James Loudon Kiley arrived February thirteen, at four thirty in the morning. He writes that he is looking forward to the middle of June, when his mother and old man will visit Hanover, giving him the opportunity of stepping out alone with the boys for a few days. He weighed six pounds and fifteen ounces.
Another letter from Ceep Pierce at Saranac Lake. He would like to have John McAuliffe and some of the others drop him a line or two. His address is 28 Old Military Road, Saranac Lake, N. Y.
Red Tucker sent a letter from Fort Bayard, N. M., where he is a M.D. with the Veterans' Bureau. He reports the arrival of Mary Elizabeth on October 14, at El Paso. She has her father's "golden" locks and her mother's good looks. Red says that she can out-yell any infant of her age, and that he is thinking of entering her in some hog-calling contest. Red has jointed the ranks of the literati. Recently an article of his on the "Use of Heliotherapy in the Treatment of Tuberculosis of the Skin" was published in the U. S. Veterans Medical Bulletin.
Gil Tapley, of the United Fruit, is on his way to the West Indies.
I'll be seeing you in Hanover a month from the time you read these hurried notes. In the meanwhile, I'm on my way to the great Middle West to attend a wedding and the Detroit Aircraft Show.
Secretary, 65 Mathewson Road, Barrington, R. I.