Linda Brackett, second daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Boy Brackett, was born in Hanover on June 13.
From the press of King Brothers of Baltimore comes a volume entitled "International Arbitral Procedure," by Crawford Morrison Bishop, Ph.D. This is the dissertation which Crawford submitted to the faculty of political science, Columbia University, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.
The Chicago Evening Post runs a department called "How They Started," and under this caption on May 31 published a very good likeness of Nat Leverone and a paragraph of mingled information and misinformation. I suppose its garbled form prevented Nat from sending it on to me, but Bill Bell has put it into my hands. I do not dare quote it as a whole, lest Nat sue me for publishing false statements, but I think this sentence from it is correct: "He is now president of the Automatic Canteen, which dispenses nationally known products by vending machines."
The monthly bulletin of the New York Dartmouth College Club, under the able editorship of Malcolm Rollins 'll, is always entertaining, but it seldom contains news of '06 men. The July issue, however, features some of our celebrities in its account of the fourth annual golf party of the club. These quotations will indicate the part '06 played on that gala occasion: "The Cornell Club . . . proved to be a little too good for the home boys, and with 456, they trimmed Messrs. T. Brown, May, Burns, Towler, and Reade by two strokes . . . T. Brown with a tidy 87 came home with the handsome vase. . . . The foursomes were won by T. Brown, who beat Tubby Gray, Lonnie Russ, and Norm Bankart; Ed Redman, defeating Carl Gish, Ralph Bauman, and John Topliffe. . . . The birdies were knocked off by Dick Clarke, Ralph Bauman, and T. Brown. ..." An advertising card in the bulletin also informs us that "T," who is an insurance specialist, "says his new address is Lincoln Building, Room 926, 60 East 42d St."
Secretary, Hanover, N. H.