Harold M. Morse of East Cleveland, Ohio, has filed credentials and made application for membership with the Grandfathers' Club, that popular and rapidly expanding organization within the class. Emmy Cleo McNelly and Mary Ellen Morse are the young ladies who have won the admiration of Grandfather Harold.
Along comes another announcement that Richard Brown Harwood of Battle Creek, Mich., made his debut on July 27. '943' gladdening the hearts of Dick and Helen Brown, in Fall River, Mass.
Heap Big Chief Cutter, not to be outdone by his braves, says that the Grandfathers' Club is something worth while and I guess I'll go along, announcing the birth of the young lady Ann Cutter, of Ithaca, N. Y.
Fred Baker of Lancaster, N. H., writes interestingly of his North Country during these war times. Draft Appeal Agent for his district, he praises the work of his draft board which has rendered his task an easy one. Out of a population of 3,000, the services have over 250 men, and when one adds a considerable number who have gone away into various war activities, an appreciable effect is noted in the small town. Girls and women are as numerous as men in the pulp mills, and canning and cold storage of berries has kept everybody busy this fall. Farmers, practically devoid of young labor, have worked feverishly in order to produce and store their crops. During war one is apt to think of the activities of the cities, but the small country towns furnish a most interesting picture of activity.
About the middle of November the Dartmouth-Cornell game will be played in the Harvard Stadium, and it seems that this might be another fine opportunity for an after-the-game-dinner at the Commander in Cambridge. We recall the delightful occasion of last year, following the Harvard game, and the surprisingly large attendance, so let's all plan to meet again this year. Definite notification of plans will be mailed you.
Secretary, 198 Humphrey St., Marblehead, Mass. Treasurer, 85 John St., New York, N. Y.