Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, November 17, 1898, Page 3, Image 3

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    VALE ALUMNI WHREHEKLY
a
ALUMNI NOTES.
[ Graduates are invited to contribute to this column.]
’57—Rev. Prof. Moses C. Tyler has
published through G. P. Putnam’s Sons’
under the title “Glimpses of England”
a series of English sketches written
1863-66.
*57—Rev. Samuel Scoville has _ re-
signed the charge of the First Congre-
gational Church, Stamford. The resig-
nation takes effect May Ist, and will
close a service there of nearly 20 years.
*590—Louis H. Bristol sailed for Eu-
rope on Saturday, November 5th, to be
gone for two months.
’'62—Rev. C. L. Kitchel has changed
his place of residence from 22 Lincoln
street to 253 Lawrence street, New
Haven, Conn.
’62—Frederic A. Ward was appointed —
on the third day of November by Govy-
ernor Black to be a Justice of the
Supreme Court of the State of New
York to fill the vacancy occasioned by
the resignation of Hon. Augustus Van
Wyck.
68 S.—Prof. Henry S. Williams has
recently returned from Europe. He
went to Berlin as the American mem-
ber of the “Commission de Classifica-
tion Stratigraphique” of the “Congrés
geologique international” appointed for
the purpose of determining the princi-
ples to be used in classifying and nam-
ing geological formations on a uni-
form basis for the geologists of the
world. He also attended the meeting of
the Anniversary of the ‘“‘Deutsche Geol-
ogische Gesellschaft.”
‘69—Hon. John R. Thayer of Wor-
cester, Mass. was, on Nov 8, elected to
represent the Massachusetts District in
Congress, defeating the Republican can-
didate, who in 1896 was elected by over
ten thousand majority.
"72—Rev. E.'S. Lines, assisted by
Rev. C. O. Scoville, ’87, conducted the
funeral services of the late Judge York,
which were held at 139 Edwards st.,
New Haven.
’72—Rev. David N. Beach, D.D., has
resigned his charge at Minneapolis on ©
account of the health of one of his
family, and has accepted the care of the
First ea Church of Den-
ver, Caix
"74 T.S.—Rev. Joel S. Ives will de-
liver an address at the one hundredth
anniversary of the First Congregational
Church of East Hampton, Conn., on
November 30.
'76—Professor Arthur T. Hadley,
President of the American Economic
Association, will make one of the ad-
dresses at the meeting to be held in
New Haven, December 27-29.
'77—Henry Roberts of Hartford was
elected last week Tuesday by the Re-
publicans as Representative in the Con-
necticut Legislature. During his col-
lege course, he was an editor of the
Yale Record. He has served in the
Board of Aldermen of Hartford during
the last year, and has shown large pub-
lic spirit in city affairs. He is Presi-
dent of the Hartford Woven Wire
Mattress Company, and a Director in
several banks and other corporations.
81 T.S.—Rev. George E. Nichols has
accepted a call to the Baptist Church in
Saco, Me. |
85 T.S.—Enoch H. Burt, for nine
years pastor in West Wintfield, N. Y.,
has accepted a call to the Congrega-
tional Church in Ivoryton, Conn.
85 T.S.—Rev. Thos. M. Yundt, since
his graduation Superintendent of the
Womelsdorf (Penn.) Orphanage, has re-
cently entertained the Superintendents
of like institutions in their annual meet-
ing.
’°86—William Adams Brown was in-
augurated on Nov. 1 as Roosevelt Pro-
fessor of Systematic Theology in the
Union Theological Seminary of New
York.
’°87—W. L. Phelps was elected Presi-
dent of the Yale Codperative Society
last week to succeed H. M. Reynolds,
80, who resigned.
87 T.S.—Rev. H. A. Bridgman of
“The Congregationalist” has an inter-
esting article in the current number of
The Independent on “Men and _ the
Churches.”
’89—Ferdinand Schwill, Instructor in
the University of Chicago, has pub-
lished through Charles Scribners’ Sons,
a book entitled “A History of Modern
Europe.” |
’90—E. L. Selden is prospectin
slots Caribou Creek, British cee.
ia.
ex-’90—Thomas H. Stagg has re-
cently entered the hardware business at
Frankfort, Ky.
’°90—Ralph M. Shaw has become a
member of the law firm of Winston &
Meagher, No. 1412 Monadnock Build-
ing, Chicago, Ill. The new connection
dates from November Ist.
’91—F red. H. Williams has been ap-
pointed Principal of the Truant School
at Binghamton, N :
*91I—E: N. Loomis, of Troop C, New
York Volunteers, spoke at the smoker
of the Long Island Alumni Association,
which was held in Brooklyn on Novem-
ber 10.
*92—A daughter was born recently to
Mr. and Mrs. Pierre Jay of New York
City.
’92—-Stanford N. Morison has left his
coffee plantation in Mexico, in order
to make a visit in the East.
’92—Clive H. Day is taking special
courses in Economic History in Ger-
many, where he expects to remain two
years. :
’92—-Alfred H. Swayne expects to go
to Havana to assist in the establishment
there of a branch of a large New York
banking company.
’92—H. S. Graves has been appointed
Assistant Superintendent of Forestry for
the United States Government under
Gifford Pinchot, ’89.
’92—T. L. McClung has left St. Paul,
Minn., in order to accept a position in
the Traffic Department of the Southern
Railway at Nashville, Tenn.
°93—A. P. Lord is studying History in
the Post Graduate Department at Yale. —
’93—The engagement has been an-
nounced of Miss Mary Raymond,
daughter of Mr. Samuel Atwater Ray-
mond, ’70, of Cleveland, to Edward M.
Williams.
93 S.— Wallace C. Winter, of St. Paul,
Minn., has been appointed Assistant
Manager of the St. Paul and Sioux
City division of the Chicago, St. Paul,
Minneapolis and Omaha Railroad.
’o4—S. L. Orr is traveling in Japan.
’94—G. C. Hixon is in the lumber
business at La Crosse, Wis.
794 S.—L. D. Tracy has been ap-
pointed an Instructor in the Civil En-
gineering Department of Union Col-
lege. Address 26 Union av., Schenec-
tady, N. Y. .
’94 S.—The marriage of James D.
Skinner to Miss Mary Louise Kountze,
daughter ‘of -Mr. and Mrs ©. B&B.
Kountze, of Denver, Col., took place
in that city on October 26.
794 S. and ’96 M.S.—Dr. Sanford H.
Wadhams enlisted about September 1,
went to Montauk and from there was
sent to Ponce, Porto Rico, where he
is now with the roth Infantry as Acting
Assistant Surgeon with the rank of
First Lieutenant.
95 S.—A son was recently born to
Mr. and Mrs. John Richard North.
_ ’95—F. Ives has accepted a position
in the Security Insurance Co. in New
Haven.
’95—Phelps Montgomery has opened
a law office at 69 Church street, New
Haven. |
’95—G. A. Lewis has passed the
October examination for admission to
the New York bar.
’95—M. N. Buckner of New Orleans
has recently recovered from a severe at-
tack of yellow fever.
’95—Charles H. Weller, who has just
returned from Germany, is studying at
the Graduate School.
795 S.—The engagement of Miss
Madeline Beer, of New York City, to
Sydney C. Borg, has been announced.
’°95—The New York Criterion of No-
vember 5th contains an illustrated story,
by Edward Branch Lyman, entitled,
“An Old-Deerfield Face.”
°95—The October number of Business
contains a notice of Henry Douglas
Parmelee’s retirement from its staff as
Editor and Manager to go into the busi-
ness of manufacturing. His business
address will be 14-16 Washington Place,
New York.
°95—Fred. H. Hamlin has just re-
turned to his home in East Bloomfield,
N. Y., from a mining expedition to the
Klondike. He was in the Klondike re-
gion for about six months, during
which time he had a serious attack of
typhoid fever, from the effects of which
he has now entirely recovered.
96 S.—A. P. Thompson, who went
to the Klondike last Spring, has re-
turned. i
’96—G. H. Nettleton has been ap-
pointed an Assistant in English in the
Sheffield Scientific School.
°96 T.S.—Christopher W. Collier, for-
merly Pastor at East Hampton, Conn.,
has just returned from a year of study
and travel in Europe. His present ad-
dress is 2 East Divinity, New Haven.
*96—J. M. Spinello is now teaching
Latin, Greek, Spanish and French in
the Military School at Manlius, N. Y.,
near Syracuse. He is also Editor-in-
Chief of the only magazine in this coun-
try published entirely in Latin. The
magazine is published in New York
City.
°96—On Tuesday, November 8th,
Miss Caroline Suydam Duer, daughter,
of Mr. and Mrs. Denning Duer of New
Haven, was married to George Xavier
McLanahan in St. John’s Church, New
Haven. Norman A. Williams, ’97, was
best man. The ushers were: J. F.
Eagle, ’96; J. B. Neale, 96; N. B. Mal-
lon;. "96; A. H. Belo, Jr., "oG;_). Phings.
’°96 S.; Sherwood Day, ’98 S.; Ord Pres-
ton, ’99, and Nathan Baldwin, 1900.
97 T.S—A daughter was recently
born to Mr. and Mrs. William H.
Rowe, Jr.
’97—-C. M. Tappen has entered the
law office of J. B. C. Tappen, ’80, at 16
Exchange Place, New York City. —
97 S.—Julian M. Gerard has accepted
a position in the office of the Knicker-
bocker Trust Company of New York.
’97—T. D. McDonald has opened a
Coaching School with H. F. Krafft
(Columbia) at 79 West 54th st., New
York.
’°97—J. S. Wheelwright and F. C.
Yeomans are second year students at
the new Cornell Medical School, New
York City.
97 S.—Amos F. Barnes arrived home
from Europe very recently after a six
months’ trip through England, France
and Germany. :
97 T.S.—Frederick H. Lynch, for-
merly Assistant Pastor of United
Church, New Haven, is supplying for
the present at Lenox, Mass. ©
97 S.—Amos F. Barnes has returned
from a four months’ trip in England
and on the continent and is to be ad-
dressed at 452 Orange st., New Haven.
°98—A. S. Campbell is studying at the
Yale Law School.
°98—Warren B. Johnson has entered
the Yale Law School.
*98—J. S. Rogers has entered the
Columbia Law School.
’98—Job E. Johnson is taking a post
graduate course at Harvard.
’98—Winifred M. Hartshorn has en-
tered the Yale Medical School.
’98—Frederick W. Huxford is study-
ing at the Harvard Law School.
*98—Pierre R. Porter is studying law
at the Kansas City School of Law.
*98—A. G. Ward is at present in the
Klondike engaged in gold mining.
’98—Edgar H. Betts is with Earl and
Wilson at their factory at Troy, N. Y.
*98—H. E. Nims has entered ‘the
Junior Class of the Yale Law School.
’98—M. T. Bennett and C. J. Fowler
are studying at the Yale Law School.
’98—George M. Ripley is teaching
English at Smith Academy, St. Louis,
Mo :
798 S.— Allan C. Eustis has secured
the position of Assistant in Chemistry
at Columbia. |
°98—Seth M. Milliken is studying
Medicine at the College of Physicians
and Surgeons, New York.
*98—O. P. Metcalf is taking a course
at the College of Physicians and Sur-
geons in New York City.
’98—Morris U. Ely acted as umpire
at the Cornell-Williams football game
played at Buffalo Saturday, Nov. 5.
°98—Moreau Delano has accepted a
position in the office of Kingsley and
Malon, brokers, of New York City.
’98—P. W. Hamill has a position in
one of the mills belonging to McVeagh
& Company, grocers, of Chicago, III.
’98—Julien A. Ripley, -who was a
member of Battery A, will take a course
in Architecture at Columbia University.
°98 S—Robert D. Brown is in the
Engineering Department of the Iowa
Central R. R. at Marshalltown, Iowa.
98 M.S.—Frank P. Broderick, M.D.
has been appointed on the staff of phy-
sicians of the Massachusetts General
Hospital of Boston.
98 S.—James J. Lyons is in the Civil
_ Engineering Department of the N. :
Does Life Insurance Pay as
an Investment ?
ACTUAL EXPERIENCE
IN THE
Atna Life Insurance Co.
Statement of a $10,000 Ten-Payment,
Twenty-Year Endowment, issued by the
‘ETNA LIFE, in 1878, and payable to the
insured in 1898. (Age 30.)
Year.| Premium. | Divipenp. | Net Payment.
4378 + $004 30 2 $694.30
1870 $27.06 667.24
sD 2 Ae eee ae ae 45.53 648.77
sos, ae Wace ree 57.16 637.14
toes 1 69.33 624.97
2 sg aU og Ore ee 82.08 612.22
$6647) 95.43 598.87
1585 0 Re 109.41 584.89
4886. 423.07 570.23
Boor fe 139.44 554.86
Total Paid by the Insured, $6,193.49
Dividends
Paid in Cash.
ES ES gies $455.57
3 5 eee ee 138.08
SO. 143.01
1604 Soe 148.18
bo ae ees De 153.60
4803. 5 524..:- 159.29
F604 FS 4 165.25
$005 4 47 ES?
SOG srk 178.10
cio 8 ge ge a ae 185.02
ES: ae ane ee 192.31
Total Cash Dividend Paid to Insured, $1,789.93
a ee
$4,403.56
5;590-44
For each $100.00 paid, the insured re-
ceived $227.06 and twenty years’ insurance
free of cost.
E. E. HALLOCK, MANAGER,
Room 5, Hubinger Building,
840 CHAPEL ST. NEW HAVEN.
Net Cost to Insured,
Gain to Insured, .
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. —
N. H. & H. R. Rv His: addressis: Gt
Grove st., New Haven.
*98—A. F. Cleveland is Freight Solici-
tor of the Chicago and Northwestern
Railway. His address. is 231 North
Grove ay., Oak Park, II.
98 S.— Alfred S. Post has accepted
a position in the office of A. D.
Juillard and Company, wholesale dry
goods, Worth street, New York.
*98—Grenville Montgomery, who en-
listed in the New York State Naval
Reserves, has been honorably  dis-
charged from the service of the United
States; and will go into business in
Denver, Colorado.
*98—A. P. Hayes has accepted the
position of Statistician of the Pennsyl-
vania R.R., West of Pittsburg, for a
year. His address is 46 Stockton ave.,
Alleghany, Pa. .
98 T.S.—Quincey Blakeley was or-
dained and installed over the Congrega-
tional Church at South Glastonbury,
Conn., Nov. 4. At the ordination ser-
vice, the sermon was given by Prof. F.
C. Porter (’86 T.S.), the charge to the
pastor’ by Rev. J. E. Twichell (New
Haven) and the right hand of fellow-
ship by Rev. G. F. Waters (’73 T.S.),
of Glastonbury.