Word comes from Murdock by the hand of his daughter, Mrs. Smith, who, with her husband, makes her home with him in Spencer, Mass. Murdock's health is good except for the failure of his sight, which has progressed so far as to prevent his reading or writing. From June to September he will be with the Smiths at their summer home on Martha's Vineyard. There is a good company of grandchildren, three granddaughters being now in college.
Mrs. Sutherland takes much satisfaction in the arrival of a great-grandson. She alternates between her two daughters' homes in Alpena, Mich., and Great Bend, Kans., being just now at the latter place. One grandson is doing graduate work at the University of Michigan, another is a junior there, and a third is finishing a milling engineer's course in Kansas. A granddaughter is in a lawyer's office. We shall all be greatly pleased to get such good reports from the family of one of our best-loved classmates.
We are saddened by the report of the death of Louis B. Wallace, Al's older son. For particulars see the notes of his class, 1910, and the fine tribute in the Necrology.
Secretary, Chelsea, Vt.