"Eben" Holden is now Peking manager for the Standard Oil Company, Peking, China. Dick Paul's brother, who has been taking a trip around the world, visited Eben in China and found him pleasantly situated with a nice wife and all that and very much in command of things Standard Oil in China.
Fred Eaton is salesman for the E. E. Taylor Company of New York, whose one chief product is shoes.
The firm of Butler-Uhlman, dispenser of flowers to Smith College students and special provider for the wives at 1911 reunions, continues to flourish to such an extent that Aubrey Butler is now building a fine residence within sight of the Smith dormitories.
Ken Clark is now located with S. W. Strauss and Company, investment bankers, 555 Fifth Avenue, New York City, as legal counsel. In addition to practicing law for them he will retain his own practice. With the number of men that are becoming advisers in investments and securities, 1911 should be able to speculate safely.
Another Elevener breaks into print—Doctor George F. Dwinnell, formerly known as "Dwink." He was one of the orators at the New Hampshire Surgical Club meeting in Manchester last month.
The spirit of house building apparently continues unabated. Brad Patten is preparing for himself a new home in Cleveland, near the Medical School.
Herb Clark writes that his philanthropical interests are confined to the supporting of four children, the latest of which is Philip Ament, born April 4, 1922.
Ed. Chamberlain has moved from Arlington to Myrtle Terrace, Winchester.
At Christ's Church, New York City, on April 29th, were married Anna Baxter Knevals and Dave Swain.
A letter from Jerry Barnes, Coulterville, California, invites me to his mountain cabin near the Yosemite Valley, where he is starting to mine. As his own chef, he has put on fifteen pounds of additional beef, part of which is helped by the fact that he catches trout within a hundred feet of his front door, shoots mountain quail on the hill behind, and beyond the hill he finds deer and bear. I can't accept the invitation, but I pass it on to any other Elevener.
Secretary, Prof. Nathaniel G. Burleigh, Han- over, N. H.