Class Notes

Class of 1886

May 1938 Henry W. Thurston
Class Notes
Class of 1886
May 1938 Henry W. Thurston

The Secretary is sorry that '86 could not be represented at either the Boston or the New York conference on the 1938 Alumni Fund campaign, but both he and Tommy Harris urge every '86 man to dig as deeply into his pocket as possible for his gift. Rose was the first man to send his contribution to the Secretary.

Newton for '86 will attend the annual conference of class secretaries in Hanover in May.

Mrs. Snow is home again from sunny Bermuda, where she says she "enjoyedthe blue waters, beautiful flowers, andquiet, comfortable atmosphere which isso restful in contrast to the rushing ofour people. Leslie was fond of Bermudatoo."

Tommy says that Mrs. Harris has improved greatly in health in California, and will now try to keep on keeping on in the dry air of Arizona.

The last of March Rose wrote that Mrs. Rose was recuperating from the tire and strain of winter in an Amherst hospital. Although the arthritis was after him, he "had already written eight chapters of a sketch for his children andgrandchildren—Memories of a Grandfather.' " On Easter morning he will speak to the men of his church club on the question, "If a man die, will he liveagain?" The Secretary would like to know what he says.

Biff writes that he and Mrs. Kelly have kept well during the winter and that he saw, at the Dartmouth dinner in St. Petersburg, White and Austin '85, Gage and Sanborn '87, and Earle and Frost '89. Our Mary Frost writes that she had 30 guests for tea in St. Petersburg, Fla., on the day of the Florida Dartmouth dinner. She also says that she leaves for the North April 15, via Orlando, Winter Park, and DeLand, Fla., where she has many friends.

Here's hoping that many of us see the Kellys and Our Mary this summer.

Secretary, 215 Walnut St., Montclair, N. J.