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10 YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY
Our “‘Ordinary”’ Insurance... .
a & & “Ordinary” Life Insurance, as operated by
THE PRUDENTIAL, is that class of insurance upon which
premiums are payable annually, semi-annually, or quarterly.
The most attractive forms of these policies are issued on the
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obtained in sums ranging from $500 to $50,000, according to the
requirements and means of the Insured.
The superb organization of THE PRUDENTIAL, and
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*
IN MEMORIAM.
[Continued from oth page. ]
Osborn, editor of the New Haven
Register, General Aiken, Hugh H. Os-
good and John T. Wait, of Norwich,
and Alfred Mitchell, of New London.
Others present were: Henry P. God-
dard, of Baltimore, John Babcock, of
Chicago, John E. Milholland and Ce-
phas Brainerd, of New York, and Henry
Hall, James B. Wasson and Hart Ly-
man, of the Tribune.
A brief committal service at Yantic
Cemetery, in Norwich, immediately fol-
lowed the service at the church. An
interesting incident was the attending,
as a guard of honor, of four members
of Company C, 18th Connecticut Vol-
unteers, which was raised at Norwich
ay Mr. Bromley for service in the Civil
ar,
i. Hi. B.
DIED AUGUST II, 1808.
[New York Tribane.]
The dirge is sung, the ritual said,
No more the brooding organ weeps,
And soft and green, the turf is spread
On that lone grave where BROM-
LEY sleeps.
Gone—in his ripe, meridian hour!
Gone—when the wave was at its crest!
And gentle Humor’s perfect flower
Is turned to darkness and to rest.
No more those honest eyes will gleam
With torrid light of proud desire;
No more those fluent lips will teem
With Wit’s gay quip or Passion’s fire.
Forever gone! And with him fade
The dreams that Youth and Friend-
ship know—
The frolic and the glee that made
The golden time of Long Ago.
The golden time! Ah, many a face,—
And his the merriest of them all,—
That made this world so sweet a place,
Is cold and still, beneath the pall.
His was the heart that over-much,
In human goodness puts its trust,
And his the keen, satiric touch
That shrivels falsehood into dust.
His love was like the liberal air,—
Embracing all, to cheer and bless;
And ev’ry grief that mortals share
Found pity in his tenderness.
His subtle vision deeply saw,
Through piteous webs of human fate,
The motion of the sov reign law,
On which all tides of being wait.
No sad recluse, no bookish drone,
His mirthful spirit, blithely poured,
In many a crescent frolic shone,—
The light of many a festal board.
No pompous pedant, did he feign,
A dull conceit of Learning’s store;
But not for him were writ in vain
eu, statesman’s craft, the scholar’s
ore.
‘SLASSV 40 627'1$ MOHS NYO LI
Fierce for the right, he bore his part
In strife with many a valiant foe;
But Laughter winged his polished dart,
And Kindness tempered ev'ry blow.
No selfish purpose marked his way;
Still for the common good he
wrought,
And still enriched the passing day
With sheen of wit and sheaves of
thought.
Shrine him, “New England, in thy
breast!
With wild flowers grace his hallow’d
bed,
And guard with love his laurel’d rest,
Forever, with thy holiest dead!
For not in all the teeming years
Of thy long glory hast thou known
A being framed of smiles and tears
Humor and force so like thine own!
And never did thine asters gleam
Or through thy pines the night-winds
roll,
To soothe,
dream,
A sweeter or a nobler soul!
WILLIAM WINTER.
Santa Catalina Island, Pacific Ocean,
August 27, 1808.
in death’s transcendent
~~
Greenway’s Training.
[Bridgeport Morning Telegram.] f
Jack Greenway, who handled the de-
ceptive curves of “Dutch” Carter when-
the Yale baseball team was invincible
and was a sturdy end rush for the Yale
football eleven, has been promoted for
gallantry on the battle field. Greenway
is with the Rough Riders and as
roughing it was part of his football
tuition, he is naturally a howling suc-
cess. No one who ever saw Jack
Greenway get around the end in a
football scrimmage, where the accom-
plishment required strength and cour-
age, will depreciate the benefit of par-
ticipation in athletic games at the period
in life when the mind undergoes a
course of training and character is being
formed.
Eleven Wale Weachers.
Arrangements for the new Cornell
Medical School in New York City are
well under way. Architect’s plans for
the building, which will be situated on
First ave. between 27th and 28th streets,
have been drawn and accepted. The
structure will be in the Renaissance
style and will be built of red brick and
limestone at a cost of about $400,000,
and when finished, in a year’s time, will
be one of the most complete colleges
of its kind in the world.
Among the Faculty and teaching
body which has already been gathered
together there are eleven Yale gradu-
ates, from the Class of Sixty-Three
~ Siecle;
the family or a means of investment of money is desired.
The Prudential Insurance Company
2» & OF AMERICA *
JOHN F. DRYDEN, Pres’t.
NEWARK, N. |.
upwards. They are: Lewis A. Stimp-
son, 63, Professor of Surgery; Frederic
S. Dennis, ’72, Professor of Clinical
Surgery; George T. Elliot, ’77, Profes-
sor of Dermatology; Alexander Lam-
bert, 84, Professor of Clinical Medicine;
F. W. Murray, ’77, Professor of Clinical
Surgery; P. R. Bolton, ’86S., Instruc-
tor in Surgery; Lewis A. Conner,
87 S.. Instructor in Medicine; John
A. Hartwell, ’80S., Instructor in
Physiology; Edward L. Keyes, 63,
Assistant Demonstrator in Anatomy;
. E. Newcombe, ’80, Instructor in
Laryngology; John Rogers, ‘87, In-
structor in Surgery and Assistant Dem-
onstrator in Anatomy.
<i, Li»
‘Vale Review” for August.
Comment: Imperialism, True and
False; Administrative Problems of an
Imperial Policy; State Railroad Pur-
chase in Switzerland. Body articles:
“The Present Status of Cotton and
Cotton Manufacturing in the United
States,’ by Mr. Edward Atkinson, of
Boston; “The Essay of Malthus: a
Centennial Review,’ by Professor
Frank A. Fetter, of the Indiana Uni-
versity; “Some Economic Consequences
oi. the Liberation of Caba,. by -Dr,
G. Kingsley Olmsted, of Yale Uni-
versity; “Labor. “Crises. ~ and «their
Periods in the United States,” by Pro-
fessor Henry W. Farnam, of Yale Uni-
versity; “Ancient and Modern Hindu
Gilds,’ by Professor E.. Washburn
Hopkins, of Yale University. Notes:
The National Municipal League; The
Alaskan Gold Fields; Economic As-
pects of the Liquor Problem; The late
Mr. E. A. Angell; Gold Contracts in
the United States. Book Reviews:
Bodley’s France (by Professor J. W.
Jenks); Pearson’s Chances of Death;
Stark’s Abolition of Privateering (by
Professor T. S. Woolsey); Sayous’
Bourses Allemandes; Henry George’s
Political Economy; Richardson’s Na-
tional Movement in the Reign of Henry
III.; Sombart’s: Socialisme au XIXe
Destrée and Vandervelde’s
Socialisme en Beligique; Sneath’s
Hobbes; Ford’s Federalist; Ashley’s
Turgot; Handworterbuch der Staats-
wissenschaften, Supplementband II.
RENCH Language and Literature, by experi-
enced and successful instructor. Tutoring and
coaching. Regent’s examinationsa specialty. High-
est testimonials. A. J. pe Mets, 68 Howe Street.
Professional Schools.
YALE MEDICAL SCHOOL.
86th Annual Session, Oct. 6, 1898.
The course leading to the degree of Doctor of
Medicine in Yale University is graded, covers four
years, and consists of systematic, personal instruc-
tion in laboratory, class-room and clinic.
for announcements, send to the Dean.
HERBERT E, Smitu, New Haven, Conn.
SCHOOLS.
Che Watchkiss School,
LAKEVILLE, CONN.
An endowed school, devoted exclusively to
preparation for college, or scientific school,
according to Yale and Harvard standards.
Eight regular instructors.
The school was opened in 1892, with pro-
vision for 50 boys. Enlarged accommoda-
tions were immediately called for, and the
capacity of the school was doubled in 1894.
A limited number of scholarships, some of
which amount to the entire annual fee, are
available for deserving candidates of slender
means who can show promise of marked
Success in their studies. |
EDWARD G. Coy, Head Master.
MR TAFTS SCHOOL.
WATERTOWN, CONN.
A Preparatory School for Boys.
HORACE D. TAFT, HEAD MASTER.
BETTS ACADEMY
STAMFORD, CONN.—soth Year.
Prepares for universities or technical schools.
Special advantages to students desiring to save
time in preparation. HOME LIFE and the
INDIVIDUAL, the key-notes.
WM.1. BETTS, M.A. (Yale), Principal.
THE KING SCHOOL, ST4MEQRD.
One hundred and twelve boys have been success-
fully prepared here for college in recent years,
Of these a large number have entered Yale.
Ten boarding pupils are taken at $600 each.
Out-of-Door-Life and Study for Boys.
Tue ADDRESS OF
MR. THACHER’S SCHOOL
is Nordhoff, [Southern] California.
GIRLS’ SCHOOLS.
MRS. AND MISS CADY’s
BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL For GIRLS.
56 Hillhouse Avenue, New Haven.
Primary, Intermediate and Finishing Courses of
Study, and College Preparatory. Certificate ad-
mits to College. Circulars sent on application,
Number in family limited.
ST. MARGARET’S SCHOOL
WATERBURY, CONN.
MIss MaryY R. HILLARD, Principal.
Reference by permission to President Dwight,
Yale University; Principal C. F. Bancroft,
Phillips Academy.