T. Franklin Dudley has become a government employee, now being chemist in Building 15, Navy Yard, Philadelphia, Pa. He is living at 200 Reading Ave., Oaklyn, N. J.
Apparently Fred Eaton is tired of the Sunny South, and has come back to the Cold North full of vim and vigor, to become associated with the sales department of the Cantilever Shoe Corporation, of 410 Willoughby Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. His home address is 20 Shawnee Road, Scarsdale, N. Y.
Our civil engineer, Al Hormel, is now asso- ciated with the Cooling and Air Conditioning Corporation, of 11 West 42nd St., New York city. Al and Warren Kimball still continue neighborly at Crestwood.
Speaking of Warren, he is now in the insurance business for himself, at 80 Maiden Lane, the firm name being Kimball and Price.
Stan Rockwood is registered as a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin, and is living at 303 Princeton Ave., Madison, Wis.
As instructor and coach of the Eastern High School, Washington, D. C., "Pug" Sanborn continues to turn out winning teams, every now and then breaking into the Washington headlines.
Our old president, "Dutch" Irwin, has acquired a new title of president,—namely, that of the Cleveland Alumni Association.
Mac Rollins writes in his New York news sheet as follows:
"We hear high grade remarks made every now and then anent the show that Doc Wyman's crew is playing over in Hoboken. It seems the current play, entitled 'After Dark,' is all that a melodrama should be, with beauteous maidens strapped to the third rail, and the villain with his foot on the brass rail."
Walt Morgan has been made a trustee of Beloit College. Also Walter has become an author, having a book entitled "Dreams of Youth"—a book of children's stories, published by the Century Company, New York.
Jim Gaylord writes that he has no news of interest to 1911 other than that he hasn't seen a classmate except Newt Russell since our 15th, and that he is rushed to death by the unusual amount of sickness.
Secretary, Hanover, N. H.