Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, February 03, 1898, Page 3, Image 3

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    YALE ALUMNI WHEHEKLY
ALUMNI NOTES.
[ Graduates are invited to contribute to this column.)
*52—Daniel C. Gilman, President of
Johns Hopkins University, will be one
of the speakers at the meeting to be
held in New York City, February 12th,
to further the interest of the movement
of negro industrial education.
*53—Charlton T. Lewis was recently
elected president of the Prison Asso-
ciation of New York.
°54—Ex-Judge Henry E. Howland,
at the annual banquet of the National
Association of Manufacturers held in
the Waldorf-Astoria on Jan. 27, spoke
on “The Industries of the Nation as
affected by its Laws.”
*55—Charles P. Stetson was re-elected
President of the European & North
American R. R. during the latter part
of December.
’61—The wife of Theron Baldwin
died in New York City, Jan. 17. Mrs.
Baldwin was the daughter of the late
Charles Steele Thomson, Yale, ’22 M.S.
*66—Rev. Marcellus Bowen, who
has been residing for several years at
Constantinople as the agent for the
Levant of the American Bible House,
has returned to this country with his
family for a visit of a few months.
His address at present is at Hartford,
Conn.
*71—Charles Hopkins Clark has been
in attendance on the currency confer-
ence at Indianapolis.
’*76—Lispenard Stewart was elected
Vice-President of the Prison Associa-
tion of New York at the last meeting.
77 L.S.—On January 18, President
McKinley sent to the senate the nomi-
nation of William J. Mills of New
Haven, Conn., to be Chief Justice of
the Supreme Court of New Mexico.
*80—Henry W. Taft has resigned on
account of his health, from the Com-
mittee on Instruction of the New York
City Board of Education.
’*85—C. E. Harris is
Provincetown, Mass.
"85—G. W. Mallon has moved his
law offices to 36 Carlisle Bldg., Cin-
cinnati.
’85—A. A. Crane has been elected
chairman of the Waterbury School
Committee.
*85—Rev. H. D. Leland has left
Bremen, Ind., to become pastor of the
i aang Church at Niagara Falls,
residing at
85 T. S.—Rev. Charles L. Kloss has
resigned from the pastorate of the
Tabernacle Congregational Church,
Kansas City, Mo., where he has been
stationed for seven years, and has ac-
cepted a call to the First Congrega-
tional Church at Webster Groves, Mo.,
where he will begin work on February
Ist.
*91—Henry C. White has returned
from his long sea-voyage around Cape
Horn.
’*91—George S. Brewster has been re-
cently elected a director of the Chi-
cago, Rock Island and Pacific R. R.
*91 S.—E. B. Sanger has been ap-
pointed one of the visiting surgeons
to the Eastern Maine General Hospital.
’93 S.—Charles E. McLane sailed for
Europe on the 27th of January.
’°93—William B. Boardman passed the
examination for admittance to the Con-
necticut Bar on Saturday, Jan. 15th.
’93: T. S—Rev. Lincoln B. Goodrich
has changed his address from Bound
Brook, Ni«j.,° to 36:diahten’ ‘streef,
Marlborough, Mass.
’94— Albert S. Briggs is principal of
the High School of Mattapoisett,
Mass.
’°94—A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Chamberlin Meserve on
January Ist.
*94—Shelton K. Wheeler was recently
elected alderman of his ward in Chatta-
nooga, Tenn.
794—On Nov. 25th, 1897, a daughter
was born to Mr. and Mrs. James Tracy
Potter of North Adams, Mass.
*°94—Raymond Lloyd has become
Professor of the classics and higher
branches in the Angelica Academy,
Angelica, N. Y.
’94——Casselberry Dunkerson has been
elected a director in the Louisville
Tobacco Warehouse Company and
appointed manager of the Falls City
Warehouse.
’904—W. E. Sanders has been placed
at the head of the Scientific Depart-
ment of the Michigan Military Acad-
emy. His permanent address is Or-
chard Lake, Mich.
’94—Clinton Spencer Bissell is em-
ployed as Assistant Engineer on the
Coast Line Railroad Development Co.
of Nova Scotia, Canada, where he will
remain until Spring.
’94—Dr. I. K. Phelps is studying
chemistry in the post-graduate depart-
ment of Harvard University. His ad-
dress for the present year will be No.
61 Oxford st., Cambridge, Mass.
’°94 and ’97 T.S.—The Rev. Amos
Thomson Harrington was recently or-
dained at the First Presbyterian Church
of Lyons, N. Y. Mr. Harrington has
been called to the pastorate of the
ESS Si 3: Church of Avon,
’94—On account of lack of financial |
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.
support the Secretary has decided to
postpone for the present the publica-
tion of the Triennial Record and refund
immediately the amount that has been
sent to him by each subscriber. The
address of the Secretary after April
Ist will be Avon, N. Y.
’94—Dr. Frank H. Chase, who has
been studying the Anglo-Saxon manu-
scripts in the libraries of London, Ox-
ford and Cambridge, has published in
the “American Journal of Germanic
Philology,” a review of Wulfing’s
“Syntax in den Werken Alfred’s des
Grossen;” and in the hundredth volume
f the “Archiv fur das Studi dcr.
neuleren Sprachen” has an article on , loss of your property. But they cannot have it unless you give it to them.
neueren Sprachen” has an article on
“Alfric’s Old English translation of
Genesis.”
’95—Edward W. Beattie was ad-
mitted to the Connecticut Bar on Jan-
uary 15th.
‘95—George W. Hamlin moved to
Colorado Springs, Col., late last Fall
to enter business there.
795 and ’97 L.S.—Lloyd Lowndes
has recently left New Haven to begin
the practice of law at Cumberland, Md.
’96—Fred F. Bennett was recently
admitted to practice at the Massachu-
setts Bar. His address is Holyoke,
Mass.
’96—-The engagement is announced
of Arnon Augustus Alling to Miss
Kathryn Terrill of New Hartford,
Conn. -
’96 Announcement is made of the
engagement of Charles W. Birely to
Miss Charlotte A. Bushnell of New
Haven, Conn.
*96—R. S. McClenahan is an instruc-
tor in the American College at Asynt,
Egypt. He was married on Sept. 1,
1897, to Miss Jeanette M. Wallace.
’97 T.S.—George E. Ladd has be-
come the pastor of the Congregational
Church of Waterbury, Vt.
’°97 S.—Robert S. Kilborne has gone
into the office of A. W. Kilborne &
Co., brokers, 42 Wall st., New York.
’97 T.S.—Rev. Wesley E. Page has
received and accepted a call to the pas-
torate of the Congregational Church
of Milton, Conn.
’97:‘T.S.—The engagement of the
Rev. David H. Evans to Miss Cor-
nelia Draper of Canandaigua, N. Y.,
has been announced. Mr. Evans
recently became pastor of the First
Congregational Church of Northamp-
ton, wy: ET:
’98 S.—The marriage of Stanley Y.
Beach to Miss Ellen Birdsey Curtis
of Stratford, Conn., has been an-
nounced. Mr. Beach is the son of.
Frederick C. Beach, ’68 S.
——--+4-
Obituary.
STEPHEN C. FOSTER, ’40.
Stephen C. Foster, of the Class of
Forty, died at his home in Downey,
Los Angeles Co., Cal., in the last part
of January. Mr. Foster was born in
East Machias, Me., in 1820. After
graduation he went South, and taught
school in Amelia County, Virginia, in
1840 and 1841, and in Alabama during
the next two years. He then studied
medicine at the Louisville Medical
College in New Orleans, and later
practised medicine in Westport, Miss.
In 1845 he crossed the plains to New
Mexico as a trader and began prac-
tising medicine at Oposura, New Mex-
ico. In January, 1846, he went to
Santa Fé, and from there to California,
as interpreter to Col. Cook, com-
manding the battalion of Iowa infantry
during the Mexican war. In March,
1847, he arrived at Los Angeles, where
he remained in the government em-
ploy as interpreter until May, 1849. He
Cen- |
-month, You have put them at the risk of losing it by losing you.
The Family’s Point of View.
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
cash to-day to your family. If you die they lose the $100 a month, the
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 on that $100 a
If you had a piece of property which was bringing you in $100 a month
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 effecttial protection against its loss which
may come any day.
And they cannot protect themselves.
you for that as much as they do for the $100 a month itself.
They rely on
They need
protection against that loss even more than you need protection against the
You have exposed them to the loss: you have made them dependent on
you: you alone can protect them in their dependence.
THE CONNECTICUT MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE 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.
DANIEL H. WELLS, Actuary.
was Alcalde of Los Angeles in 1848-49
and a member of the convention to
form the Constitution of California in
1849, and was state senator from 1851
until 1853. In 1854, ’55 and ’56 he was
Mayor of Los Angeles. In August,
1848, he married Mercedes Lugo, a
member of a prominent Spanish family.
His wife and two sons survive him.
WILLIAM JARVIS CRAW, ’52 S.
William Jarvis Craw died. on Octo-
ber 26, 1897, at his home in Rowayton,
Connecticut. He was a member of the
first class which graduated from the
Sheffield Scientific School.
He was born at Norwalk, Connecti-
cut, January 27, 1830, and entered the
Yale Analytical Laboratory, the pre-
sent Scientific School, in 1848.
Soon after graduation Mr. Craw en-
tered the field of commercial chemistry,
in which he was successful. Within a
period of two years, however, he suf-
fered a complete breakdown in health,
which made it necessary for him to
abandon it. After his health failed
he went into the oyster-growing busi-
ness at Rowayton, where he lived the
remainder of his life. He was a pioneer
in artificial cultivation of oysters in the |
State of Connecticut.
On November 27, 1879, he was mar-
ried to Miss Josephine Chapin of New
Berlin, New York, who survives him.
LINUS M. CHILD, ’55.
Linus Mason Child of Boston was
stricken with apoplexy in the Park
Square railroad station in Boston on
_the evening of January 25, and died
soon afterwards.
Mr. Child was born at Southbridge,
Mass., on March 4th, 1835. He gradu-
ated from Yale with the Class of Fifty-
Five, and for the next three years
studied law in Lowell and Cambridge,
receiving his admission to the Massa-
chusetts Bar in 1859. He practiced
law in Lowell in the office of his father,
but soon moved to Boston, where he
rapidly became recognized as one of
that city’s leading lawyers.
Mr. Child was the Republican rep-
resentative in Boston’s city council, a
member of the School Board and in
the years 1868 and 1869 served in the
Legislature. For twenty years, up to
[Continued on 6th page.]
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.
IMP
ENGLISH AND SCOTCH
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OF HAMILTONPLACE BOSTON,
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ates 3
COOPER
PMPORS ands sore se eute
_...BREECHES MAKERS
Twenty-nine 34th Street, W.
NEW YORK.
Telephone, 1405-38th St.