Rev. Charles C. Merrill, executive secretary of the Commission on Missions of the Congregational and Christian churches, has accepted the position of secretary to the Congregational Board of Pastoral Supply, beginning February 1, 1934.
The following is condensed from articles in newspapers of Fulton, N. Y.: "For theseventh time Judge Herbert J. Wilson hasbeen sworn into the office of city judge ofthe city of Fulton. Judge Wilson was electedas the first city judge in 1902, when the villages of Fulton and Oswego Falls becamethe city of lulton. In 1905 he was not acandidate for reelection. In 1913 he wasagain a candidate and defeated the Democratic incumbent of the office, and sincethat time in municipal elections there hasbeen only one candidate for the office on■Republican and Democratic tickets—JudgeWilson. He has been a consistently fairtninded judicial officer, and his qualitieshave resulted in winning the confidence ofthe entire electorate. Judge Wilson is anative of Constable. He was educated inthe public schools of that place, and laterwas graduated at Dartmouth. He completed his law course at the Albany Law.School, after which he came to Fulton, andbecame affiliated with the law firm ofPiper, Rice, and Wilson in 1900. After thedeath of Arvin L. Rice, this firm dissolved,and Judge Wilson became the partner ofA. L. Rice Jr."
As the ALUMNI MAGAZINE goes to press, we learn with deep sorrow of the death of Florence S. Marden at the Ritz in Boston after a protracted illness. She was born in Goffstown, New Hampshire, and was a graduate of Wellesley College in the class of 1895. She married Phil Marden in 1902. The host of the Marden's Dartmouth friends sympathize with Phil in his ereat loss.
Secretary, 14 Beacon St., Boston Editor, HENRY N. HURD Claremont, N. H.