Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, February 17, 1898, Page 3, Image 3

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    TAT Mo ALUMNI “WEE Ki y
ALUMNI NOTES.
[ Graduates are invited to contribute to this column.)
°37—-Ex-Senator William M. Evarts
celebrated his 80th birthday on Feb-
ruary Oth.
*6g—Charles W. Bardeen has edited
and published a new book entitled
“Teaching as a Business,” consisting
of six addresses on this subject.
’61—Brayton Ives has been elected
President of the Metropolitan Trust
Co., 37 Wall st.. New York.. Mr. Ives
was formerly President of the Western
National Bank, N. Y., and has served
two terms as President of the New
York Stock Exchange.
’61—The United States Senate has
ordered printed for its use a paper en-
titled “The Historic Policy of the
United States as to Annexation,”
written by Professor Simeon E. Bald-
win, Professor of Constitutional Law
in the Yale Law School.
67 S.—Joseph T. Whittelsey has re-
signed his position as Secretary of the
National Lawn Tennis Association.
’*68—Rev. Elisha W. Miller has ac-
cepted a call to Douglas, Mich., from
Carson City, Mich.
*71—The Reverend Nathan H. Whit-
tlesey is Secretary of the National Min-
isters Relief Society and authorized
representative of the National Council
of the Congregational Churches.
76 L.S.—Francis H. Parker was last
week appointed one of the Trustees of
the Connecticut School for boys, at
Meriden, Conn.
’*"79 T.S.—Rev. W. A. Remele has re-
ceived a call to Olympia, Wash. He
is at present at Poultney, Vt.
’80—The Supreme Court of Colorado
has just issued an order appointing
Charles W. Haines a member of the
State Board of Law Examiners.
’81 S—Frank L. Bigelow left for
Mexico via Havana on February 5th, on
a business trip.
’*80—Frank F. Abbott is the editor of
the Letters of Cicero, a new book in
the College Series of authors, publish-
ed by Ginn and Co.
82 T.S.—Rev. Levi Marshall has re-
Fig from Akron, O., to Hannibal,
O.
’°88 S.—The engagement is announced
of George B. Berger to Miss Carrie
Merriam, daughter of General and Mrs.
Merriam of Vancouver Barracks.
’"90—The engagement is announced of
Dr. Geo. L. Amerman to Miss Harriet
Duguid of Syracuse, N. Y.
’°90—Richard T. Percy is giving a
series of organ recitals at the Marble
Collegiate Church, 5th avenue and 29th
st., New York City, on the Ist and 3d
Thursday afternoons during February
and March, at 4 o'clock.
’91 S—Announcement is made of the
engagement of Albert F. Francke to
Miss Marion Rand of Lawrence, L. I.
ex-’91 S.—William Pierson Hamilton
has been appointed confidential clerk
to J. Pierpont Morgan of the firm of
J. P. Morgan & Co., bankers, N. Y.
’92—-The marriage of Miss Anna
Cary Ward and E. F. Clay, Jr., took
place on January 6th, 1898, at Paris,
Ky. | :
*94—C. A. Smith is assistant at St.
Paul’s Church, Poughkeepsie, N. Y
‘904 M.S.—Dr. F. H. R. Oertel has re-
cently opened an office at 137 College
street, New Haven, Conn.
*94—Arthur G. Dickson is an Instruc-
tor in the Law School of the University
of Pennsylvania.
’94—Buell McKeever is practising law
with Isham, Lincoln & Beale, 718
The Temple, Chicago, III.
’94—The marriage of James P. Lina-
han to Miss Annie Plunkett of New
York City took place recently.
’94—Leland S. Stillman is practising
law with the firm of Butler, Notman,
Joline & Mynderse, at 54 Wall st., New
York.
’94 M.S.—Dr. Edward L. Kingman
holds the position of surgeon for the
South American Development Com-
pany, Guayaquil, Ecuador.
’94—F rederick S. Chapman recently
received an appointment as Government
Inspector of dredging, and has been
overseeing the work at Stamford Har-
bor and Pawcatuck River.
. ’94—Ferdinand S. Crosley is practis-
ing law in connection with the firm of
Duer, Strong & Jarvis, 50 Wall st.,
New York. Mr. Crosley’s permanent
address is 502 Bedford ave., Brooklyn.
’94—Alphonso B. Brown has recently
secured by competitive examination the
position of House Officer on the First
Surgical Service at the Boston City
Hospital. The term of service is eigh-
teen months beginning January 1, 1808.
’*96—-C. Coit is in the office of the
NY CG) & Ho RR. R. Co; New York
City.
’96—A. C. Tilton is studying History
and Philosophy at Berlin University,
Germany. :
96 L.S.—W. J. Tilson has opened an
office for the general practice of law in
Atlanta, Ga.
’96 —C. S. Morris has returned to the
Yale Law School and entered the Class
of Ninety-Nine.
’96—_W. L. Henry has accepted the
position of classical Instructor at the
Poughkeepsie Military Academy.
796 M.S.—Dr. Milo Jones has been
recently appointed to fill the position of
Health Officer in Greenwich, Conn.
’96 «COT: S.—The engagement is an-
nounced of Rev. Charles N. Thorp,
Oswego, N. Y., to Miss Long of Rut-
land, Vt., Mount Holyoke, ’96.
’97 L.S.—W. H. Griffith has entered
the wholesale shoe business.in Kansas
City, Mo. ;
’97—C. Chadwick is at Grace Hospi-
tal, New Haven, suffering from an
attack of appendicitis.
’97 M.S.—Dr. George H. Weaver
has passed the Massachusetts State
Medical Examinations.
’97 M.S.—Dr. Max H. Loeb has
opend an office for the practice of medi-
cine at 74 York street, New Haven,
Conn.
—_—___~++e—___—_—
Obituary.
ERNEST WALKER, ’08.
Ernest Walker, ’98, of New York
City, died of Hodgkin’s disease at the
Infirmary Wednesday morning, Feb-
ruary 9. Since the opening of College
this Fall, Mr. Walker was in poor
health, but was not taken seriously ill
until about nine days prior to his death,
when he developed swellings of the
lymphatic glands, and his case was
diagnosed by Dr. Leonard W. Bacon
as Hodgkin’s disease. The funeral took
place February 12, from the Woodlawn
Cemetery Chapel. The Senior class
was represented by six of his most inti-
mate friends, who acted as honorary
pall-bearers.
Mr. Walker was twenty-one years old,
and prepared for Yale at the Columbia
Grammar School, New York City.
Since entering College he had identified
himself with the work at the East Street
Mission, where he was a great favorite.
The members of the Senior class met
in Dwight Hall Thursday morning, and
decided to wear a badge of mourning for
thirty days; a committee was appointed
which should draft and send a letter of
sympathy to his family.
——_—__+«—____
Pittsburgh Association.
The Yale Alumni Association of
Pittsburgh held their annual meeting at
the University Club in the city of Pitts-
burgh January 13th, 1808. There was a
very large attendance of alumni. After
the election of officers and business
meeting a very enjoyable smoker was
held, at which speeches were made by
the newly elected officers and by the
Hon. Oliver P. Scaife, Jr., L.S. ’80.
The Association is contemplating
some celebration in a worthy manner
of the 200th anniversary of the founding
of Yale College. The graduates of
Yale who live in Pittsburgh are always
very enthusiastic.
The following is a list of the officers,
who were elected to serve for two years:
President, Albert H. Childs, 61;
Vice-Presidents, Henry R. Ewing, ’81;
O. D. Thompson, ’79; Treasurer, Kier
Mitchell, ’83; Secretary, Harry W.
McIntosh, ’92 L.S.: Executive Com-
mittee, Albert York Smith. ’75: Starling
W. Childs, ’o1; S. W. B. Moorhead,
’91: Frank F. Brooks, ’96 S.; Harry D.
McCandless, ’97 S.
<>
—
“Wale Review” for February.
The contents of the Vale Review,
which appeared Feb. 15, follow:
Comment: The Progress of Currency
Reform: A New Phase of the Tariff
Sage The New England Cotton
trike,
The Family’s Point of View.
Sow Ge. £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 it 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
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
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.
The Incidence of Taxation in the
United Kingdom, by Mr. C. P. Sanger
of London, England.
Prevailing Theories in Europe as to
the Influence of Money on International
Exchange, by Professor G. M. Fia-
mingo of Rome, Italy.
The Franchises of Greater New York,
by Dr. Max West of the U. S. Depart-
ment of Agriculture.
Modern Social Reform and Old
Christian Ideals, by Mr. L. G. Powers
of the Minnesota Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
Editorial Notes: Educational Cam-
paigns (by Dr. W. H. Tolman); State
Tax Commissions; Reprint of Doug-
lass’s “American Currencies’; Recent
Economic Publications.
Book Reviews: Bogart’s “Finanzver-
haltnisse der Einzelstaaten”; Maltbie’s
“English Local Government’; Good-
now’s “Municipal Government” (by
Mr. G. L. Fox, 774); Wilcox’s “Study
of City Government”; Cournot’s Mathe-
matical Principles of the Theory of
Wealth” (by Mr. J. M. Gaines, ’96);
Van Bergen’s “Story of Japan.”
‘“ Scientific Monthly” Contents.
The January number of the Scientific
Monthly, which has been unavoidably
delayed, appeared on February oth. A
new feature of the magazine is the half-
tones which illustrate several of the arti-
cles. Besides the regular Editors’
Notes, Scientific Notes, and Book
Notices, Alumni Notes, and review of
the month, it-contains the following
body articles: “The Electrically-Welded
Rail,” by Hunter Morrison, oS;
“Benjamin Franklin and His Electri-
cal Experiments,” by Edward N. Saun-
ders, Jr.; “Chainless Bicycles,’ by
Howard Lee Davis, ’99 S.; “The
Development of the Etheric Wave
Theories,” by W. Murray Sanders, ’99
S. and “Nansen’s Journey Across
Greenland” (second paper), by Wil-
liam Walker, ’99 S.
>>
— >
Boarding House Fire,
Shortly after ten o’clock last Satur-
day morning fire broke out in the house
59 Prospect St. The house, which is in
the block next to the Scientific School
building, was completely gutted. Four
students, T. V. McNamee, L.S.; S
Bolin, 99 L.S.; F. Vanderveer, ’99 L.S., |
and E. W. Stevens, 1900 S., roomed in
the house.
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. —
J EKESe
a2 eee
IMPORTERS OF
ENGLISH AND SCOTCH
SUITINGS.
=
OF HAMILTONPLACE BOSTON.
ee ti
=I Onze.
— AE fa VgZ: 2S 2 aS OZ
LA gt8 9 Ver 55S vay eC. 2 _—
977 STALE T pee
COOPER & COMPANY,
TAPOORS Ati oe ee es
. ...BREECHES MAKERS
Twenty-nine 34th Street, W.
NEW YORK.
Telephone, 1405-38th St.