A most welcome letter reaches us from Willard Warner of Chattanooga, Tennessee, known to all classmates as "Cap" Warner. "Cap" gets his title from being Captain of our Class Baseball Nine and well did he fill the job.
"Cap" writes he is living alone at his present address. His single daughter with whom he had been living has recently died at the age of 55. He has, still living, a son and a married daughter with a family of six children.
"Cap" has always been deeply interested in Evangelical and other Religious work and has been a member of the Episcopal Church since infancy and is also an active member of the Chattanooga Billy Sunday Club, which he says has been in existence twenty years with a membership of 45 and has not failed to meet every Wednesday during that period. "Cap," writes Billy Sunday said "if the Episcopal Church wakes up—the devil will have to look out."
"Cap" now is and has been for eighteen years Treasurer of the Public School Bible Teaching Work and writes he has plenty to do to keep him occupied, so that he will not die of inertia. He has been insisting for 15 years that the Episcopal Church engage in the work of personal evangelism by its members as well as by its clergy and is still speaking and writing for it and claims Evangelism is the only way to attain that objective; so it is easy to understand that "Cap's" greatest interest in life is "Evangelism."
Notwithstanding, however, his Religious activities, he still finds time to engage in business affairs as secretary of a large corporation manufacturing cotton yarn underwear. He is intensely interested in his classmates and sends best wishes to all.
There are some classmates from whom we have yet to hear—but we live in hopes.
Secretary, 10 Post Office Square, Boston, Mass