Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, October 06, 1898, Page 6, Image 6

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    26
VALE ALUMNI WHrrEKLY
ALUMNI NOTES.
[Continued from 25th page.)
the marriage service, assisted. by her
brother, the Rey. Frederick D. Lobdell
of Philadelphia. The Bishop of the
Diocese, the Rt. Rev. William D.
Walker, ._pronounced the benediction.
Miss Margaret Lobdell was_ bride’s
maid and Mr. James McCormick
Mitchell best man.
’95—A sketch of one of the saddest
instances in the return of Company L
of the Second Massachusetts Regiment
to their home in Greenfield, is entitled
“The Tragedy of the Home Coming.”
It is written by Edward Branch Lyman.
It has deservedly found a great many
readers, not only in Greenfield and in
other parts of Massachusetts, but gen-
erally throughout the country, where
now its story is particularly appre-
ciated. It is the story of the vain
search of a sister for a brother on the
soldier train which brought back the
home company.
’96—E. C. Lackland is practicing law
in St. Louis, Mo.
’96—Theodore Carleton’s present ad-
dress is 336% Fourth street, Brooklyn,
N.Y
’°96— Wolcott P. Robbins is in the law
office of Hornblower, Byrne, Taylor &
Miller, 30 Broad st., New York City.
’96 T.S.—Rev. Evarts W:. Pond has
recently been installed pastor of the
Congregational Church of Sheffield,
Mass.
796 S.— Ernest K. Adams and Clar-
ence L. Collins, 2d, left Vancouver, B.
C., on Sept. 12, for a trip around the
world.
’96 S.—The marriage of Miss Wilhel-
mina Crapo Cristy to Thomas H. West,
Jr., will take place at 4.30 Pp. m., Oct.
21, at 148 McDougall av., Detroit,
Mich.
’96—Ward Cheney, Second Lieuten-
ant, Fourth Infantry, U. S. A., is re-
covering from a very serious case of
typhoid fever at the Army Hospital at
Fort Sheridan, III.
*96:« T~.S.— Rev. Charles Nicholas
Thorp was married to Susie Gertrude,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clark Levi
Long, Sept. 28th, at Rutland, Vermont.
He is pastor of the First Congregational
Church, Oswego, New York.
97 S.—John A. Hall is coaching the
Carlisle Indian School football team
this Fall.
‘o7—Hubert B. Augur is teaching
classics at the Bishop Scott Academy,
Portland, Ore.
97 L.S.—David E. Moulton has
opened law offices at 27-29 Jose Build-
ing, 98 Exchange st., Portland, Me.
’97—Stewart Patterson has been as-
signed to Battery K, Seventh United
States Artillery, with rank of Second
Lieutenant.
97 S—The engagement of Miss
Martha Ray of Knoxville, Tenn., to G.
Barrett Rich, Jr., of Buffalo, has been
recently announced.
97 S.—J. C. Cristy has been with
George Morley & Co., wholesale lum-
ber dealers, 550 East Atwater st., De-
troit, Mich., since last Fall.
’97—Amos R. E. Pinchot of Troop A,
New York Volunteer Cavalry, is slowly
recovering from a severe attack of
malarial fever contracted while in Porto
Rico.
’97 S.—Winsor. P. French enlisted
May 2, in the Second New York Vol-
unteers. He was discharged from that
regiment June 29, in order to accept a
Second Lieutenancy in the Two Hun-
dred and First New York. His regi-
ment was stationed most of the time at
Camp Black, Hempstead Plains, Long
Island, and while there Lieutenant
French was appointed member of a per-
manent court martial. He resigned his
commission September 6. .
’98—Jay C. McLaughlan spent the
Summer abroad. ss
’98—Henry Fletcher has entered the
Harvard Law School. .
*98—C. D. Cheney spent the Summer
in England, France and Germany.
’98 M.S.—A. H. Hine is coaching the
Williams University football team.
’98—Lawrence Hitchcock is in the
iron business in Youngstown, Ohio.
’98—Grenville Parker has accepted a
position in the City Bank of New York.
’98—R. H. Crowell and J. C. Brooks
have entered the Harvard Law School.
’98 T.S.—Rev. Walter B. Street was
lately ordained a minister at Lee, Mass.
*798—T. S. McLane is in the Treas-
urer’s office of the N. Y. C. & H. R.
RR: f
: ._ E. Johnson’s address for the
eed sce ah be 12 Oxford st., Cam-
bridge, Mass.
*98—R. Reynolds Hitt has been re-
cently in Japan. He will enter the Har-
vard Law School this Fall.
’°98—G. G. Schreiber, J. M: Woolsey,
R. J. Turnbull, Jr., Forsyth Wickes and
J. S. Rogers have entered the Columbia
Law School.
98 S.—€. Wayne Cunningham is with
the Link-Belt Engineering Co. at
Tioga, Philadelphia, Pa. His address
is Tioga and 2tst sts.
*798—H. W. Wilcox, F. T. vanBeuren
and E. C. Perkins have entered the Col-
lege of Physicians and Surgeons of
Columbia University.
*98—George B. Perry has entered the
Harvard Law School, Edward Norris
the Columbia Law School and Henry
Sillcocks the New York Law School.
98 S.—J. L. Howard, Jr., left Niantic
a few days ago, where he had, up to
that time, been acting as orderly for
the mustering officers for the Connecti-
cut troops.
<> >
—
Obituary.
REV: GEORGE -C. LUCAS, >(43:
The death of Rev. George Clark
Lucas occurred August 9, at his home,
No. 230 Central Park South, New York
City, aged 83 years.
Mr. Lucas was born in the County of
Sussex, England. He came to this
country at the age of sixteen, and was
graduated from Yale in 1843. Three
years later he was graduated from the
Yale Theological Seminary, having
been licensed to preach in the Presby-
terian ministry the previous year. He
held pastorates at the Second Presby-
terian Church, Lansingbury, N. Y., the
Central Presbyterian Church, Newark,
N. J., and the Allen Street Presbyterian
Church of New York. His last charge
was at Woodbridge, N. J., which he
held until 1874, when he went abroad
and remained several years. After his
return he held no settled charge. At
the time of his death he was President
of the Board of Trustees of the Barron
Library at Woodbridge, N. J. He had
been in failing health for some time be-
fore his death. He leaves a wife, three
daughters, and a son, Albert P. Lucas.
ANDREW JUDSON WHITE, ’46 M.S.
The death of Andrew Judson White
occurred at London, England, on Sep-
tember 23d, after a long illness. The
remains were brought thhome and _ in-
terred at Woodlawn on October 8th.
Mr. ‘White was born at Canterbury,
Conn., on May oth, 1824. He entered
Yale College with the Class of Forty-
Six, but did not complete the Academic
Course, taking up instead the course at
the Yale Medical School, where he
graduated in 1846. Mr. White was for
many years engaged in the wholesale
drug business in New York City and
in London, although of late years he
has not been actively engaged in busi-
ness enterprises. As a capitalist he was
connected with many ventures, and he
was for many years President of the
Yost Typewriter Company, until the
leading typewriting companies became
merged into the Union Typewriter
Company, in which latter company he
was a Director at the time of his death.
In November, 18094, he presented Yale
University with the dormitory which
has been named after him.
He always took a great interest in
matters pertaining to Yale and Yale
life. Besides the widow he leaves a
son, Raymond S. White, who graduated
at Yale in the Class of Ninety-Five.
REV. WILLIAM D. LOVE, D.D., ’47 T.S.
Rev. William DeLoss Love, D.D.,
died at St. Paul, Minn., Sept, s.
Dr. Love was born at Barre, Orleans
County, N. Y., Sept. 20, 1819. He
graduated from Hamilton College in
1843, and studied Theology at Andover
and the Yale Divinity School, graduat-
ing from the latter institution in 1847.
He entered the ministry as pastor of the
Howe Street Church of New Haven,
and subsequently held pastorates in Ber-
lin, Conn., Milwaukee, Wis., East
Saginaw, Mich., South Hadley, Mass.,
and New York City.
During the Civil War Dr. Love
labored zealously in the work of the
Christian Commission. Before the
War he was an ardent abolitionist. He
was also an author of many volumnes
and pamphlets, his first book being a
“Child’s History of Slavery.” Later,
while a pastor in Wisconsin, he wrote
the “History of Wisconsin in the War _
of the Rebellion.” |
DR. JOSEPH B. ELLIOTT, 753 M.S.
Dr. Joseph B. Elliott died on Sunday
July 3, at his home, 493 Clinton avenue,
Brooklyn. At the time of his death Dr.
Elliott was one of the leading homeo-
pathic physicians in Brooklyn. He was
born in Sharon, Conn. in 1821 and was
a descendant of John Elliott, the first
missionary to the Indians in that set-
tlement. Directly after his graduation
from the Yale Medical College in 1853
he took charge of the State Insane
Asylum -at dretiton, N.. J, and-aier
serving a few years in that capacity he
moved to Brooklyn, where the continued
in active practice almost to the close
of his life.
He was consulting physician of the
Homeopathic Hospital and of the
Brooklyn Nursery. He was also War-
den of the Episcopal Church of the
Messiah. The interment was at Sharon.
LIEUT. RODMOND V. BEACH, ’87.
Lieut. Rodmond V. Beach, of New
Haven, died from typhoid fever on
Thursday, September 209, at Ponce,
Porto Rico.
At the beginning of the war Lieut.
Beach was appointed Second Lieuten-
ant in the First United States Engineers,
and soon afterwards received a commis-
sion as First Lieutenant and was se-
lected by Colonel Griffing as his Ad-
jutant. His regiment went into camp
at Peekskill, N. Y., and on August 9
was ordered to Porto Rico. Last Wed-
nesday letters were received from the
officers of the regiment telling of Lieu-
tenant Beach’s illness and on the fol-
lowing morning word was received of
his death. The body will reach New
Haven the latter part of this week and
will be buried with military honors. _
Lieut. Beach, son of John S. Beach,
was born in 1865, and graduated from
Yale in 1887 and the Law School in 1880.
While in college and -after: graduating
he took a great interest in lawn tennis,
and became one of the well known
players of the country. In 1891 he en-
listed in the New Haven Grays and in
the following year he was promoted to
be First Lieutenant and Paymaster of
the Second Regiment. In July, 1893,
he was made. Battalion Adjutant. He
held the office of Secretary of the Sec-
ond Regiment Officers’ Association for
For the Fall Shooting. |
Is your “ Parker’? all ready for it? Presum-
ably it is, if it was carefully put away
at the end of the last season. But
perhaps you want something different
- this year, as to calibre, weight, or
design. Shooters know all about the
general qualities of the gun. A cat-
alogue gives all details.
N. Y. Salesrooms, No. 96 Chambers St.
PARKER BROS., MERIDEN.
wy ; S
osrones HOT) 6 CHAPEL S:
ON {746 CHAPELS!
UR Special? OSS New ilaven Conn
(GB We make the engravings used in
‘the “ ALUMNI. WEEKLY.”
— =
some time. About a year ago Lieuten-
ant Beach rendered valuable voluntary
service to Captain Wells in the reor-
ganization of the Sarsfield Guards. Mr.
Beach was a member of the Quinnipi-
ack Club and the Lawn Club and an
original member of the Graduates Club.
Mr. Beach leaves two brothers, John
K. Beach, ’77, a lawyer, and Francis
G. Beach, ’83, Captain of Battery C,
Heavy Artillery, C. V., now of the
Third Connecticut Volunteers, at Camp
Meade, Penn., and one sister, Rebecca
D. Beach.
HENRY E. MCDERMOTT, ’96.
Henry E. McDermott died at the hos-
pital in New Haven,.Conn., on Monday,
October 3. He had been in ill health
for a year or more from the effects of
an operation for appendicitis.
Mr. McDermott graduated from Yale
in the Class of Ninety-Six, and im-
mediately afterwards was appointed As-
sistant to Professor Chittenden in Phys-
iological Chemistry. The following
year he entered the Yale Medical School
and last Spring began his work as As-
sistant Instructor in the College of Phy-
sicians and Surgeons. Last Commence-
ment Yale gave him the degree of M.A.
Owing to continuing poor health he
was obliged to give up his work and
was advised to rest at his home for a
year. This preyed upon his mind and
doubtless hastened the end.
FOOTBALL
As the American Colleges play
it, is distinctly an American
game. The Englishmen
who see it are amazed at
the development of Rugby
by United States collegians.
In all the advances, intrica-
cies and elaborations of the
sport, the football special-
ists have found one firm in
the United States always
ready to meet, and even
often to anticipate their
needs. This is one notable
example of the up-to-date-
ness of
A. G. SPALDING & BROS.
New York. Chicago.
Pais BLISS & CO.
| TAILORS ~~
NEW HAVEN, - CONN.
CHARLES T. PENNELL,
Successor to Wm, Franklin & Co.,
[MPORTING TAILOR,
40 Center St., New Haven, Conn.
PAGH BROS...
COLLEGE PHOTOGRAPHERS,
1024 Chapel St., New Haven.
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