Rev. W. F. English, Jr., late of Lowell, is conference and convention secretary for New England of the Interchurch World Movement, with offices at 6 Beacon St., Boston.
Ralph P. Currier, who for the past year has put all his time into school garden organization in Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont for the federal department of education, will return to teaching next fall as headmaster of the high school in Milford, N. H.
Warren F. Hale is in charge of the state forestry department's crew of men in the southern New Hampshire towns, eradicating currant and gooseberry bushes in an effort to stop the spread of white pine blister rust. He resigned as park superintendent and forester at Salem, Mass., to take a place with the New Hampshire department. Hale, generally called "String", is some inches over six feet. One of his jobs is to protect his men from bodily injury from irate farmers and their wives, who frequently object to having their gardens despoiled of currants by the state's men.
George Butterfield was operated on in May for appendicitis at his home in Fitchburg. Soon after his release from the hospital he was taken back with a severe attack of tonsilitis. He has left the Chamber of Commerce, of which he was secretary, and is now in charge of the Knife Information Bureau in Fitchburg.
Secretary, Laurence M. Symmes, 115 Broadway, New York