ALUMNI NOTES.
( Graduates are invited to contribute to this column.)
’67—W. H. Morse, Class Secretary,
was appointed to the position of As-
sistant in the Cataloguing Department
of the Congressional Library, Wash-
ington, D. C., Sept. Ist. This appoint-
ment was obtained through the efforts
of Senator George P. Wetmore, his
classmate.
’81—The November number of The
Printer and Bookmaker contains an arti-
cle by Charles H. Cochrane on “The
Men who make the Dictionaries,” in
the course of which he says: ‘Dr.
Arthur E. Bostwick’s work on books
of reference began as associate editor
with-John’ D. Champlin, of the Young
Folks’ Cyclopedia. . For some _ five
years he has been assistant editor of the
annual supplement to Appleton’s Cy-
clopedia, contributing the articles on
the progress--of-seience. For three
years he was associate editor of the
Standard Dictionary. He -vas formerly
a tutor in physi¢s, at Yale, was also an
associate editor of The Forum, and now
conducts the scientific department of
The Literary Digest. He is an indefatig-
able worker, and keeps up to date in all
the sciences. In addition, he has that
rare good judgment and ability that is
more properly called genius. His asso-
ciates say that he writes all day and
reads all night, and that if he had any
spare time he would spend it hunting
for something new to learn.”
°84 S.—John P. Terry is assayer for
the Montana Ore Purchasing Co. of
Butte, Mont:
’°86—S.—S: B. Robbins of Great Falls,
Mont. is at present civil engineer for
the Boston..and. Montana, and the
Butte and Boston Mining Companies,
at Butte. Hes ‘
°87—-George D. Pettee, who is Reg-
istrar at Andover, and is now in
Europe, intends to take up a course of
study at Yale after Christmas.
’89—The marriage of Edward James
Gavegan to Mrs. Anna W. O’Mara
took place October 14th, in New York.
’90 S.—Harrison I. Drummond has
been appointed to the Board of Police
Commissioners of St. Louis, by Gov.
Stephens.
’9i—Cards are out for the marriage
on November 16, 1897, of Miss Flor-
ence Lamprey, daughter of the late
Morris Lamprey of St. Paul, Minn., to
George Phelps Robbins, at Christ’s
Church, St. Paul.
’92—Clarence C. Wilson has a posi-
tion with the Pond Machine Tool Co.,
of Plainfield, N. J.
’92—The engagement has been an-
nounced of James E. Wheeler to Miss
Edith Pemberton Williams.
’92—Chas. Sherman Haight
married on Nov. 9, to Miss Alice
Maria Hoyt of New York City.
93 S—A girl baby was born to Mr.
and Mrs. Harry C. January on Octo-
ber 26th.
’93—- Rufus M. Gibbs has announced
hissengagement to Miss Cornelia N.
Andrews of New York City.
’93—The engagement has been re-
cently announced of M. G. Borden to
Miss Lucile Papin of St. Louis.
’95—W. A. Delano is with Carrere
& Hastings, architects, of New York.
’95—The engagement of Hermann
Thomas to Miss Hill of New York has
been announced.
’95—S. A. Everitt has been for some
weeks with the new publishing firm,
organized in connection with McClure’s
Magazine, the Doubleday & McClure
Co. of New York.
96 T.S.—Rev. John H. Kimball has
been called to the Congregational
church at Stoughton, Wisconsin.
’96—Sherman Day has left the office
of Day & Heaton, 6 Wall st., and
entered the New York Law School.
96 S.— William H. Pouch of Brook-
lyn, N. Y. was marired on Nov. 8, 1807,
to Miss Helen Helwig of Brooklyn.
Edgar Pouch, ’98, was best man and
mee A. Loomis, ’97, was among the
ushers.
_ ’97S.—John B. Rose is studying law
in the New York Law School.
’°97—J. H. Simpson is studying law
at the Northwestern Law School.
’97—George B. Pfingst is with the
Lo Trust Company, Louisville,
y.
was |
AT WS VALUES Ow’ HERY
’o7—C. F. Mosle has left for Paris to
study architecture at the Beaux Arts.
’o7—E. S. Harkness has returned
from Japan and settled in New York.
’97—Frank Brookfield is in the glass ©
business with his
father in Brooklyn,
No Yea lad |
\ 97—W. T. Cowdrey has starteé in | sh to-day to your-family. It you die they lose the $100-a month, the
business with a shipping firm in New
MGR ace eo
i971, . da. omertata 18 . Sbidyire
Forestry at the Harvard Graduate
School.
’97—H. G. Lapham is in the Boston
office of the United States Leather
Company.
’97—George W. Samson is with the
Pope Manufacturing Company, Hart-
ford, Conn.
’97 S.—Richard I. Neithercut is with
the West End Lumber Co., of Bridge-
port, Conn.
’o7—A. W. Bell will leave shortly to
spend the Winter in the Samoan Islands
for his health.
’97—J. H. Winterbotham is engaged
in the cooperage business with his
father in Chicago, Ill.
’o7—-Henry H. Townshend is travel-
ing in England, and will return about
Christmas to study law.
’97—-Curtenius Gillette is a student at
the College of Physicians and Sur-
geons, New York City.
’o97—F. H. Bosworth left for Paris
on November 11th to study architec-
ture at the Beaux Arts.
’97 T:S.—H.° L.: Pyle was ordained
pastor of the Congregational church at
Olean, .N.-Y¥., October, 21. -
’97 S.—Philip .W. ..Bill is . studying
medicine at the. College of. Physicians
and Surgeons, in New York.
a7 Wiliam Gy, - Cooke..is ~ with
Alexander and Baldwin, commission
merchants, San Francisco, Cal. .
‘97H: D. and: L.: Lo) Kountze have
returned from Japan, and .are.in the
First National Bank, Omaha, Neb.
’97 S.—W. D. Scranton has gone
into business with his father, Charles
H. Scranton, a broker in New Haven.
‘97—John L. Ewell, Jr. is at present
connected with the book firm of Wil-
liam Ballantyne and Sons, Washington,
’97—Herbert L. Sutton is with the
National Photographic Paper and
Chemical Company of Springfield,
Mass.
‘o7--braee fe Spaulding, Jr. has
charge of the Language Department of
the Wilmington College Preparatory
School.
97. S._G. Barnett Rich, Jr.,bas been
commissioned by Governor Black as
First Lieutenant Company A, 65th
Reet. N, GeoN. Ys
Obituary.
REV. W. W. ANDREWS, 731.
Rev. William Watson Andrews of
Wethersfield, Conn., died on Sundey
evening, at the age of eighty-seven.
He was born in Cornwall, one of a
family of four brothers and one sister,
and graduated from Yale in 1831, in the
class with President Porter.
In 1833 he was licensed to preach by
the Litchfield North Association at
Norfolk and immediately began his
work, although he continued to teach
the following Winter. He was first
invited to preach at New Hartford and
soon afterwards at Kent, and he was
ordained May 21, 1834, by the North
Consociation (Congregational) of Litch-
field. He continued at Kent for fifteen
years,. then took a pastorate in St. Law-
rence County, N. Y. Shortly after-
wards he visited Canada and the Brit-
ish Islands preaching in many cities,
his theme being the new light thrown
upon the pathway in these last days and
the restoration of the Apostles and pro-
phets.
Mr. Andrews had lived in Wethers-
field for the past 30 years, but did not
pursue his work actively. He leaves a
wife, two sons and two daughters.
HORACE BARNARD, ’40.
Horace Barnard died at his home,
No. 26 East 35th st., New York, on
Monday, November 8th, 1897, aged
sixty-seven years. He was born in
Charleston, S. C., but when a child
moved to Hartford, Conn. There he
was prepared for Yale College. He
The Family’s Point of View.
ce BG.- £x=
F you are thirty-five years old and are in good health, and are earning $100
a month, your life, on which this earning depends, is worth $22,700 in
equivalent of which is the $22,700. The cash value of your life to them
is therefore $22,700. They, lose that if you die.
You have made your family dependent on you: dependent 6if that $100 a
month. You have put them at the risk of losing # by losing you. 7 |
If you had a piece of property which was bringing you in $100 a month
and it stood a chance of being destroyed and so cutting off your income,
you would not rest until you had taken enough of that $100 a month and
‘nsured yourself against the loss of it.
You would consider that you had not
done your duty by yourself until you had so protected yourself effectually.
Your life is just such a piece of property to your family: you have made
itso. They need just that same effectual protection against its loss which
may come any day, And they cannot protect themselves. They rely on
you for that as muchas: they do-for the $100 a month itself,.cThey need
protection against that loss evén more than you need protection against the
loss of your property. But they cannot have it unless you give it to them.
You ‘have exposéd them to the loss: you have made them dependent..on
you 7 you, alone can protect them in their dependence. a aa
THE CONNECTICUT MUTUAL LIFE INSURAN CE COMPANY
Makes its plans from the family’s point of view: to give them the most
absolute protection, at the least cost to you and with perfect equity to both.
It will be glad to serve you and your family in this great matter.
JACOB L. GREENE;,President.
JOHN M. TAYLOR, Vice-President.
EDWARD M. BUNCE, Secretary.
PERSIE PSS s Fae age Oe id
DANIEL H. WELLS, Actuary. -
studied law in Harvard, and in 1853
entered the law office of William M.
Evarts. When the war broke out Mr.
Barnard enlisted, and went to the-front,
but he was soon returned by the hospi-
tal authorities on account of chronic
quinsy. Resuming the practice of the
law, he became prominent through his
activity in cases of bounty jumping.
In later years he made a specialty of
patent law. He had been an invalid
since 1895. |
Mr... Barnard was a member of the
Manhattan Club; and although a demo-
crat he wasa meber of the Union Club
crat he was-a member of-the-—Unton-
Club, having been admitted during the
war. He was also a member of the
Sons of the Revolution, his great
grandfather, John Barnard, having been
a ‘captain’ in the. Third Connecticut
regiment.
Mr. Barnard was married, on the
30th of July, 1853, to Miss Louise A.
Zarega. His wife and three children
survive him. His son Horace had been
for some years associated with him,
as an attorney and counsellor at law.
IRA MOORE, 55 S.
Professor Ira Moore was found dead
at his home in Cucamonga, Col., Octo-
ber 30. He was born in Parsonfield,
Me., in 1829, and was graduated from
the Sheffield Scientific School in the
Class of Fifty-Five. He was also a
graduate of the Normal School of
Massachusetts.
the Illinois Normal School at Bloom-
ington and was its vice-principal until
1861. In the same year he commanded
a company of volunteers in the Thirty-
third Illinois regiment, recruited for the
war, from the students in his classes.
In 1865 he organized the Normal School
at St. Cloud, Minn.
few years later he removed with
his family to San Jose, Cal. In 1883
he accepted the principalship of the
State Normal School at Los Angeles.
He resigned in 1893 on occount of
failing health. He is survived by his
wife, a son, and a daughter. The in-
terment was at San Jose.
GEORGE LATHROP WRIGHT, ’67.
The members of the Class of Sixty-
Seven will be pained to learn of the
death of George Lathrop Wright, which
occurred at his brother’s residence in
Auburn, N. Y., on Sunday, the 7th
inst.
[Continued on oth page.)
In 1857 he organized |
|
“THEODORE B. STARR
JEWELER AND SILVERSMITH,
206 FIFTH AVE.
MADISON SQUARE,
New YorK,
asks attention to the very useful
College Pitchers and Mugs which he
offers —for Yale, Harvard, Prince-
ton (the new seal), University of
Pennsylvania, Amherst, Williams,
Columbia. They are of earthen-
ware, of the College color, and
bear on the front the College seal,
executed in solid silver.
MADISON SQUARE.
IMPO
ENGLISH AND SCOTCH
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COOPER & COMPANY,
PAU es and 626 oh eee
....BREECHES MAKERS
Twenty-nine 34th Street, W.
NEW YORK.
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