Edmund A. Freeman has finished his library course at Albany, N. Y., and is now located in Washinton, D. C., as cataloguer in the library of the Bureau of Railway Economics, Transportation Building.
Mr. and Mrs. Bart Shepard are happy to announce the arrival of Alan Bartlett Shepard, Jr., on November 18, 1923.
E. Leeds Gulick, Jr., has gone to Albuquerque, N. M., and you can reach him at 705 New York Ave. He hopes to establish a branch of Camp Aloha, in the Rockies. More power to him!
John Joseph Scarry's first Saturday Evening Post story appeared in the November 17 issue. It is called "Skimpy," and is illustrated by William Kemp Starrett.
A card from the Grand Canyon of Arizona says that Sherm and Delia Ward are enjoying their trip to the Coast. They are going "over the road," and will leave the car in California, returning by train, in order to go out next spring to drive back again. Sherm says that it's not much like driving at home when it rains in Arizona.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Baker announce the birth of a son, Kenneth Arthur, on September 12, 1923,—consequently Ken is strutting around as proud as a peacock.
Close on the heels of John Joseph, Ted Davis appears in the Saturday EveningPost of December 1, 1923, with "The Well from Perugia," illustrated by James M. Preston. Thus the Posts of two weeks apart introduce two 1913 men to a host of readers.
In New York on the eve of the Columbia game the class held a dinner at Keen's downtown restaurant before the Dartmouth smoker at the Waldorf-Astoria. Present at the dinner were Wells, Meleney, Terry, Lenfesty, Catterall, Davis, Smith, Scully, Gannon, Macdonald, Ashton, Dessau, Bidwell, Remsen, and they were joined at the smoker by Alden and Stoddard. The fact that the following day was Thanksgiving prevented many of the class from attending.
Secretary, 18 Oliver St., Boston