Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, February 18, 1897, Page 3, Image 3

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    YALE ALUMNI WHEHEKLY.
ALUMNI NOTES.
Conducted by JoHN Jay.
[ Graduates are invited to contribute to this column.)
*54—-Alexander. S. Twombly has
recently written a book, entitled: ‘“Ine
Masterpieces of Michael Angelo and
Milton,” (Silver, Burdett & Co.)
*5S—Dr. William S. Hubbell has re-
cently resigned the pastorate of the
North Presbyterian church of Buffalo,
Lae &
’60—‘‘Addresses and Fragments in
Prose and Verse’ (Chicago: A. C.
McClure. & Co.. is the title of a vol-
ume which has recently been edited
by Edward G. Mason in memory of
the author, the late James S. Norton,
65.
’°64—-Mr. Selah Brewster Strong was
married to Miss May Lefferts on
Thursday last in the Church of the
Incarnation, Madison avenue and
Thirty-fifth street, New York. They
are going to live at Richmend Hill on
Long Island.
*71i—-Charles H. Clark of Hartford,
Conn., left on Tuesday, Feb. 16, for
the city of Mexico. He will return
in a few weeks by water from Vera
Cruz, stopping at Havana.
*74—-The members of the bar of New
Haven county have petitioned. to the
judges of the Court of Common Pleas
that George M. Gunn be reappointed
Prosecuting Attorney for the Court of
Common Pleas, criminal side, for the
ensuine term.
°79—The marriage of Severgn Bouyn
Sharpe to Miss Frances Paynitar, will
take place on Wednesday, Feb. 7.
Ernest Carter, ’79, will act as best
man.
°*82—-Samuel C. Hopkins and Miss
Mary Howland Pell will be married in
New York City on April 18.
°82—Prof. Erwin Hinckley Barbour
has recently published three small
pamphlets, being extracts from Publi-
cation No. V., of the Nebraska Acad-
emy of Sciences, on the ‘‘Deposits of
Volcanic Ash and Fossil Diatoms in
Nebraska’”’ and on ‘‘Progress Made in
the Study of Daemonelix.”’
*84—-Henry C. Hopkins, who has
been seriously ill with tthe typhoid
fever, has recovered, and will sail for
Genoa, Italy, on Feb. 27.
°85—William Scoville Case was nom-
inated Judge of the Common Pleas
Court of Hartford, February 9, to suc-
ceed Judge David S. Calhoun. The
Hartford Courant speaks of the nom-
inee in the following terms:—‘Mr.
William §S. Case, nominated yesterday
as Judge Calhoun’s successor on the
bench of the Common Pleas Court, is
one of the younger members of the
Hartford Bar, a son of ex-Speaker
William C. Case, and a member of
the firm of Case, Bryant & Case. He
has a Yale sheepskin (now nearly
twelve years old), quiet, unobtrusive
manners, literary tastes, and an ex-
perience of the joys of authorship.
Although the law is proverbially a
jealous mistress, he has written and
_published a romantic novel.’
°86S.—Calvert Townley, Ph. B., M. E.,
formerly of Pittsburgh, Pa., has been
advanced to the position of assistant
to the first vice-president of the West-
inghouse Electric Manufacturing com-
pany.
"87 'T. S—Frank P. Lynch and Miss
Agnes Eustice, of Hartford, were re-
cently married in that city.
*87—Announcement has been madeof
the engagement of Frank D. Tuttle to
Miss Florence Guertin of Brooklyn.
*88—Henry HE. Stevens, Jr., has re-
moved from 164 West Ninety-second
street to 272 West Highty-ninth street,
New York City.
*88—Herbert Cushing Tolman is one
of the editors of a book called “Greek
and Roman Mythology,’ published by
Leach, Shewell & Sanborn.
*89—A. Henry Mosle has been taken
into the law firm of Curtis, Malet,
Provost & Zolt, New York City, as a
partner.
°39Hon.—The Macmillan company
will publish soon “Biblical Quotations
in Old English Prose Writers,” by
Professor Albert @.. Cook.
*89—The second volume of Charles
Foster Kent’s “History of the Hebrew
People.” (Charles Scribner & Sons),
has recently been published.
790—G. H. Capen has changed his
address to 38 Westmoreland Place, St.
Louis, Mo.
’91—Rev. R. Hilliard Gage was mar-
ried to Miss Carrie Pardee Worden in
the Walnut Street Presbyterian
Church, Philadelphia, Thursday even-
ing, January 21. J. Q. Tilson, ’91, was
one of the ushers. Mr. Gage is now
pastor at Wenonah, N. J.
’91S.—G. S. Eddy is traveling among
the universities of India.
’92—-EXben F. Stevens has recently en-
tered the New York Stock Exchange,
92—Arthur L. Day, Ph. D., has
changed his address to 67 Grove street,
New Haven, Conn.
792—-Harry A. G. Abbe is residing at
Ontario, Cal., now, and expects to re-
turn to Hartford, Conn., in May.
799--H. 18. Wright, Jr., has entered
into a partnership with G. S. Potter,
attorney-at-law, of Buffalo, N. Y.
°92--F’. S. Woodruff has accepted a
position in the law office of his father,
Cc. H. Woodruff, 120 Broadway, New
York City.
’92—Hon. Deg. Lawrence Hutton is
the author of a book entitled ‘“‘Literary
Landmarks of Florence,’’ recently is-
sued by Harper Bros.
792—-Alfred H. Swayne has recently
returned from a journey around the
world, and is now a member of the
firm of Swayne & Swayne, 120 Broad-
way, New York City.
99— Alfred H. Swayne has resumed
the practice of law at 120 Broadway,
New York, after an absence of a year
and a half spent in a journey around
the world.
7929S.—N. Dwight Harris sailed for
Germany on January 20. He intends
to enter the University of Berlin and
take a two or three years’ course in
Ancient and Medieval History. He
has just finished a two years’ course
in history at Chicago University.
°983—George M. Creevey, who egrad-
uated from the College of Physicians
and Surgeons last Spring, is now an
ambulance surgeon at Roosevelt Hos-
pital, New York. He will continue
there for another year, and then go
abroad to study. —
’93S.—J. B. Fair has gone South for
the rest of the Winter. His address
is Palm Beach, Florida.
°983—Hon. Rev. George A. Gordon of
Boston, has recently written a book
entitled, “Immortality and the New
Theodicy.’’ 3
’*94—A. P. Nipgen is now practising
law in Cincinnati. aa
"94—S. B. Martin has opened a law
office in New Haven.
’°94—J. P. Linahan is now in the
casket business in New Haven.
’94.—Charles N. Hulburt has been
admitted to the bar of Connecticut.
’94—Winthrop McKim has recently
been admitted to the New York Bar.
°94—-F". S. Crosley has opened an
office for the practice of law in Brook-
lyn.
’"94—-Charles N. Hulburt has been ad-
mitted to the bar to practice in Con-
necticut.
’94—G. W. Olmsted is at present with
the firm of Schoellkoft & Matthews of
Buffalo, N. Y.
’"94-J. C. Sawyer has been appoint-
ed manager of the Somersworth Ma-
chine Co, of Dover, N. H.
’"94—Frederick Lynch, ’97T.S., will
occupy the pulpit of the United Church
next Sunday morning.
’°94—G .H. Ryder is at present study-
ing medicine in the College of Physi-
cians and Surgeons, in New York.
"94—A. Mitchell has given up his
position at Beirut, Syria, and is now
studying at the Auburn Theological
Seminary.
*94—-Henry Payne Whitney arrived in
San Francisco, Feb. 14, from Yoko-
hama. He will leave for New York on
the 19th.
’°94—E.. R. Thomas is assistant treas-
urer of the Standard Straw Board
Co., and president of the Ohio South-
ern Railway.
°94—-W.. H.. Sallmon sails in June for
Australia, where he is to act as the
secretary of the Austral-Asia Student
Union, an association for Christitan
work, corresponding to the Young
Men’s Christian Association of this
country.
94 L. S.—Yale’s first graduate to en-
list in the Cuban army is Oliver Perry
Merritt. Mr. Merritt has just sailed
for Cuba, where he will enlist on the
side of the insurgents. He was a
member of the Connecticut National
Guard, and came to New Haven from
the law Office of Judge Brewster of
Danbury, where he had studied for
two years. He is at present a mem-
ber of the New York Bar.
94-Lawrence B. Jones has been ad-
mitted to the bar to practice in Penn-
sylvania.
95--J. J. Walworth has entered the
Newton Theological Seminary at New-
ton, Mass.
959.—R. H. Thayer is now traveling
in the service of the Standard Radia-
tor Co., of Buffalo, N. Y.
7955.—_A. Z. Huntington has. ob-
tained a position with the Scranton
Gas and Water Co., Scranton, Pa.
95H. C. Goodwin has_ recently
been elected secretary and treasurer
of the Stimson Lumber Co., Newburn,
Nw Ga
74g—-T,. FE’. Archbald is one of the
board of directors of the Auburn
Seminary Journal.
96—F. L. Griffeth has removed to
Columbus, Ohio, where he is engaged
in editing the ‘Daily Reporter.”
<> La
Be AR) aft
Obituary.
HON. LEONARD E. WALES, 745,
The Hon. Leonard E. Wales, Judge
of the United States Courts for the
District of Delaware, died at his
home in Wilmington, Del., on the
night of February 8. He had been ill
put a short time, and his death was
a great surprise to all. It was caused
by bronchitis, which resulted from an
attack of the grip.
Judge Wales was born in Wilming-
ton on November 26, 1823. His schooi
days were distributed among several
academies, but he finished his prepara-
tion for college at the Hopkins Gram-
mar School of New Haven.
On graduating from Yale in 1845 he
began a course of law under his
father’s instruction, and on May 8,
1848, he was admitted to the bar. He
was then for two years associated
with John A. Allderdice, a young
brother lawyer, in editing the Dela-
ware State Journal, which was the
organ of the Whig party in that State.
For several years he was clerk of the
United States Courts in the Delaware
‘District, and in 1853 he was elected
’ City Solicitor at Wilmington, and was
re-elected in the folowing year.
Governor Wales occupied several
important positions in the army dur-
ing the Civil War. On October 1, 1864,
he was appointed by Governor Can-
non, Associate Judge at New Castle
County. This position Judges Wales
filled until March 6, 1884, when, by
President Cleveland, he was appointed
Judge of the United States Court, to
Succeed Judge Edward G. Bradford,
who died January 17, 1884. He had
filled that position with great ‘accep-
tability to both thie profession and the
people of his State.
In politics Judge Wales was origin-
ally a Whig, but he had been a mem-
ber of the Republican party since its
organization in Delaware in 1856. He
was a inember of the Presbyterian
Church and took an interest in its
affairs. From 1879 until a few years
ago Judge Wales was president of the
Delaware Historical Society, and prob-
ably took more interest in it than any
other man in the State. He was
president cf the Cincinnati Society and
Sons of the American Revolution.
Judge Wales was never married, and
made his home with his late sister,
Miss Wales, and his surviving sister,
Mrs. Bissell.
A New Haven
lawyer, who knew
Judge Wales
rersonally, writes of
, goim:—
“He was a man of unusual simplic-
ity of nature and manner, remarkably
cordia’, sympathetic and graceful in
his companionship with his friends,
and with a memory ready with its in-
teresting and instructive store of
reading and reminiscence. He always
displayed a great interest in the Col-
lege and the success of its graduates,
old and young. On the bench he won
the respect of all by his careful and
conscientious performance of ‘his very
exacting duties. For a long time (my
impression is for three years or more)
he carried the burden of Judge Nix-
on’s Court in the District of New Jer-
sey during that judge’s temporary
disability, hearing and deciding many
“important cases.’’
BERNARD A. PRATTE, °46.
Bernard Antoine Pratte, ’46, died at
Decatur, Wise Co., Texas, February 1,
1897.
He was a son of Bernard Pratte of
St. Louis, Mo., where he was born
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August 5, 1825, and a grandson of
Bernard Pratte, founder of the Amer-
ican Fur Co. The father of Bernard
Antoine was twice mayor of St. Louis.
The Prattes beonged to the old French
residents of St. Louis, and were con-
nected in business and by marriage
with the Chonteaus, Cabannes and
other old French families of St. Louis,
many of whom were engaged in the
fur trade, and in which John Jacob
Astor laid the foundation of his great
fortune. After graduating, Pratte
studied law and established himself
in St. Louis. When the war broke out
he entered the Confederate Army as
a private, and later became an ord-
nance Officer. After the war he en-
tered commercial business and later
became secretary of an insurance com-
pany at Atlanta. For some years past
he had resided at Decatur. He was
buried at St. Louis. His wife was
Eliza Gibson Edwards of Louisville,
Ky. He left no children.
WILLIAM LAMPSON, ‘62.
William Lampson, ’62, died at his
residence in Le Roy, N. Y., on Sun-
day, February 14. On January il,
1896, Mr. Lampson suffered a slight
stroke of paralysis, and for several
months was unable to leave his house.
his
condition became worse, and since
that time was in very feeble health.
Mr. Lampson was born in Le Roy,
N. Y., on February 28, 1840, and was
the son of Miles P. Lampson. He re-
ceived his preliminary education in his
native town, and entered College in
1868. After graduation Mr. Lampson
studied for two years in Germany and
in this country. In 1867 he received
the degree of LL.B. from Columbia.
In 1869 he became president of the
First National Bank of Le Roy, a po-
sition which he held until the time of
his death. For several years previous
to his death he led a very retired life,
devoting a great deal of his time to
reading and study. Mr. Lampson
never married, and has no near rela-
tives in this country.
WALTER MURPHY, ’82.
News has just been received of the
death of Walter Murphy; ’82, on Feb. 5,
after an illness of only three days at Salt
(Continued on sixth page.)
Tighe, Lane Wheeler & Farnham
Attorneys at Law,
109-112 Manhattan Building,
St. Paul, Minn.
AMBROSE TIGHE. | JOHN W. LANE.
HOwaRD WHEELERz CHARLES W. FARNHAM
C. P. WURTS, - - Yale ’80,
Insurance and Investments.
184 LaSalle Street, - Chicago, Iil.
Direct cable code with English Lloyds, also
Patriotic Assurance Co. of Dublin (capital
£1,500,000), and other foreign companies. Spe-
cial facilities for placing surplus and difficult
lines. Correspondence solicited with insurers
and agents. :
Choice 6 per cent. mortgages on improved Chicago
property for sale,
GONNECTICUT QUARTERLIES
WANTED.
A fair price will be paid for
Numbers 1 and 2 of Vol. I, of
the Connecticut Quarterly. Any
persons having these numbers
who are willing to dispose of them
will confer a favor by communi-
cating with this office.