Does everyone remember Archie Mills, slender, shy, with sensitive face and friendly ways? He has had much business interest on the west coast from Seattle and on toward the south. He has two competent and well educated sons and recently he assumed the satisfactions of a grandfather. He has a commercial position with a Los Angeles firm. He never writes but a classmate knows someone who knows a cousin of Mills and in this tenuous way we still hold Mills in class membership. Let us try to get him to our 45th reunion. His address is 692 Middletown, Huntington Park, California.
Carroll W. Morse in Boston is almost as silent as Mills. He is a bachelor, I believe, and a brokerage salesman for Halsey, Stuart Co., I know, and a man still young, vigorous and happy, I am told by those who see him at the University Club.
Frank Coakley is a Massachusetts lawyer with a home at 388 Harvard Street in Cambridge. The report is that he is in good health and excellent spirits.
Morton C. Tuttle has been quite seriously ill with pneumonia. Harry Chase, to whom a number of classmates owe much, reports an excellent prospect for an early and complete recovery.
John Tully Thorne: As soon as Thorne had finished his professional training he secured a public school position in New York City. Now for forty years he has continued teaching and some thousands of boys and girls have profited from his instruction. While still at his work in his class room this fall he was stricken with a serious illness and hurried to a hospital. He is now at home but in impaired health and it is possible that he has retired permanently from active school teaching. Five of his seven children are living and well established and there are several grandchildren. Thome's home is at 1018 Jackson Avenue, New York City.
Walter F. Kelly: A few months ago Dr. Kelly bought for eventual retirement a farm on the Squash Hollow Road, in New Milford, Conn. On this farm he spent the holidays with his daughter Mrs. Frances K. Carrington. The family Christmas card was a forest scene on the Kelly farm.
The class was filled with pride to read in the January issue of the ALUMNI MAGAZINE biographical and professional appreciation of Charles E. Bolser, teacher, scientist and professor at Dartmouth.
Secretary, State Capitol, Hartford, Conn.