Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, April 21, 1898, Page 9, Image 9

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    YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY
SPECIAL NOTICES.
(Class and Association Secretaries are invited to
use this column.]
Sixty-Three Reunion.
The members of the Class of Sixty-
Three, Yale College will meet this year,
it being the thirty-fifth since graduation
There will be the usual meeting for
business in one of the lecture or recita-
tion rooms about noon on Tuesday,
June 28th. The place and hour will be
definitely announced on posters. The
Class Supper will take place on the
evening of the same day at the house of
the Ansantawae Club, Sayin Rock.
The electric cars from New Haven
pass near the Club House. Members
of the Class are requested to inform
the Class Secretary, Samuel Hunting-
ton, 146 Broadway, New York City, on
or before June 20th whether they mean
to be present.
As the Secretary will be expected to
make a report to the Class, to consist
of such information as may be furnished
him by absent members, all who will be
unable to be present are requested to
write him, telling what has hapened to,
or been done by them and their families,
with as full an account as may be
thought proper of their present sur-
roundings and circumstances, and other
matters of especial interest to them.
The Secretary will be glad to receive
any material that may be of use for a
future Class History, although it will
probably not be printed for some time
yet.
Sixty-Eight’s Reunion.
The Class of Sixty-Eight will hold
its reunion this year, and, judging by
the letters already received, the Com-
mittee expects that there will be a large
attendance. The Class Banquet will be
held at the house of the New Haven
Lawn Club on Whitney avenue, and
“The Woodbridge,” 159 Elm street, has
been engaged for the exclusive use of
the Class during Commencement week.
—-+4—___—_
Obituary.
LEONARD ABRAM BRADLEY, ’55.
Leonard: A. Bradley, °55, of New
York City, died very suddenly on Mon-
day, while visiting his brother, Dr.
William L. Bradley, at his home, No.
226 Church street, New Haven. He
had come to New Haven on Saturday,
and up to the time of his death was in
as good health as usual. On Monday
morning he was suddenly attacked with
heart disease, and death followed al-
most instantly. - He leaves a brother,
Dr. W. L. Bradley, ’60, and three sis-
ters, all of whom reside in New Ha-
ven.
Mr. Bradley was born in New Haven,
Pa., on March 14, 1833. He entered
Yale in 1851, and graduated with the
Class of Fifty-Five. After graduation
he took a course in the Yale Law
School, finishing his studies in the of-
fice of Charles E. Strong, of New York
City. He was admitted to the New
York bar in May, 1858, and was for
some time in partnership with Charles
E. Strong, before engaging in practice
alone. He continued in the practice of
law up to the time of his death. Mr.
Bradley was a member of the Presby-
terian Church, presided over by Rev.
Dr. John Hall. He was intensely in-
terested in the Young Men’s Christian
Association, and narticularly in the Yale
Y. M. C. A... He was also closely as-
sociated with the branch at 23d street,
New York City. He had taken an ac-
tive part in the development of soldiers’
libraries, and had been instrumental in
placing books in various army posts
throughout the country. For many
years he was Assistant Secretary of his
class, doing a large part of the work
‘connected with that office.
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The Late Mr. Brisbin.
A classmate of John Ball Brisbin, |
Forty-Six, who died at St. Paul on
March 22, and whose obituary notice |
has been in the WEEKLY, writes in an
obituary sketch just received that Mr.
Brisbin, on retiring from the practice
of law about ten years ago, presented
his library to the Ramsey County Bar
Association, which he had assisted in_
founding. The sketch contains a tri-
pute to Mr. Brisbin’s attractive personal —
qualities and his genius for friendship.
This is the new home of the Phoenix Mutual
Life Insurance Company, of Hartford.
Its
architects were Cady, Berg & See, the men
who have built so many of the most conspic-
uous structures of New Yale.
Athletic Calendar.
April 23.— Invitation games, at Yale
Field.
April 23.—University of Pennsylvania
relay races at Philadelphia.
April 30.—Annual Spring games,
open to Yale men, 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
Haven.
May 27 and _ 28. — Intercollegiate
games, New York.
June 4.—Yale-Princeton baseball at
New Haven.
June 4.—Yale Freshman-Princeton
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. .
- wy
voy
“A young Yale scientist while dig-
ging in a hole for a skunk, found a five
dollar gold piece.”
Vinhats - Yale luck Anyone © élse
would have found the skunk.’—Har-
vard Lampoon.
It’s a good lamp.
That’s why so
many are in use.
For Sale by all dealers. Send for Booklet G.
BRIDGEPORT BRASS COMPANY,
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“No, boys; I have not been burning
the midnight oil to get all that material
for my address. I have not spent hun-
dreds for books of reference. [I could
not have got these up to date facts and
figures in that way.
““T simply send to Romeike for
Press Clippings.
_ Day by day he sent me editorials and
_ original articles collected from. thou-
_gands of newspapers and periodicals
| which are read in his offices, and I only
had to arrange the material.”
ROMEIKE’S
Press Cutting Bureau
will send you all newspaper clippings
which may appear about you, your
friends, or any subject on which you
want to be “up to date.”
A large force in my New York office
reads 650 daily papers and over 2,000
weeklies and magazines ; in fact, every
paper of importance published in the
_ United States, for 5,000 subscribers, and
_ through the European Bureaus, all the
_ leading papers in the civilized globe.
_ Clippings found for subscribers are
_ pasted on slips giving name and date of
paper, and are mailed day by day.
Write for circulars and terms.
HENRY ROMETKE,
139 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK.
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