YALE ALUMNI WHEKLY
Academic Class Book.
The Academic Class Book, the an-
nual publication of the Senior class,
appeared on June 3d. The editor and
publisher is Frank Atkins Lord, ’98.
The book is of the usual size, bound
in light red buckram, with a cover de-
sign “Yale ’98,” and the Yale seal in
black.
The dedicatory poem was written by
C. E. Merrill, Jr., ’98, and the frontis-
piece is a full page half-tone of Dean
Wright. » The pages are interspersed
with pictures of University buildings
and Ninety-Eight Class Organizations.
The various subjects treated in the
book are grouped under the following
headings: “Former Members,” ‘New
Recruits,” “In -Memoriam,” ‘‘Educa-
tional,” “‘Financial,’ “Personal,” “Pot-
Pourri,” “The Junior Appointment
List,” “Pro Patria,’ “Future Occupa-
tions,” “Senior Class Officers,” “Offi-
cers of Ninety-Eight,” ‘Physical’ and
“To the Class.”
The histories of each year are written
by the following men: Freshman, Julian
S. Mason; Sophomore, J. H. Scranton;
Junior, J. R. Paxton, Jr.; Senior, F.
G. Hinsdale. The literary history has
been written by Arthur Douglas Bald-
win, *98; Athletics, by J. O. Rodgers,
’98; Social, by R. L. Evans; ‘‘Debat-
ing,’ by H. W. Fisher, ’98; ‘‘Musical,”
by S. R. Kennedy, ’98; “Religious,” by
H. B. Wright, ’98.
The average age of the Class on the
day of graduation will be twenty-three
years, seven months and six days.
The oldest man in the Class is G. War-
ren, thirty-two years, two months,
seventeen days, and the youngest is J.
D.. Whitney, nineteen years, seven
months, nineteen days. The average
height of the two hundred and fifty-
one who gave their height is five feet
eight and eight-tenths inches. Of these
the tallest is H. W. Wilcox, six feet
four inches, and the shortest are Ben-
jamin and Richards, who measure five
feet four inches. There are sixty-six
men in the Class who are six feet or
over.
As to the future occupations of the
Class, six will enter the Yale Law
School; twenty-one the. Harvard Law
School; fourteen the New York Law
School; seven the Columbia Law
School and four scattering. Twenty-
seven will study in offices or schools,
not yet selected; twenty-two hope to
practice medicine; nine expect to enter
the ministry; eighteen will teach.
Letters, journalism, architecture, en-
gineering, chemistry, science, com-
merce, banking, railroading, manufac-
turing, lumbering, farming, and busi-
ness will engage the attention of forty-
three others. 7
The voting in the personal article
resulted as follows: Most popular, F.
H. Simmons; handsomest, Ledyard
and Twichell; prettiest, J. S. Mason;
meekest, Benjamin; most eccentric,
Montgomery; windiest, Winthrop;
most to be admired, Perkins; most
versatile, J. C. McLauchlan; brightest,
S. E. Bassett; will be most successful,
F. E. Williamson; “grouchiest,” Col-
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 on week. Daily sessions from 8 to io P. M.
LIBRARY FACILITIES are excellent. The Law
_ Library contains over 11,000 volumes.
Tuition, $100 per year.
For circulars, address :
L. J. Tompxins, Registrar.
15 Instructors.
HOME LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
OF NEW YORK.
GEORGE E., IDE, President.
Won. M. St. Joun, Vice-President.
Exv.is W. Grapwin, Secretary.
Wm. A, Marsuatt, Actuary,
' FB. W. Cuapin, Medical Director.
625 Students.
EUGENE A, CALLAHAN,
General Agent, State of Connecticut,
23 Church Street, New Haven.
_ easiest,
Titfany & Co.
Household Articles
for Wedding Presents
A complete stock of plain
and cut glass at very moderate
prices.
Inexpensive breakfast, dinner
and tea sets in blue and white
English ware.
Silver-plated table ware;
dishes for large roasts, entree,
and vegetables, and complete
dinner services.
Roast and game carvers and
superior table cutlery of every
description.
Our several departments offer
many other articles appealing
to the same refined taste as our
richer products.
UNION SQUARE
NEW YORK
cord; Class dig, Downes; nerviest, Mer-
rill; wittiest, Scranton; best-natured,
Sawyer; has done the most for Yale,
J. O. Rodgers; best athlete, J. O. Rod-
gers; Class bluffer, G. T. Marsh; most
melancholy, Colcord. The most popu-
lar novel is‘*Lorna Doone”; poem, ““The
Ancient Mariner”; prosewriter, Steven-
son; poet, Shakespeare; most valuable
college publication, The News; most
popular New Haven paper, Register;
New York paper, Sun; tobacco,
“Handsome Dan’; drink, beer; actress,
Miss Adams; actor, Jefferson; Class
fusser, Male; social light, Parker; easi-
est year, Junior; hardest, Freshman;
most useless required studies, Psychol-
ogy and Philosophy; most valuable,
Mathematics; most difficult elective,
English Constitutional History; easi-
est, American Literature; valuable,
Economics; pleasantest, European His-
tory; forty-two believe in an extension
of the Elective system to all classes,
and ninety are opposed; seventy-eight
are in favor of extension to Sophomore
year.
The Faculty are voted as follows:
Popular and pleasantest, W. L. Phelps;
most polished, Wheeler; _ brightest,
Hadley; best teacher, G. B. Adams;
most difficult to recite to, Richards;
Phillips; hardest to bluff,
Fisher.
The Class uses “trots” and asks for
“more watchers” as regards the honor
system. The general regret is failure
to -study enough. The average ex-
pense of the Class was $915.47 per year.
One hundred and forty men are in
favor of compulsory chapel, and one
hundred and one opposed. One hun-
dred and twenty-two voted that
Dwight Hall had a beneficial effect;
thirty-six held the opposite view and
twenty-nine were divided.
NN eS
A Sketch of Dr. Beard.
Rev. Augustus F. Beard, D.D., the
new member of the Corporation, is a
Connecticut man, born in Norwalk,
where his ancestors have lived since
early colonial times. He was grad-
uated in the Class of Fifty-Seven, in
which he was a Spoon Committee man
and Senior Orator on Statement of
Fact. He was also a Senior Society
member. He is a graduate of Auburn
Theological Seminary.
His first pastorate was in the First
Congregational Church, Bath, Maine,
After that he was for twelve years
pastor of Plymouth Congregational
Church, Syracuse, N. Y. In 1881 he
became pastor of the American Church
in Paris, and remained there (about)
five years, actively associated with
French Protestant evangelization, both
among the Huguenot churches and in
the McCall Mission, in intimate con-
nection with such men as Dr. McCall,
M. Busier, M. Reveilland. He returned
to this country in 1886, to become Cor-
responding Secretary of the American
Missionary Association, which main-
tains churches and schools among the
neglected races of America from
Florida to Alaska. He has’ been
especially concerned in the administra-
tion of the extensive educational work
REV. DR. AUGUSTUS F. BEARD, 757,
Newly elected member of Yale Corporation.
of the Association among the freedmen
of the Southern States.
A discriminating Yale graduate, who
knows Dr. Beard well, writes of him
thus: “Dr. Beard is a man of broad
culture, large and varied experience and
of:a national reputation. He wields a
facile pen and is much*sought as a
preacher and lecturer. His appoint-
ment on the Yale Corporation is a
peculiarly fortunate one.”
iw eee
June “ Outing.”
One of the articles in June Outing,
which will be especially acceptable to
Yale men, is an illustrated article on
the Yale Corinthian Yacht Club, by
Frederick Coonley, ’96. Special promi-
nence is given to the bicycle in this
number. The full contents- are as
follows:
“Cupid on Wheels,” by Caroline
Shelley; “Through the Shenandoah
Valley Awheel,” by Daniel’ F. Gay;
“A June Day on Egg Island, Alaska,”
by Geo. C. Cantwell; “The Yale Cor-
inthian Yacht Club,” by Frederick
Coonley; “Bicycling in the Black
Forest,’ by Anson P. Atterbury;
“Canadian Golf,’ by Jno. P. Roche;
“A People’s Playground,” by Ed. W.
Sandys; “My Greatest Race,” by
Cockburn Harvey; “A Maiden Effort,”
by the late Kathleen Sullivan; “Black
Bass on the Orange Watershed,” by
Llewellyn H. Johnson; “Bluefishing off
Montauk;” “The Atlantic Yacht Club,”
by A. J. Kenealy; and the usual edi-
torials, poems and records.
PASSPORTS and WAR MAPS
Passports procured on three days’
notice on application to New Haven
Custom House. The finest Govern-
ment charts of Cuba, Porto Rico, the
Philippine Islands, the West India
Islands, and the Atlantic coasts and
harbors kept on sale at Government
prices.
Cuas. ADAMS.
Yale ’87,
ADAMS, MCNEILL & BRIGHAM,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,
71 Broadway, - New York,
Members New York Stock Exchange. Stocks
and Bonds Bought and Sold. Investment Securi-
ties a Specialty, :
**Long Distance Telephone, 2076 Cortlandt.”
AtEx. MoNEILL. Wu. g, BRIG@HAM.
Yale °8%,
LEOPOLD H. FRANCKE. ALBERT FRANCK
Yale ’89. Yale ’91 S. ”
LH. AS 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 Misceilaneous Securities not
listed on the Stock Exchange. |
Long Distance Telephone, 1348 Broad.
Guaranty Trust Co.
of New York.
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CAPITAL, ~ a: iy $2,000,000
SURPLUS, - = = $2,500,000
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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 ISELIN, Jr., Vice-President.
GE R. TURNBULL, 2d Vice-President,
HENRY A. MURRAY, Treas. and Sec’y.
. NELSON BORLAND, Asst. Treas. and Sec’y
OHN GAULT, Manager Foreign Dept.
DIRECTORS,
Charles R. Henderson,
Adrian Iselin, Jr.,
Augustus D, Juilliard,
ames N. Jarvie,
ichard A. McCurdy,
Alexander E. Orr,
Walter G. Oakman,
Henry H. Rogers,
Oliver Harriman, H. McK. Twombly,
R. Somers Hayes Frederick W. Vanderbilt,
William C. Whitney.
Samuel D. Babcock,
George F, Baker,
George S. Bowdoin,
August Belmont,
Frederic Cromwell,
Walter R. Gillette,
Robert Goelet,
G. G. Haven,
LONDON BRANCH,
33 LOMBARD STREET, E. C.,
F. NEVILL JACKSON, SECRETARY,
Buys and sells exchange on the principal cities of
the world, collects dividends and coupons without
charge, issues travellers’ and commercial letters of
credit, receives and pays interest on deposits subject
to cheque at sight or on notice, lends money on
collaterals, deals in American and other investment
securities, and offers its services as correspondent and
financial agent to corporations, bankers and merchants,
Bankers.
BANK OF ENGLAND,
CLYDESDALE BANK, Limited,
NATIONAL PROVINCIAL BANK OF
ENGLAND, Limited,
PARR’S BANK, Limited.
Solicitors.
FRESHFIELDS AND WILLIAMS.
London Committee.
ARTHUR JOHN FRASER, CHAIRMAN.
DONALD C, HALDEMAN.
“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
M. B. CLARK, President.
W. H. KING, SECRETARY.
A. C. ADAMS,
HENRY -E. REES,
WESTERN BRANCH,
* 413 Vine Street, Cincinnati,
NORTHWESTERN BRANCH,
Omaha, Neb.
PACIFIC BRANCH, San Francisco, Cal.
INLAND MARINE DEPARTMENT,
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\ asst. SECRETARIES.
aes & GALLAGHER,
O.
General Agents.
WM. H. WYMAN, General Agent.
W. FP. HARFORD, Assistant General Agent.
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CHICAGO, ILLS., 145 LaSalle Street.
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BOSTON, 12 Central Street.
PHILADELPHIA, 229 Walnut Street.