Edward C. Richardson is now a vice-president of the International Standard Electric Corporation of New York city, but he is still located in Japan with the Nippon Electric Cos., Ltd., at Tokyo.
Everett A. Chisholm is teaching mathematics at New Haven College and also in the high school in New Haven. Conn.
Verney W. Russell since last June has been division engineer on the construction of the Third Division of the Kittitas Sigh Line Canal in the state of Washington, and is located at South Cle Elum. The construction of this division is by contract, and involves the expenditure of nearly $2,000,000. Russell is with the United States Reclamation Service.
Charles F. Goodrich had an article in the Engineers' Ncivs-Record of April 28, 1927, entitled ''Counterweighted Cables Raise 433 ft. Spans to High-Level Cantilever Bridge."
Richard Messer was married to Miss Bessie Z. Marshall at Richmond, Va., on June 14, 1926. His office address is 601 State Office Building, Richmond.
Max H. Cook is now in the real estate business in San Diego, Cal., and his address is 813 California Building.
Henry S. Brintnall reports his new address in Los Angeles, Cal., as 1058 South Meadowbrook Ave.
Clark How Edwards died April 29, 1927, of pulmonary tuberculosis in the Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles, Cal. The Secretary only learned of it recently. An obituary will appear later in the MAGAZINE.
Howard D. Billman, sometimes known as "Varsity," is a great booster for the state of California, to wit: "This part of California has the rest of the state backed off the map; big rainfall, beautiful scenery, fertile soil. Just remember we have the most diversified county in the state on account of—prunes, grapes, apples, pears, cherries, dairy products, lumber, chickens, etc. The Healdsburg district, where we are located, raises the best prunes in the country, Santa Clara County not excepted. Ask Stillman, he knows."
Percy Noel reports that his son is a student at the Sorbonne and hopes to transfer to Dart- mouth in the fall. Noel pere is European cor- respondent for the Philadelphia Record, and his address is 8 Place Jean-Baptiste Clement, Paris XVIIIe, France.
Henry Thrall writes that in order to keep young as long as possible he is spending as much of each summer as he can in the Beartooth Mountains, where he has a camp in the town of Red Lodge, Montana.
. Mr. and Mrs. Harry T. Smith were in the East in the fall and attended the Dartmouth- Yale game in New Haven.
George R. Ricker is assistant chief clerk with the Singer Sewing Machine Company in Dallas, Texas, and is an ardent Elk. His business address is 1021 Santa Fe Building.
Charles F. Eichenauer spoke in December at the convocation at Illinois College.
Norman Stevenson's new address is 366 Madison Ave., New York city.
Stephen Harvvood, son of Fred Harwood, expects to enter Dartmouth next fall. His sister Betty is a junior at Northwestern University.
A Student Loan Fund has been raised by the students of the University of Tennessee and named for Eliott Frost. A similar fund and also a scholarship in his memory have been established at the University of Rochester. In the February number of Harper's Magazi ne Mrs. Frost has a group of eight poems entitled "The Lost Lyrist," and in the February issue of the Dial she has two poems called "Cataclysm and Tryst."
Rainford G. Taylor is with Meinrath Corbally Company of Seattle, wholesale dealers in fruit products, especially fruit and berries of the Pacific Northwest. He reports that he was married in 1911, and has a boy and two girls between the ages of five and thirteen years.
Mrs. John H. Dunlap has had a long illness and her three boys have been living in Franklin, Vt., with their uncles, Gordon Gates and Rhett Gates, who are brothers of Don Gates '05.
Secretary, 511 Sears Building, Boston