FOR EVERY $1,000 OF LIABILITIES THE NEW YORK COLONY. Class Reunions and Other Entertain= ments at the Club, Almost thirty members of Ninety- Seven were present at the first reunion of the class in New York, which was held in one of the private dining-rooms of the Yale Club last Saturday evening. As announced, the meeting was a very informal one, refreshments were served, and the evening was passed in the usual Yale style, in singing, led by -T. Miller, ’97. Before adjourning, it was unanimously decided to hold four or five more Ninety-Seven nights at the Club during the Winter. OTHER ENTERTAINMENTS. Several other events connected with the Club which will occur shortly are as follows: On Saturday the members of the: Class of Ninety-Two in New York will hold a smoker, and the fol- lowing Friday, December toth, will be ~Club Night.” It is hoped “to get a large crowd at the house on this even- ing, and to give’a literary flavor to the early part of the evening. One of the University Faculty will be asked down from New Haven to read a paper or deliver an address. On the tenth also the officers of the University Alumni Fund will hold a dinner at the Club. ADDITIONS TO THE HOUSE. During the past week a great step for- ward has been made as regards the deco- THE IMPREGNABLE PRUDENTIAL. ~ Al 6 «6 AAU aeING WHE KLY IT CAN SHOW $1,260 OF ASSETS. rations of the Club, through Messrs. Charles Scribners’ Sons and Harper Bros. Over one hundred more framed original drawings have been loaned to the Club by these firms, and these are exactly in the line of decoration most desired by the House Committee. This is especially true of the drawings illus- trating the articles on life at Harvard, Yale and Princeton which appeared in Scribners’ Magazine last Spring. The complete set of these, which have until now been at the Harvard Club, has been transferred to the Yale Club, and the pictures are now hung in the main room downstairs, arranged in three groups according to the respective col- leges. The Library Committee report some - further contributions, and the shelves in the reading-room are slowly but surely filling up with Yale books and memorabilia in response to the circular sent out. Perhaps the most interesting of the more recent gifts is a copy of the ge and regulations of Yale College in 1800. : —___+ + —____—_ Glee Club Itinerary. The management of the University Glee and Banjo Clubs has announced the following itinerary for the Christ- mas trip: | Wednesday, December 22—Brooklyn; Thursday, December 23—Philadelphia; Friday, December 24—Pittsburg; Sat- urday, December 25—Louisville; Mon- day, December 27—Kansas City; Tues- day, December 28—St. Joseph; Thurs- day, December 30—Colorado Springs; CHARMING NOVELTY. I 4 a Crown Lavender Pocket Salts. ee Bottles as shown, or in dainty Kid Purses, which can be carried in the pocket with perfect safety. Made by them for many years in England, but now for the first time introduced into this country. Made in the following odors: CROWN LAVENDER CRAB-APPLE BLOSSOMS Crown Lavender 2 naa se. Pocket Salts “Sastaee mami [Patented Aug. 4, 1896.] 5 RETR THE CROWN PERFUMERY CO, aeee Of London, call attention to one of their i HH "i most charming novelties. cg << eggs Ys — = — Crown Perfumed Pocket Salts. : — ee Ya WHITE LILAC / VIOLET TE YLANG-YLANG VERBENA MA’TSUKITA And all other odors. These Pocket Salts are Perfect Gems. Deliciously perfumed with the CRown PERFUMES, and iden- ticalin quality with the world renowned CROWN LAVENDER SALTS, and VARIOUS PERFUMED Saurts, the creation of the CrowN PerrumMeERY Co., so long and favorably known to their London and Paris clients. Prices: Standard Size, 50c. Smaller Size, 40c, In Kid Purses, '75c. Smaller Size, 6c. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR THEM. SOLD EVES YWHERE. BEWARE OF WORTHLESS IMITATIONS. ——$$—$ ________.