Fred H. Hodgson is teacher of science and higher mathematics in Montpelier (Vt.) Seminary.
David R. Blanpied is assistant in Montpelier (Vt.) High School.
Laurence W. Griswold is connected with the Daily News of Batavia, N. Y., of which his father is publisher.
W. H. Harriman, non-graduate, is in the employ of the Guanajuato Power and Electric Co., at Guanajuato, Mexico.
Theodore I. Dunn is teaching in Black Hall School, Black Hall. Conn.
At the annual meet of the Central Amateur Athletic Association of Chicago, held Sept. 12, Arthur B. Shaw established a new world's record for 120-yard high hurdles, lowering the time to fifteen seconds.
Frank Elmer Titcomb, non-graduate, died in a hospital in Somerville, Mass., July 28, after an operation for appendicitis. He was born in Farmington, Me., March 17, 1884, being a son of Hiram and Jennie (Gould) Titcomb. He graduated from the high school in Farmington in 1902, and before entering College had also studied in the normal school in the same town. At Thanksgiving of his junior year he left College on account of his father's death, and did not return, but took up his father's business and was successfully carrying it on. He was secretary of the Farmington Mutual Fire Insurance Company, and occupied a prominent place in the business and social life of the town. He was universally respected, and his death came as a great shock to the community.
Secretary, Laurence M. Symmes, Winchester, Mass.