It looked as though the cupbroad was bare of class news for this issue of the MAGAZINE, but on the last day of grace some arrived from a good many hundred miles away, being brought in person by our Mississippi cotton planter, John Quincy Eaton, whom it was grand to see in good health and good spirits once more. He told us of meeting that international railroader, Bob Burnap '94, in Memphis, Tenn., not long ago.
We have seen in the papers, lately, that J. V. Stillings has presented an ancient document to the Cheshire County Historical Society That Dr. E. S. Miller talked to the Woodsville Bird Club about white ants That Harry Metcalfs daughter, Katharine, has entered the University of New Hampshire, where sons of Baker, Calef, and McLaren have graduated in the past That Colonel and Mrs. Walter Woolson Brown have been spending a month at White Sulphur Springs between Sunapee and the Ritz Tower That Guv W. Cox has been elected vice-chairman of the board of trustees of Boston University. Calef, who seems to be our chief politician, was elected on November 3 for his third consecutive term in the New Hamp- shire State Senate, a rare distinction in a state where so many citizens are desirous of holding the comparatively few offices.
Secretary, 104 North State St., Concord, N. H.