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RECIPROCAL RELATIONS

The Boston City Club has reciprocal relations with the clubs listed below and members of the Boston City Club may have all the privileges of these clubs by presentation of their membership cards.

ALBANY, N. Y........

Albany Club, 102 State Street.

Sleeping rooms (18); restaurant, 7 A.M. to midnight.

BALTIMORE, Md....

Restaurant, noon to 4 P.M.

BUFFALO, N. Y.......

Restaurant, 8 A.M. to 8 P.M.

CHICAGO, ILL......

Restaurant, 11.30 A.M. to 8 P.M.

CHICAGO, ILL..

City Club, S. E. cor. Calvert and Fayette Streets.

Ellicott Club, Ellicott Square Building.

City Club, 315 Plymouth Court.
Hamilton Club, 18 So. Dearborn Street.

Sleeping rooms (20); restaurant, 8 A.M. to 9 P.M. CINCINNATI, OHIO....

Business Men's Club, 9th and Race Streets.
.City Club, Hollenden Hotel.

Restaurant, II A.M. to 12 midnight CLEVELAND, OHIO..

Restaurant, 12 M. to 2 P.M. DUBUQUE, IA..........

Restaurant, 12 to 1 P.M., 6 to 7 P.M. HARTFORD, CONN...

Restaurant, 9 A.M. to 12 midnight. INDIANAPOLIS, IND....

Restaurant, 11.30 A.M. to 2 P.M. KANSAS CITY, Mo...

Restaurant, 11.45 A.M. to 2 P.M.

MEMPHIS, TENN....

Restaurant, 12 M. to 3 P.M. MILWAUKEE, WIS...

Commercial Club, Ninth and Locust Streets.

City Club, 7 Central Row.

Chamber of Commerce, 28 So. Meridian Street.
.City Club, 1021 Grand Avenue.

Chamber of Commerce, 79 Monroe Avenue.
City Club, 211 Grand Avenue.

Restaurant, 11.30 to 2.00 and 5.30 to 8.00.
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN..

.Athletic Club, 621 Second Avenue South.
Commercial Club, 311 Fourth Avenue North.
Arkwright Club, 320 Broadway.

Sleeping rooms (135); restaurant and every club facility.
NASHVILLE, TENN........

Restaurant, 11.30 to 3.00 and 6.00 to 8.30. NEW YORK, N. Y..

Restaurant, 7 A.M. to 6 P.M. OMAHA, NEB.....

Restaurant, 11.30 A.M. to 2 P.M. PHILADELPHIA, PA.......

Sleeping rooms (20); restaurant, RICHMOND, Va..

Restaurant, 7.30 A.M. to 8 P.M.
SEATTLE, WASH...

Sleeping rooms (47); restaurant.
ST. JOHN'S, N. F..
Restaurant.

ST. LOUIS, Mo.

Restaurant, 12 M. to 2.30 P.M. WASHINGTON, D. C..

Chamber of Commerce, 14th and Farnam Streets.

City Club.

7 A.M. to 8 P.M.

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Business Men's Club, 10th and Main Streets.
.Arctic Club, 308 Cherry Street.

City Club, Water Street.

City Club, 911 Locust Street.

City Club, 1634 Eye Street Northwest.

Sleeping rooms (20); restaurant, 7.30 A.M. to 9 P.M.

Members should consult this list in its latest form, as changes are constantly being

made.

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Board of Governors

Ex Oficio

OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES

A. B. Beeching George H. Ellis Frank V. Thompson Charles H. Thurber John J. Walsh

Term expires 1921

1920-1921

GEORGE H. ELLIS, President

CHARLES H. THURBER, First Vice-President FRANK V. THOMPSON, Second Vice-President JOHN J. WALSH, Secretary

A. B. BEECHING, Treasurer

LLOYD B. HAYES, Civic Secretary

John L. Bates
Charles B. Breed
W. Cameron Forbes
Harry S. Kelsey
Frank D. Kemp
Clarence W. McGuire
Clarence C. Minard
William B. Munro

Term expires 1922 James S. Blake Charles L. Burrill William C. Crawford Frederick Homer James A. McKibben Patrick F. O'Keefe F. Nathaniel Perkins Abraham C. Webber

Term expires 1923 March G. Bennett Frederic H. Fay Franklin T. Kurt Fred E. Mann George von L. Meyer Claude A. Palmer Henry Penn

E. Leroy Sweetser

Executive Committee
*William B. Munro
Charles B. Breed
Frederic H. Fay
Henry Penn

Gen. E. Leroy Sweetser
Frank V. Thompson

• Chairman

House Committee
*Frank D. Kemp
March G. Bennett
Austin C. Benton
Horace S. Ford
Arthur L. Potter
Entertainment Committee
*Fred E. Mann

Walter E. Anderton
Edwin F. A. Benson
E. Fred Cullen
Franklin W. Ganse
Edward McKernon
Jacob R. Morse
Robert Seaver
Alfred R. Shrigley
Frank P. Sibley
Carroll J. Swan
Addison L. Winship
Membership Committee
*A. C. Webber

W. Stanwood Field Victor A. Heath Samuel F. Hubbard Frank D. Kemp Dr. Timothy Leary Frank Leveroni John J. Morgan Francis P. O'Connor Myron E. Pierce Frank R. Shepard Edward C. Wade Hospitality Committee *Franklin T. Kurt Augustus T. Beatey Moses J. Brines William J. Fortune J. Mitchel Galvin Harry N. Guterman Walter A. Hawkins Jas. C. Higgins Col. W. J. Keville Rabbi Harry Levi Logan L. McLean Charles H. Simons Arthur J. Wellington

Finance Committee
*F. Nathaniel Perkins
George E. Brock
David A. Ellis
Bernard J. Rothwell
Auditing Committee
*George von L. Meyer
John F. Malley
Charles S. Sanborn

Art and Library Committee
*William C. Crawford
John K. Allen
Pasquale Gallassi
Vesper L. George
J. E. Hannigan
Maurice B. Hexter
Seth K. Humphrey
Joseph Michelman
Edward K. Robinson
Foster W. Stearns
Forum Committee
*Charles Kroll
March G. Bennett
G. Waldo Crawley
Geo. W. Coleman
W. T. A. Fitzgerald
C. E. Gibson
E. G. Herdman
Victor J. Loring
Moses S. Lourie
John J. Walsh
Bulletin Committee
*Patrick F. O'Keefe
Edgar E. Nelson
George R. Pulsifer
Julius Andrews
Worcester Putnam
Nominating Committee
*Addison L. Winship
Charles P. Curtis
Frederick P. Fish
Frank L. Locke
Bernard J. Rothwell
Frank P. Sibley
James J. Storrow

BOSTON CITY CLUB

BULLETIN

FOR THE INFORMATION OF MEMBERS OF THE CLUB

mem

"This Club is founded in the spirit of good fellowship and every
ber of the Club knows every other member without an introduction”.

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EDOUARD HOREMANS, OF BELGIUM, v. GEORGE F. SLOSSON Auditorium, 3 p.m. and 8 p.m.

(Open to Member and Friends — Tickets required)

Edouard Horemans, of Belgium, billiard champion of Europe, who overwhelmed the leading players of seven countries, making unprecedented high runs and averages, now in this country to play Willie Hoppe, the American champion, for world supremecy at 18.1 and 18.2 Balkline, will play two exhibition matches with Mr. George F. Slosson, former champion, one in the afternoon at 3 o'clock, another at 8 o'clock in the evening.

The Belgian champion has a record high run of 648, and a record high average of 200 in 1,000 points of 18.2, which excel the best American marks by 2 to I. After less than two weeks of play under the unfamiliar American conditions of faster cloth, smaller balls, and lower tables, he has made runs of 290, 276, 270 unfinished, and 235; and a high single average of 133 in 400 points.

He is a left-hander with a spectacular style of play, particularly on massé shots and the line nurse. Alfred Mortier, of France, the world's amateur champion, predicts that Horeman's style will revolutionize the game of Balkline. He is a marvel at exhibition fancy shots, which he will display after both games.

Dinner at 6 o'clock. Tickets at the office of the Civic Secretary. Seats in the auditorium will be reserved for those attending the dinner. Auditorium tickets can be procured at the office of the Civic Secretary, for both matches.

Thursday Evening, January 6

CONCERT

THE FOOTLIGHT ORCHESTRA

CHARLES F. MANNEY, Conductor
Assisted by

MASTER WINSLOW ROUSE, Soloist

Auditorium, 8 o'clock

The Footlight Orchestra is one of the leading amateur musical organizations in Boston. It is composed of players, men and women, many of them members of the City Club. It is an important adjunct to the Footlight Dramatic Club of Jamaica Plain, which is known throughout Greater Boston for its excellent work in amateur theatricals. Mr. Charles F. Manney, the conductor, is a member of the City Club, and has for many years taken an active interest in the musical events of the Club.

Master Winslow Rouse is the soprano soloist at Trinity Church, and is acknowledged to be the finest boy soprano in Boston to-day. His singing at the annual dinner of the Chamber of Commerce in Symphony Hall was one of the notable features of the occasion.

The full program will be found on page 88.

Thursday Evening, January 13

GEORGE W. HOPKINS

"BUSINESS TO-DAY-WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT

IT?"

Auditorium, 8 o'clock

E. FRED CULLEN will preside.

As the new year opens, business men are wondering what 1921 holds in store for them, and what is to be done. Believing that many members of the Club would like to hear a practical business man on this practical question, we have invited Mr. George W. Hopkins, general sales manager of the Columbia Graphophone Company, to give us the benefit of his wide business experience in solving the problem. He is one of the best-known sales and advertising managers in the country A Boston boy, his early business training was received in the firm of Chase & Sanborn. Later he went to the Johnson Educator Food Com pany, from there to the Loose-Wiles Biscuit Company, and then to the American Chicle Company, which he left to assume his present position. He talks straight from the shoulder and with the same punch which has characterized his success as a business man.

Dinner at 6 o'clock. Tickets at the office of the Civic Secretary.

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