Attendance from our class at the football games this year has been small, much to the disappointment of the Secretary, who went to Hanover for the Lafayette game and saw not a single member of '90, not even Perley Bugbee. At the Harvard game in the stadium, however, he sat beside Mr. and Mrs. George B. Young and had a most enjoyable little visit. Mr. Young had just returned from a business trip to Texas.
The night before the Harvard game, the Secretary spent with Hilton and his wife at their beautiful old farmhouse in Tewksbury, Mass. They returned to their home in Chicago the following Sunday. Hilton is much improved in health and is as busy a man as ever. It was an added pleasure to meet at the Tewksbury home for a few minutes Edward, Hilton's youngest son, who is a member of the junior class at Dartmouth and is making a fine record.
Among the noted United States senators who fell victims to the Democratic landslide November 8 was Hon. George H. Moses. Moses, who was accorded an unopposed renomination in the primaries, was defeated by the narrowest of margins by ex-Governor Fred H. Brown of Dartmouth, class of 1903. Had he been re-elected and served out his term of office, Moses would have completed a full half century of public life, as he began with a secretaryship to a New Hampshire governor, even while he was still in college. As it is, he has had a long and distinguished career, no member of the Senate being more widely known. He contemplates writing a book of memoirs, and they should certainly prove of surpassing interest and contain many revelations of political deeds and conditions in the past twenty-five years.
Secretary, 45 Wakefield St., Rochester, N. H.