YALE: ALUMMNI- WHERE
NINETY-FIVE S. ADDRESSES.
[Continued from 6th page. |
*G. P. Savidge, Spring Lake, Mich.
Louis Saxon, 39 Silver street, New
Haven, Conn.
E. G. Schurig, Union Bridge Com-
pany, Athens, Pa. 3
G. H. Seward, P. O. Box 21773, New
York City.
G. W. Shaw, 907 Superior street,
Toledo, O.
F. D. Sherman, 35 Remsen street,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Lloyd W. Smith, Parsippany, N. J.
*Frank N. Schwartz, Pittsburg, Pa.
George H. Southard, Jr., 85 Rem-
sen street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
C. S. Stephenson, 216 Clermont
avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
F. B. Stephenson, 199 Jefferson
avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. T. Stillman, Elizabeth, N. J.
G. E. Stevens, Scranton, Pa.
* F. R. Stoller, Exchange Building,
Kansas City, Mo.
James Terry, 175 Collins street, Hart-
ford, Conn.
Augustus P. Thompson, Honesdale,
Pa.
*Perceval Thompson, 25 Deleware
Place, Chicago, Ill.
R. H. Thayer, Jr., 529 Franklin street,
Buffalo, N. Y.
George E. Thompson, Jr., 94 York
Square, New Haven, Conn.
F. H. Todd, 62 Whalley avenue, New
Haven, Conn.
J. R. Torbert, 1698 Main street, Du-
buque, Iowa.
E. A. Vanderveer, 28 Eagle street,
Albany, N. Y.
T. T. Vandergrift, 7 Warren street,
Jamestown, N. Y.
G. W. Van Slyke,
avenue, Albany, N. Y.
William H. Van Slyke, 756 Madison
avenue, Albany, N. Y.
Frederick H. Verhoeff, Johns Hop-
kins Medical School, Baltimore, Md.
O. H. Vieths, 4482 Lindell avenue,
St. Louis, Mo.
*Harold O. Webster, Cleveland, O.
Edward J. Woolsey, 27 William
street, Lord’s Court Building, New
York City.
*M. P. Warren, New York City.
H. G. Wagner, 4o Pearl street, New
Haven, Conn.
H. §. Waite, 383 East Broad street,
Columbus, O.
C. C. Walbridge, 37 Ninth avenue,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Cleveland E. Watrous, Chester, Conn.
H. A. Weaver, South Woodstock,
Conn.
H. G. Wells, 527 VanBuren street,
Chicago, IIl.
D. U. Wilcox, Care of Buffalo
Courter, Buffalo, N.Y.
William H. Wilcox, 22 Mitchell
avenue, Waterbury Conn.
G. W. L. Woodruff, 27 East 22d
street, New York City.
756 Madison
William A. Whitcomb, Care Glens
Falls Paper
Falls, N. Y.
Mill Company, Glens
—<ti> >
Bin ase
The Yale Cruiser Fund Committee de-
cided Yale wanted to give guns and so
gave guns. There was no time to wait
for a canvass. The response to the origi-
nal appeal was so generous that Yale was
trusted to furnish the $5,200 at once.
Please send your share, if you have not
already done so. The Committee needs
$3,000 immediately. This means as much
as possible as soon as possible from every-
body. Please make checks payable to
YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY, Agent, and
send to this office.
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,
Bridgeport, Conn,
Long Island Association.
The Spring meeting of the Yale
Alumni Association of Long Island will
be held at the Brooklyn Club, corner
of Clinton and Pierrepont streets, Fri-
day evening, May 6th, at 8.30 o’clock.
Capt. Zalinski, U. S. A., retired, in-
ventor of the dynamite gun, will talk
on “High Explosives in Modern War-
fare.”
A chorus from the University Glee
Club, also Mr. Wm. Runyon and Mr. F.
J. Vernon and others, will enliven the
after service in the grill room.
Intercollegiate Shoot Saturday.
The first semi-annual shoot of the
newly formed Intercollegiate Shooting
Association will be held in New Haven
next Saturday, on the grounds of the
New Haven Gun Club. Harvard, Cor-
nell, Columbia, Pennsylvania and per-
haps Princeton, will send teams to meet
the Yale men. The work of the Yale
team up to the present time has been
fair. Last Saturday a match against
the New Haven Gun Club resulted in
a victory for New Haven by a score
of 129 to 124.
The members of the Yale team are:
C.. Be Spears, 1000, Captains R.- Van
Name, ’99; E. B. Knowlton, 1900 S.; A.
Maynard, 1900 S.; H. Loomis, 1900 S.,
and W. Bennett, P. G. Five of these
men will be chosen to shoot Saturday.
ee 6- Oars
1900 Drum and Fife Corps.
At a meeting of some members of
the Sophomore class held last Friday,
a Drum and Fife Corps was organized.
The men composing this Corps are:
Leader of fifes, H. E. Ellsworth;
fifes, A. C. Newcombe, G. Shelby, J. P.
Adams, W. F. Gillespie, D. S. Smith,
‘EieiB. Glark,. H. M.. Field, : K. Bruce,
F. B. Adams. Leader of drums, J. W.
J. N. CHAMPION & CO.
ARE MEMBERS OF THE
& FLORISTS’ #
INTERNATIONAL 3
TELEGRAPH — DELIVERY
ASSOCIATION.
Delivering Fresh Cut Flowers to friends in
Europe or any part of United States in a few
hours’ time. Only the leading Florists of the
country are members of this Association,
which is a guarantee that not only choice
flowers, but taste in arrangements in the
different styles will be of the highest order.
Decrow; drums, W. B. Seabury, W. L.
Otis, K. Winter, H. W. Babcock, F. D.
Cheney, R. Russell. Bugles, E. H.
Tatum, G. C. Wallworth, R. H. Me-—
Cormick. Bass drum, T. A. Howell.
Cymbals, F. C. Havemeyer.
SHIELD YOUR SELF
FROM IMITATIONS
Almost everything about —
COLUMBIAS is imitated except
the material put in them.
Machines and Prices
Guaranteed.
POPE MFG CO.HARTFORD,CONN.
CATALOGUE free from any Columbia
dealer,or by m or one 2 cent stamp
se
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.
LOCK FRONT
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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.
“IT simply send to Romeike for
Press Clippings.
** Day by day he sent me editorials and
original articles collected from thou-
sands 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 ROMEIKE,
139 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK.
Branches: London. Paris, Berlin. Sidney.
— |
Remington
Standard Typewriter’s
New Models
draw old friends closer and attract
new ones, by the power of inherert
merit and unfailing service.
WYCKOFF, SEAMANS & BENEDICT,
14 Center st., New Haven, Conn.