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

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    a
YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY
3
ae
ALUMNI NOTES.
Graduates are invited to contribute to this column.)
\ 24—The New York Tribune of
farch 6 contains an article on “Yale
of Former Days,” being the recollec-
tions of Benjamin D. Silliman as told
ay the reporter from an interview.
52—Hon. William W. Crapo was
President of the day at the recent cele-
bration of the semi-centennial anniver-
sary of New Bedford, Mass.
"55—Judge Stanley Woodward was >
the presiding officer at the trial at
Wilkesbarre of the Sheriff and his
deputies who fired on the mob at Latti-
mer last year. Judge Woodward’s con-
duct of the trial has met with most
unstinted praise from many 4uarters.
The Evening Post says of his charge to
the jury that “it was one of the sound-
est pieces of juristic reasonin~ that has
even been heard from the American
bench.”
'62—Rev. Henry S. Barnum of Con-
stantinople is spending the Winter in
Florida and supplying pulpits at Mt.
Dora and Tavares, Fla.
’64—Rev. Lewis Gregory, pastor of
the First Church of Lincoln, Nebraska,
has been granted a six months absence,
which he will spend in travel in the
Bast
*70—Hon. E. B. Thomas, on Febru-
ary 2I, was sworn in as United States
Judge for the Second District of New
York State.
°73—Samuel J. Elder, appearing for
the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and
Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
made the closing argument in the hear-
ing last month before the Massachu-
setts Joint Committee on Cities on the
limitation of the height of buildings
near Copley square.
’76—The Hon. William Waldo Hyde
of Hartford returned on March oth ~
from a two months trip to California.
’76—Otto T. Bannard has been ap-
pointed to the Executive Committee of
the College of the City of New York.
’76—Professor Arthur 1. .iadiey
delivered a lecture on ‘The Relations
of the United States with Cuba” before
his class in Political Economy last
week. :
*z79-—O. D. Thompson was recently
elected President of the Phillips An-
ae Alumni Association of Pittsburg,
a
’82—C. K. Billings has an article on
“Golf” in the February Golfer.
’80--S. M. Clement and family are
spending the remainder of the Winter
at Pasadena, Cal.
’°82--Henry E. Bourne has an article
in the Citizen for March entitled “The
Interest of America in Sea Power.”
’°83Fred C. Leonard was recently
appointed United States Marshal for
the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
’°83--Francis G. Beach, Class Secre-
tary, will retire from_the postmaster-
ship of the New Haven Postoffice
April Ist.
’°83—-Chas. C. Clarke and wife are at
the “Hotel Green,” Pasadena. Mr.
Clarke expects to assume a position
upon the Sheffield Faculty next Fall
in the capacity of instructor in French.
’°82--Charles Halsey is in Los An-
geles, for a time. His health has been
impaired for some months, and he ex-
pects to be benefited by the mild and
sunny climate of Southern California.
86 S.—Calvert Townley, who until
recently was with the General Electric
Company in New York, has removed
to the Boston branch of the Company.
°25_The present address of Clifford
W. Hartridga is 35 Nassau street, New
York City.
87 S.—The engagement is announced
of L. A. Jenkins to Miss Anna Hyde ©
of Buffalo, N. Y
22 _W. D. Washburn, Jr., of Minne-
apolis, has issued a pamphlet on “Cuba
and Spain: Our Plain Duty.”
88 _F. A. Verplanck has been elected
Corresponding Secretary of the Con-
necticut Teachers’ Guild for the ensu-
ing year.
28S. —Philemon T. Sherman has
just been appointed a member of the
Grant Monument Committee, New
York City. ; :
728 —Mr. and Mrs. George A.White-
head have announced the marriage of
their daughter, Mary Battle, to Edwin
Parsons on Tuesday, March 8th, at 217
Jones st., E. Savannah, Ga.
"89 S.—O. E. Taft read a paper before
the National Currency Convention held
at Chicago on “Finance.”
’89 S—The wedding of Arthur B.
Skelding and Miss~ Clara Dorothy
Ames of Washington, D. C., ‘took
place Tuesday, February 8, at Wash-
ington.
’90 S—Theodore D. Irwin has re-
cently entered business with Halstead
& Co., coffee merchants, 194 Forsythe
sreet., New York City.
’91—H. K. Smith has been appointed
a commissioner of the Superior Court
of Connecticut by Judge Shumway.
’91 S.—R. M. Dodsworth has re-
cently become Secretary of the Young
Men’s Christian Association of White
Plains, N.Y.
’91 S—Amasa Trowbridge has been
appointed a member of the Board of
Survey appointed by Adjutant-General
Haven of Connecticut.
’92—A_ son, William Bartlett Mar-
shall, was born to Mr. and Mrs. L. W.
Marshall on Monday, March 7th.
’92—-Richard G. Eaton has recently
been appointed to the position of resi-
dent physician at the Holyoke City
Hospital, Holyoke, Mass.
’92—The permanent address of Rev.
Harry W. Luce is Tunchow (via Che-
foo), China. Friends may obtain oc-
casional notes of information by send-
ing their addresses to J. S. Luce,
Scranton, Pa.
7904 S.—Mr. and Mrs. Arthur T.
Kemp are spending the Winter in their
cottage at Aiken, S. C. ;
’94—The engagement is announced
of Kirk C. McKinney to Miss Flor-
ence Devol, daughter of Gen. H. F.
Devol* =
’°94 M.S.—Edward S. Moulton . was
married on February 28th to Miss Fan-
chon M. Smith of Oakland, Cal., in
that city.
’94—_W. H. Leete has recently been
appointed prosecuting attorney of the
town of Enfield, Conn. He is in the
law office of Briscoe & Andrews, Hart-
ford, Conn. » .
’94 S.—S. G. Colt, who has for the
last year been superintending the con-
struction of an electric railroad at
Buenos Ayres, will soon return to the
United States.
’9 S—James D. Layng has gone
South on a pleasure trip.
’°95 S.—Richard T. Crane will leave
for Russia in the near future.
’os—E. W. Beattie has an article on
the Yale Law Journal in this year’s Yale
Shingle.
’95 S.—F. E. Newton and Miss Ella
P. Holbrook were married at Town-
shend, Vt., September 7, 1897.
’95S.—John. A. Farwell and Lee
Jones, ex-’96S., are in the pineapple
business on the Indian river, Fla.
’96 —F. C. Lee’s address is now 5
Rue St. Benoit, Paris.
’96 S.—Eugene H. Sherman is in the
New York Law School.
’96—H. H. Benedict is spending the
Winter at Palm Beach, Florida.
’96 S.—Alexander N. Jerrems has
been in the West for a month.
’96—G. B. Hatch is on the Board of
Editors of the Harvard Law Review.
’96—Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Cross are
now living at 63 Sparks st., Cambridge,
Mass. |
96 S.—Jemuel G. Marty has returned
much improved in health from a trip
to the Gulf of Mexico.
’96—A. H. Pardee’s address has been
changed to Hazleton, Pa. His former
address was Germantown, Pa.
’96—Dudley L. Vaill has been ap-
pointed Treasurer of the Geo. Dudley
Tanning Co of West Winsted, Conn.
796 S.—F. C. Thrall has recently be-
come Assistant Manager of the Detroit
Machine Screw Works, Detroit, Mich. —
’96—F. M. Jeffrey has left the Yale
Graduate School to become instructor
at the Rectory School, New Milford,
Conn.
’96—J. A. Hutchinson is now with
the firm of T. C. Moesser & Co.,
leather ‘merchants, 132 Lincoln st.,
Boston, Mass.
96 S.—F. H. Miller is with the Inter-
national Navigation and Investment
Company, conducting mining opera-
tions between Alaska and the United
States. :
’97 S.—John E. Shaw is studying law
at the University of Minnesota.
’97 S.—John J. Hewitt is with the
- Tacoma Lumber Company at Tacoma,
Wash.
’97 S.—Anson G. Betts is taking a
post-graduate course in Chemistry at
Columbia.
“announced in the last
New York Yale News.
(Correspondence of YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY.]
New York, March 16.—On Saturday
night a dinner of the Ninety-Five
alumni of New York was held in one of
the upper rooms of the house, and
brought together a large number of
the Class for a pleasant evening. An
informal reunion of Eighty-Five is to
take place during the coming week, as
issue of the
WEEKLY.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION MEETING.
On Friday next the meeting of the
Alumni Association to take action on
the proposed dissolution of that body
will be held at Sherry’s. At the close
of the business meeting supper will be
served. The following circular in re-
gard to the question to be voted on
has been sent out:
A meeting of the Association will be
held at Sherry’s, Fifth avenue and
Thirty-seventh street, Friday evening,
March 18, 1898, at nine o’clock.
The Executive Committee will then
present and will recommend for adop-
tion the following resolution:
. Resolved, That this Association be
dissolved at the close of the meeting.
They will also recommend, if this
resolution be adopted, that directions
be then given as to the disposition to
be made of the funds and property of
the Association. :
The undersigned have handed to the
Secretary their resignations as officers
and members of the Executive Com-
mittee, to be presented in case their
recommendations as aforesaid shall not
be substantially approved, being that,
. because of their opinion, as shown by
said recommendations, other managers
should be chosen if the Association is
to continue. In such case it will be
necessary at said meeting to elect new
officers and members of the Executive
Committee: Geo. A. Adee, President;
Geo. C. Holt, Vice-President; TW
Skiddy, Vice-President; Julian W. Cur-
tiss, Secretary; Alex. Lambert; Henry
W. Calhoun; John H. Hammond;
Herbert Parsons; Edmund Coffin;
Henry W. Taft.
a>
a
CLASS NOTICES.
Ninety-Two Sexennial.
The Sexennial reunion of our class
will be held in New Haven on June 28.
It will be the only Sexennial meeting
we will ever have.
There is not a member of the class
whose presence is not needed to make
the meeting what is should be—an old-
fashioned Ninety-Two game. We used
to know how to do it. Let’s do it
again.
The Committee have decided to
assess ten dollars for sexennial ex-
penses. This will include the cost of a
sexennial record. Ninety-Two is the
only class which has been out of Col-
lege six years without publishing a
class book.
Harmonie Hall has been engaged,
Colt’s band of Hartford will be ours
for the day and night and a tender-
hearted caterer has consented to feed
us. We will occupy a prominent sec-
tion of the bleachers at the ball game,
and trolley cars have been secured to
carry us to and from the Field.
You can greatly increase the chances
of a sticcess and lessen the labors of the
Committee by replying as early as pos-
sible. Please make checks payable to
the order of A. H. Swayne.
Members of the class can, secure
rooms in East Divinity by writing to
FE. F. Hill, East Divinity, New Haven,
Conn. The charge will be one dollar
a day. :
‘Remember this—you'll be sorry if
9
eo Sw B. WRIGHT,
A. H. SWAYNE,
Epw. BoLTwoopD,
Committee.
New York, March 8, 1808.
» %
~~
Ninety-Five Notice.
Circulars have recently been sent out
by the Class Secretary asking for the
present business address of members of
the Class of Ninety-Five. A new list
is being compiled for the purpose of
triennial announcements.
[Continued on 5th page. |
nee
Athletie Calendar
April 23.—Annual Sprin
open to Yale men, at Yale Field pik
April 23.—University of Pennsylvania
relay races at Philadelphia.
April 30.—Invitation games, at Yale
Field. |
April 30.—Yale Interscholastic Ten-
nis Tournament, at New Haven.
May 14.—Dual Yale-Harvard track
games, at Cambridge. ,
May 21.—Yale Freshman-Princeton
Freshman baseball at New Haven.
May 24.—New England Champion-
ship Tennis Tournament, at New
Bae
ay 27 and 28. — Intercollegiat
games, New York. pate
June 4.—Yale-Princeton baseball at
— Haven.
une 4—Yale Freshman-Princeto
Freshman baseball at Princeton. :
June 11.—Yale-Princeton baseball at
Princeton.
May 14.—Yale Freshman-Harvard
Freshman baseball at New Haven.
June 18.—Yale-Princeton baseball at
New York, if necessary in case of a tie.
June 23.—Yale-Harvard baseball at
Cambridge.
June 28.—Yale-Harvard baseball at
New Haven.
May 30.—Yale Freshman-Harvard
Freshman baseball at Cambridge.
July 2.—Yale-Harvard baseball at
New York, if necessary in case of a tie.
August 16.—National Interscholastic
Tennis Tournament at Newport.
October 5.—Intercollegiate
Tournament at New Haven.
‘Tennis
a, <>.
v >
The University Glee Club will assist
at the next concert of the New Haven
Symphony Orchestra to be given at
the Hyperion on Thursday, March
31st. The Club will give Prof. H. W.
Parker’s Commencement Ode, assisted
by Mr. A. Beresford of Boston, as
soloist. This will be the first time the
ode has been sung since Commence-
ment two years ago.
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.
MPORTERS OF
ENGLISH AND SCOTCH
SUITINGS.
COOPER
FARORS and. .- 20%:
_...BREECHES MAKERS
Twenty-nine 34th Street, W.
NEW YORK.
Telephone, 1405-38th St.