Jonas ("Judge") Hutchinson disappeared from his home in Chicago in October, 1927, and his sister, Mrs. H. H. Green, requests that publicity be given to the fact that a reward of $100 has been offered for information which results in locating him. Mrs. Green's address is 854 Chalmers Place, Chicago. It is feared that he may have met with an accident or lost his memory. He was a salesman for the Chevrolet Automobile Company.
Carroll A. Campbell has a daughter, Jean, born in January, 1927. His older daughter, Ailsa, expects to enter Mount Holyoke next fall. "Camp" was laid up for four weeks under the doctor's orders after the flood in the Connecticut river of last November.
Charles S. Borden's son, Seymour S. Borden, graduated from Chicago University in June, 1927, and his daughter, Ruth, is a sophomore there at the present time. Charlie is president and manager of S. S. Borden Company, commission merchants, at 123 South Water Market, Chicago. His home is at 6958 Chappel Ave.
Halsey B. Loder Jr. has been elected captain of the junior swimming team of the University Club of Boston. The team has been selected from more than seventy-five contestants, all sons of members of the club.
Lyon Weyburn went to Prague, Czechoslovakia, on business for clients last spring, his wife going with him. They returned by way of Cannes, Paris, and London.
Ira Newick is vice-president and manager of the Hislop Garage Company of Portsmouth, N. H., which operates two garages there.
Alexander R. Maynard is president of the Dartmouth Club of Detroit. He is manager of the Graybar Electric Company in Detroit, which was formerly the supply department of the Western Electric Company. His new home is at 19609 Shrewsbury Ave., Detroit, in the suburb known as Sherwood Forest. The Dartmouth Club of Detroit last fall announced that it will award each year a loving cup to the football team of the high school in the Metropolitan District of Detroit which attains the highest record in that sport and in individual studies. The winning team is to be determined by combining the standing of the team in the football league with the average scholastic standing for the first semester of the letter men composing the team. The cup is to be retained permanently by the team winning it three times.
Arthur McClary's mother, Mrs. Patience Ford McClary, widow of the late Martin E. McClary, died February 14, 1928, at her son's house in Malone, N. Y., which had been her home in recent years. She was seventy years of age.
Harold D. King is superintendent of lighthouses in the 5th district, with headquarters at Baltimore. This district of the U. S. Lighthouse Service comprises the waters of Mary- land, Virginia and three-quarters of North Carolina, including the great Chesapeake Bay and tributary rivers and the sounds of North Carolina. In point of number of aids to navigation maintained it is the largest in the U. S., and in point of traffic, second only to the New York district.
Walter Rogers attended the meeting of National Education Association in Boston in February as president of the trustees of Lake Shore High School, St. Claire Shores, Mich., a position which he had held for the last five years. He was interested in the sessions of the Department of Superintendents. Walter's oldest boy, John, is now sixteen, and expects to be ready for Dartmouth in two years.
Beginning the first of this year the name of Harry Peyser's law firm at Portsmouth, N. H., is Marvin, Peyser, and Tucker. Harry's oldest son, Frank Washburn Peyser, is now at Phillips Exeter, and expects to enter Dartmouth next fall.
Secretary, . 511 Sears Building, Boston