TALE ALUMNI WHEHEKLY gy ARMY AND NAVY PERSONALS. [Continued from 5th page.] ‘92 S—Charles Weiser was appointed a Captain in the Commissary Depart- ment by President McKinley, July 109. ‘92 S.—Richard F. Manning of Troop A, New York Cavalry was taken ill with typhoid fever, July 16. He is now rapidly recovering, however. ‘93—Col. F. A. Hill, who was on the staff of Maj.-Gen. Wilson, was appointed Collector of Customs of the Port of Ponce, Porto Rico, the day Ponce was taken. *95—Yandell Henderson, U. S. N. who served on the U. S. S. Yale, is now in the White Mountains. 95 S.—After the battle of La Guasi- mas, June 23, John C. Greenway was promoted to rank of First Lieutenant, for bravery and meritorious conduct. ”*96 S.—Clarence S. Day, Jr., received honorable discharge from naval service on Sept. 2. ex-’96—Corporal John Howard Davies of Company G, Third Ohio Vol- unteers was taken seriously ill and granted an indefinite sick leave, July 25. ’96—Alfred Day Pardee of the First Troop, Philadelphia City Cavalry, U. S. A. is at home on a furlough. He enlisted June 13th and went into camp at Mt. Gretna, Pa. the same day. The troop went to Camp Alger, July 8, and from there to Newport News, July 24. July 28, they sailed on the transport Massachusetts for Ponce, Porto Rico. Returning, they landed at Jersey City, Sept. Io. ’97—P. H. Bailey is a member of Co. H, First Connecticut Volunteers. The regiment was in camp at Niantic until June 9, when Companies A, D, G and H were removed to Fort Knox, Me. July 14, the regiment was mobilized at Niantic; removed to Camp Alger, Falls Church, Va., July 17. September 7, the regiment returned to Niantic. The regiment was to have taken part in Gen. Wade’s expedition to Porto Rico, but the expedition was finally aban- doned. ‘97S—Ross A. Hickok enlisted in Battery A, Light Artillery Pennsyl- vania Volunteers, May 5. He was made corporal July 12. July 28 he was commisssioned First Lieutenant and assigned to Co. M, Fifth Pennsylvania Volunteers, which he was with at Camp Thomas, Chickamauga Park, and Camp Hamilton, Lexington, Ky., returning to Mt. Gretna, Sept. 15, where they were given a thirty days’ furlough. ’98—A. C. Ledyard received his com- mission as Second Lieutenant in the regular army and was assigned to Gen. Miles’s staff on July 22d. He immediately started for Porto Rico. 99 S.—While home on furlough in June, A. M. Bell of Battery A, First Connecticut Volunteers, fell and injured his elbow, and has since been absent on sick leave. ’99—Edward Carson Waller, Jr. of Roosevelt’s Rough Riders was_ shot over the left eye in the fight before Santiago but continued with his troop throughout the engagement. He has since fully recovered from his wound. While at Tampa he was ill with fever and only recovered in time to go with the troop to Cuba. 1900 S.—M. M. MacMillan was dis- charged from Battery A, First Artillery, Connecticut Volunteers, July 16th. On the same date he was commissioned Assistant Quartermaster with rank of Captain of U. S. Volunteers. > = <= a Ma it Obituary. SAMUEL G. BUCKINGHAM, 733. Rev. Dr. Samuel G. Buckingham died at his home in Springfield, Mass., July 12. He was born Nov. 18, 1812, and graduated from Yale in 1833 and three years later from the Yale Divinity School. His first pastorate was the Second Congregational Church in Mill- bury, Mass., at which place he re- mained ten years. From Millbury, Dr. Buckingham went to what is now the South Congregational Church at Springfield, Mass., in 1847, succeeding Rev. Noah Porter, who had accepted a professorship in Yale College, and remained there in active service until the time of his death. For many years Dr. Buckingham was a trustee of the Williston Seminary at Easthampton, Tiffany 8 Co. Wedding Stationery A wedding invitation or marriage announcement is indicative of good taste in proportion to the intelligent observance of its essential details. Messrs. Tiffany & Co. offer their long experience and the unequaled equip- ment of their Stationery Department to properly execute orders of this character. Two weeks should be allowed for engraving and printing wedding invita- tions. Tiffany & Co.’s products can be purchased only direct from their own establishment, UNION SQUARE NEW YORK and he served on the reconstruction and building committees of the Theological | Department of Yale. His chief literary production was: “The Life of William A. Buckingham, the War Governor of Connecticut”— his brother. Yale gave him the degree of Doctor of Divinity in 1860. The Springfield Republican says: “It is the best beloved citizen of Springfield, the oldest Christian minis- ter in years of age or years of service, the man whose presence, gradually withdrawn, will yet be missed more than that of scores of even well-known men among us,—to whom we must now bid farewell While he never became a champion of the new orthodoxy, he never antagonized it, and the change came as mellowly and cor- dially to his soul as dew to the grass or the west wind to the heated earth. He was of the school of the beloved dis- ciple, to whom he was so often likened, and his influence was thus that of the lover, not of the hater, or even in any degree of the disputant.” ROBERT PALMER STANTON, 743. Rev. Robert Palmer Stanton died at his home in Norwich, Conn., after a long illness. He was born in Belcher- town, Mass., and entered Yale with the Class of Forty-Three. After his gradu- ation from the Academical Department he took a course at the Yale Divinity School, and from his graduation until 1880 was actively engaged in preaching, principally in Connecticut. His last pastorate was in Greenville, Conn. where he remained from 1856 until 1880, retiring in that year. CHARLES SAMUEL WARD, 763 M.S. Dr. Charles Samuel Ward died at his home in Bridgeport, Conn., on July | 31st from a cerebral hemorrhage. Dr. Ward was born in 1842, and graduated from the Yale Medical School in the Class of Sixty-Three. The same year he entered the service of the country as a medical cadet and served through- out the remainder of the war, in that capacity. After the war was over he began the practice of his profession in New York City, and at the time of his retirement a few years ago held a very large clientage. Since then he has passed the greater part of his time in Bridgeport. Dr. Ward, himself coming from an ancient line, took great interest in genealogy and was for many years National Secretary of the Society of the Colonial Wars. He was active also in the organization of the society known as the Barons of Runnymede. He leaves no family. GEORGE TROWBRIDGE, 778. Dr. George Trowbridge died sud- denly of heart paralysis on Saturday morning, Sept. 12th, at his residence on West 47th street, New York. Dr. Trowbridge was born in New Haven in 1855, and graduated from Yale in the Class of Seventy-Eight. He entered the .College of Physicians and: Sur- geons of New York the next year, and received his diploma from that institu- tion in 1881, but practiced medicine only a few years, giving it up to scientific and literary research. The funeral was held from the Brick Presbyterian Church, Thirty-Seventh and Fifth ave- nue, on Tuesday morning. EDWARD WILSON JOHNSTONE, ’92 S. Edward Wilson Johnstone was in- stantly killed at the works of the United Verdi Copper Co. at Jerome, Ariz., on July 23, by the collapse of the walls of the assaying office in which Mr. Johnstone was working. He was born in Connellsville, Pa. in 1872 and prepared for Yale at Andover. After - graduation from Yale in the Class of Ninety-Two S. he went to Butte, Mont., where he had charge of the building of a railroad and water works for a large mining concern. In two years he moved to Jerome, Ariz. and undertook the construction of a railroad from Jerome to Phoenix in the same state, which he_ successfully carried out. When the superintendency of the United Verdi Copper Co. was offered | him in 1897 he accepted it and remained with that company until the time of his sudden death. i ee Smith’s Good Golfing. Walter B. Smith, ’99, met Findlay S. Douglas in the finals for the golf cham- pionship of the United States on the Morris County links, Morristown, N. J. last Saturday, but was defeated. Smith’s work through the whole tourna- ment was quite phenomenal, he having beaten many of the best players in America. An account of the doings of Yale men throughout the country in golf and tennis will be printed next week. COMEGE PHOTOGRAPHS. THE FINISHING OF AMATEUR WORK AND VIEWS OF STUDENTS’ ROOMS ARE SPECIALTIES. Samples of work at Co-op. CORBIN & KONOLD,. PHOTOGRAPHERS, 811 Chapel Street, - corner Orange. | | | | | | $$ 4 DEATH OF T. W. MILLER, 97. [Continued from 3d page.] Sheffield Scientific School, of Yale, graduating in 1896. He was first em- ployed by the Susquehanna Coal Co., but later became Secretary and Treas- urer of the Hygiene Milk Co. He was always passionately fond of military life and in March, 1897, joined as a private Co. D, oth Regt., then National Guard of Pennsylvania. He was elected Second Lieutenant of Co. B, July 1, 1807, and on May 5, 1808, while the 9th was at Mt. Gretna, he was elected Captain of Co. B, oth Regt., Pennsylvania Volunteers.. In that office he served up to the time of his death. The same buoyant cheerfulness and consideration that marked his social relations in private life were character- istic of him on the field. Not a day passed but that he did not visit the sick of his company and offer them all the assistance and consolation at his com- mand. While a strict disciplinarian and thoroughly versed in the military man- ual and code, he had the rare faculty of maintaining a high standard of efficiency and discipline without being overbearing and dictatorial. He was born with the military inclination and only a few years ago was eager to join the regular army and devote all of his time to the service. but was dissuaded from doing so by his parents. He was descended from a patriotic and military ancestry. Elijah Shoemaker, who was killed in the Wyoming massacre, was his Zreat-great-grandfather, as was also Col. Nathan Denison, who was in the same battle. The funeral was held on Thursday, Sept. 8th. Among the honorary pall bearers were T. B. Ryman, ’97S. and Dorrance Reynolds, Yale 1902. Cuas. ADAMS. ALEX.MCNEILL. Wwa.S. BrigHam. ale *87. ale ’87. - ADAMS, MCNEILL & BRIGHAM, BANKERS & BROKERS, 44 Broad Street, - New York. Members New York Stock Exchange. Stocks and Bonds Bought and Sold. Investment Securi- ties a Specialty. “Long Distance Telephone, 947 Broad.” LEoPpoLp H. FRANCKE. ALBERT FRANCKE, Yale ’89. Yale ’91 8. 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 fisted on the Stock Exchange. : Long Distance Telephone, 1348 Broad. HOME LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK. (GEORGE E. IDE, President. Wm. M. St. Joun, Vice-President. Exruis W. GLapwin, Secretary. Wm. A. MarsHAa.t, Actuary. F, W. Cuaprin, Medical Director, EUGENE A. CALLAHAN, General Agent, State of Connecticut. 23 Church Street, New Haven. ““The Leading Fire Insurance Company of America.” SSS A|. \ 2" GZYNSSN ZB ee pA \ ee A ee fa AX W. H. KING, SECRETARY. A. C. ADAMS, HENRY“. KEES, | WESTERN BRANCH, 413 Vine Street, Cincinnati, O. NORTHWESTERN BRANCH, Omaha, Neb. PACIFIC BRANCH, San Francisco, Cal. INLAND MARINE DEPARTMENT, Incorporated 1819. Charter Perpetual. Cash Capital, $4,000,000.00 Cash Assets, 42,089,089.98 Total Liabilities, 3,655,3 70.62 Net Surplus, 4 433,719.36 Losses Paid in 79 Years,81, 125,621.50 E. O. WEEKS, VICE-PRESIDENT. ) ASSISTANT SECRETARIES. \ KEELER & GALLAGHER, General Agents. § WM. H. WYMAN, General Agent. \ W. P. HARFORD, Assistant General Agent. BOARDMAN & SPENCER, General Agents. ( CHICAGO, ILLS., 145 LaSalle Street. | NEW YORK, BOSTON, PHILADELPHIA, 52 William Street. 42 Central Street. 229 Walnut Street.