Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, June 03, 1897, Page 7, Image 7

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    PN eo A LLU M Nee
IM TORS
" SHEFF.” ELECTIONS,
Taken Into the
From °99S.
Men Societies
The following men from 998. received
elections to Berzelius on Tuesday :
Carle Cotter Conway, of Oak Park,
Tl.
apes Philip Flint, of Los Angeles,
Cal.
Hades cas Windus Knight, of St. Louis,
Mo.
4 Otto Hayes Lindenberg, of Columbus,
Edward Armstrong McCullagh, of
Irvington-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Myron Turner Townsend, of New
York City. :
Louis Schnebly Treadwell, of Hurst-
ville, N. Y.
Willis Ogden Warren, of New York
City.
BOOK AND SNAKE.
The following members of ’99 S. re-
ceived elections to Book and Snake
Tuesday evening :
Archbald Marshall Bell, of Allegheny,
Pa. ;
Henry Skyrin Clark, of Cincinnati,
Ohio.
Philip Thornton Dashiell, of Bustle-
ton, Penn.
Osborne Atwater Day, of New Haven,
Conn.
Charles Randall Drummond, of St.
Louis, Mo. .
ee Howlett Durston, of Syracuse,
Edwin Milo Eddy, of Bay City, Mich.
Richmond Macleod Graff, of Pitts-
burg, Pa.
Leeds Mitchell, of Chicago, III.
Benjamin Venor Norton, of Detroit,
Mich. :
Pies Brady Sutphin, of Cincinnati,
i0.
Elections from the Scientific Fresh-
man Class have also been made as fol-
lows :
THETA Xi,
John Milton Fiske, Jr., of Chicago, M1.
Joseph Reed, of Pittsburg, Pa.
George Raymond Hall, of Philadel-
phia, Pa. 3
George Hall Smith, of Chicago, Ill.
Frederick Addison Warner, of Nauga-
tuck, Conn.
Frank Herbert Warren, Jr., of Chi- |
cago, Ill.
CHI PHI.
Donald Palmer Cameron, of Salt Lake
City, Utah.
Northrup Fowler, of New York City.
Louis Allston Gillet, of Chicago, Il.
Elisha Sears Lewis, of Springfield,
Mass.
George James Warner Mabee, Jr., of
Denver, Col.
Gilbert Cornwell Summerfield, of
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Herbert. Forsythe Van Every, of |
Brooklyn. N. Y.
William Gordon Woolfolk, of New |
York City.
From the class of Ninety-eight Sheff.
the following men have been taken to
the society :
Robert Ernest Broatch, of Middle- |
town, Conn.
Pierce William Grace, of Brooklyn,
Y )
Howard Blauvelt Jackson, of New
York City.
Allan Edgar Philbrick, of Little Sil- |
ver, N. J.
THETA DELTA CHI.
Ward Slosson Gregory, of Norwalk,
Conn.
Robert Goodell Church, of Meriden,
Conn.
Raymond G. Clapp, of Northampton,
Mass. :
Frederick M. Jourdain, of Branford, —
Conn.
DELTA PHI.
Frank Fowler Baldwin, of Honolulu,
Robert Livingston Dunn, of Tidioute,
a.
Charles J. Freeborn, of Paris, France.
James Albert Hogle, of Salt Lake
City, Utah.
Charles Rees Lloyd, Jr., of San Fran-
cisco; Cal.
Edward Everett Marshall, of Phila-
delphia, Pa. ;
Carl King Palmer, of Danville, Ill.
Alexander Hammond Rutherford, of
San Francisco, Cal.
Walter Murray Saunders, of Mont-
clair, Ni J,
Sidney Frank Shattuck, of Neenah,
Wis.
Seth Edward Thomas, Jr., of New
York City.
- Benjamin Fred Tritch, of Denver, Col.
¢
Why should an Educated Man
be Handicapped ?
—
One certainly is if he goes into business of any kind without
knowing what is likely to be required of him. Those who know
what is Best in Academie Education can appreciate most keenly
the best
PRACTICAL
EDUCATION.
Education in the minor details of any business may be
obtained, it is true, by experience.
But don’t be educated in this
way unless youmust. IT’S EXPENSIVE. Employers charge
dearly (in reduced wages) for what they teach. The long wait for
a fair salary means more than the small outlay and short time
required for thorough training in
Eastman Business College,
POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y.,
THE BEST TRAINING SCHOOL OF THE LAND.
Write for its catalogue. It will prove interesting reading.
If you cannot well attend the College you can certainly afford a
course of instruction BY CORRESPONDENCE.
[=-By the way, Lieutenant-Governor Timothy L. Woodruff, of
New York, Yale ’79, finished his education with a course
at Eastman.
104 Fifth Avenue, under Fifth
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S0LE AGENT=
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Edy
aT i:
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eines Z 4
MANS ||; GA
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‘No, boys; I have not been burning
the midnight oil to get all that material
for my address. I have not spent hun-
dreds for books of reference. I could
not have got these up to date facts and
figures in that way. : ;
“JT simply send to Romeike for
Press Clippings. ae
‘Day by day he sent me editorials and
original articles collected from thou-
sands of newspapers and periodicals
which are read in his offices, and I only
had to arrange the material.”
ROMEIKE’S
Press Cutting Bureau
will send you all newspaper clippings
which may appear about you, your
friends, or any subject on which you
want to be “up to date.”
A large force in my New York office
reads 650 daily papers and over 2,000
weeklies and magazines ; in fact, every
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through the European Bureaus, all the
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Clippings found for subscribers are
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Write for circulars and terms.
HENRY ROMEIKE,
139 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK.
Branches: London. Paris, Berlin. Sidney.