YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY
87
ALUMNI NOTES.
{ Graduates are invited to contribute to this column.)
’52 M.S.—Charles A. Lindsley has
been elected President of the Board of
Managers of the New Haven Dispen-
sary for the ensuing year.
*54—Hon. H. E. Howland presided at
the annual dinner of the Mayflower De-
scendants of the State of New York
which was held on November 22. He
was also elected Governor for the en-
suing year. J. T. Terry, Jr., ’79, was
elected Deputy Governor and Rev. Dr.
Roderick Terry, ’70, Elder.
*61—Ebenezer B. Convers has re-
cently presented to Phillips Andover
Academy $1,200 for the foundation of
prizes in Mathematics.
°62—William Woolsey Johnson has
just published a text book on Calculus.
’69—Henry Holt and Co. are pub-
lishing “A History of English Ro-
manticism in the Eighteenth Century,”
by Professor H. A. Beers..
69 S.—F rederick S. Curtis, Principal
and founder of the Curtis School,
Brookfield Center, Conn., has just com-
pleted a new dormitory, built on the
school grounds.
‘71—J. H. Hoffecker has been elected
to Congress from Delaware.
’71—Announcement has been made of
the marriage of Frederick Mead, Jr.,
and Mrs. Mary E. Bowman, on Octo-
ber 10th.
‘72—W. H. Bradley, formerly United
States Consul at Nice, is now United
States -Consul at Tunstall, England.
‘72—Hon. A. Heaton Robertson has
been elected President of the Middle-
town, Meriden and Waterbury Rail-
road Co.
‘72—At a recent meeting of the New
Haven Colony Historical Society, Dr.
E. S. Lines, ’72, was elected Vive-Presi-
dent, and D. E. Bowers, ’87, Treasurer.
"73—Dr. Seth T. Stewart has just re-
turned from a careful inspection of the
schools of Norway and Germany.
75S.—Burton Mansfield has been
elected a Manager of the Domestic
and Foreign Missionary Society of the
Episcopal Church. |
"76 S.—William McCulloh Brown has
been engaged during the Summer in
surveying the boundary line between
io and Garrett Counties, Mary-
and. :
‘76—The Santa Fe New Mezican of
Nov. 17 publishes the following in its
local columns:
“General Superintendent Frank W.
Vaille of the United States postoffice
department in the Philippines, writes to
a friend in this city that the Philippines
- are a great country in their possibilities;
and after a trip over the railroad on the
island of Luzon he is convinced from a
business standpoint, as well as from the
standpoint of morality, Christianity and
civilization, that the United States ought
to hold onto the group. The climate is
all right if one will but live according
to the rules laid down by the experience
of others. Superintendent Vaille is a
very busy man, and has a herculean
task in establishing the new mailing
system at Manila; but as he is one of
the most experienced and capable men
the postoffice department every had,
order is gradually being brought out of
chaos, and the mails are now being
distributed with neatness, accuracy and
dispatch. Mr. Vaille sometimes has
30 tons of mail matter to handle at
once.
77 L.S.—Hon. W. J. Mills recently
left New Haven to resume his official
duties in New Mexico.
*77—-John F. Keator was re-elected to
the Legislature from the 21st District,
Philadelphia, Pa., by a majority of
4,795 votes.
*78—James B. McEwan was re-
elected a member of the New York
Assembly from Albany.
’78—Clinton Spencer was elected a
member of the Connecticut House of
Representatives from Suffield.
*78—On Nov. 8, Howard C. Hollister
was re-elected Common Pleas Judge
in Cincinnati, Hamilton Co., Ohio, re-
ceiving more than 10,000 votes above
his highest opponent.
*78—Rey. Harlan P. Beach, Educa-
tional Secretary of the Student Volun-
teer Movement,h as just published a
book on the affairs of China entitled,
“Dawn on the Hills of T’ang.
’79—Timothy L. Woodruff, Lieuten-
ant-Governor-elect of New York, is
camping in the Adriondacks.
’80—Colonel N. G. Osborn acted as
Chairman of the committee in charge
of a reception in honor of Gen. Shafter
which was given in New Haven on
November 28.
’2o-_At a recent meeting of the Direc-
tors of the Naugatuck Division of the
New York, New Haven and Hartford
R. R., William D. Bishop, Jr., was
elected President.
’81 L.S.—Allan W. Paige sailed on
November 16 on the U. S. transport
Berlin for Cuban and Porto Rican
ports. He will return early in Decem-
ber.
’86—Alfred Cowles has been elected
President of the Yale Alumni Associa-
tion of Chicago.
’87—Samuel Knight has opened an
office for the practice of law in the
Mills Buildings, San Francisco, Cal.
’89—Henry J. Sage is General Mana-
ger of the “Opalite’ Tile Co. Pitts-
burg, Pa., recently organized to manu-
facture tiles on a new process.
’90—Edgar Ames is in the Govern-
ment’s employ and is building the canal
from Puget Sound to Lake Washing-
ton.
’790—C. F. Lester has a full page
drawing in the Thanksgiving number
of the Criterion, entitled “Run with the
Ban.
’90 S.— Everett G. Griggs is tempor-
arily acting as Superintendent of the
St. Paul and Tacoma Lumber Com-
pany in Tacoma, Washington.
’90 S.—The marriage of Dr. Nelson
Lloyd Deming to Miss Louise Carna-
han, daughter of Mrs. William Lane
Carnahan, took place on Wednesday,
November 16, at Fort Wayne, Indiana.
*91—Second Lieutenant G. B. Hoppin
has resigned from the Fifth Infantry,
U. S. A., and has returned to business.
*91—Mrs. G. D. Williams of Roches-
ter, N. Y., has issued invitations for the
marriage of their daughter. Laura
Whitney Williams, to Albert H.° Bar-
clay. The ceremony will be performed
at St. Luke’s Church, Rochester, on
Wednesday, December 7.
93 L.S.W—W. C. Shoup of Torrey’s
Rough Riders, has been mustered out
of service.
’93—The engagement of Miss Mary
Raymond, daughter of Samuel A. Ray-
mond, ’70, to Edward M. Williams, has
been announced. :
93 S.—R. E. Hall, Captain Co. K,
second Regiment, C. G., New
Haven, has, at his own request, been
placed on the retired list.
’94 S.—James H. Miller is now in the
West and expects to enter a railroad
office.
°94—E. J. Garvan has been appointed
Attorney for the Hartiord Business
Men’s Association. .
94 S.—W. Harry Glenny, Jr., is a
member of the entering class at the
Johns Hopkins Medical School.
’94—Albert A. Bigelow has changed
his address from 308 Tacoma Building,
be es to 181 College ave., St. Paul,
inn.
794 S.—H. Lee Joyce is still with the
Tubular Dispatch Co. at 154 Nassau st.,
New York City. He is now First As-
sistant Engineer. :
794 M.S.—E. S. Moulton sailed on
November 28 for Zaruma, Equador,
to accept the position of Surgeon to the
South American Development Co.
94 M. S.—E. L. Kingman, who has
been in South America for a number of
-years, will soon return North for the
purpose of persuing some special work
in medicine.
’94—Howard A. Lamprey was ad-
mitted to the Rhode Island Bar Octo-
ber first, and has resigned his clerkship
in the R: I. Supreme Court and opened
a law office at 311 Butler Exchange,
Providence, R. I. He is associated in
his practice with Warren R. Perce, one
of the leading patent and corporation
attorneys in the State. Mr. Lamprey
has become a member of the Faculty
of the Rhode Island Law School.
’95—M. N. Buckner is in the Insur-
ance business in New Orleans, La.
95 L.S.—F. Chunn has removed to
Baltimore and opened a law office there.
"95—Samuel Peterson is studying in
the Graduate Department of Yale Uni-
versity.
795—A. S. Peabody has received the
degree of LL.D from North Western
University. 3
795—John L. Lockwood, Jr., has
opened a law office at 95 Nassau st.,
New York City.
’°95 S.—John A. Bookwalter is now
located with the Salt Lake City Salt
Works Company. |
95 S.—H. S. Waite’ was married to
Miss Margaret Stewart of Columbus,
Ohio, in September. :
*95—R. G. Paynter has-accepted a
position as Resident Physician in the
Georgetown Hospital, Del.
’95—G. W. Wiley is Secretary and
Treasurer of the George H. Tefft Co.,
grocers, of Springfield, Mo.
’95—Miss Adele Farrel will be mar-
ried to George C. Bryant on December
7th, at Christ Church, Ansonia.
‘95—J. K. Stauffer is convalescing
from typhoid fever contracted in the
United States Volunteer service in the
late war.
795 S.—The engagement of Miss
Frances Kellogg Fuller of Cleveland,
O..46 Norman Leeds has been an-
nounced.
- 95 8.—Frank J. Parker has been ap-
pointed Junior House Surgeon at the
Manhattan Lye and Ear Hospital of
New York City.
’95—Paul Kennaday has entered into
a co-partnership for the general prac-
tice of law under the firm name of
Dowd & Kennaday with offices in the
st. Paul Building, 220 Broadway, New
York City.
’95—The following Ninety-Five men
were recently elected to the University
Club of New York: B. S. Cable, W. L.
Beadleston, G. A. Phelps, L. McKee,
and Z. B. Phelps.
95 S.—Francis H. Oldershaw was
married to Miss Lucy Osborn Blakeslee,
at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Blakeslee, 13 Park st.
New Haven, Conn., on Nov. 16.
’95 S.—The marriage of H. C. Hol-
comb to Miss Margaret Manson,
daughter of Captain and Mrs. M. Man-
son, of New Haven, will take place in
the Howard Avenue Congregational
Church of this city on December 14.
95 8.—Miss Grace Carroll Ferguson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walton Car-
roll Ferguson, was married to Alfred
W. Dater, on November 23, at St.
John’s Church, Stamford, Conn. H.
M. Dater, ’91, acted as best man.
795 S.—Miss Madeline Beers, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Julius Beer, was
married to Sidney Cecil Borg, at the
home of the bride’s parents, 38 West
75th st., New York, last week. The
best man was Myron I. Borg, ’96.S.
’96—The engagement of Miss Edith
Palmer, daughter of Rev. Dr. Charles
Ray Palmer, to Arthur E. Foote, has
been announced.
’°96—G. X. McLanahan, who was re-
cently married in New Haven, passed
the New York Bar examinations in
October. He will return from his
Southern trip in December and live at
the Majestic, West 72d st., New York.
’°96—-Emory Hawes has been admitted
to the New York Bar and is now prac-
ticing law in the office of Butler, Not-
man, Joline & Mynderse, formerly the
firm of Butler, Stillman & Hubbard, at
54 Wall street, New York City.
’°97 M.S.—A. L. Howard is studying
at Edinburgh.
’97 S.—E. H. Noyes is with the Chi-
cago Edison Co. 7
’97 S.—J. Monks is studying law: at
the New York Law School.
’97 M.S.—E. D. Chipman has opened
an office in Waterbury, Conn.
’97 S.—F. K. Stevens is working in
the 6th National Bank, New York City.
’97 S.—N. S. Wadhams is in the Class
of Nineteen Hundred, Yale Medical
School.
’97 S.—W. K. Shepard is an Assistant
in Physics in the Sheffield Scientific
School.
’97 S.—D. B. Deming is studying at
the College of Physicians and Surgeons,
New York.
’97 S.—Joseph C. Belden is with the
Kellogg Switchboard & Supply Co. of
Chicago, IIl.
’97 S.—A. G. Betts is in the shirt and
collar business with Earl & Wilson,
Array, NN. X.
’97 M.S.—F. I. Nettleton has opened
an office for the practice of medicine,
in Shelton, Conn.
’97 S.—E. A. Hoffman is at present
employed by the Allen Bradley Co.,
distillers, Frankford, Ky.
907 S.—J. .F. Bonnell is
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shipping
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Does Life Insurance Pay as
~ an Investment ?
ACTUAL EXPERIENCE
IN THE
Attna 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.)
YeEAR.| Premium. | Divipenp, |Net Payment.
1878 45-$604.30 2 3g, $694.30
TS 70-4 SS. $27.06 667.24
1880 Phy 45.53 648.77
RO fee 5716 637.14
ise 69.33 624.97
TONS fe oe 82.08 612.22
SERA os 95.43 598.87
| Gore by al ene ee 109.41 584.89
ie a a 123.07 570.23
SSP op oS 139.44 554.86
Total Paid by the Insured,| $6,193.49
Dividends
Paid in Cash.
borers eet Ranney eS $155.57
18805 Sa 138.08
Loo) eee gee 143.01
$500 2) 148.18
RO 153.60
TAS © Ge eee ana ee 159.29
Sade i es 165.25
ca Ge ee eee a 171.52
FE0G fe 178.10
A oS 9) as ee erent 185.02
4598 4 keccis 192.31
Total Cash Dividend Paid to Insured, $1,789.93
ee rr
$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.
Net Cost to Insured,
Gain to Insured, ;
NEW HAVEN.
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.
clerk for the Mahoning Valley Iron
Co. of Youngstown, Ohio.
’97 M.S.—J. B. Brocksieper, having
returned from Berlin, has opened an
office in New Britain, Conn.
97 S.—H. E. Setchell is studying in
Sheffield Scientific School for the de-
gree of Mechanical Engineer.
’97 M.S.—T. D. Pallman, who has.
been studying in Germany, expects to
return to America in a few months.
’97 S.—C. H. Stilson is now with the
Westinghouse Electric and Mig. Co.,
Pittsburg, Pa. His present address is
624 Rebecca ave., Wilkinsburg, Pa.
’97—John L. Ewell, Jr., has left the
Department of Agriculture at Wash-
ington, D. C., and has accepted a posi-
tion in the Actuary Department of the
Prudential Life Insurance Co. of
Newark, N. J.
797 S.—B. B. Lum is in the machine
shop of the Winchester Repeating
Arms Co. He enlisted in the Connecti-
cut Naval Reserves and was held on the
receiving ship Minnesota in Charles-
ton Navy Yard till he was discharged,
August 25, 1808.
98 S.—Frank V. Chappell is in busi-
ness in New London, Conn.
[Continued on goth page.]