Class Notes

Class of 1876

April 1938 Dr. Henry H. Piper
Class Notes
Class of 1876
April 1938 Dr. Henry H. Piper

Hardison's letters from Florida have an added interest as the season advances. The frost period is over, followed by a week of genuine spring conditions, with the opening of orange blossoms and new life all about. Long automobile trips are taken; now to St. Petersburg and the Gulf, now to New Smyrna and the Atlantic seaboard, or off into the middle of the state, where a sawmill is encountered, a cooperative citrus packing plant, and a plant for the preparation and canning of grapefruit juice and orange juice. Hill had spent a day in DeLand on his way to Winter Park.

At the Dartmouth meet in Boston, February 9, there were present from classes in the Seventies, Newell '79, Parkhurst '78, Deane '77, and Piper '76.

Goodhue writes of a gathering of twenty Dartmouth men in Dayton, all under forty but himself. Accompanying his letter were reminiscences he had written, "DartmouthCollege in 1872", a very vivid and entertaining document of something over two thousand words.

The winter sojourn of Judge and Mrs. George W. Anderson in DeLand, has been broken by Judge Anderson's sudden death.

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