S. J. Smith is now with The Woodbury Service, Inc., appraisal and production engineers, located at Room 2233, Park Row Building, New York city.
Judge N. P. Brown was the chief speaker at the December meeting of the Springfield (Mass.) Lunch Club. His subject was "The Dartmouth Spirit." The Union called it "red hot."
W. B. Hodgkins writes from Phoenix, Arizona, about an eight-foot rattler recently brought in, with sixty-seven rattles in his tail. He is interested also in "tarantulas as big as pie-plates, and the famous Gila monster." He recommended that at least one specimen of this last mentioned orange black spotted lizard-like creature be sent to Princeton.
A. B. Tootell has gone back to teaching in the Great Falls (Montana) High School. He is selling off his farm stock.
S. Burns, Jr., of Burns, Brinker, and Company, has changed his business location m Omaha, Neb., to Southwest Corner 17th and Douglas Sts., Ground Floor Brandeis Theatre Building.
Prof. H. R. Willard, before leaving Washington, D.C., for Orono, Maine, worked for twelve weeks in the War Trade Board, helping prepare a "History of Prices during the War." The work was done under the direction of Prof. Wesley C. Mitchell, editorin-chief, included prices of about 1500 articles, and covered, when completed, about 2000 octavo pages.
A. L. Galusha moved from his former home in Sharon, Mass., last November, to another house which he had recently bought.
P. H. Winchester late in November spent a week-end with his father in Portland, Maine.
L. A. Martin returned to America from his Y.M.C.A. secretaryship abroad in December. He has gone to Unity, Maine, with Mrs. Martin for a period of rest, and reports himself already much recuperated.
Dr. Raymond Pearl suffered a severe loss when many of his most valuable records, covering years of exhaustive scientific investigation, were destroyed by a fire November 28, which consumed one of the old Johns Hopkins University buildings in Baltimore.
The December 15 issue of The Dartmouth gives an account of the banquet of the 1919 varsity eleven in the Commons the night of December 13. Prof. J. P. Richardson acted as toastmaster, and J. W. Gannon, president of the Athletic Council, spoke on Dartmouth's intercollegiate relations, and presented the gold football souvenirs to the letter men of the past season.
Prof. H. A. Miller entertained the president of Korea at Oberlin, Ohio, on December 6. Professor Miller is much in demand on the lecture platform. In one week recently he made separate trips to Dayton, Cincinnati, and Louisville (Kentucky), yet lost only one class exercise at Oberlin by doing so.
Secretary, Kenneth Beal, 55 Botolph St., Melrose Highlands, Mass.