YALE ALUMNI WHEHEKLY
31
ALUMNI NOTES.
| Graduates are invited to contribute to this column.)
°37—Hon. William M. Evarts has
been re-elected Chairman of the Board
of Trustees of the Peabody Educational
Fund. Mr. Evarts is the only surviv-
ing member of the original board of
trustees.
*42—Rey. Burdett Hart returned in
the latter part of September from
Breezy Hill, N. H., where he had spent
his vacation with his party of twenty,
including his children and _ grand-
children.
"46—At the recent annual meeting of
the American Social Science Associa-
tion at Saratoga, Hon. F. J. Kingsbury
was elected First Vice-President.
’52—President D. C. Gilman has been
elected a member of the Executive
Comat of the Peabody Educational
und.
*54—Hon. Henry E. Howland was a
member of the reception. committee
of the Union League Club of New
York which entertained Col. Roosevelt
on Oct. 6.
*54—According to a dispatch from
Pekin, Yung Wing, the Chinese-
American and graduate of Yale, has ob-
tained an extension of time for his con-
cession for the Tient-Tsin-Chin-Kiang
Railroad, alleging that he had received
the support of an English syndicate to
supply the necessary capital, $25,000.000.
’56S.—George F. Fuller of Spring-
field has been named by the Republi-
cans for State Senator.
’*56—A. J. Steinman has been nomi-
nated for Congress by the Democrats
of the Tenth Pennsylvania District.
’50—George William Jones, Professor
of Mathematics in Cornell University,
will instruct in the New York State
College of Forestry, in Ithaca.
‘61—At the recent annual meeting of
the American Social Science Associa-
tion at Saratoga, Judge S. E. Baldwin
was elected President.
‘61—Professor Simeon E. Baldwin, ot
the Yale Law School Faculty, has pub-
lished recently a book entitled “Mod-
ern Political Institutions.”’
62—Frederic A. Ward was nominated
for the Supreme Court of New York,
on Oct. 7, by the Republicans of the
Second Judicial District of Brooklyn.
‘64—Rev. Lewis Gregory has ten-
dered his resignation as pastor of the
First Congregational Church of Lin-
coln, Nebr.
’64—Matthew C. D. Borden was a
member of the Reception Committee
which entertained Col. Roosevelt at
the Union League Club in New York,
on Oct. 6.
‘65—Rev. H. A. Stimson, D.D., was
one of the speakers before the meeting
of the American Board of Foreign
Missions recently held at Grand Rapids.
‘65—Rev. H. A. Stimson, D.D., of
New York has written a book on the
Apostles’ Creed which the Congrega-
tional Publishing Society is about to
isstie.
'67—Senator George Peabody Wet-
more has been elected a member of the
Finance Committee of the Peabody
Educational Fund.
’67—Prof. W. H. Goodyear recently
gave a lecture before the New York
Y. M. C. A. on the subject, “The In-
fluence of Greek Art in Modern Sculp-
ture.”
’68—Gen. J. M. Varnum was one of
the Vice-Presidents of the great Repub-
lican ratification meeting at New York
last Wednesday evening.
’68—Rev. Oliver C. Morse leaves the
School for Christian Workers at
Springfield, Mass. to become Vice-
President of Rollins College at Winter
Park, Florida.
’"70—Rev. Roderick Terry, formerly
Chaplain of the Twelfth New York
Infantry, has recovered from a serious
illness from camp fever.
’70—Fleming H. Revell & Co. have
recently published a short sketch by
James G. K. McClure entitled: “The
Man Who Wanted to Help.”
’"70—Charles W. Gould, of New York,
has been appointed Special Assistant to
the Attorney-General, to aid the United
States Commissioners appointed to
carry out the Spanish evacuation ot
Cuba.
*7i—Judge William K. Townsend of’
New Haven has returned recently from
abroad and will preside over the Fall
term of the United States Court in this
city.
%
73 S.—Henry S. Hoyt is on a shoot-
ing trip in Colorado.
73 L.S.—Hon. Julius -C. Cable, of
New Haven, has been nominated for
State Representative of Connecticut by
the Republicans. :
732 Samuel T. Dutton, Superinten-
dent of the Brookline public schools,
spoke before the Ministers’ meeting on
“The Public Schools and the Church.
73 At a reception of the Union
League Club of New York tendered
to Col. Roosevelt on Oct. 6, Albert B.
Boardman was a member of the Recep-
tion Committee.
*74—Charles F. Joy has been renom~
inated for Congress by the Republicans
of the Eleventh Missouri District.
74 T.S.—Rev. George Michael has
recently resigned as pastor of the Con-
gregational Church at Detroit City,
Minn. 3
*75—Clarence E. Bloodgood. is a
member of the Democratic State Com-
mittee of New York for the Twenty- —
fifth District.
—?”75—Almet F. Jenks, of Brooklyn, has
been nominated for Justice of the Su-
preme Court of New York State by
the Democrats of the Second Judicial
District.
"76—Thomas N. Birnie has changed
his place of residence to Mill street,
Springfield, Mass.
*76—Lispenard Stewart has lately
been re-elected President of the New
York State Prison Association for the
fourth time.
76—William W. Hyde, who was
nominated by the Democrats of the
First Congressional District of Hart
ford for Congress, has declined the
nomination owing to business interests.
’77—Rev. C. H. Stevens has resigned
the pastorate of the Congregational
Church at Canton Center, Conn.
"77 'T.5.—Rev. L. F. Berry has re-
signed the pastorate of the Congrega-
tional Church at Ottumwa, Iowa.
*77—R. M. Colgate is one of the
incorporators of the newly-formed
Automatic Screen Roller Company, of
New Jersey.
"77 'T.S.—Rev. Clarence Finster, of
Rockford, Mich., has received a call to
the Congregational Churches at Clarks~
ville and South Boston.
"78—Douglas P. Birnie has just re-
vane from Honolulu to Springfield,
ass.
*78—George W. Burton has been
appointed Cashier of the Lacrosse First
National Bank at Lacrosse, Wis.
*78—John P. Clarke was a member
of the Reception Committee of the
Union League Club of New York,
Mirna entertained Col. Roosevelt, on
et. 6;
*79—Col. Lucien F. Burpee, Second
Regiment, ‘C. N. G.,-acted as honorary
bearer at the funeral of Rodmond V.
Beach of New Haven.
"79—A. V. S. Cochrane was renomi-
nated for Congress by the Republicans
of the Nineteenth Congressional Dis-
frict in séssion at lroy, N.-Y¥< on
October 6.
’*80—Rev. Wilson C. Wheeler, of
Chapman, Kan., has accepted a call to
the Congregational Church at New-
ton, Kan.
80 S.—Frank McA. Collin of Benton
Center, N. Y. was nominated for State
Senator, on Oct. 4, by the Democrats
of the Forty-first District.
81 L.S.—Livingston W. Cleaveland
has been renominated for Judge of Pro-
bate by the Republican Probate District
Convention of New Haven.
*81—Rev. B. W. Bacon will entertain
Professor Karl Budde of the University
of Strassburg, who will lecture in New
hes on the Pre-exilic Religion ot
Israel.
*83—Professor Samuel Ball Platner of
Western. Reserve University has been
elected Secretary of the Managing Com-
mittee of the American School of Classi-
cal Studies in Rome, and Vice-Presi-
dent of the American Philological
Association.
°84—Robert M. Boyd, Jr. will be mar-
ried on October 26 to Miss Mary Edith
Bancroft, daughter of Major Eugene
A. Bancroft, of New London, Conn.
’°84—Cards are out announcing the
marriage of Miss Nettie May, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Gabriel,
of Cleveland, O. to Herbert W. Wolcott
on Wednesday, October 5.
*85—Dr. Colman W. Cutler has re-
moved his office from 50 East 53d st.
to 36 East 33d st., New York City.
’°860—Alfred Cowles spent a part of the
Summer in England.
_ °86—Austen Colgate is one of the
incorporators of the newly formed Au-
tomatic Roller Screen Company of New
Jersey.
86 T.S.—Rev. C. H. Patton, pastor
of the Pilgrim Church (Congregational)
of Duluth, Minn., has accepted a call to
the First Church of St. Louis, Mo.
’87—James R. Sheffield .was one ot
the Vice-Presidents at the big Republi-
can mass meeting in New York last
Wednesday night.
’87—Invitations have been issued for
the wedding of Miss Edith Tod, daugh-
ter of Mrs. John Tod, of Cleveland, O.,
to James R. Sheffield, at Trinity Cathe-
dral on November 2.
88 S.—Morgan Walcott has been
honorably discharged from the United
States Navy. He was fourth officer
on the auxiliary cruiser Yale.
89 S—William C. Wurtenberg is
coaching the Dartmouth University
football team this year.
89 S.—Arthur H. Day acted as hon.
orary bearer at the funeral of Rodmond
V. Beach of New Haven.
*89—Rev. C. O. Gill of East Fairfield,
Vt., has accepted a call from the Con-
gregational Church of Westmore.
*89—J. Gamble Rogers will return to
his home in Chicago early in December
from Paris, where he has been study-
ing in the Ecole des Beaux Arts.
*89—The marriage of Miss Maud
Donald Macbride, of Philadelphia, to
George W. Woodruff, took place early
in August at the home of the bride’s
mother, Mrs. Margaret Macbride, 1324
Spruce street.
"89 T.S.—Prof. J. H. Tufts of the
University of Chicago and Helen B.
Thompson have written a book entitled:
“The Individual and His Relation to
Society,” which has lately been pub-
lished by the University of Chicago
press.
’90—Ernest L. Selden is at present
prospecting along the Caribou Creek,
British Columbia.
*90—Capt. E. L. Munson, Surgeon in
the United States Army, has been visit-
ing in New Haven. .
“60 T.S.—Rev. E. E. Smiley has re-
signed the pastorate of the First Con.
gregational Church of Cheyenne, Wyo.,
to become President of Wyoming State
University.
*o1—Charles Gibbs Carter is practic-
ing law in the firm of Roberts & Car-
ter, in the Carnegie Building, Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
*oi—J. F. Plummer was a member of
the Reception Committee of the Union
League Club of New York which enter-
tained Col. ‘Roosevelt on Oct. 6.
’91 S.—The marriage of Miss Marian
Rand, daughter of George C. Rand,
President of the Rockaway Hunt Club,
to Albert Francke will take place at
Lawrence, Long Island, Tuesday, Ccto-
ber 18.
‘791 T.S.—Rev. C. H. Dickerson of the
Bethlehem Church of Newark, N. J.,
has been called to take up missionary
work among the colored people at
Florence, Ala., under the Reformed
Church Board.
’92—George R. Montgomery has re-
turned from Turkey, and will enter the
Yale Divinity School.
’92—Preston Brown, Second Lieu-
tenant in the Second U. S. Infantry, has
been ordered to report in person at
Huntsville, Alabama, to be examined
as to his fitness for promotion.
’92—Hugh A. Bayne has left New
Orleans to make his permanent home
in New York. He is doing some law
work for Messrs. Howland & Murray,
and practicing for himself at the office
of that firm, Mills Building, 35 Wall
street.
’93—Albert W. Pettibone is in the
lumber business at Lacrosse, Wis.
’93—-E. R. Lamson is the author ol
an article in the National Magazine on
a trip to Santiago, which he calls “In
the Face of the Yellow Flag.”
793 T.S.—Rev. H. P. Woodin, for-
merly pastor of the Presbyterian Church
at Amenia, N. Y., has accepted a call
to the Third Church, Chicopee, Mass.
793 S.—The marriage of Miss Kather-
ine Virginia Walcott, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles H. ~ Walcott of
Indianapolis, Indiana, to William G.
Comly took place on Wednesday even-
ing, October the 12th, at the Second
Presbyterian Church of Indianapolis,
794A. N. C. Fowler is in the law
“As you grow
1820
old, grow rich.”’
1898
bGeke
Aina ENDOWMENTS
BETTER THAN GOVERNMENT BONDS.
BECAUSE:
They have paid, and are paying, a better rate
of interest.
They are fully paid for in a definite number
of years.
Their value is fixed and does not fluctuate.
They are non-taxable and are protected by
legislative supervision.
In case of death, even during the first year,
no further payment is required, but the
Endowment becomes immediately payable,
the same as a life policy. |
They are sold in sums of from $1,000 to
$25,000, and are within the reach of ail.
Their payment is guaranteed by the tna Life
Insurance Company, of Hartford, Conn.
assets over $47,500,000.
They provide for early life, middle life, ad-
vanced life, and death.
They are indisputable, non-forfeiting, and
absolutely safe.
Write for particulars.
E. E. HALLOCK, MANAGER.
Room 5, Hubinger Building,
840 Chapel St. | NEW HAVEN.
HL S. CROFUTT,
Spectal Representative.
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 seal), 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.
office of L. and S. Brown of Glens
Falls, New York. |
’94 S.—William Proctor has accepted
a position with Kountze Bros., Bankers,
120 Broadway, N. Y. City.
’94—George C. Hixon is in the lum-
ber business with the Alexander Lum-
ber Company at Aurora, IIl.
94 T.S.—Rev. A. Lincoln McClelland
of Nekoosa, Wisc., has accepted a call
from the Congregational Church of
Milton, Wis.
’°94 T.S.—The marriage of the Rev.
Carroll Perry and Miss Grace Hawley
Underwood took place on Tuesday,
Oct. 11th, at Litchfield, Conn.
794 and ’96M.S.—A. R. Defendorf
has accepted a position as pathologist
at the Connecticut State Asylum,
Middletown, his duties to begin in
January, 1899.
’94—Edwin O. Holter has been hon-
orably discharged from the Government
service and resumed the practice of law
in the offices of Howland & Murray,
35 Wall street, New York.
’°94—The marriage of Miss Edith
LaBuise, daughter of Peter LaBuise, of
New Orleans, to Harry Lane Eno will
take place at Saugatuck, Conn., Wednes-
day, October 19.
’94 S.— Edward C. Hall of the Rough
Riders, who was taken ill with typhoid
[Continued on page 32.]