YALE ALUMNE Sz Ree RI 15 ALUMNI NOTES. ( Graduates are invited to contribute to this column.) All Secretaries and others havit& information about Yale men, proper for record in the alumni note col- umn, are urged to send it to us as promptly as possible, The records of the alumni in the vacation are a little more difficult to gather than at other times of the year, but it is absolutely necessary to keep this department up to date at all seasons ofthe year. Records are maintained the year round. th <> ~ ’40—Nathaniel H. Egleston, who for the past fifteen years has been in Wash- ington, in charge of the forests of the United States, has given up his work there and will take up his permanent residence in Boston shortly. ’60—Professor O. C. Marsh has re- cently been elected a Foreign Member of the Geological Society of London. He has also been appointed a dele- gate to represent this country at the International Congress of Zoologists at Cambridge, England, in August. ’6o—W. S. Keyes was appointed by the Governor of the State of California a representative of the State to attend the “International Mining Congress” which met at Salt Lake City, Utah, on July 6th. He was also chosen to represent the State Miners’ Association and the State Mining Bureau. 76—F. W. Vaille of the U. S. Rail- way service has recently been ordered to Manila to take charge of the mail service there. : ’So—E. D. Scott’s address for the Summer will be care of American Ex- press Co., 3 Waterloo Place, London, England. ‘oo—Frank E. Bradley has opened a law office at 82 Chambers street, New York City. ‘9t—Hippolyte Gruener has been ap- pointed Associate Professor of Chem- istry at Western Reserve University. ‘92—Cards are out for the marriage of Miss Katherine, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Barber of Marengo, IIl., to James W. D. Ingersoll, July 14th. Mr. and Mrs. Ingersoll will be at home after October 1 at 124 High st., New Haven. ’92—The engagement is announced of Miss Elie Katherine Quinby, daughter of Captain Quinby, 11th Infantry, U. S. A., to Dr. Charles A. Schumaker. ’93 S—The engagement of Miss Laura Stewart Waples of Dubuque, Ia., to Herbert Y. McMullen has been an- nounced. ‘93—Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Jessie May Beckwith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Beck- with of Nepaug, Conn., to Rev. Giles F. Goodenough, pastor of the Con- sregational Church at Ellsworth, Conn. ’‘93—Winthrop E. Dwight has re- turned from Europe, where he has been studying since 1806. ex-’93 S—The engagement is an- nounced of Miss Salome _ Britton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. a of vlevelanu, O., to Lee Se- over. 94 S.—The engagement is announced of Miss Evelyn M. Stafford of New- — burgh, N. Y., to F. Philip Farnsworth ’95—The engagement of Miss Arm- strong of Stockbridge, Mass., to W. H. Scoville, has recently been announced. *95—Rev. Fred. W. Burge has re- cently become assistant to the Rev. S. M. Cooke at St. John’s Church, Rich- field Springs, N. Y. ’97—Victor Sutro is with the Chemi- cal National Bank, 270 Broadway, New York City. ioy-—R,.. Chicolmeds ath Ge, Edison General Electric Co., 40 Broad st., New York City. ’97—W. F. Clark has accepted a call to the West Haven Baptist Church, West Haven, Conn. ’97 S.—E. W. Carlton is with the Martin Kalbfleisch Chemical Co., at their Bayonne Branch, Bavonne, N. J. _’97—Sherman F. Johnson was mar- ried to Miss Adela Louise Curtis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Homer A. Curtis of Meriden, Conn., on Wednes- day, June 29. The ceremony was per- formed by the Rev. C. H. Williams, '58, of Hartford, and was attended only by the immediate families, ’98—The engagement is announced of Miss Maud Lundberg of this city to James Alexander Hamilton of Cale- donia, N. Y. | ’98—The engagement has just been announced of Miss Maud Lundberg to James Alexander Hamilton of Cale- donia, N »- was es th ol Please hurry to this office every scrap of war news about Yale men which comes your way. Put m every detail you can. Please send this news as fast as it comes to you. It 1s especially necessary to get it promptly. was Bi as Army and Navy Personals. ’°84S.—Joseph W. Rogers is a Ser- geant in Co. L. 12th New York Vol- unteers, U. S. A., which is now under general marching orders to be prepared for active service in the field at once. BRIGADIER-GENERAL A. S. BURT, 61. Commanding First Brigade, Second Division, Seventh Army Corps, Now at Camp Cuba Libre, Jacksonville, Florida. "89 S.—Lieut. A. H. Day of the Con- necticut Naval Battalion has succeeded Lieut. E.G. Buckland in the command of the U. S. Patrol boat Viking. "89 L. S.—Edward G. Buckland has resigned his commission in the United States Navy as Commander of the Vik- ing and Lieutenant of the U. S. Naval Volunteers and has removed to Provi- dence, R. I., accepting there the ap- pointment of attorney for the New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail- road. His resignation from the Law School Faculty has also been received. 704 S.—Edward C. Hall has enlisted in Co. C, ist U. S. Volunteers Cavalry (Roosevelt’s Rough Riders) and is now at the front. "99 S.—Edward Carson Waller, Jr., who was with the Rough Riders in Cuba, is reported wounded in the en- gagement near Santiago. _— Ys we eee “English Etymology.” “English Etymology” (D. C. Heath & Co., Boston) is the joint work of Prof. Frederick Kluge of the Univer- sity of Baden, and Prof. Frederick Lutz of Albion College, Mich. De- signed to serve as an introduction to the study of the historical grammar of Eng- lish, it forms an excellent reference book, and should attract students to this interesting subject of the develop- ment of the language. The words se- lected are those most frequently occur- ing in ordinary speech, and their history is briefly traced through middle and old English, and the various languages of - Europe. The explanations are concise and scholarly, and the book is well adapted for even the advanced student of linguistics. ‘The Essentials of Argumenta- ; tion.” “The Essentials of Argumentation,” by Professor Elias’ J. MacEwan (D. C. Heath & Co.), has been before the public for a few months, long enough to prove its peculiar value. It is not only excellently adapted to technical training, but is of interest to the general - reader. As to its value in educational work, Professor Enoch Perrine of > Bucknell University writes as follows: “It does well what no other book with which I am acquainted attempts: it pre- sents not only the logical side of Argu- mentation—and they all do this more or less successfully—but it also pre- sents in full the rhetorical side—and this is generally slighted. To make a good ‘brief’ is one thing, and to develop it well is quite another thing. To do this latter thing, Prof. MacEwan’s book is the best help for both teacher and stu- dent now before the public. It is al- ready in use with us.” The book has already attracted con- siderable notice as of great service in training men for the law and the ministry. The “Yale Battery.” Light Battery A, First Artillery, Con- necticut Volunteers, finished its recruit- ing here on July 1, and is now drilling hard at Niantic, with full ranks of 173 enlisted men. The high standard of the command has been well maintained in the new enlistments. One of the last Yale men to apply for enlistment was James F. Hooker, ’95. The equipment for the Battery is now well in hand and the organization is probably better favored in the way of guns, horses and other equipment than any other battery, except the Astor, outside of the Regular Army. Lieutenant Weston, Yale ’98, has been commanding the Battery the past week in the absence of Captain Honce, ble has been ill at his home in Bran- ord. | ; Private A. C. Ledyard, Yale ’98, who was named by the President for a Sec- ond Lieutenantcy, successfully passed his examinations at New York last week and is now awaiting orders. - as — oe. Harvard’s Honorary Degrees, From President Eliot’s Presentation. Masters of Arts—Nathaniel Paine, a Worcester local historian, biographer, bibliographer, botanist, zodlogist and antiquarian. Charles Lawrence Pierson, one of the earliest graduates of the Lawrence Scientific School, a resolute soldier in the Civil War; an upright man of af- fairs. . Hersey Bradford Goodwin, a judici- ous, high-minded and influential man of business and _ serviceable citizen, member of the much respected Railroad Commission of Massachusetts. - Doctors of Divinity—James De Nor- mandie, wise pastor of the First Church of Roxbury and president of the trustees of the Roxbury Latin School, thus governing John Eliot’s church and John Eliot’s school. William Reed Huntington, beloved rector of Grace Church in New York, an abundant fountain in a thirsty land, a fountain of charity, piety and solace. Doctors of Law—James Mason Crafts, forty years ago a graduate of the Law- rence Scientific School and now Presi- dent of the most successful school of applied science in the United States, the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology. Thomas Wentworth Higginson, a Bachelor of Arts in ’4I, a minister, a teacher, an early abolitionist in theory and in practice, Colonel of the First Regiment of South Carolina Colored Volunteers in the Civil War; a historian and a man of letters. John Kendall Hamilton Gordon, the seventh Earl of Aberdeen, Governor General of Canada; he represents to- day the greatest English achievement except English liberty—a _ beneficent colonial policy. Class Reports. Mr. Wm. P. Bacon, Class Secretary of Fifty-Eight, has done a great service by preparing a treatise on Class Re- ports, which ought to help in making them in the future very much more valuable. He prints a list of 234 class reports in the Academical Department, including all the biographies of eight or more.pages isstied to 1808. He urges all Secretaries, before compiling a report, to carefully examine those that have been issued, and he urges them to exchange with all other secretaries. In regard to a class secretaryship he has this interesting paragraph: “A class secretaryship is no sinecure, but one finds himself in good company when he recalls the names of Secretaries Day and Murdock of 1797, and of Fitch, Olmstead, Salisbury, Day, Kings- ley, Thacher, Silliman and Hadley; of Presidents Dwight and Gilman, and of Newton and Wright. The value of these records I think is underestimated. Acceptable as they are to those for whom they are printed, they will also interest future biographers, since they often furnish personal contributions to the study of character and effort.” JOHN CORNELIUS GRIGGS, ’g0, Late Director Metropolitan College of Music. SONG RECITALS and VOCAL INSTRUCTION. Carnegie Hall, New York City. Summer address, Monteagle, Tennessee. TUTORING — For Yale entrance examinations. Greek and Latin a Specialty. Best references. Success- ful experience. Terms reasonable. RoB’T H. MILLER, ’97, 133 Wall St., New Haven. TO RENT.—Two large, cool, quaint, old coun- try residences, and one cottage, with gardens and barns. Near church, post office, telephone station. Daily mail. Address, CARRINGTON PHELPs, North Colebrook, Conn., or CarRRINGTON A. PHELPs, 282 Lawrance, New Haven, Conn, The Tagheonie Private Tutory. LANESBORO, Berkshire Co., MASS. Special instruction for Boys defi- cient in any branch, in. preparation for all Schools and Colleges. Men received any time throughout the year. , R. DEFOREST TUCKER, Head-master. PRIVATE TUTOR. CPs: JUNIOR, ready to fit boy for entrance, Freshman, or Sophomore examinations. 2 Willing to accompany him, or provide board in a home among the Green Mountains. Best of references, and experience. 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, Prince- 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. & C Ai ANG Si slice cecum tebe . ... BREECHES MAKERS Twenty-nine 34th Street. W. NEW YORK. Telephone, 1405-38th St.