Mrs. George H. Hitchcock is a new subscriber to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE. She lives with her sisters in Terrace Park, Ohio. When George came on for our Twenty-fifth Reunion she accompanied him, and they brought with them their son Hiram, then a boy of eight. He is now connected with the laboratory of the Philip Carey Company, makers of fabricated roofing and siding. He is married and has a son, George Hiram, aged eleven. They live at gag Kearney Ave., Hart- well, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Another new subscriber to the MAGAZINE is Ralph Doane. He is a genuine Cape Codder, a descendant of a long line of forbears who lived on Cape Cod. Deacon John Doane {1591-1686) was probably the earliest settler. He came from England and settled in Plymouth, Mass., in 1630, and in 1644 he changed his residence to Eastham on the tip of the Cape. For many years he was prominent in public affairs. Ralph Doane enjoys country life and during the hunting season he is a familiar figure with his gun, accompanied by his bird dog or rabbit hound. He owns and maintains the large ancestral home in Harwich Port in which he was born and now lives.
John B. (Jack) Sparhawk, eldest son of our late classmate, serving as an airborne engineer in New Guinea, is now a sergeant and brown as a native. He reports that we must not be optimistic as to the war there being over very soon. "It's going to be a long, tough job," he writes.
In San Diego, Calif., there was recently held an initial gathering of Dartmouth men in that vicinity. Of all present, Chester Flagg was the oldest by fifteen years, and incidentally the youngest married man. Among those attending was Carleton Frost '44, a grandson of the late Gilman D. Frost '86. The Dartmouth group was brought together by the energetic good-fellowship of William T. (Bill) Adams '34.
Mrs. Nathan (Mellita) Kendall, widow of "Nate" Kendall, sold her home in Tucson, Ariz., during the past year and now resides in Milwaukee, Wise., with address at Astor Hotel.
Some late reports regarding families of deceased classmates are as follows: The family of Leslie H. Ingham now living consists of Mrs. Ingham; a daughter, Mrs. Florence Ingham Cornell, married and four children; two sons, Howard E. Ingham, married and six children; and Herbert L. Ingham, married but no children reported. There are seven great-grandsons and one great-granddaughter. Mrs. Ingham lives with her daughter, Mrs. Cornell and family at 4256 Jennings Rd., Cleveland, Ohio, and her son Howard and family live next door.
The family of Edward S. Riley now living consists of two daughters and two sons: Miss Cora E. Riley, 221 Otis St., West Newton, Mass.; Charles S. Riley, Dorchester Rd., Darien, Conn.; married and one child (a daughter); Edward C. Riley, The Lee Side Farm, Lumberville, Pa., married and two children (son and daughter); Mrs. Marion Riley Curtis, 55 Silver Hill Rd., Weston, Mass.
Dr. and Mrs. Nathaniel K. Noyes are making their annual fall visit to Hanover and will be at the Hanover Inn, as usual. While there they plan to attend the Coast Guard football game on November 11.
Under the excellent management of Capt. and Mrs. Ford Kent Sayre in recent years the Hanover Inn has become a popular rendezvous for Dartmouth men visiting Hanover, also for their families. Since the death of Capt. Sayre last July, in which Mrs. Sayre has our sincere sympathy, she has taken over the sole management of the Inn which she so efficiently managed during her husband's absence in war service.
A dinner for Dartmouth men of the eighties and early nineties is to be held at the University Club, Boston, the evening before the Notre Dame-Dartmouth football game at Fenway Park, Boston, on Oct. 14. Frost and your secretary plan to attend the game.
Secretary and Treasurer, 108 Mt. Vernon St., Boston 8, Mass.