YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY
ALUMNI NOTES.
[Graduates are invited to contribute to this column.)
_ ’30—Hon. Henry Barnard of Hart-
ford celebrated the eighty-seventh an-
“‘niversary of his birth, January 24.
’52—The Class Record is in the
printer’s hands. It contains, besides
statistics, etc., half-tone portraits of
~ most of the forty-six surviving mem-
bers. Reports have been received from
all but Curtiss, Duncan, Hardy, Hend-
rickson, Lounsbury, McCormick, Mc-
Kissack, and Stewart. The Secretary
would be obliged to any one who can
give him information of any of them.
bp: Rev. A. N. Lewis, Montpelier,
t.
’60-—E. G. Mason spoke on “The
Lawyer’s Ideals,” at the reception and
dinner given the Hon. Joseph H.
-Choate by the Chicago Bar Association,
February 4th.
’68—Charles E. Searls will be engaged
. as the special counsel of Charles G.
Dawes, Comptroller of the Currency.
*70—George E. Dodge has presented
the New York Working-Girls Vacation
Society with a sanitarium valued at
$10,000, situated at Santa Clara, N. Y.
*71—Luther Fuller has recently been
promoted to the position of 3d As-
sistant. Examiner in the United States
Patent Office at Washington, D. C.
"74 S.—Nathan E. Beckwith, of Los
Gatos, Cal., will sail from San Fran-
cisco on February 5 for Sitka, Alaska,
to engage in surveying.
’°80—Henry W. Taft lately resigned
from his position on the Committee on
Instruction of the Board of Education
of New York City.
784 L. S—Alfred M. Downes, Pri-
vate Secretary to Mayor Van Wyck of
New York City, was married on Thurs-
day, February 3d, to Miss Anna M.
Dougherty of New York City.
°86—A. Cowles and Mrs. Cowles are
spending the Winter in Colorado
Springs, Col.
"88—F. L. Woodward is at Augusta,
Ga. He is taking quite a prolonged
rest from business.
*88—Of fifty replies received in re-
sponse to the invitation sent out by the.
Secretary, forty-five members of the.
Class have expressed their intention to
attend the decennial reunion.
89 and ’o1 L. S.—Israel H. Peres was
elected a member of the Board of Edu-
cation of Memphis City Schools on the
regular Democratic ticket, Jan. 6, 1808.
89 S.—Cards are out announcing the
marriage of Arthur B. Skelding, son of
the late Arthur E. Skelding, ’53, to Miss
Clara Dorothy Ames, daughter of Rev.
J. G. Ames of Washington.
*91—Ray B. Smith of Syracuse, N. Y.,
has been appointed assistant clerk of
the New York State Assembly.
*92—Oliver H. Bronson was ordained
at the Pilgrim Congregational Church
of Cleveland, Ohio on January 25th.
’92—Newton F. Vail is an instructor
in the Berkeley School of New York
_ City, having taken the position last Fall.
’93—Alfred C. Woolner has. opened
offices for the general practice of law in
the Commercial Cable Building, 20
’ Broad st., New York City.
7904 S.—A’ son has been born to Mr.
and Mrs. Victor Thorne.
’°94 S.—H. I. Bartholomew has re-
cently gone into the cement business
at Belfontaine, Ohio.
794 S—A. M. Byers, Jr. has re-
cently been apointed Secretary in the
firm of A. M. Byers & Co., Pittsburg,
Pa:
’94—T. Eaton was recently elected
an honorary member of the Harvard
Dickey Club, and on the fourth ten of
the Institute of 1776.
’94—Harry P. Whitney purchased
Fortuny’s “Court of Justice—Alham-
bra,” at the auction sale of Stewart
pictures on Thursday, February 3, in
New York.
795 S.—James D. Laying, Jr. was re-
cently admitted to the New York Bar.
’°95—F rank S. Butterworth has en-
tered upon the banking business in New
York.
’95—George C. Bryant has entered
the law firm of Wooster, Williams &
Gager, Derby, Conn.
’95—Cards are out for the marriage
of Raymond S. White to Miss Sadie
H. Crane of New York City.
795 S.—Alfred W. Dater has become
the Assistant General Superintendent
of King’s County Electric Light &
Power Co., Brooklyn, N. Y. |
‘tors’ meeting several weeks since.
note which appeared in the WEEKLY
years at the latter place.
’°95—G. K. B. Wade and Allen Ward-
well, who are now at the Harvard Law
School, passed the examination for the
New York Bar at the recent trials.
’°95—H. K. Taylor has changed his
address from Hartford, Conn. to Cleve-
land, Ohio, where he will open a branch
office for the Hartford Rubber Works
Company. ~
’95—Frederic R. Galacar is special
agent in New York State for the Magde-
burg Fire Insurance Co., and not the
Springfield Insurance Co. as was stated
in the WEEKLY recently.
95 and ’97 L. S.—Clarence W. Hal-
bert and. Hugh T. Halbert have left
New Haven for their home in St. Paul,
Minn., where they will practice law.
Their adress will be for the present,
365 Summit avenue.
’95—Frederick H. Rawson was
elected Assistant Cashier of the Union
Trust Co. of Chicago, at a recent meet-
ing of the directors. He was also
elected a director of the Globe
National Bank in Chicago at a direc-
The
a short time ago was incorrect.
’96—C. V. Hopkins is spending the
Winter in Rome.
°96 —H. S. Kip will leave New York
shortly for a trip to Mexico.
796 «S.—Otto H. Miller recently
sailed for Europe, to be absent five or
six months.
ex-'96—J. H. C. Clark was married
to Miss M. K. Tyler of Washington
in December.
’96—Richard C. Haldeman is taking
a course in Electrical Engineering at
Johns Hopkins University.
ex-’97—Charles S. Adee has entered
the office of Redmond, Kerr & Co.,
bankers, 41 Wall st.
’97—Walter Stuart has recently gone
into business with the firm of W. T.
Hatch and Sons, 96 Broadway, New
York.
’97—Gerald Hughes has left the New
York Law School to enter his father’s
law office in Denver, Col. His ad-
dress is Hughes Block, Denver.
a 0
To Members of Ninety-Four.
The ALumnri WEEKLY under date of
February 3d, 1898, publishes a notice
from our Class Secretary, Rev. A. T.
Harrington, in which he says, that
“owing to failure of financial support he
must postpone the publication of the
Class Triennial Record.” Those of the
Class who have not subscribed may have
had some good reason for not doing so.
The Record will add greatly to the
Class literature and will be of great in-
terest to every member of the Class, and
therefore its publication should not be
delayed.
Those who were at our Triennial last
June will remember that a financial
report was rendered, stating that we had
on hand some $1200. This money of
course is to be devoted to the interest
of the Class, and is not the publication
of the Triennial Record of interest to
the Class? Let the Secretary keep
what money has already been sub-
scribed and draw the balance from the
Class Fund.
Anyway let us have the Record. I
trust that this matter will be of interest
enough to call forth other like com-
munications.
James FrRARY POTTER.
North Adams, Mass.
—_——_~+0o—____—
Obituary.
JAMES AUSTIN GALLUP, ’5I.
Rev. James Austin Gallup died in
Madison, Conn., on January 30th, at 7
p. mM. Mr. Gallup was the son of
Russell and Hannah Gallup and was
the fourth of nine children. He was
born in Ledyard, Conn., on November
15th, 1823. He worked on his father’s
farm until he was eighteen years old,
attending the common schools. He
prepared for College at Bacon Aca-
demy, Colchester, Conn., and at Phil-
lips Academy, Andover,. spending two
After gradua-
tion from Yale in 1851 he entered the
New Haven Theological Seminary,
graduating in 1854. His first pastorate
was with the Essex, Conn., Congrega-
tional Church, where he remained from
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| may come any day.
The Family’s Point of View.
Br ce_- G-
[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. It 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.
‘month, You have put them at the risk of losing # by losing you. —
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
And they cannot protect themselves.
They rely on
you for that as much as they do for the $100 a month itself, They need
protection against that loss even more than you need protection against the
loss of your property. But they cannot have it unless you give it to them.
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.
May, 1854 until October, 1865. In
November, 1865, he was installed pastor
of the Madison Congregational Church
and continued until four years ago,
when he was made pastor emeritus.
His first marriage was with Miss Emily
T. Hubbard of New Haven on June
24th, 1854. On November 28th, 1876,
he married Miss Charlotte R. Andrew
of New Haven. He had no children.
ALWIN ETHELSTAN TODD, 771.
The Rev. Alwin Ethelstan Todd died
at his home in Berea, Kentucky, on
February 2d of consumption, from
which he been suffering for over a
year.
Mr. Todd was the son of Orrin and
Eliza Todd and was born in North
Blanford, Mass. He fitted for College
at Easthampton, Mass., under Dr. Hen-
shaw and entered Yale with the Class
of Seventy-One. The year after gradua-
tion he was engaged in surveying a rail-
road to Kennebuck, Me. In the Fall
of 1872, he entered the Yale Theologi-
cal School, from which he graduated in
1875. He immediately began preach-
ing at Stuart, Iowa, where he remained |
until early in the year 1877, when he
was called to preach in Monterey, Mass.
In 1880 he removed to Chester, Mass.,
where he lived until he was called to
the Congregational Church of West-
hampton, Mass., in 1886. In January,
1891, he resigned his Westhampton
pastorate to accept the position of Pro-
fessor of Natural Science in Berea
College Kentucky, a position which
‘he held at the time of his death.
In July, 1875, he was married to Miss
Gertrude M. Peck of New Haven. Be-
sides his widow he leaves a son and two
daughters.
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‘ Courant” Prize Winner.
The gold medal offered by the Cour-
ant for the best short story, has been
awarded to Ray Morris, 1901, of New
Haven, for a story entitled, “The Ex-
Banshee.” Professor H. A. Beers, ’69;
Mr. C. M. Lewis, ’86, and C. E. Mer-
rill, Jr., °98, were the judges.
th, Lin
4
The Cornell Law School will have a
crew this year. This is because the
Law Students are ineligible for the
regular Freshman crew and so cannot
receive any preliminary training for the
University eight except by having a
crew of their own.
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 seai), 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
SUITINGS,
OF HAMILTONPLACE BOSTON.
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COOPER & COMPANY,
FAULORS: ands etseetene = +
.... BREECHES MAKERS
Twenty-nine 34th Street, W.
NEW YORK.
Telephone, 1405-38th St.