YALE ALUMNI
WEEKLY © — 5
The Apollo Club.
The Apollo Glee and Banjo Clubs
have organized for 1808, and from the
interest already shown in the work of
the Clubs, the coming season promises
to be unusually successful. The adop-
tion last year of a distinct name and
Policy for the Clubs was followed by an
increased interest in the organizations,
and a much more spirted competition
for membership. The primary object
of the Apollo is to develop material for
the University Clubs, but as distinct
Organizations the Apollo Clubs have
come to occupy a very important posi-
tion in the undergraduate life. Keeping
in view the real purpose of the Club to
furnish men for the University Club,
the management of the Apollo Banjo
Club this year restricted the competi-
tion for membership to underclassmen.
The Clubs this year will be under the
management of T. S. Maffitt, ’99, as-
sistant manager of the University
Clubs. Leeds Mitchell, ’99 S., has been
appointed president of the Banjo Club,
and S. B. Sutphin, ’99 S., leader.
The make-up of the Apollo Banjo
Club is as follows:
Banjeaurines—E. Watrous, ’99; 2B.
F. Grant, ’99 S.; S. B. Sutphin, ’o9 S.;
J. M. Walton, ’99S.; B. V. Norton,
99 S.; C. H. Draper, 1900; T. W. Rus-
sell, 1901; R. W. Parsons, 1901.
Piccolo Banjos—F. W. Blumenthal,
1900; C. A. Phelps, 1901.
Banjos—M. W. Dodge, ’o9; F. R.
Parks, ’99; W. E. Porter, ’99S.; E. L.
deForest, 1900 S.
Mandolins—W. W. Knight, ’o9S.;
R. H.- McCormick, Jr., 1900: D. S.
Blossom, 1900; L. Manierre, 1901.
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
LAW SCHOOL.
Washington Square, New York City.
DAY CLASSES (LL.B. after two years).— Twelve
hours’ required work and six hours’ optional per
week. ‘The daily sessions (from 3 30 to 6 Pp M.)
are so arranged that the student may do effective
work in an office every day.
EVENING CLASSES (LL.B. after three years.) —
Ten hours’ required work and four hours’ option-
al per week. Daily sessions from 8 to 10 P. M.
LIBRARY FACILITIES are excellent. The Law
Library contains over 11,000 volumes.
Tuition, $100 per year.
For circulars, address
L. J. Tompkins, Registrar.
625 Students. 15 Instructors.
CLARENCE PorRTER.
WHITEHOUSE & PORTER,
Real Estate Brokers & Agents.
509 FIFTH AVE., BET. 42d & 43d STS.,
AND 1 NASSAU STREET,
Telephone, 1420-38th st. NEW YORK.
United States Mortgage & Trust Co.
59 Cepar Street, New York.
Capital, $2,000,000.00. Surplus, $1,100,000.00.
‘Transacts a General Trust Business.
Pays Interest on Deposits subject to check.
Is a Legal Depositary of Court and Trust Funds.
WortTH’N WHITEHOUSE.
Officers:
Grorce W. Younc, ......__...- President.
LuTHER KouNTZE, _..__-.- Vice-President.
James Timpson,...Second Vice-President.
ARTHUR-LURNBULL, =< 25ci<2 a2 Treasurer.
Wititam P. Erriorr, .......... Secretary.
CLarK WILLIAMS,..._..-. Ass’t Treasurer,
Ricuarp M. Hurp,......- Ass’t Secretary.
Directors:
8. D. Babcock.
C. T. Lewis.
C. D. Dickey, Jr. ect
F R. A. McCurdy.
David Dows, Jr. Chas. M. Pratt. Luther Kountze.
G. G. Haven, Jr. Dumont Clarke. T. A. Morford.
Jas. J. Hill. Wm. P. Dixon. Rob’t Olyphant,
Gustay E. Kissel. R. A. Granniss. Jas. Timpson.
Geo. W. Young.
HOME>
Life Insurance Co.
OF NEW YORK.
C. R. Henderson.
G. Hubbard.
vi
GEORGE E., IDE, President.
Wm. M. ST. JOHN, Vice President.
ELLIS W. GLADWIN, Secretary.
WM. A. MARSHALL, Actuary.
F. W. Cuapin, Med. Director.
EUGENE A. CALLAHAN,
General Agent
STATE OF CONNECTICUT. —
23 Church Street, - - New Haven.
Guitars—T. H. Spence, ’99; R. G.
VanName, ’99; G. P. Docker, ’995.;
F. B. Humphreys, ’99 S.; G. W. Hub-
bell, 1900; E. Cutter, 1900S.; N. A.
Baldwin, 1901; J. C. Kimball, 1901.
The present make-up of the Apollo
Glee Club is as follows:
First’ Tenor—jobn. D:. Carson, 90;
Clarence P. Dodge, ‘99; Henry R.
Dennis, ’99; William G. Wallace, ’99;
Sydney B. Morton, 1900; Henry E.
Ellsworth, 1900; H. O. Price, 1900;
John A. Keppelman, 1901.
Second Tenor—Alired E. Richards,
98; Lewis M. Williams, 798; Curtis H.
Walker, ’99; William D. Cushman, ’99;
William J. Torrey, ’99; Alexander B.
Marvin, 799; Frederick S. Coe, ’o99S.;
George V. Reynolds, Igot.
First Bass—Robert E. Hume, 798; .
Frederick D. Vincent, ’99; Charlcs FI.
Conner, Jr., ’99; Thomas, H. Clarkson,
1900; Herbert R. Smith, 1900; Robert
Russell, 1900; William R. Clarke, 1900;
Allen W. Judd, rgo1.
Second Bass—Harold A. Hatch, ’o8:
Robert F. Dyer, ’98S.; Arthur F. Way,
’99; Loring B. Packard, ’99; Arthur
L. Sherman, ’1900; Edwards A. Park,
1900; Keith Spalding, 1901; Robert L
Atkinson, I901.
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ADs os
The Spirit of Yale and of
Harvard.
The April number of the Bookman
contains the following review of ‘‘Har-
vard Episodes’:
“From a social standpoint, Yale and
Harvard are the most interesting of all
our American universities; and, from
the same standpoint, they are thor-
oughly antipodal. Yale, which finds
its closest analogy in a great English
public school like Eton or Harrow, is
the personification of the democratic
spirit. A student entering there is
taken for what he actually is, and he is
not judged by any extraneous and non-
academic © considerations; such ‘as
money, or birth, or friends. He makes
his way to prominence by sheer force
of scholarship, or literary ability, or
athletic prowess, or personal popu-
larity. The class is the unit of the
whole system.
“Between the classes the lines are
drawn and a great gulf fixed. The
curriculum is conservative; the spirit
of the place is one of intense solidarity,
and it breeds a certain morgue that is
not displeasing. The students are not
very sophisticated, but they are ex-
tremely enthusiastic. They love their
College customs; they are proud of their
classes; they are frantically loyal to
Yale itself. They think nothing else
so great and glorious; and they have a
magnificently barbaric contempt for
anything outside of their own Univer-
sity. They are more boys than men,
and they are largely treated as such by
the authorities; yet it is all rather fine;
and the tone of the place, if youthful
and a little raw, is inspiring, wholesome, -
and thoroughly American.
“Harvard on the other hand, is
profoundly sophisticated. It is a place
where enthusiasms are discouraged,
where Good Form is supreme. Its
social distinctions are marked out and
maintained with the greatest rigor.
Its spirit is aristocratic and a trifle
supercilious. It is not merely a seat
of learning in the academic sense; but,
with a wider meaning, it is a place
where young men soon come to know
the subtle yet very patent disparities
that will confront them as soon as they
enter upon the larger life of the world
outside. Wealth does much; birth does
more; friends, or rather associations
and an indefinable something savoring
of caste, do more than all. These facts
have often led to considerable reproba-
tion. Harvard has been called snob-
Bish, yet tt is: hardly’ that 2". °° We
commend the whole of the first story
(“The Chance’) to those who wish to
get an accurate understanding of what
the Harvard spirit really is. This
spirit is, in its way, perhaps, as fine a
thing as Yale’s; but it is vastly different,
and a knowledge of it in advance might
oiten save the entering student from a
certain disillusionment and disappoint-
ment.”
th, i
mn,
8. 8. S. 1900 Deacons.
The members of Ninety S. met March
30th, at: the. suet. YM. CA te
elect their Class deacons. W. F. Coch-
ran, 98 S., presided over the meeting.
The men elected were: H. S. Brown
of Springfield, Mass.; H. Richards, Jr.,
of New York City, and O. H. Schell of
Harrisburg, Pa.
_ fortune-maker and fortune-holder, and that
CHas. ApAMs, ALEX.MONEILL. Wwm.S. Brienam,
Yale ’87. Yale ’87,
ADAMS, MCNEILL & BRIGHAM,
BANKERS & BROKERS,
44 Broad Street, - New York.
Members New York Stock Exchange. Stocks
and Bonds Bought and Sold. Investment Securi-
ties a Specialty.
“Long Distance Telephone, 947 Broad.”
ECONOMICS. |
HERE was a time in this country, not
long past, when the making of a for-
tune was held to be in a great measure
the prime test of any man’s ability. Then it
came to be a recognized fact that it was
full as hard to know how to keep it when
LEOPOLD H. FRANCKE, ALBERT FRANCKE,
Yale ’89. LS.
Yale ’9
L. H. & A. FRANCKE,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,
50 Exchange Place, ~ - New York.
Members New York Stock Exchange.
Buy and Sell on Commission Stocks and
Bonds dealt in at the New York Stock Ex-
change. Also Miscellaneous Securities not
listed on the Stock Exchange.
Long Distance Telephone, 1348 Broad.
made. Now a third condition confronts the
is how best he can dispose of his wealth when
the time comes at last for it to pass out of
his hands. The world knows thousands of
men who have made fortunes only to lose
them. Not infrequently it talks of one who
made money and who conserved it well
during his lifetime, but who showed no
skill in disposing of it when he came to
leave it; one conspicuous case is enough
to mention: that of the late A. T. Stewart.
Guaranty Trust Co.
It is a fact not to be denied that the most
difficult problem confronting successful
financial life is what to do with money. Yet
with few exceptions everyone is certain that
it is a trick, not an art, and that he knows it |
perfectly. When a man is quietly modest
on the subject, when he moves with care
where money is to be invested, —there is
the man who, the chances are, is truly skilled
in the whole matter.
Equally true with this is one other fact
of such a man: he is invariably either an -
insurer of his life, or a firm advocate of life
insurance for the great multitude of human
beings who are fighting the battle of life.
He has come to know fully all the difficulties
that surround the getting, the saving, and
the placing of money, and is glad to lean,
CAPITAL, - <= =
HENRY A. MURR
of New York.
NASSAU, CORNER CEDAR STREET.
$2,000,000
SURPLUS, - = = $2,500,000
ACTS AS TRUSTEE FOR CORPORATIONS,
FIRMS, AND INDIVIDUALS, AS GUARDIAN,
EXECUTOR, AND ADMINISTRATOR, TAKES
ENTIRE CHARGE OF REAL AND PERSONAL
ESTATES.
INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS
subject to cheque or on certificate,
STERLING DRAFTS ON ALL PARTS OF
GREAT BRITAIN BOUGHT AND SOLD, COL
LECTIONS MADE.
TRAVELLERS’ LETTERS OF CREDIT AVAII>
ABLE IN ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD, AND
COMMERCIAL LETTERS OF CREDIT ISSUED-
WALTER G. OAKMAN, President.
ADRIAN Setar ae R., Vice-President.
GEORGE R. TURNBULL, 2d Vice-President.
AY, Treas, and Sec’y.
. NELSON BORLAND, Asst. Treas. and Sec’y.
OHN GAULT, Manager Foreign Dept.
DIRECTORS.
Charles R. Henderson,
Samuel D. Babcock,
Adrian Iselin, Jr
George F. Baker,
i :
Augustus D. fuililard,
ames N. Jarvie,
ichard A. McCurdy,
Alexander E. Orr,
Walter G. Oakman,
ged H. Rogers, ;
Oliver Harriman, H. McK, Twombly,
R. Somers Hayes, Frederick W. Vanderbilt,
William C, Whitney.
George S. Bowdoin,
August Belmont,
Frederic Cromwell,
Walter R. Gillette,
Robert Goelet,
G. G. Haven,
and to advise others to lean, upon so sure a
staff for future needs and returns as is held
out for the help of all in life insurance as
offered by The Mutual Life of New York.
There is no other business, and no other LONDON BERANOH,
33 LOMBARD STREET, E. C.
F. NEVILL JACKSON, SECRETARY.
Buys and sells rep on the principal cities of
the world, collects dividends and coupons without
sharge, issues travellers’ and commercial letters of
tredit, receives and pays interest on deposits subject
to cheque at sight or on notice, Iends money on
sollaterals, deals in American and other investment
securities, and offers {ts services as correspondent and
financial agent to corporations, bankers and merchants.
investment, which can show such testimony
aS can life insurance. Nor can any flife
insurance company show a record past and
present comparable with that of The Mutual
Life of New York. The uninsured person
can in no way so well assist himself in the
proper care and growth of his earnings as
to insure his life. And if in this as in other
things he seeks the best, he will indubitably
turn to the Grand Old Mutual. Consider
this matter —.you can come to but one
Bankers.
BANK OF ENGLAND, _
CLYDESDALE BANK, Limited,
NATIONAL PROVINCIAL BANK OF
ENGLAND, Limited,
PARR’S BANK, Limited.
Solicitors.
iSi ELDS AND WILLIAMS.
decision; and that will lead you to The 7ebeeyt
London Committee.
ARTHUR JOHN FRASER, CHAIRMAS.
DONALD C. HALDEMAN.
Mutual Life Insurance Company of New
York.
“The Leading Fire Insurance Company of America.”
Incorporated 1819. Charter Perpetual.
Cash Capital, $4,000,000.00
Cash Assets, — 12,089,089.98
Total Liabilities, 3,655,3 70.62
Net Surplus, 4,433,719.36
Losses Paid in 79 Years, 81,125,621.50
— =
= 9 S—=
Wm. B. CLARK, President.
W. H. KING, SECRETARY. E. O. WEEKS, VICE-PRES.
A. C. ADAMS,
HENRY E. REES, \ Asst. SECRETARIES.
Lanta & GALLAGHER,
O.
WESTERN BRANCH,
413 Vine Street, Cincinnati,
NORTHWESTERN BRANCH,
PACIFIC BRANCH,
General Agents.
WM. H. WYMAN, General Agent.
Omaha, Neb. : W. P. HARFORD, Assistant General Agent.
San Francisco, Cal. BOARDMAN & SPENCER, General Agents
CHICAGO, ILLS., 145 LaSalle Street.
NEW YORK, 52 William Street.
BOSTON, 12 Central Street.
PHILADELPHIA, 229 Walnut Street.
INLAND MARINE DEPARTMENT,