Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, May 05, 1898, Page 3, Image 3

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    YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY
3
ALUMNI NOTES.
( Graduates are invited to contribute to this column.)
'42—Rev. George B. Hubbard has
resigned from the pastorate of the Con-
sregational Church of Plymouth, Wisc.
: 48—Henry T. Blake read a paper be-
ore the New Haven Colony Historical
Society on Wednesday evening, April
27, on “New Haven Green as a Place
of Burial.”
"62—Mr. and Mrs. Frederic A. Ward
Sailed for Genoa by the steamer Kaiser
Wilhelm II, on April 30.
_ 62—Rev. H. H. Stebbins, D.D., has
just completed the tenth year of his
pastorate at the Central Presbyterian
Church, of Rochester, N. Y., which has
a membership of over 2,000.
‘6o—E. P. Arvine is traveling in
Mexico. In an interesting letter to a
local paper Mr. Arvine among other
things says the Mexicans, so far as he
has observed, are strongly for Cuban
liberty.
"72 S.—Prof.. D. W. Hering, C. E,
(Yale) contributed recently to the
Popular Science Monthly, an article on
“A Year of the X-Rays,” also to the
Engineering News, a paper on the “Ten-
sion of Spokes in the Bicycle.” Prof.
Hering is a member of the New York
Academy of Science.
'74—George L. Fox, Rector of the
Hopkins Grammar School, is recover-
ing from an attack of pleuro-pneumonia,
‘75 L. S.—Judge George M. Sharp,
of Baltimore, has been appointed to the
Supreme Court Bench of Maryland.
*81—Rev. Professor Benjamin W.
Bacon, of the Yale Divinity School,
sailed for Europe for an extended tour
on Saturday, April 23.
*84—John R. Halsey has changed his
law office from 256 Broadway to Wash-
ington Life Building, at 141 Broadway,
New York City.
*84—Gerard Fountain was married on
April 28th, to Miss Anne Elizabeth
Miller, daughter of Mr. John Caldwell,
of Edgewood, Penn. |
*86—Charlton M. Lewis has recently
edited a book entitled “Foreign Sources
of Modern English Versification.”
"88 $.—The Bank of Hawaii has been
organized at Honolulu, H. I., by a
banking firm of which George R. Car-
ter is a member.
*88—The marriage is announced of
D. S. Merwin to Miss Minnie Lee Col-
lins at Pasadena, Cal., on April 25th.
They have started on a trip to the At-
lantic coast, and will return to Cali-
fornia in October.
*90—Professor Charles B. Bliss has
an article in the April Forum on “Pro-
fessor Munsterberg’s Attack on Experi-
mental Psychology.”
*90—George L. Amerman was mar-
ried April 25, 1898, to Miss Harriet E.
Dugniel, sister of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Dey of Syracuse, N. Y.
*9I—Grosvenor Atterbury has fur-
nished the plans for the Club House of
the New Haven Lawn Club.
°92—Herbert J. Wyckoff will be one
of the speakers at the Commencement
exercises of the Yale Divinity School,
May 18.
93 L. S—A. W. Carter has purchased
a large ranch for a sugar plantation on
the Island of Molokai, H. I.
’°93—The engagement is announced of
Miss Christine Siebeneck, younger
daughter of Mr. Joseph G. Siebeneck,
of Pittsburgh, Penn., to Noah H.
Swayne, 2d.
’°93—Clarence C. Harmstad has re-
moved his office to the Washington
Life Building, 141 Broadway, corner
Liberty street, New York, where he
si continue the general practice of the
aw.
’94—Edward Russell Thomas sailed
for Genoa by the steamer Kaiser Wil-
helm II, on April 30. :
’94—Frederick H. Lynch has resigned
his position as Assistant Pastor of the
United Church of New Haven.
"95—E. W. Beattie has been elected
President of the Kent Club of the Law
School.
’95—Emerson Gifford Taylor has
been appointed Instructor in English
in the Sheffield Scientific School to suc-
- ceed Mr. James W. Broatch, ’91, who
resigned his position there a week ago.
95. 5.—H. G. Wells, now a member of
the Senior class of the Rush Medical
School of the University of Chicago,
_ stood second among 300 candidates, in
a competitive examination for positions
on the House Staff of the Cook County
(Ills.) Hospital. aS
’95—The Class Secretary of Ninety-
Five gives the following items: |
The address of Samuel Tyler is, care
Alexander Tyler, 205 Sears Building,
Boston, Mass.
Ervin E. Osgood is located at the
Berkeley School, 20 West 44th st., New
York City. |
’96—W. C. Morgan has been recently
elected an honorary member of the
German Chemical Society of Berlin.
°96 S.—C. A. Mabie is in the whole-
sale lumber business. Address Mc-
Clure-Mabie Lumber Co., Fisher, West
Virginia.
’96—-Franke S. Havens has received
notice of his election as an honorary
member of the German Chemical So-
ciety of Berlin on account of his origi-
nal researches in that science.
’97—James P. Sawyer has been ap-
pointed a City Cemetery Commissioner
of Rutland, Vt.
th, i,
Be ne
Army and Navy Personals.
’290—At the presentation of a flag to
the 65th New York, last Saturday night
at Buffalo, the presentation speech was
made by Hon. James O. Putnam. The
address is described as remarkably elo-
quent and “a fine specimen of lofty
patriotism.”
*46—Stephen W. Kellogg has a son,
Frank S., a Lieutenant in the U. S.
Navy, who was on board the Baltimore,
in the recent engagement of Admiral
Dewey’s fleet with the Spanish at
Manila. ,
REV. C. O07DAM. 92:
’54—Judge Stanley Woodward ad-
dressed the troops of the Ninth Regi-
ment, N. G. P., on their departure for
Mt. Gretna, Pa., on Wednesday even-
ing, the 27th inst.
*6I—Ex-Col. Andrew Sheriden Burt, .
of the 25th U. S. Regulars, has been
sent with his regiment to Key West,
Fla. Col. Burt entered the service as
a Sergeant in the 6th Ohio Volunteers,
April 12, 1861. In the same year he
was appointed a First Lieutenant in the
18th U. S. Infantry and was promoted
to a Captaincy in 1863. During the
Civil War he was twice brevetted, Cap-
tain and Major, for gallant and meritor-
ious services and was wounded at the
battle of Mill Spring, Ky. Since the
war he has been in continuous service,
for the most part on the western plains.
In 1883 he was made Major of the 8th
Iniantry; in 1888, Lieutenant Colonel
of the 7th, and in 1892, Colonel of the
25th. He was in command of the
escort which accompanied Prof. O. C.
Marsh of Yale on some of his scientific
explorations in the West. Some “bar-
rack-room Kipling” has composed the
following regimental ballad:
“We've known him in times of peace,
And when in times of trouble
Have eyes and swords together flashed,
We felt we knew him double.
“He rides to danger with his men,
A fearless form before them;
. And that’s the reason why, perhaps,
Those very men adore him.
“Tf bullets sing and rifles ring,
May no mischance avert
Just praise from one—Mar’s own true
son,
Gallant Andy Burt.”
°68—Professor E. K. Bageod is
superintendent of Naval War Records
at Washington, D. C.
*"70—Charles McC. Reeve, who has
been a Colonel in the Minnesota Na-
tional Guard for a number of years, has
been commissioned Colonel of the
First Minnesota Regiment of Infantry,
by the Governor of Minnesota, and will
have command of the regiment in the
present war with Spain.
*72—Rev. C. O. Day goes to the war
as chaplain of the First Regiment, Ver-
mont National Guard. Mr. Day, who
is pastor of the Congregational Church
in Brattleboro, Vt., has been Chaplain
of the regiment for four years, and pro-
poses still to go where his regiment
goes. He was a member of the Univer-
sity Ball Nine while in College.
*76—Captain G. E. Bushnell, Assist-
ant Surgeon in the U. S. Army, has
been appointed by President McKinley
‘Physical Examiner of the volunteers
from Massachusetts.
76S.—The steam yacht Conqueror,
owned by Frederick W. Vanderbilt,
was inspected by the Government com-
mission Saturday, and was favorably
reported on for purchase as a torpedo-
boat.
_ 777—J. Montgomery Sears, of Boston,
has offered his 100-foot steam yacht
Varuna to the U. S. Government, for
use as a patrol-boat.
*77—Russell Frost, Brigadier-Gen-
eral and Brigade-Commander of the
Connecticut National Guard, is promi-
nently spoken of for an appointment by
the President as Brigadier-General of
volunteers.
’*80—John S. Harding is a Major in
the Ninth Regiment, N. G..P., now in
camp at Mt. Gretna, Pa.
*82—H. C. Jefferds is Surgeon in a
Tacoma, Wash., regiment. |
*82—H. L. Williams is Captain of a
company from Northampton, Mass.
*83—Assistant Adjutant-General F. G.
Beach has been reduced in rank from
Lieutenant-Colonel to Captain to re-
cruit and command one of. the two
Heavy Artillery Batteries which Con-
necticut has been called upon to fur-
nish.
’°86—Thomas Darling is a member of
Company D, Ninth Regiment, N. G./P.
°87 S.—George H. Wood has enlisted
in Company G, Third Regiment, Ohio
National Guards.
°87—-Lewis Seymour has enlisted in
the Twentieth Separate Company of
Binghamton, N. Y.
*87—R. V. Beach is Battalion Ad-
jutant of the Second Regiment, Con-
necticut National Guard.
°88—Jesse H. Behrends is Captain in
the Sixty-Fifth New York, which left
New York April 30.
"88 M. S.—Captain Henry R. Stiles,
Assistant Surgeon in the U. S. Army,
has been appointed by President Mc-
Kinley Official Physical Examiner of
the volunteers from Maine.
88 S.—Rev. George B. Richards of
Buffalo, was offered the Chaplaincy of
the 65th New York, one of the regi-
ments selected for service, but was
obliged after much consideration to
decline the offer.
*90—John D. Farnham is a member
” Company D, Ninth Regiment, N.
a
*92—A. C. Orrick is a member of
Battery A, Missouri National Guard.
’°92 S.—W. R. Ricketts is a member
Company D, Ninth Regiment, N.
“iP.
Ex-’92 S.—J. D. Cheney is First
Lieutenant in Company G, First Regi-
ment, Connecticut State National
Guard, which has been called out by
Gov. Cooke.
*94—C. N. Loveland is a member of
Company D, Ninth Regiment, N. G. P.
"795A. B. Shepley is a member of
Battery A, Missouri National Guard.
’96—-Ward Cheney has enlisted with
Company G, First Regiment, Con-
necticut National Guard. _
’096 S.—F.. G. Darte is a member of
Company D, Ninth Regiment, N. G. P.
’°96 S.—J. D. Stearns is a Lieutenant
in the Ninth Regiment, N. G. P., now
in camp at Mt. Gretna, Pa.
°96—W. Cheney is a member of Com-
pany G. First Regiment, Connecticut
State National Guard, which Gov.
Cooke has called upon for service.
97 SG Barrett Rich, Jr.,< isa
Lieutenant in the 65th New York,
which left New York April 30.
798 L. S.—John Knox Blake has en-
listed in the Sarsfield Guard of New
Haven.
798 M. S.—H. C. Rowland, a member
of the New York Naval Reserve, has
left the school on account of his assign-
ment to the Yankee.
1900 M. S.—C. W. Field, a member of
the New York Naval Reserve, has been
ordered to the vessel Nahant.
*76—Dr. William J. Wakeman is now
at Chickamauga with the First Cavalry.
The annual banquet of the Phi. Beta
Kappa Society will be held at the Ton-
tine on Monday evening, May 9, at
8.30 o'clock. Professor William Lyon
Phelps, ’87, will act as toastmaster.
wns
i od
Please do as much as you can as soon
as you can to make up the $5,200 for the
Maxim guns for the Yale. The more
promptly the sum 1s made up the better
for Yale. Please do not wait for a per-
sonal call. Checks can be made payable to
YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY, Agent, and sent
to this of fice.
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, Pririce-
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.
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