The secretary has lately issued a report of his class, unique in form, attractive in appearance, and unusually complete in contents.
Fred S. Berry has recently removed from Concord, N. H., to Blairstown, N. J., to follow his profession of civil engineering with the Delaware, Lackawanna, and Western Railway.
Fred T. Dunlap is secretary of the board of trade of Manchester, N. H.
Dr. Alpheus W. Hoyt is physician and surgeon for the Austen Coal and Coke Co., at Austen, W. Va.
Frank J. Davis, non-graduate, is a civil engineer in New Haven, Conn , with office at 865 Chapel St., and home at 20 Carmel St.
Harry Simons Denny died at the home of his parents in Northfield, Vt., October 3, after a long struggle against the dreaded disease, tuberculosis of the lungs. He was born in Northfield, July 6, 1863, and was the son of George and Ada (Simons) Denny. He prepared for college at the State Normal School at Randolph Center, and was for more than three years a student at Norwich University. Leaving that institution late in the fall of 1887, he entered the senior class in the Chandler Scientific Department, and graduated with the class. For the first year after graduation he taught in the Wisconsin Industrial School for Boys, at Waukesha. Returning to Vermont, he was married to Mary Bertha Prince of Randolph, and taught for some months at Calais. In the spring of 1890 he entered the employ of the Vermont Marble Company, at Proctor, and continued with them until he was obliged to leave on account of his wife's health. He went with her to Tryon, N. C., where she died' May 4, 1894, of the disease which afterwards proved fatal to her husband. They had one daughter, who survives her parents. In the fall of 1894 he went to Jacksonville, Fla., and entered the employ of the George W. Clark Company, marble dealers. He remained with them nearly all the time until his return to his Vermont home, in July, 1907, though during the last two years he had given a part of his time to real estate business in order to be out of doors. His brave but unavailing fight against the last enemy has won him much sympathy, and his manly Christian character has always commanded respect.
Secretary, Rev. William B. Forbush, 89 Hancock Ave., East, Detroit, Mich.