A note from Aborn, who is a summacum laude aid to the Secretary, reports that he joined Cox, Chandler, and Gordon in representing the class at' the Boston alumni dinner. "Gordon was looking particularly well, and Guy and Chandler werefull of pep as,usual."
A Boston Post columnist writes of President Cox that he "smokes his cigar,not like the dynamo executive, chewingthe end of it, but like an epicure to whomevery puff is a thing of beauty and a joyforever."
"BEATING A PATH"
Another member of the class to enjoy recent big city newspaper publicity is Senator Calef, whose national cheese business with headquarters in Barrington, N. H., was used by the New York Times as a modern illustration of the Ralph Waldo Emerson maxim about the path to the door of the champion mouse-trap maker.
Our '39 representative in the other branch of the New Hampshire legislature, Sam French's son Harold, called on the Secretary recently, and turned out to be as tall as his father and like him in other ways. Young Mr. French registers as an Independent Democrat, but soon found a' point of political agreement with the Secretary in their common admiration and support of John Winant.
The name of Rufus Baker's son John was in print as one of the winners in a Boston Globe guessing contest. He did not get the first prize of $1,000, which went to a West Lebanon garage man, but did win enough to pay his poll tax.
Vint Stillings served on the grand jury for the winter term of the Superior Court for Cheshire county.
Secretary, 104 North State St., Concord, N. H.