All neighborhood news this month, as we have had no letters from the hinterland.
"Dr. George E. Pender, who has been ill, received a warm greeting when he appeared on the street yesterday," says the Portsmouth Herald, which reported, later, the attendance of the Doctor at the Harvard game.
Doctor and Mrs. Edward S. Miller motored from Woodsville, recently, to Schenectady, N. Y., to visit their son, who is with the General Electric Company there.
All attempts to get George Dodge interested in politics have failed, but his daughter Adelaide is one of the founders of the Manchester branch of the League of Women Voters.
Calef served on the United States court grand jury last month. His son, Leon, was married to Miss Ruth Morrill of Rochester, another son, Harlan, acting as best man.
Speaking of weddings, we notice that Kinney officiates at one every now and then in his Lyme parish.
Speeches by Sam Hunt have been almost as numerous this fall as touchdowns by Marsters. Sam is doing a great job for the Public Service Company of New Hampshire on this line.
Announcement in a Lancaster paper of the marriage at Branchville, Md., of Harry Hilliard, refers, we think, to a son of our Harry DeF. H., but out of the latter we cannot a yip get.
The Secretary's only out-of-the-state '93 caller in October was Dr. J. H. Stevens of the Copley-Plaza, Boston.
If we were running a '93 magazine, instead of a column, we would try for an article from Selden, former editor of the Magazine of WallStreet, on the recent cataclysm—we like that word better than debacle—there.
Apropos, if it is not too late, of the Carne- gie Report, we find that the names of our '93 battery, Booth and Barr(y)ett, do not appear in the General Catalogue. Bozy gets into "Athletics at Dartmouth," however.
Secretary, 104 North State St., Concord, N. H.