YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY
of the Class will be taken; at 2 P. M.
the Class will assemble at Osborn
Hall and proceed to the Yale-Harvard
baseball game at the Field, attended by
the Naval Reserve Band of New York;.
at 6.30 p. mM. the Class will again as-
semble at Osborn Hall and go to the
Class Supper at Warner Hall, where
the Class Cup will be presented to R.
T. Lowndes, Jr.
The Committee has extended the time
for receiving payment for tickets to the
Class Supper, price $6.00, including sub-
scription for band, etc., to June 15th.
No accommodation will be provided
at the Supper for anyone whose ticket
has not. been paid for by the above
date. Seats on the West Bleachers will
be reserved for the Class at the base-
ball game. Rooms may be secured in
Divinity Hall on application to the
janitor, Mr. E. F. Hill, East Divinity,
price $1.00 per man per night; six
nights for $5.00.
gaged, however, for a shorter time than
two nights. The headquarters of the
Class during Triennial will be at 176
Lyceum, where members of the Class
are requested to report and register.
Dinner tickets will be given out at the
business meeting of the Class, which
all must attend. Special Triennial
hats can be obtained from Malley,
Neely & Co. for a trifling sum and each
man is asked to buy one and also to
wear white duck trousers and a dark
coat.
The date of the Boat Race is June
22d. Very few men have been able
to decide whether or not they wish a
seat reserved for them on the observa-
tion train. The Committee has accord-
ingly made the following arrangement.
A number of seats will be reserved for
the Class, and if enough apply a special
car can be had. Any one wishing a
reserved seat must fill out in full the
blank sent to each member, and send
it before June toth, with $2.00 for each
seat (no man can apply for more than
two) and a stamped envelope, addressed
to himself, to Grenville Parker, Presi-
dent Yale Navy. The tickets will then
be sent to each man at the address
given. All remittances for the Trien-
nial Fund should be sent to George
Townsend Adee, Treasurer, Bartow-on-
Sound, Westchester County, N. Y.
~<thy G hite
we
The Ninety Class Letter.
A number of men in the Class of
Ninety have started a Class letter on
the same principle as that of the Class
of Forty-Four, an account of which ap-
peared in the WEEKLY some months
ago. The main difference is that in-
stead of writing a letter once a month,
each man writes once a year. His let-
ter is then forwarded to each one of the
correspondents in turn, until all have
read it. It is then returned to Mr. R.
D. Crane. In this way each man hears
once a month from some one of the
coterie.
The names of the writers are: Prof.
F. Bedell, Cornell University; H. M.
Bishop, New Haven; Dr. F. T. Brooks,
Greenwich, Conn.; R. D. Crane, New
York; Prot....A... 4, = Crehore,:.. Dart-
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 4 week. Daily sessions from 8 to ro 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.
Ex.is W. Grapwin, Secretary.
M. A. MarsHatt, Actuary.
F, W. Cuarin, Medical Director,
EUGENE A. CALLAHAN,
~ General Agent, State of Connecticut,
23 Church Street, New Haven.
625 Students,
No room can be en-'
TIFFANY & Co.
Silver Ware for
June Weddings.
Attention is invited to the
notable advantages that our sil-
ver ware offers to intending
purchasers: assurance of artis-
tic merit, refined taste and a
design the character of which is
not destroyed by over produc-
tion or promiscuous sale.
A “Tiffany product” cannot
be purchased elsewhere, as we
never sell to-the trade or to
other dealers.
Selections sent upon approval
to parties known to the house
ot who will make themselves
known by satisfactory refer-
eee a eS
Sa 5
UNION SQUARE,
& w& s& NEW YORK. _
mouth College; Prof. H. T. Fowler,
Galesburg, Ill.; E. M. Griswold, Erie,
Pa.; Dr. E. P. Joslin, Boston, Mass.;
Dr. W. C. Lusk, New York; Prof. S.
N. Morse, Williston Academy; H. L.
Munger, Dayton, O.; F. W. Robinson,
New York City; W. White, Philadel-
pia. 12
wy <
Liban
A Good College Pitcher.
[New York Sun.]
“The best college pitcher I ever
saw,” said George Davis, shortstop of
the New Yorks, yesterday, “was Carter
of Yale.’ He had phenomenal speed,
wonderful curves and a remarkable
delivery. I shall never forget the day
he pitched against the New Yorks two
or three years ago, in the early Spring.
The day was cold, and the New Yorks,
all done up in heavy sweaters, were
taking things easy. Carter had on a
light flannel shirt, with his right arm
bare, and he began sending in the balls
like cannon shot. His speed was
something terrific, and we were all
dodging away from the plate, fearing
that he would knock somebody’s head
off. We kept waiting for him to let
up, but he continued to shoot them in
with such steam that, in all, we made
only about seven hits in the game.
When the teams got into the dressing
room after the game a couple of Yale
men were rubbing Carter’s arm.
““That was pretty hot speed you had
to-day, Carter,’ said Johnny Ward.
“Oh, I don’t know,’ replied the tall
Yale pitcher. ‘Did you people think I
was swift?’
_ “Well, I should say we did,’ replied
Ward. ‘You had us scared to death!’
““T’m surprised at that,’ retorted Car-
ter, seriously, ‘because my arm isn’t
exactly right, and I didn’t let myself
out.’
“Ever since then the New Yorks who
took part in the game have been regret-
ting the fact that the big Yale man’s
arm wasn’t right, for we’d have liked to
have just seen what he was capable of
doing with us when he was fit.”
<hr La.
DS A SE
Critic: “Where did you get the idea
for that picture?”
Painter: “Out of my head.”
Critic: “You must be glad that it is
out.”—Fliegende Blatter.
WESTERN BRANCH,
THE SMALL POLICY.
‘THERE is a considerable body of men, who
appreciate and acknowledge the value of
life insurance, who yet fail to rank them-
selves among the insured, for no other reason
than that they feel it impossible to maintain
a policy as large as they should like : as large,
it may be, as some friend’s or neighbor’s.
This is a decided mistake. Whatever value
may be possessed by the $100,000; policy, it
should be remembered that the $1,000 policy
possesses a value as real and proportionately
just as great. It is only by small things that
one climbs most surely to greater.
Life insurance is an investment; an invest-
ment of the safest sort when taken in a com-
pany of approved merit and worth As such,
it is wisdom to secure it at the earliest oppor-
tunity, purchasing the “bonds” in smaller
“bunches”’ than one would like, it may be,
but nevertheless securing what is possible,
with the determination to increase such
holdings as soon as opportunity permits.
Such action as this bespeaks the conservative
character of sound life insurance, and it is
generally granted that the best investments
are the conservative ones. Life insurance
becomes a Speculation only when more is
taken than one can properly support.
Three distinct arguments present them-
selves in favor of the taking of small policies.
First, the man insured for $100,000 is usually
the man possessed of other properties.
Whatever value he may place upon his policy,
whatever value it may prove to those he
leaves behind, it yet is not the sole support
to which they look. On the other hand, the
holder of the thousand-dollar policy, often,
if not generally, bequeaths little or no other
property. Here surely is a value placed upon
the small policy out of all due proportion to
size. It is doubtful if anything could further
accentuate its imperative worth.
. In the second place, the $100,000 policy
benefits one family only, whereas a whole
community shares and enjoys the benefits of
a hundred $1,000 policies on as many lives,
Lastly, the small policy secured early in
life proves such a saving in premium charges
over one, even of equal face value taken later,
that from such savings alone further thou-
sands can from time to time be added. The
history of many of those who are to-day
insured for large amounts, some reaching
millions, shows that they began with small
sums, gradually adding to that insurance as
circumstances permitted,
All this shows the unwisdom of ignoring
or underrating small policies. They are like
other apparent trifles—they eventually count
for the most. In procuring one for yourself,
see to it that it is the best — that it is issued
by The Mutual Life of New York, which for
over fifty-five years has issued millions of
just such policies to the decided helping of
the purchasers.
CHas. 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, 2976 Cortlandt.’
ALEX, EILL. Wm. 8. BRIQGHAM.
_ Yale °8%.
LEOPOLD H. FRANCKE. ALBERT FRANCKE,
Yale ’89. 91
Yale ’91 S.
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.
Guaranty Trust Co.
of New York.
“NASSAU, CORNER CEDAR STREET,
CAPITAL, = = = $2,000,000
SURPLUS, = = = $2,500,000
ACTS AS TRUSTEE FOR CORPORATIONS,
FIKMS, AND . INDIVIDUALES, 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 AVAIL
ABLE IN ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD, AND
COMMERCIAL LETTERS OF CREDIT ISSUED.
Cece
WALTER G. OAKMAN, President.
ADRIAN ISELIN, Jr., Vice-President.
GEORGE 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.
(Bann arent:
Samuel D, Babcock,
George F, Baker,
George S. Bowdoin,
August Belmont,
Frederic Cromwell,
Walter R. Gillette,
Robert Goelet,
. 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, 3,055 ,3 70.62
Net Surplus, 4,433,719.36
Losses Paid in 79 Years, 81,125,621.50
WM. B. CLARK, President.
W. H. KING, SECRETARY.
A. C. ADAMS,
HENRY E. REES,
E...O. WEEKS, VICE-PRES.
ASST. SECRETARIES.
f KEELER & GALLAGHER,
O.
413 Vine Street, Cincinnati, ; General Agents.
NORTHWESTERN BRANCH,
PACIFIC BRANCH,
WM. H. WYMAN, General Agent.
Omaha, Neb. Ww. PF. 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,