Evidently, The Troubadour is not without some tonic effect. William V. Dixey, executive director of the architectural division of the Emergency Planning and Research Bureau, Boston, says that after an exceedingly difficult day, very tired, and perhaps a bit depressed, he read the Ernest Poole article and the other articles in the June number. After reading our little magazine, he says, “it is amazing how one finds himself among the fields of New Hampshire; troubles and worries evaporate into thin air. It is without doubt the most refreshing magazine that comes to our home.”
“On a perfect fall day,” writes Mrs. Russell A. Wentworth of Baltimore “we made a trip by motor to Mt. Washington. I thought I had never seen anything so gorgeous as the sun shining on and filtering through the multi-colored leaves. Then around the next curve a lake of crystal water would burst into view. One beautiful scene followed another so rapidly that we were completely at a loss for words to express our enjoyment and appreciation of the beauty we were privileged to view.”








