Fred T. Dunlap—reports starting, with Mrs. Dunlap, soon after the DartmouthHarvard game for his winter quarters in St. Petersburg. If we read his card correctly there were 2 reasons for his early departure, the score of the Harvard game and the winter scene on the card he was using, the one showing Rollins Chapel and Dartmouth Row with the elm trees as bare as last year's bean poles, the tops of the buildings showing above the snowdrifts. It reminded Fred of the March storm of 1888 and Florida looked good to him.
Fred L. Pattee—says that again he has returned to Coronado Beach and his work at Rollins College after spending part of the summer at Tryon in the N. C. Mountains, that still he longs for a sight of the N. H. hills but "Oh the pathos of distance," wishes he like Dunnie and Mercury had wings on his heels that he might flit from plain to mountains with the ease of some of our class. But says Pat—"l have foul Spark Plugs and a badly worn commentator (perhaps he means commutator, it's all the fault of the typewriter) and part of the time I hit only on 3 cylinders but I still am able to run without being towed." So says Prof. Pattee, our master of metaphor.
Mrs. Fred A. Whittemore, wife of ourFred, had no peace of mind or body on Oct. 3rd for her many friends in Hanover and all of Grafton County had learned this was her 85th birthday. So says the GraftonEnterprise via Fred Pattee. You will recall that Mrs. Whittemore lives in Hanover with her 2 younger children, Dolloff and Annie. Her older son Wilfred is a banker in Washington and Leila the older girl is the wife of Ralph Trovillion of St. Louis. Besides her 4 children she has 4 grandchildren and one greatgrandchild.
Secretary, 11 Oak St., Belmont, Mass. Treasurer, 135 Summer St., Maiden, Mass.