ALUMNI NOTES.
[ Graduates are invited to contribute to this column.]
*56—Miss Edith Agatha, daughter of
Gilbert Field Bailey, was married Dec.
27, to Mr. George Augustin Tait, at
“My ete Homestead, Groton Falls,
N.Y.
*61—A. F. Haradon has changed his
address from Marshalltown, Iowa, to
1341 Morse avenue, Rogers Park, Chi-
cago, Ill.
*72—F. B. Swayne is associated with
his brother Wager Swayne, ’56, in a
law office in New York City.
’72—There is an article in the Decem-
ber issue of the Yale Law Journal by
Professor T. S. Woolsey, entitled, “The
Status of Cuba.” :
'73—Rev. John C. Goddard responded
to the toast, “The Pulpit,” at the annual
banquet of the Litchfield County Uni-
versity Club, which was held in Win-
sted, Conn., on December 16.
'77—Arthur Reed Kimball’s article
which appeared in a recent number of
the Outlook, on Marshall Newell’s career
as a recurrence of the New England
type, has been reproduced in the Newell
memorial volume issued last week.
°84—Dr. William B. Coley has re-
cently been appointed Clinical Lecturer
in Surgery in the College of Physicians
and Surgeons (Columbia University),
New York.
°845.—Edwin M. Herr recently re-
signed his position of Supt. of Motive
Power in the Northern Pacific R. R. to
accept that of Assistant .~.anager of the
Westinghouse Air Brake Co., at Pitts-
burg, Pa.
’86—The fact was mentioned in the
Alumni note column in a recent issue
of the paper, that William Adams
Brown was inaugurated on November
Ist, as Roosevelt Professor of Sys-
tematic Theology at the Union Semi-
nary at New York. After graduating,
Mr. Brown took one year’s course at
New Haven for an M.A. He spent the
next three years at Union Seminary,
where he won a fellowship which en-
tiled him to two years study at Berlin
and Goettingen. On his return from
abroad in 1892, he was appointed as in-
structor in Church History at Union
Seminary. For the next two years, he
was instructor in Systematic ‘Theology
on the same Faculty, and for three years
thereafter was Provisional Professor in
the same subject. His election to the
mae: chair was made June 16th,
1898.
’89—Charles S. King of Wabash, Ind.,
was chosen at the lat: election to repre-
sent his district in the General Assem-
bly of the State. His address while at
the Legislature is The Denison Hotel,
Indianapolis, Ind.
’‘00S.—Fhe wedding of Miss Eva
Louise Seward, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Seward, to Dr. Robert E.
Peck took place at the home of the
bride’s parents in Bristol street, New
Haven, on December 27.
‘91—The engagement is announced of
Miss Ruth Marie Sites of Auburndale,
Mass., to Rev. Francis T. Brown of
Fort Plain, Nw ¥z
‘91 T.S.— The wedding of Miss Bessie
Chittenden to the Rev. Frederick B.
Richards took place on December 27
at the residence of the bride’s father, 62
West 54th Street, New York.
’92—Mr. and Mrs. James E. Wheeler
have returned from’ their wedding trip
and have settled in their new home, 83
Wall street, New Haven.
’93—-A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Klinipke on December 12.
’94—The engagement has been an-
nounced of Miss Julia Hammer of
Branford, Conn. to George F. Eaton.
’°93 S.—The engagement is announced
of Miss Mary Dicus Bayley of Spring-
field, O., to Dr. Joseph Hyde Pratt of
Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Dr. Pratt
is at present the State Mineralogist and
a consulting mining engineer with office
at Chapel Hill.
7904 S.—I. M. Heller has completed his
work at the Wright Hospital, New
York, and will practice in New York.
’94—The marriage of Miss Anette
Vail, daughter of Mrs. Aaron Frederick
Vail, to Dr. Harry Little Welch, took
place on Thursday, Dec. 15, 1808, at
the Church of Saint Mary the Virgin
in New York City.
’94—Rev. Frederick H. Lynch, form-
erly Assistant Pastor of the United
Church in New Haven, has accepted a
call to the Congregational Church of
ee ee A UP IMENT EE
Lenox, Mass., where he has been sup-
plying for several months.
795—M. A. Delano’s address in Paris
is care of M. Hottinguer & Co. |
’95—H. C. Nutting is Instructor in
Latin in the University of California.
’95—Julian C. Bingham is with the
Northampton Paper Box Co., North-
ampton, Mass.
’9s—Charles B. Cheyney was admitted
to the bar of the District of Columbia
on December 13, 1808.
a
PROF. WILLIAM ADAMS BROWN, 786.
’95—George C. Richmond has ac-
cepted a call to the Congregational
Church at Somersville, Conn. He was
installed on December 27.
°95—John R. Wathen has recently
‘been appointed Professor of Normal
and Pathological Hist-logy and Bac-
teriology in the Kentucky School of
Medicine at Louisville, Ky.
’95—Miss Gussie Ayer Thom, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. William B. Thom
of New York City, was married to
Henry Douglas Parmelee at the Church
of the Divine Paternity, in that city, at
4 o'clock on the afternoon of Decem-
ber. 31st,, by..Rev.< Charles H. - Eaton.
The best man was Augustus Stephen
Peabody, 2d, ’95, of Chicago. George
A. Phetps, -o5;: G. Bo Bo Wade, 79s;
George Gurnee, ’95, and Henry F. Par-
melee, *948., were the ushers. A re-
ception was given by the br-de’s par-
ents immediately following the cere-
mony. After an absence of a few
weeks, Mr. and Mrs. Parmelee will re-
side at 8 East 56th st., New York City.
’96—Alexander G. Bentley was ad-
mitted to the bar of the District of
Columbia on December 13, 1808.
’96—-Edwin S. Oviatt had an article
on the author, J. W. deForest of New
Haven, in the New York Times Satur-
day Review of Dec. 17.
’°96—The wedding of Miss Portia
Robert, «daughter. of Gol. - Hi. M.
Robert, U. S. A., to Clarence V. Fow-
ler,,took place at ,.Haworth, N. J.) on
December 14, 1898. H. M. Robert, Jr.,
*960, was best man. ,
’96-—-Ward. Cheney, Second Lieuten-
ant of the Fourth U. S. Infantry, has
recovered from his illness and has
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119
rejoined his regiment at Fort Sheri-
ran, - Ith; and will accompany 14-10
Manila, sailing from New York, Jan 15.
’97 S.—George H. Flinn is the presi-
dent of a large real estate company in
Pittsburg, Pa.
’97 S.—John H. Porter is a member
of Troop B, 1st Squadron, National
Guard, Colorado.
’97 S.—C. H. Bartlett is a draughts-
man in the office of the Walworth Mig.
Co., of Boston, Mass.
’97 S.—J. Louis Gregory was married
to Miss Alma A. Blake of New Haven,
Conn., on July 7th, 1808. :
’97 S.—Geo. H. Freeman is studying
law in the office of Huntington &
Warner, Woodbury, Conn.
°97—B. F. C. Thompson has entered
the law office of Gurley, Stone & Wood,
Marquette Building, Chicago.
’97 S.—Daniel D. Schenck is in the
office of his father, who is the sales
agent for the .D.<L. & W.-R. Re Coal
Dept.
97 S.—Clifford W. Beers is_ with
Hroggson Brothers, contractors and in-
terior decorators, at 7 East 44th st.,
New York.
’97 S.— Frank C. Shipman is doing
engineering work in the office of the
Engineer of the Borough of Walling-
ford, Conn.
’97 S.—Howard M. Ingham is work-
ing in the machine shop of the South-
wark Foundry and Machine Co. of
Philadelphia.
97 S.—J. R. Jackson, Jr., is engaged
in the manufacture of the “Foley” Gold
and Fountain Pens with office at 187
Broadway, New York.
97 S.— Fred. A. M. Scheffelin re-
turned last May from a trip around the
world and is in the real estate office of
Horace S. Ely & Co., 27 West 30th st.,
New York.
’97 S.—John E. Shaw is studying law
at the University of Minnesota, and is
at the same time studying in the law
offices of Russell, Cray & Jamieson of
Minneapolis, Minn.
’97—Jesse W. Olney is attending the
Albany Law School. Mr. Olney has
perpetuated the use of the. University’s
name on an engine of war, by re-
christening his swift and invincible St.
Bernard “Yale.” This name was ap-
plied as soon as the cruiser went out of
commission.
’98—R. K. Richardson is studying in
the Graduate Department of Columbia
University.
’98—W. H. Peck has entered the law
office of Roger Foster, ’78, at 35 Wall
street, New York City.
*98—D. L. Hebard has changed his
address from Chestnut Hill, Pa., to The
Colonial, Delaware, ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
’98—A. Rosecrans Baldwin is at
Aiken, S. C., recovering from an at-
tack of pleurisy and pneumonia brought
on by a severe cold on the lungs. He
is entirely out of danger now. Huis ad-
dress is care of A. Holmes.
’98—David H. M. Gillespie and
Claude F. Walker, ’97 Ph.D., have issued
in pamphlet form their paper on “The
Application of Iodine in the Analysis
of Alkalies and Acids,’ which was
originally published in the December
number of the the American Journal of
Science.
98 S.—The iriends of John N. Ander-
son were very much disturbed by a re-
port of his death mysteriously origi-
nated and busily circulated. For the
sake of alleviating any anxiety on the
part of those who have not immediate
access to the facts, it will be as well to
say that by letters and personal appear-
ance and other good evidences, Mr.
Anderson has frequently and_ thor-
oughly disproved the report.
—___++—____
Obituary.
ISAAC LEWIS PEET, ’45.
Dr. Isaac Peet, Emeritus Principal of
the New York Institution for the In-
struction of the Deaf and Dumb, died
Tuesday evening, Dec. 27, at Fordham
Heights, N. Y. ,
He was born Dec. 4, 1824, at the
American School for the Deaf, Hart-
ford, Conn., where his father filled the
double position of Steward and teacher.
He was graduated from Yale in 1845,
with rank that entitled him to member-
ship in the Phi Beta Kappa Society
and received the degree of M.A. from
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Statement of a $10,000 Ten-Payment,
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Yerar.| Premium. | Diviwenp. |Net Payment.
4878 (E0450 4) eo $694.30
SPOS sree a $27.06 667.24
5 hol, 3 2a Mgeeantne te 45.53 648.77
fe 57.16 637.14
fous 69.33 624.97
pO a ee a 82.08 612,22
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Total Paid by the Insured,| $6,193.49
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(885. )> > Sans $155.57
T5800 oe ces. 138.08
NOOO i Wes 143.01
1SOt oe. 148.18
5 Foi o. i Sogn 153.60
6 6 Sa aaa aver 159.29
SA Se arceeneccs 165.25
1305 471.52
nh a iad ee econ 178.10
pr ape eS ee 185.02
1898 Oy atv xieecogn 192.31
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F.C. EPALLOCK. MANAGER,
Room 5, Hubinger Building,
840 CHAPEL ST. 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.
Yale in 1849. He at once became a
professor in the New York Institution
for the Instruction of the Deaf and
Dumb, where his father was Principal.
While teaching, he pursued the study
of theology in the Union Theological
Seminary, and was graduated in 1849,
but was never ordained. In 1867, upon
the retirement of his father after thirty-
six years’ service, Dr. Peet was elected
his successor, and filled the office of
Principal for twenty-five years. Colum-
bia granted him the degree of LL.D. in
1872.
He was a prolific and scholarly
writer on all subjects relating to the
deaf. Among his chief works are “A
Monograph of Decimal Fractions,
“Tanguage Lessons for the Deaf and
Dumb,” and “A Manual of Vegetable
Physiology.’ In 1886 his inaugural ad-
dress as President of the Medico-Legal
Society of New York on “The Psychi-
cal Status and Criminal Responsibility
‘of the Uneducated Deaf and Dumb” at-
tracted much attention. Dr. Peet was
for years a member of the Executive
Committee of American Instructors of
the Deaf, and although a devout Pres-
byterian, he was a leading member of
the Church Mission to Deaf-Mutes and
of the committee in charge of the Gal-
laudet Home for Deaf-Mutes. In 1872
[Continued on 122d page.|