Joe Bartlett was recently mentioned in connection with the appointment of an important judgeship in Massachusetts. One of the best after-dinner speakers in New England in the person of Buck Chandler was recently invited to New York City to show his skill in that capacity to the Gothamites.
John Gilman and Harry Clark continue to carry on in the great building project for the government at West Point. We are anticipating seeing both those men at our 40th Reunion next year.
Billy Mitchell has recently written to Ted Leggett, stating that it takes a considerable part of life to learn how to live wisely. So say we all of us.
Tute Worthen from far-off Zealandia hopes to make our 40th Reunion. What a treat for all of us to shake the hand of the famous astronomer "Tycho Brahe" once more!
Fritz Robbert, Ted Leggett, Seelman, and Doc Nolan are very loyal in attending the Dartmouth alumni gathering in New York each year.
The Secretary received a brightly colored card from the Royal Hawaiian Hotel in Honolulu the other day from Mush Jones and his family. He states they are 5500 miles from Boston picking pineapples and bananas. They expect to be in Long Beach, Calif., May 1, and back home in Rochester by the middle of June. Mush is always up to something interesting and is mighty loyal in attending our reunions.
There appeared recently in a little magazine entitled Health, issued monthly by the New Hampshire State Board of Health, a very appreciative article on our classmate Dr. Charles Duncan. There is a very good picture of Charles in the magazine, and this picture has been enlarged and hung on the walls of the office of the State Board of Health in Concord, N. H. I hope we all drop in to see it when we are in Concord. The Secretary took occasion to send one of these pamphlets to Guy L. Gary, for Duncan and Gary were great friends in college.
News has just come to the Secretary of a farewell dinner given to Fred Pope in Chicago by his former colleagues in the Chicago Trust. Mr. H. H. Hilton of the class of 1890 presided. This seems quite appropriate, for Mr. Hilton was instrumental in having Pope enter the banking profession in Chicago in 1918. Fred and his wife are leaving Chicago, May 3, by automobile for Sandwich, Mass., where they will make their home. Chicago's loss is Massachusetts' and Cape Cod's gain. We certainly shall be glad to see "Seth" and
Secretary, 57 Grove Hill Ave., Newtonville, Mass.