Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, December 10, 1896, Page 3, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    SNA Toe. A TUM Ne
ALUMNI NOTES.
Conducted by JOHN JAY.
[ Graduates are invited to contribute to this column.]
66 L. §—Hon. William E. Simonds
will deliver a lecture entitled, ‘In the
Woods,” at the annual meeting of the
Connecticut Board of Agriculture at
Danbury, Conn., on December 16.
‘68 David McG. Means has an ar-
ticle in the December ‘Forum’ on
“Will Government by the People En-
dure ?’’
72 | G—Hdward P. Armstrong, who
has been assistant pastor of the Cen-
tral church in Rochester, N. Y., for
the past two years, has just accepted
a similar position in the Humphrey
street Congregational church, New
Haven, Conn.
"79—Thomas B. Marston was mar-
ried to Miss Julia D. Ewart at Chica-
go, Ill., on October 22, 1896.
729 Charles E. Richards was recent-
ly injured in a runaway accident upon
his Southern California ranch. The
wagon, in overturning, caught his leg
in such a@ manner as to injure the ~
knee joint. He has been laid up for
some time, but hopes soon to be out
again.
7299 At the twelfth annual meeting
of the American Historical Associa-~
tion to be held at Columbia Univer-
sity on December 29, Professor Ed-
ward G. Bourne, of Yale, will read a
paper on “The Use of History Made
by the Framers of the Constitution.”
7298 _Wdward P. Eastwick, Jr., has
recently become Superintendent of the
American Sugar Refining Company’s
refineries in New Orleans, La.
*s4—-Selden P. Spencer has. been
elected circuit judge of St. Louis coun-
ty, Mo. Ro eee
"24S —Thomas C. Johnson, who has
been connected with the Winchester
Repeating Arms Company of New Ha-
ven since graduation, has recently in-
vented a cartridge holder, or clip,
which is used to hold cartridges in
place, in vertical magazine firearms.
°25—James A. Merrill was recently
appointed Municipal Judge for the
city of Rutland, Vt.
°86—Judson S. Dutcher has been ap-
pointed class secretary.
°87S.—Grayson G. Knapp, formerly of
Auburn, N. Y., has removed to Buf-
falo, and is engaged in business there.
°88 T. S—Rev. Robert L. Marsh has
accepted a call to the pastorate of the
Congregational church at Humboldt,
Iowa.
°90S.—Harry G. Day has become
Class Secretary in place of Alexander
W. Evans, M. D., resigned.
790S.—Philip Allen is now in the em-
ploy of the Michigan Southern Rail-
way Company, acting as Superinten-
dent at Grand Rapids, Mich. -
791—Thomas G. Adams has become
instructor in physical culture at the
New Haven Y. M. C. A.
°91—Norman McClintock has accept-
ed a position with the Otto Gas Engine
Co., of Philadelphia, Pa.
°91—Charles G. Carter, formerly of
Titusville, Pa., is now permanently lo-
cated in Pittsburg, with the firm of
Roberts & Carter, counsellors at law.
°"91—TThe marriage of Alfred L. Aiken
to Miss Elizabeth Hopkins, of Worces-
ter, Mass., took place in All Saints
church, Worcester, on November 25.
’"91—-Stuart Dodge Jessup, who was
an instructor in the Woodbridge
School, New York, is teaching Syrians
English in the Sidon, Syria, Academy,
aiding Rev. Dr. Ford in preparing
seme boys for college and others for
native missionary work. He resides
In the home of his father, Rev. S. Jes-
sup, “De Di, 36a
°92—James T. Carr has been spend-
ing several weeks in Tacoma, Wash.
792 L. S—Morgan J. Flaherty has
been appointed editor of the Lewiston,
Me., Sun, having formerly been editor
of the Bar Harbor Record.
°92—-The marriage of Eben F. Ste-
vens to Miss Evelena Babcock Dixon,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William P.
Dixon, of New York, took place in St.
Thomas’ Church, in that city on De-
cember 2.
°92S.—The marriage of Sherman H..
Bouton to Miss Olive Ely, of Chicago,
will take place in that city on Decem-
ber 30.
792 L. S.—The engagement is an-
nounced of Francis W. Treadway to
Miss HEsther Frisbie, of Cleveland, O.
92 L. S.—John F. Carpenter, of Put-
nam, Conn., has been appointed Judge
Advocate General on the staff of Gov-
ernor Cooke, of Connecticut.
793—Frank E. Donnelly has opened a
law office at Rooms 11-15, Laning
Building, Wilkes Barre, Pa.
7983—The marriage of George H. Rice
to Miss Agnes G. Reynolds took place
in Scranton, Pa., on December 2.
798—Walter P. Judson, who grad-
uated from the Yale Law School last
June, has opened a law office in the
Exchange Building, New Haven, Ct.
7"983—Alvah S. Chisholm was married
to Miss Adele Corning, daughter of
Mr. W. H. Corning, of Cleveland, Ohio,
in Trinity Cathedral, on November 24.
Irwin B. Laughlin acted as best man.
Among the ushers were W. W. Smith,
"93; Adrian V. S. Lambert, ’93; Allyn
F. Harvey, °93; and W. A. Osborn, ’93.
793S.—Donn Barber is studying ar-
chitecture at the Ecole des Beaux Arts
in Paris. His address is 133 Boulevard
Raspail.
7°94—-Robert H. Nichols has obtained
the position of teacher of English in
the Hill School, Pottstown, Pa.
794—_Hamilton Holt is now on the
editorial staff of the Independent, 130
Fulton Street, New York City.
794--'T, Warrington Gosling is in-
structor in English Literature in the
Hughes High School, Cincinnati, Ohio.
794-R. EF’. Smith is pursuing a course
of study at Oxford, England, and ex-
pects to return to this country about
June 1.
794_-The address of W. B. Allison has
been changed, from Dubuque, Iowa, to
Assistant Clerk, Senate Committee on
Appropriations, Washington, D. C.
794--S, C. Kebabian is practicing law
in New York City, and has also been
elected to the Twenty-third Regiment,
N. Y. S. N. G. Address 48 Wall Street,
New York.
794 William M. Raymond has been
admitted to the Illinois bar and is
practicing law in connecticn with the
firm of Winston & Meagher, 1412 Mon-
adnock building, Chicago.
94 James R. Trowbridge, who is
with the Union Special Sewing Ma-
chine Co., has changed his address
from 27 Delaware Place, Chicago, IIl.,
to 578 East Division Street.
94 Frank S. Bunnell is taking a
post graduate course in the Univer-
sity of Minnesota and is also an in-
structor at Minneapolis Academy,
Minneapolis, Minn.
704— William E. Thoms, who was re-
cently admitted to the Connecticut
bar, has been made Commissioner of
Finance for the city of Waterbury,
Conn., and treasurer of the Connecti-
cut Federation of Cyclists.
794--T. LL. Pierson of the Traveler’s
Insurance Company, Hartford, has
been elected Secretary of the Connec-
ticut Society of the Sons of the Amer-
ican Revolution and also Secretary of
the Bachelors Club, of Hartford.
94S, — William I. Clock has recently
become traveling engineer for the firm
of A. A. Simonds & Co., Dayton, Ohio.
794 T. S—Rev. William F. Ireland
has just been installed pastor of the
South Avenue Church, of Syracuse,
Ni Y:
"94S.—-Mlisha G. Trowbridge has ac-
cepted a position as designer for the
Passaic Rolling Mill, of Paterson, N.
795—G. B. Carlson is now studying
law in the office of A. B. Calef, Mid-
dletown, Conn. .
°95—Harry N. Hyde has entered the
law office of Hitchcock, Dahoney &
Hitchcock, Syracuse, N. Y.
95—Edward B. Lyman has_ been
made sporting editor and writer of
special articles on the Springfield,
Mass., Republican.
96—F. H. Billard has removed to
Chicago, Ill., where his address is No.
4,335 Emerald Avenue.
’96—The address of Eliot Sumner,
secretary of the class of 1896, was in-
correctly printed in the last issue of
the Weekly. His present address is
1411 Highth avenue, Altoona, Pa.
’96S.—Frank F. Brooks has gone in-
to business with the Pennsylvania Fi-
delity and Trust Company, of Pitts-
burg, Pa.
VV Ese
Obituary.
REV. OLIVER CRANE, 745.
Rev. Oliver Crane, D. D., LL. D.,
°45, died of paralysis at his home, 12
Concord Square, Boston, Mass., on No-
vember 29. He was born in West
Bloomfield (now Montclair), N. J., July
12, 1822. He prepared for College at
the Bloomfield Academy and was grad-
uated from Yale College in 1845, hav-
ing entered his class in Sophomore
year. After graduation he taught at
a boarding school in Bordentown, N.
J., for over a year. He then entered
the Andover Theological Seminary,
where he remained a year, finally
graduating from the Union Theological
Seminary in 1848.
He was married, September 5, 1848,
to Miss Marion D. Turnbull, daughter
of John Turnbull, of New York.
Dr. Crane sailed for Turkey from
Boston in 1849, as a missionary and
spent the first year in Broosa, Bithy-
mia, learning the Turkish language.
He had charge of the stations at Ain-
tab and Aleppo, North Syria, for over
two years and in 1853 was assigned to
Marsovan, near the Black Sea, but re-
turned to America in the Autumn of
that vear.
He then accepted a call to the Pres-
byterian Church, in Huron, N. Y., and
was installed its pastor in January,
1854. Three years later he accepted a
call to the Presbyterian Church in
Waverly, N. Y., and in 1860 again
sailed for Turkey, where he was sta-
tioned as missionary at Adrianople.
Tn 1863 he was compelled to return to
this country again. The following year
he became pastor of the Presbvterian
Church at Garbondale, Pa. He re-
signed his charge at that place in 1870
and in 1872 made an extensive tour
through Furope and the Fast. In 1874
he was’ re-appointed missionary at
Aintab, but returned on account of ill-
health in about seven months.
After his return Dr. Crane retired
from active ministerial duties, and de-
voted himself to literary pursuits. In
1889 he received the degree of LL. D.
from “Westminster College, Mo. He
always took a keen interest in the af-
fairs of Yale and at the time of his
death was Secretary of his class.
EBENEZER ANDREWS, 761.
Wibenezer Andrews, °’61, died at his
residence in Milan, Ohio, November
18th, 1896, after a brief illness. He
was the second son of Ebenezer An-
drews, Yale, 1817, and the great grand-
son of Ebenezer Jesup, Yale, 1760. He
prepared for College at Phillips Acad-
emy. Andover, Mass, entered and
eraduated with his class at Yale.
After graduating, he spent a year
at the New Haven Law School, and
then went to Chicago, Ill.. and en-
eaged in business. He remained there
until 1876, when he removed with his
family to Milan, O. He leaves a wife
and daughter.
FREDERICK A. MANNING, ’81.
¥Wrederick Arnold Manning, M. D.,
91, died at Denver, Colorado, on
Thursday, December 38, in the thirty-
ninth year of his age.
Mr. Manning was born in the year
4257, and entered the Class of ’81, at
Yale. On graduation, he studied med-
scine at the College of Physicians and
Surgeons in New York City. from
which he graduated in May, 1884. Of
late years he practiced as a doctor in
Denver, Colorado.
———_+eo—__—_-
Newark Alumni Association,
A meeting of the Alumni of Newark,
N. J., was held in that city on Nov. 30.
About thirty were present and a very
enjoyable evening with singing was
passed. So much enthusiasm was
aroused that it was resolved to form
a permanent organization. For this
purpose a committee composed of Rev.
Dr. Timothy J. Lee, 75; John G. C.
Sonn, °79; Schuyler B. Jackson, °71;
Malcolm .MacLear, ’91, was appoint-
ed. It was decided to co-operate with
the Essex County Alumni association
if possible. The next meeting will be
held on January 15.
foe ee
Lafayette cicsed her football season
on Thanksgiving Day, without having
suffered a single defeat. Only ten
points were scored against her. Next
Fall all but one of the present team
will be in college.
Seay
=
.W. EMERY
C 246 FIFTH AVENUE
NEw YORK
Tarlor...
Correct Styles for
Dress, Business
Golf, Riding
Bicycle Suits
Bien cg
ae
TIFFANY & CO.
Makers of Corporate and Frater=
nity Seals and Dies Silver Testi-
monials Athletic Prizes Class Pins
Society Emblems Engraved Invi-
tations and Stationery for the
Leading Universities Colleges and
other Educational Institutions.
Cuts of Watches
and Chains sent
upon request.
UNION SQUARE
NEW YORK.
Prize Examinations in Sacred
Literature.
The American Institute of Sacred
Literature of Chicago offers for the
year 1896-97 six prizes for the best ex-
aminations in Hebrew, New Testa-
lished in the secular and
oe
ment, Greek and the English Bible.
The examinations are open to all col-
lege men and women of the United
States and Canada, and the prizes to
be awarded are$100 for the best paper
and $50 for the second best paper in
each of the three subjects mentioned.
The names of the successful contest-
anti and of the institutions with
which they are connected will be pub-
religious
press of the United States and Can-
ada. :
The purpose of the Institute in of-
fering these examinations is chiefly to
induce college students to obtain a
working knowledge of Hebrew and
New Testament Greek, together with
an adequate biblical instruction so
that data may be procured by which
to convince the vast number of col-
leges in which the departments are
not included, that it is important to
add to their int2llectual equipment,
facilities for the best work in these
subjects. Should the results of the
examinations warrant their contin-
uance, prizes will be offered annually.
No entrance fee whatever is requir-
ed. The examination in the English
Bible is open to all college students
and those in Hebrew and New Testa-
ment Greek to all students as well as
to those who enter the first year class
of a Theological Seminary in the Au-
tumn of 1897, provided such students
are college men or women whose grad-
uation took place not earlier than
June, 1896. The privilege is reserved
of withdrawing one or all of these ex-
aminations should an insufficient num-
ber of candidates apply.
All three examinations will be held
on March 10, 1897, in whatever in-
stitute each candidate may be located.
The names of candidates for any or
ali of these examinations may be en-
rolled at once, but will not be receiv-
ed after January 1, 1897, except by
special permission of the principal of
the American Institute, Dr. William
R. Harper. The prizes will be award-
ed in June, 1897.
For forms of application and an-
nouncements, inquiries should be
made of the American Institute of Sa-
ered Literature, Hyde Park, Chicago,
Ill. As there is no income to the In-
stitute from this work the courtesy
of return postage will be appreciated.