Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, October 21, 1897, Page 7, Image 7

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    XTALE ATU IMING
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JUNIOR APPOINTMENTS.
Names of Men in Ninety-Nine who
were on the Scholarship List,
The following appointments in the
Junior class were announced on Sat-
urday last:
PHILOSOPHICAL ORATIONS.
Sullivan Dorr .Ames, Providence, R.
I.; Robbins Battell Anderson, Duluth,
Minn.; George Edwin Atwood, Nor-
folk, Conn:; John Kirkland Clark,
Brooklyn, N. Y.; Caleb Ellis Fisher,
Fargo, N. D.; John Francis Flynn,
Meriden, Conn.; Alfred Bates Hall,
Chester, Conn.; Francis Jenks Hall,
Brookville, Pa.; Charles Montgomery
Hathaway, Jr., Olyphant, Pa.; Arthur.
Wayland Lovell, New Haven, Conn.;
Arthur Sitgreaves Mann, Buffalo, N.
Y.; Joseph Harrison Morey, Buffalo,
N. Y.; John Pease Norton, Los An-
geles, Cal.; Howard Chandler Rob-
bins, Springfield, Mass.; Barry Conger
Smith, East Orange, N. J.; Ralph
Gibbs Van Name, New Haven, Conn.
HIGH ORATIONS.
Henry Thornton Bowles, New York
City; Norman MacLeod Burrell, New
York City; Guy Mortimer Carleton,
Hartford, Conn.; John Dolph Carson,
Portland, Ore.; William Dick Cutter,
Brooklyn, N. Y.; John Lewis Evans,
Haveriord, Pa.; Willard Ernest Ever-
ett, Lowell, Mass.; Charles Root; Fow-
ler, New Haven, Conn.; Lucius Pom-
eroy Fuller, Willimantic, Conn.; Stew-
art Gilman, Sioux City, Ia.; Ballinger
Mills, Galveston, Tex.; Frederick
Hitchcock Morley, Colorado Springs,
Col.; William Bigelow Neergaard,
Brooklyn, N. Y.; Henry James Nich-
ols, Binghamton, N. Y.; Hibbard
Richard Norman, 2d, Shewville, Conn.;
Henry Robinson Shipman, Hartford,
Conn.; Carl Bovee Spitzer, Toledo, O.;
Chauncy Brewster Tinker, Denver, Col.
ORATIONS.
Robert Campbell Adams, Brooklyn,
N. Y.; Henry Cotheal Andrews, Fish-
hie mY... tuther.- Logis. Beard,
Springfield, O.; John Bicknell, West
Cummington, Mass.; John Boyce,
Schodack Landing, N. Y.; Alfred Yar-
tan Dubuque, Albany, N. Y.; Freder-
ick Bliss Fallon, Bridgeport, Conn.;
Joseph Allen Farley, Rochester, N. Y.;
George Willis Field, Worcester, Mass.;
Arthur Sullivan Gale, Jacksonville,
Fla.; Marvin Hayes Gates, Kansas
City, Mo.; Samuel Anderson Gilmore,
Uniontown, Pa.; George Dana Graves,
Manchester, N. H.; William Edward
Schenck Griswold, Erie, Pa.; Mervin
Clark Harvey, Cleveland, O.; William
Edwin Hilliard, New Haven, Conn.;
George William Humphreys, Cohoes,
N. Y.; Robert Henry Keener, St.
Joseph, Mo.; Edwin Tuttle Lewis,
Brooklyn, N. Y.; Henry Killam Mur-
phy, New Haven, Conn.; William Bar-
ret Neville. Scranton, Pa.>~ Colman
Stuart O’Loughlin, Glens Falls, N. Y.;
Francis Robert Parks, Westfield, Mass.;
Samuel Woodson Sawyer, Independ-
ence, Mo.; Louis Henry Schutte, Chi-
cago, Ill.; Carroll Fuller Sweet, Grand
Rapids, Mich.; Laurance Tweedy, Dan-
bury, Conn.; Curtis Howe Walker,
West Haven, Conn.; William Merser
Wheeler, Portville, N. Y.
DISSERTATIONS.
DeForest Baldwin, New Haven,
Conn.; Lewis Franklin Battey, Put-
nam, Conn.; Ledyard Coggswell, Jr.,
Albany, N. Y.; William Enright Dav-
enport, Bridgeport, Conn.; Leonidas
John Durbin, Williamstown, Pa.;
Charles Royall Frazer, Cynthiana, Ky.;
George Edward Hecker, Noroton,
Conn.; Thomas Denison Hewitt,
Brooklyn, N. Y.; William Churchill
Hodge, Jr., Buffalo, N. Y.; Fred Alon-
zo King, Portland, Me.; Victor Alex-
ander Kowalewski, New Haven, Conn.;
Thomas Fisher Lawrence, Hartford,
Conn.; Charles Philip Leonard, Nian-
tic, Conn.; Benjamin Burgess Moore,
New York City; Holkins Palmer,
Summit, N. J.; Wililam Hervey Rood,
Brookfield, Vt.; Walter Byron Smith,
Chicago, IIl.; William Godfrey Wal-
lace, Rochester, N. Y.; Frederick Wil-
loughby Weston, New York Cys
FIRST DISPUTES.
Charles Westley Abbott, Plainfield
N. J.; George Philip Baker, ona
‘Hill, NN. Y¥.<5 Jone Harvey Borden,
Brooklyn, N. Y.; - Samuel Pearson
Brooke, Mt. Tabor, Ore.; John Stark
Cameron, Jr., Salt Lake City, Utah;
George Shepard Chappell, New Lon-
don, Conn.; Charles Frederick Childs,
Brattleboro, Vt.; Ralph Emerson Cran-
dall, Leonardsville, N. Y.; Robert
Darling, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Charles
Leroy Darlington, Xenia, O.; Benson
Everett, Kingston, N. Y.; William
Henry Field, Rutland, Vt.; John Leo
Gilson, New Haven, Conn.; Frederick
Augustus Gorham, Jr., Grand Rapids,
Mich.; Arthur Sears Hamlin, Canan-
daigua, N. Y.; Edward Foote Hinkle,
Ashland, Wis.; Melvin Tilden Hol-
WEEKLY
ter, New York City; Carl Gottfried
Jahn, Jr., Columbus, O.; Samuel Pres-
ton Knight, Middletown, N. Y.; Russell
Cornell Leffingwell, Yonkers, N. Y.;
Othniel Bletm Lessig, Pottstown, Pa.;
Charles Alonzo Powers, Cleveland,
O.; Ernest Stanley Smith, East Orange,
N. J.; Solomon Albert Smith, Chicago,
Ill.; Richard Udall Strong, New Bruns-
wick, N. J.; Charles ‘Rufus Swift, Jr.,
West Hartford, Conn.; Edmund Quincy
Trowbridge, New Haven, Conn.;
Frederick Dale Vincent, Ashley, Pa.;
Frederick Webster, Galveston, Tex.;
Isaac Newton Wyckoff Wilson, Albany,
brook, Sharon, Mass.; Richard Hook- . N. Y
er, New Haven, Conn.; George Pelton
Hutchins, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Ellis Oli-
ver Jones, Jr., Columbus, O.; Walter
Clark Lee, Oxford, N. Y.; Arthur Mat-
thias Marty, Kansas City, Mo.; Ed-
ward Coleman Moore, Moline, IIL;
Winchester Noyes, Brooklyn, N. Y.;
Joseph Coolidge Palmer, Syracuse, N.
Y.; Ernest Shirley Rastall, Chicago,
Iil.; Edmund Pillsbury Smiley, Chi-
cago, Ill.; Charles Henry Wagner,
Putnam, Conn.; George Liggett Ward,
Lawrence, Mass.; Ezra Joseph War-
ner, Penfield, N. Y.
SECOND DISPUTES.
Lorenzo Dibble Armstrong, New
York City; William Augustus Bar-
stow, East Orange, N. J.; Charles
Griswold “<Bartlett.. “Jr. ° Black. -Hall,
Conn.; Charles Augustus Belin, Scran-
ton, Pa.; Samuel -Gale Boyce, .Scho-
dack Landing, N. Y.; Oliver Sarson
Bryant, Cincinnati, O.; Horace Jewell
Fenton, Willimantic, Conn.;
Osmond Guthrie, Albany, N. Y.;
Joseph Harvey Kitchen, Cleveland, O.;
George Samuel Mittendorf, New York
City; Loring Bradford Packard, Shar-
on, Mass.; Edward Spencer Parmelee,
New Haven, Conn.; Omar William
Platt, Milford, Conn.; Ossian Ray, Jr.,
Lancaster, N. H.; Elmer Wallace
Robinson, Meriden, Conn.; Marvyn
Scudder, New York City; Harry Shaw,
Whitinsville, Mass.; Frank Erdman,
Simmons, Chicago, Ill.; Sanford Stod-
dard, Bridgeport, Conn.; Eliot Wat-
rous, New Haven, Conn.; Guy Well-
man, Friendship, N. Y.; Robert Riss- °
ler Wilson, Cincinnati, O.; Edward
Seymour Woodruff, New York City;
Thew Wright, Buffalo, N. Y.; Henry
Bingham Bartlett Yergason, Cincinnati,
FIRST COLLOQUIES.
Hugh Moffat Bissell, Detroit, Mich.;
Frederick Hiester Brooke, Birdboro,
Pa.) jamot Brown; . Ghicago, UL;
Harold Clark Cheney, New Haven,
Conn.; Harry Clifford Colwell, Kit-
tanning, Pa.; Murray Witherbee
Dodge, New York City; John Victor
Doniphan; jJrj-< Brookiyn: Neo YY.
Charles Francis Doyle, Jr., Cohoes, N.
Y.; Charles Abbott Greene, Fairport,
N. Y.; Isham Henderson, New Haven,
Conn.; Charles Jonathan Herrick,
Albany, N. Y.; Frederick Hotze, New
York City; Charles Edward Julin, Chi-
cago, Ill.; MacIntosh Kellogg, New
York City; Albert Hezekiah Kirtland,
Chester, Conn.; Everson Howard
Lewis, Syracuse, N. )..¥.; . Oswald
Lockett,.. Jr., Chicago, -. IlL;.- Altred
Richard .Lowrie, Elgin, Ill.; Norton
Thayer Montague, Chattanooga, Tenn.;
Wilber Smith Peck, Jr., Syracuse, N.
Y.; Joseph Scovil Porter, New Haven,
Conn.; John Reid, Jr., Yonkers, N. Y.;
John Buss Seymour, Bennington, Vt.;
Edward Thomas, Thomaston, Conn.;
Clarence Elmore Thompson, Jr., West
Haven, Conn.; George Lincoln, Wake-
field, Mass.; Harry Brookings Wallace,
St. Louis, Mo.; Horace Byron War-
ner, Penfield, N. Y.; Arthur Fitchway,
Westfield, Mass.; Charles Hopkins
Welles, -Jr.,. Scranton, Pa.;° Henry
‘McClure Young, St. Louis, Mo.; Tru-
man Post Young, St. Louis, Mo.
SECOND COLLOQUIES.
Coburn Dewees Berry, Jr., Nashville, —
Tenn.; Nicholas Frederick Brady,
Albany, N. Y.; Charles Asahel Bray-
ton, Cleveland, O.; William Eglin Cur-
tiss, Cleveland, O.; William Doran
Cushman, Buffalo, N. Y.; Dwight
Huntington Day, Indianapolis, Ind.;
Anson Conger Goodyear, Buffalo, N.
Y.; Frederick Charles Hecker, Noro-
ton, Conn.; Henry Hutchinson Hollis-
Richard |
Earp Forrest, Philadelphia, Pa.; Keith”
— <->
Appointment Statistics.
The scholarship rating of the Class
of Ninety-Nine for Freshman and
Sophomoré years as given out shows
a falling off in Phi Beta Kappa mem-
bership as compared with several pre-
ceding classes. The Class of Ninety-
Eight had a membership of fifty-five,
whereas that of Ninety-Nine is thirty-
four. The following table gives a com-
parison in full of the Classes of ’94, ’95,
’96, ’97, ’98 and "99:—
Crass to. ’94 ’95 '96 97 ’98 ’oQ
Philosophical Orations __.--- $949 oO 49 4h 1G
High Orations... 2022 =>. sos 10 14 20 19 24 18
Oat te ee, a 26 24 27 27 24 29
Dissertanons.- 2.1... <2. 34 16 10° 37 ° 26 19
First Disputes: : sess 10°33 27 23° 17 30
Second Disputes_.....2...--- 24 23 34 28 26 26
Piret (onoguies 20 5... 33: 20) 20) 30°.35:. 35
Second Colloquiés.-.-........ 53°. 20°. 26). 30 =35 ae
ite, eee oot 2 156 165 189 197 209 193
—_—_—_—_+4—__——
In the College Pulpit.
Following is a list of the preachers
who will occupy the pulpit for the next
f Sundays: !
October 24—Rey. Joseph H. Twich-
ell, Hartford.
October 31—Prof.
Andover, Mass.
November 7—Prolf.
Haven.
November 14—Rev. Reuen Thomas,
D.D., Brookline, Mass.
George Harris,
Ladd, New
| OO
NS
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CHARLES {f. PENNELL,
Successor to Wm. Franklin & Co.,
IMPORTING [| AILOR,
40 Center St., New Haven, Conn.
J. EDWARD SOMERS,
IMPORTING TAILOR,
63 Center Street,
NEW HAVEN, - CONN.
F. R. BLISS & CO.,
TAILORS
CHURCH AND CHAPEL STREETS,
New Haven, Conn.
Most of the Students of Yale
are preparing to earn their own livelihood—some in professions—
others in the
BUSINESS WORLD.
others would be glad to know of
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. It is therefore not unreasonable to suppose thai