At the recent meeting of the New Hampshire Historical Society, Henry W. Stevens was re-elected president of the society, of which Clarence E. Carr and Hon. Thomas D. Luce are members of the board of trustees.
William S. Forrest reports that he is as active in mind and body as forty years ago, and continues the active practice of law in Chicago. His home is at Highland Park, and he has a family of Mrs. Forrest, six children, and four grandchildren. A son, William, who withdrew from Dartmouth in 1925, will graduate from Knox College next June, where he has taken a high standing in scholarship. He intends to adopt the profession of teaching. His youngest son, Nelson, is twelve years old and will prepare for admission to Dartmouth.
John A. Munroe of Omaha, Neb., former traffic manager of the Union Pacific Railway, with a friend, Mrs. Elder, has established in Omaha the "Hattie B. Munroe Home for Convalescing and Crippled Children," a corporation which is now in full operation, children being taken without expense. They have furnished fine grounds and buildings for this Home, which is now caring for thirty-one children. Sunshine is a great instrument of healing there, as many of the children are suf- fering from troubles which are especially bene- fited by this treatment. The Home is estab- lished as a memorial to Mr. Munroe's wife, the late Hattie B. Munroe. The buildings are marked by a tablet in bronze, bearing a bas- relief of Mrs. Munroe with an appropriate in- scription.
Secretary, Concord, N. H.