Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, June 10, 1897, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
(Continued from seventh page.)
'75.—Hon. Harry Higbee is one of the
Democratic nominees for judge in the
Eighth Judicial Circuit of Illinois. Mr,
Higbee was graduated from Yale in
1875, and attended the Columbia Law
School in New York and the Union
College of Law in Chicago. He was ad-
mitted to the bar in 1878, and since
that time has won the reputation of
being one of the ablest lawyers in
central Illinois. In 1888 he was elected
State Senator and reelected with an in-
creased majority in 1892.
’76—Hon. William Waldo Hyde has
been appointed a member of the Con-
necticut State Reformatory Commis-
sion by Governor Cooke.
’78—Harold S. Van Buren, of Spring-
field, Mass., has been appointed Consul
at Nice, France, by President McKin-
ley.
’"79S.—The wedding of Miss Mary
Say, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus
J. Lawrence, and Albert Lowry Web-
ster took place on Tuesday afternoon,
June 1, at Grace Church, New York.
The Rev. James B. Thomas of Cohas-
set, Mass., officiated. The best man
was Benjamin Webster, ’79. Among the
ushers were George H. Gilman, ’90;
William J. Comstock, ’79S.; Prof. Hor-
ace L. Wells, ’77S., and Dr. Howard
Van Rensselaer, ’818.
’87—The marriage of Miss Edith S.
White to Edward W. Goodenough,
M. D., took place at Waterbury, Conn.,
Wednesday, June 2nd. Rev. Arthur
Goodenough, ’62, asisted by the Rev.
Joseph Anderson, officiated, Dr. Ralph
S: Goodwin, ’90S., was best man.
’*88—Hervey R. Franklin is now prac-
ticing law at 518 Walnut Street, Phila-
delphia, Penn.
’$8—Bernard C. Steiner has been elect-
ed President of the Maryland State
Building Association. He will be pres-
ent, as one of the American delegates,
at the International Library Congress
in London, from July 13 to 17.
*88S.—The marriage of Charles W.
Stewart and Miss Ella Ornstein was
solemnized in New York city on Satur-
day, June 5, at the home of the bride’s
parents, 1389 West 7ist Street. Rev. Dr.
Madison C. ePters performed the cere-
mony, and the best man was Percy R.
Bolton, ’86S.
*°89 Ph. D.—Professor William O.
Krohn, who holds the Chair of Psy-
chology in the Illinois State University
at Champaign, has recently perfected a
very delicate piece of machinery for
measuring thought. It is called the
chronoscope. It is thought the instru-
ment will be particularly valuable in
the treatment of mental disorders. A
branch experimental laboratory has
been established at the Kankakee
Hospital for the Insane ,where already
25,000 experiments have been made.
The Chicago Sunday Tribune says: “It
has been demonstrated to the satisfac-
tion of the scientists interested in the
experiments that the presence of in-
sanity is made discernible by the ma-
chine before acute symptoms have
manifested themselves, thus pointing
the way to prevention, which is al-
ways better than cure. But its use is
not limited to this purpose merely, for
with it a diagnosis can be made in
cases of pronounced mental alienation
that could be made in no other way,
and with an accuracy that will disting-
uish the one-hundred-thousandth part
of a second as exactly as the anatomist
can measure the one-thousandth part
of an inch.”’
"90—Stowe Phelps has been promoted
to the position of Sergeant in Squadron
A, of New York City.
790T.S.—Rev. Hugh L. Elderdice has
recently been appointed President of
the Westminster, Md., Theological Sem-
inary of the Methodist Church.
’90—Invitations are out for the mar-
riage of Clayton C. Dorsey to Miss Mar-
guerite Montgomery, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John C. Montgomery, on
Tuesday evening, June 22, at 8 o’clock,
in St. John’s Cathedral, Denver, Col.
’90—Arthur W. Colton has an article
in the current number of the New En-
gland Magazine, entitled “In Gettys-
Pur: Lime; -a-Story:*
*90—The marriage of Stuart Henry
Rowe and Miss Agnes Helen Ford took
place on Friday, June 4, at Syracuse,
New York. Mr. and Mrs. Rowe will
be at home in Mankato, Minn., after
September 1.
’"91—The wedding of Miss Maud M.
Morris ,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mar-
shall E. Morris, and William Thurston
Hincks, will take place in the First
Baptist Church, Bridgeport, Conn., on
Tuesday evening, June 15.
°"92—F). H. Spaulding sailed for Eur-
ope on the Cunard Line steamship
‘Umbria,’ May 29, to be absent about
four months,
°92S.—Lucius L. Pattee has finished
a two-year’s service as interne of the
Rochester, N. Y. Homoeopathic Hos-
pital and will soon open an office in
Rochester,
°93.—Ralph Birdsall is at Middletown,
{onn., as private secretary to Bishop
Williams, in whose care he may here-
after be addressed.
_of Richard E.
| A. Pearl,
YALE ALU MINI
931, S.—The engagement is announced
Jeffery to Miss Blanche
of Boston. Mr. Jeffery is
law at 10 Tremont
now practicing
| Street, Boston.
| appointed City
Se ee eee
a a —————————————————— ‘
'938—Frank James Brown has been
Attorney of New Ha-
ven by Judge Bishop. Mr. Brown grad-
uated from the Yale Law School in
1895, and has since been connected with
the law firm of Averill & Matthewson,
of this city.
°94—-Richard H. Worthington has just
graduated from the Law School of the
University of Maryland.
’"94—-M. J. Gibbons has accepted @
position in the Civil Engineering De-
partment of the New York, New Ha-
ven and Hartford Railroad at New
Haven.
'94—-Charles A. Smith, Charles J.
Sniffen and Albert L. Whittaker, ’92,
were ordained deacons of the Protes-
tant Episcopal Church by Bishop Niles,
of New Hampshire, at Middletown,
Conn., on Wednesday, June 2.
"95 L. S.—Henry C. Burroughs has
opened a law office at 403 Main Street,
Bridgeport, Conn.
’°95L.S.—Howard C. Webb has been
appointed Assistant City Attorney of
New Haven. He is a member of the
law firm of Case, Ely & Case.
’"95—David M. Levy, of Cincinnati, O.,
has been admitted to the bar and to
membership in the law firm of Johnson
& Levy, in which his father is a part-
ner.
JSOSEPH DASH,
Room 16, - - 828 Chapel St.
Manufacturing Jeweler & Diamond Setter.
Repairing executed with great care.
Diamond Mountings a specialty.
Also, Class and Fraternity Pins.
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The best are Photographs.
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No Spread, Luncheon
or Banquet is complete
without
“ LONDONDERRY.”
Most of the Students of Yale
are preparing to earn their own livelihood—some in professions—
others in the
BUSINESS WORLD.
ee
Many of these on leaving the University will want to know what
will best promote their prospects in a business way. A young man
receives the best general education at Yale, but even after graduating
he may need to specialize in the vocation he intends to follow.
In
- preparing for a business career it is of course advantageous for him to
fit himself adequately for his chosen pursuit. ,
Many College men have found profit in taking one or more of
our special courses.
others would be glad to know of
It is therefore not unreasonable to suppose thas
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Members New York Stock Exchange.
Stocks and Bonds Bought and —
Investment Securities a Specialty.
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Members New York Stock Exchange.
Buy and Sell on Commission, Stocks and
Bonds dealt in at the New York Stock
Exchange. Also Miscellaneous Securities
not listed on the Stock Exchange.
Long Distance Telephone, 1348 Broad.
A. M. HuntTER. F. K, HUNTER. L. A. CooPER.
HUNTER, COOPER & COMPANY,
Members of New York Stock Exchange,
BANKERS and BROKERS,
51 Exchange Place, - New York.
3tocks, Grain, Cotton, ‘ivate Wires to Chicago.
Telephone, 2237 Cortlandt.
KOUNTZE BROTHERS,
BANKERS,
Broadway & Cedar St.,
NEW YORK.
Letters of Credit
FOR TRAVELERS.
Available in all parts of the world.
Descriptive pamphlets furnished upon
application.
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Purchasers say:
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