Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, February 01, 1899, Page 2, Image 2

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    154
Orange, N. J.; Miss McCurley, Balti-
more; Miss Tatum, New York; Miss
Galpin; J. P. Adams, 1900; E. H.
Tatum, 1900; N. A. Howard, ’99 S.
Box 18—Mrs. W. H. Moore, Chi-
cago, Ill.; Mrs. C. Devries, Baltimore,
Md.; Mrs. S. C. Schoyer, Pittsburg,
Pa.; Mrs. Eugene Kingman, Provi-
dence, R. I.; Miss Elizabeth H. Cas-
sard, Baltimore, Md.; Miss
Vogeler, Baltimore,
Schoyer, Pittsburg, Pa.;
Chapin and Miss C. A. Kingman,
Providence, R. I.; W. J. Vogeler, 1900;
H. Moore, 1900; L. C. Kingman, 1900;
W. E. Schoyer, 1900.
Box 19—Mrs. B. H. Campbell, Eliza-
beth, N. J.; Mrs. Dexter, New Haven,
Conn.; Mrs. H. Brock; Mrs. C. Wil-
liams; Miss M. F. Brinley; Miss F.
Brock: Miss F. C. Griscom, all of
Philadelphia, Pa.; Miss E. K. Sanger,
Washington, D. C.; W. B. Willians,
1900; S. Campbell, 1900; C. E. Brinley,
1900; J. P. Brock, 1900.
Box 20—Mrs. E. Coffin, New York
City; Mrs. McLean, Pittsburg, Pa.;
Mrs. J. S. Kittle, Ross Valley, Cal.;
Miss Eldridge, Norfolk, Conn.; Miss
S. Coffin, New York; Miss M. McLean,
Pittsburg, Pa.; Miss Isabel Kittle,
Ross Valley, Cal.; Miss Marion Eells,
San Francisco, Cal.; Miss M. Swift,
Detroit, Mich.; A. L. Kittle, 1900; H.
C. Heinz, 1900; L. C. Hedge, 1900;
W. S. Coffin, 1900; J. S. Eells, toot.
Box 21—Mrs. W. T. Brown, Spring-
field, Mass.: Mrs. E. H. Bolton, Cleve-
land, O.; Mrs. R. W. Betts, Brooklyn,
WN Y¥.;. Miss M. -L. Morey, Denver,
Col.; Miss H. L. Barnes, Rockford,
Ill.; Miss E. Bolton, Cleveland, Be
Miss E. Betts, Brooklyn, N. ¥.; Miss
H. M. Lauder, Pittsburg, Pa.; J. Win-
terbotham, Jr., 1900S.; J. F. Symes,
1900 S.: J. W. Morey, 1900S.; H. 5S.
Brown, 1900 S.; R. W. Betts, 1900 S.
Box 22—Mrs. P. B. Palmer, Chicago,
Til.; Mrs. J. M. Fiske, Chicago, Ill;
Mrs. Clausen, New York City; Miss
Marion Clausen, New York City: Miss
Gertrude Gladwin, Chicago, Ill.; Miss
Mabel W. Hartsuff, Chicago, Ill.; J. M.
Fiske, ’09 S.; G. Duncan, 1900; D. C.
Palmer, 1900.
Box 23—Mrs. G. S. Day, New York
City; Mrs. G. W. Hubbell, Greenwich,
Conn.; Miss E. J. Davis, Davis, West
Virginia; Miss Isabel Curtiss, New
York City; G. W. Hubbell, 1900; J.
Day, 1901; J. E. Davis, 1900.
Box 24—Mrs. Wade, Waterbury,
Corin.:: Mrs. “We Ov Bickok, © Harris-
burg, Pa:; “Mrs. &. Norton, Detroit,
Mich.; Miss L. Eddy, Bay City, Mich.;
Miss i. Capelle, Sewickley, Pa.; Miss
A. Norton, Detroit, Mich.; Miss
Polly Learned, Norwich, Ct.; Miss M.
Chittenden, Detroit, Mich.; Miss Mary
Wade, “Waterbury, Conn.: > Miss >i.
Hickok, Harrisburg; Pa.; “Miss A.-Day-
idson, Pittsburg, Pa.; Miss Schenck,
Dayton, O.; Miss H. Hastings. Belle
Bornte, Pas: S:.oB. Sdtphin, -’00/S.: > -B.
V. Norton, 1900 S.; E. M. Eddv ’g99S.;
A. H. Durston, ’99S.; A. B. Babcock,
099 S.; C. Campbell, to00 S.; W. Valen-
tine, ’97S.; C. N. Hickok, 1900 S.
Box 25—Mr. H. L. Hotchkiss, New
Haven, Conn.; Miss Elizabeth Hotch-
kiss, New Haven, Conn.; Miss Mar-
garet Keen, Philadelphia, Pa.; Miss
Sophie Moore, Pittsburg. Pa.; Miss
Nevin, Pittsburg, Pa.; ©. W. Cady,
toot; S. McL. Buckingham, ’oq: S. H.
Hotchkiss, 1900S.; R. Townshend,
1900 S.
Box 26—Mrs. J. P. C. Foster, New
Haven, Conn.; Mrs. R. H. McCormick, *
Chicago, Ill.; Miss McCormick, Chi-
cago, Ill.; Miss Coulthurst, Salem,
Mass.; Miss Grace Seeley, Cincinnati,
O.; Miss Hilda Tiffany, New York
City; > Co To Tiffany; 2d), 1900: - 17 8.
Francis, 1900; R. H. McCormick, Jr.,
1900.
Box 27—Mrs. Ives, New York; Mrs.
W. W. Seeley; Miss Helen Seeley; Miss
Lucy Herron, all of Cincinnati, O.;:
Miss Pauline Ives, New York City;
Miss Cheney, South Manchester, Conn.;
Miss M. Cheney, South Manchester,
Conn.; Miss D. Cheney, South Man-
chester, Conn.; F. D. Cheney, 1900;
W. E. Minor, 1900; T. B. Clarke, Jr.,
1900.
Box 28—Mrs. M. A. Hanna; Mrs. J.
J. Sullivan; Miss R. Hanna; Miss H.
Sullivan; Miss Wright, all of Cleve-
land, O.; M. L. McBride, 1900; C. E.
Sullivan, 1900; J. H. Hord, roo1-
Box 29—Mrs. Merritt, Cleveland, O.;
Mrs. A. C. Hord, Cleveland, O.; Miss
Helen Chisholm, Cleveland, O.; . Miss
Josephine Chisholm, Cleveland, O.;
Miss Brewster, Rochester, N. Y.; Miss
Elizabeth Thompson, Pittsburg, Pa.;
Mrs. Thompson, Pittsburg; Miss Mc-
Bride, Cleveland; C. S, Brooks, 1900;
WAI ALUMNI
H. Chisholm, 1901; H. M. Hanna, Jr.,
1900 S.; G. B. Kip, Igor.
Box 30—Mrs. Blackington, Scran-
ton, Pa.; Mrs. Cogswell, Albany, N.
Y.; Miss M. E. C. Galpin, Scranton,
Pa.; Miss Helen Humpstone, Brook-
lyn, N. Y.; Miss M. R. Bowditch,
Albany, N. Y.; Miss Lucy Pierson,
Hartford, Conn.; Miss Cornelia Cogs-
well, Albany, N. Y.; W. Noyes, ’99;
H. J. Nichols, ’99; C. P. Dodge, ’99;
L. Cogswell, ’99.
Box 31—Mrs. L. W. Stott, Albany,
N. Y.; Mrs. J. S. Wood, Mt. Vernon,
N. Y.; Mrs. W. H. Averell, Rochester,
N. Y.; Mrs. W. D. Candee, Brooklyn,
N. Y.: Miss E. B. Averell, Rochester,
N. Y.; Miss L. Miller, Mt. Vernon,
N. Y.: Miss L. V. Stott, Albany, N. Y.;
Miss O. H. Candee, Brooklyn, Ne oy .:
Miss Means, Pittsburg, Pa.; Miss Flor-
ence Day, Pittsburg, Pa.; S. M. Wood,
1900; A. VanderVeer, 1900; J. M.
Long, 1900; F. Crampton, 1900; W. H.
Averell, 1900.
Box 32—Mrs. E. C. Conway, Chi-
caco, Ill.; Mrs. E. Norton, Chicago,
Ill.; Miss S. G. Norton, Chicago, IIL;
Miss Edith Robertson, Rockford, IIl.;
Miss Meta Knight, St. Louis, Mo.; Miss
Mary Dana, Chicago, Ill.; Miss Sybil
Conway, Chicago, Ill.; C. C. Conway,
99: Si55 WW: Knight;<"09 §:;°: O:-H-
Lindenberg, ’99S.; L. H. Thompson,
’99 S.
vues 33—Mrs. Lynde Harrison, New
Haven, Conn.; Mrs. George L. White,
Waterbury, Conn.; Mrs. Wheeler,
Terre Haute, Ind.; Mrs. C. F. Kiefer,
Alleghany, Pa.; Mrs. J: D. Leary, New
York City; Miss Gertrude Harrison,
New Haven, Conn.; Miss Louise
Deshler, Columbus, O.; Miss Helen
Dennis, Paris, France; Miss Sophie
Wheeler, Terre Haute, Ind.; Miss
Marie Leary, New York City; Miss
Gertrude Kiefer, Allegheny, Pa.; P. R.
Brand, ’99 S.; W. G. Woolfolk, 1900 S.;
W. H. White, 1900 S.; F. M. Chisholm,
1901; Hi Chappell,;.toor: -P. C. Kiefer,
IQOT.
ake 34—Mrs. J. L. Lombard, Kansas
City; Miss Winifred Lombard, Kansas
City; Miss Mary Rockwell, Junction
City, Kansas: Wo ReClask sone: 142:
Lombard, 1900. ne
Box 35—Mrs. Chappell, New Lon-
don; Mrs. Peat, New Haven: Mrs.
Myron and Mrs. Burr, New York; Mrs.
Davidson, Boston; Miss Chappell, New
London; Miss Helen Davidson, Bos-
ton; Miss H. St.B: Eustis; Winches-
ter, Mass.; Miss Amelia Burr and Miss
Sawyer, New York; Mr. Scudder, New
York;~ D> Chappell; 1600: +. Fo Ord-
way, 1900; E. E. Davidson, 1900; H. S.
Arnold, 1900; G. H. Bartholmew, 1900.
~Box 36—Mrs. W. Sanders, Montclair,
N. J.; Mrs. S. E. Thomas, New York;
Mrs. E. Marshall, Philadelphia: Miss
C. Thomas, and Miss A: P.. Thomas,
New York; Miss E. Marshall, Phila-
delphia; Miss Dann, New Haven; J.
A FLOSS, (00S, PN Daim. oe.
wit. Thomas: Ir. “og S:= Ei he Mar
shall, ’99 S.; W. M. Sanders, ’o9 S.
Box 37—Bought by President and
Mrs. Dwight, but unoccupied.
Box 38—Mrs. L. A. Barbour, Hart-
ford; Miss Adelaide Hamilton, Chicago;
Miss Anna Wescott, Hartford: Miss
Edith F. Henry, Detroit; Miss Harriet
Barbour, Hartford; M. B. Brainard,
1900; L. B. Barbour, 1900; B. Henry
1900; G. W. Simmons, 1900; L. §
Treadwell, 1900 S.
R. C,. Fisher, New
bd
Box 39—Mrs.
Rochelle, N. Y.; Mrs. B. Nugent, St.
Louis; Miss Emily Henderson, New
York; Miss Capen, St. Louis; Miss
. Josephine H. Smith, New York; T.
RR. Fisher, °3d,° “60S - 44) -T: Nugent,
"O90: > CP? Capen. “tooo; = REN. Wil-
cox, “00:5.2 RR. Ts Dain! 760 S:-
Box 40o—Mrs. N. C. Mellen, Stam-
ford, Conn.; Mrs. J. Thorndike, Bos-
ton; Miss Reba Thomas, Boston; Miss
Katharine Ayres, Indianapolis; Miss
Elizabeth Wood, Gloversville, N. Y.;
Miss Alethea Putnam, New York; W.
R. Maloney, 1900; F. H. Winters, 1900;
H. H. Hackett, 1900. |
Box 41—Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Far-
nam, New Haven; Mrs. Frank Kerno-
chan, New-York; Miss Betty Whitney,
New Haven. |
Box 42—Mrs. A. C. Dallam, New
York; Mrs. J. B. Bowden, New York;
Mrs. H. J. Lewis, Stratford, Conn.:
Mrs. S. C. Lewis, Springfield, Mass.:
Miss Ross, New York: Miss Maud
Ada Miller, Stratford, Conn.; Miss E.
G. Allen, Stratford, Conn.; Miss Marsh,
Springfield, Mass.; Mrs. A. R. Bowden,
New York: Jo) Datiam, ’ooS.: 0:
L. Miller, 990 S.;_ E. S. Lewis, ’o9 S.;
L. R. Bowden, ’99 L.S.
Box 43—Mrs. A. P. Childs, Castleton,
Vt.; Mrs. D. H. Clement, Brooklyn;
Mrs. A. S. Cressy, Hartford; Miss Ada
VV Eee ET
M. Hobbs, New Haven; Miss Ellen
B. Cramton, Rutland, Vt.; Miss Louie
C. Sherman, Castleton; Miss Cathleen
A. Sherman, Castleton; Miss Madeline
H. Parker, Philadelphia; Miss Sara
M. Riggs, Palmyra, N: Y.; Miss
Martha W. Riggs, Palmyra, N. Y.;
Miss Ferguson, Springfield, Mass.; M.
S. Cressy, "1900; L. Sherman, 1900; P.
S. Riggs, 1900; E. Congdon, 1900; R.
Ferguson, 1900.
Box 44—Mrs. M. H. Alling, New
Haven; Mrs. E. W. Buck, Wethers-
field; Mrs. J. A. Graves, Hartford;
Mrs. J. C. North, New Haven; Miss
Helen Noél, St. Louis; Miss Helen
Whittlesey, New Haven; Miss Amy
Pratt, Glastonbury, Conn.; Miss Elsie
L. Ney, Hartford, Conn.; A. H. Graves,
1900; C. Bentley, 1900; W. Buck, 1900;
G. B. Tennant, 1900; A. W. Olds, ’99 S.
Box 45—Mrs. George W. Hall, Phil-
adelphia; Mrs. Sperry, Fair Haven,
Conn.; Mrs. S. C. Fleetwood, New
Haven; Mrs. Buell, New York; Miss
J. Alice Merwin, New Haven; Miss
Nina Sperry, New Haven; Miss M. S.
Fleetwood, New Haven; Miss Bishop,
New Haven; Miss Buell, New York;
N. W. Warren, ’909S.; W. H. Buell,
S05. Wak: hérd, "00 S22 A.
Howarth, ’99 S.; G. R. Hall, ’o9S.
Box 46—Mrs. E. H. Saunders, St.
Paul; Miss Caroline Saundets, St. Paul;
Miss Cornelia Saunders, St, Paul: Miss
Elsie Olds, Brooklyn; Miss May Web-
ster, Chicago: Miss Jane Standish, De-
troit; RR. P.:Flint;’00 S.;: FE: N,: Saun-
ders. fr; “90 S:- -GieN. -Crouse:: 4r.
Box 47—Mrs. F. J. Jones, Cincinnati;
Mrs. W. A. Taylor, Brooklyn; Mrs.
K. D. Riggs, New York: Miss Mary
M. Newport, St. Paul: Miss Gertrude
Hubbard, Cambridge, Mass.; Miss
Francis Jones, Cincinnati; Miss Helen
Leaman, Cincinnati; Miss Charlotte
Stillman, Brooklyn; A. Cameron, Jr.,
1901; E. L. Jones, toor; P. L. Mitchell,
1goT; Newport, -Jt., 1001? Coo. S.
Stillman, 1901.
Box 48—Mrs. Joseph Porter, New
Haven; Mrs. T. W. Spence, Milwaukee,
Wisc.; Mrs. Marvy Schufeldt, Chicago;
Miss Mildred Wilson, New Haven:
Miss Bonnie Forest, Hartford; Miss
Eleanor Kelley, Chicago: Miss Grace
M. Lewis, Milwaukee; T. H. Spence,
700; W. R. Kelly, ’99: J. S. Porter, ’9o.
Box 49—Mr. and Mrs. Phelps Mont-
gomery, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Barclay, New Haven; Miss
Johnson, New Haven: Miss Mabel
Johnson, New Haven; Miss Edith Bo-
gart, New York; Miss M. Montgomery,
Portland, Ore.; J.-D. Bogart; 1001 ¢-J.
B. Seymour, ’99.
Box 50—Mrs. J. P. C. Foster, Mrs.
E. E.- Bradley, New Haven: Miss
Bertha Bradley. Miss Mabel Bradley,
Miss Helen Judd. General E. E. Brad-
ley. all of New Haven.
"Box 51—Mrs. C. W. Ives, New
Haven: Mrs. Charles Hubbard, Nor-
wich, Conn.; Mrs. Cram, South Nor-
walk, Conn.; .Miss Alice Cram, South
Norwalk, Conn.; Miss Rosalie Hub-
bard, Norwich, Conn.; Miss Leila
Ives, New Haven; E. Learned, ’o0;
A. R. Lowrie, ’90: G. R. Johnson. ’oo.
Box 52—Mrs. M. Stone, New York;
Mrs. Daggett, New Haven: Miss
Locke, New York; M. A. Stone, 1900.
HH?
1900 S.; H. A. Webster, 1900 S.
Literary Notes. Li
Under the head of “Money in Litera-
ture,” Edgar Saltus writes as follows in
Collier’s Weekly:
“ “Old Sleuth,’ lately deceased, is re-
ported in the practice of his profession
to have accumulated half a million.
That is a good deal of money to make
by the sweat of one’s pen. But there
are some who have done, and there are
others who are doing better yet. Mr.
Moody, for instance. Already one
book of his has brought him in over
twice that amount. ‘Then there is Mr.
Kipling. He began quite modestly.
To-day he accepts twenty-five cents -per
word in England and half a dollar here.
We don’t blame him. On the contrary.
The point is though, where at that rate
is Old Sleuth,. where too is Mr. Moody?
Mrs. Humphrey Ward is less mono-
polian. In eight years with four novels
this lady has cleared three hundred
thousand dollars. Stould she be spared
to us she may beat Scott, who made
two million. At present she is only
seventy-five thousand behind Anthony
Trollope, a hundred ghousand behind
Bulwer and two hundred thousand be-
hind Dickens. That is nothing. Besides,
in comparison to Mrs. Pinkham, she is
simply nowhere, For a poem entitled
‘Corelli is her one rival.
“Sleep,” Tennyson received a guinea 2
word. For the “Miserables” Hugo re-
ceived eighty thousand, and for “Sap-
pho” Daudet received two hundred
thousand dollars. We believe Mrs.
Pinkham to be much better paid. Muss
The sums which
this delicious bareback, sawdusted cir-
cus-rider of the fountain pen has gath-
ered together, while unbelieveable, are
wholly deserved. There is but one
literary cuss who has done better-
What his name is escapes us. We for-
get, too, the titles of his works. They
are of the variety known as subscrip-
tion, and on their sales he has built a
square Chicago block. There should be
a moral to all tales, and for the benefit
of young writers there is one to this:
In literature, virtuosity is its own re-
ward.”
Dodd, Meade & Company, publishers
of the Bookman, announce that Decem-
ber was the best month the Bookman
ever had; better in subscription and
better in advertising than ever before.
This was in spite of the increased com-
petition in the field of-literary month-
lies. The publishers announce the cir-
culation of the Bookman as averaging
13,500 copies.
Rudyard Kipling has written a poem
entitled “The White Man’s Burden,”’
evidently called forth by the colonial
development of the United States. It
will appear in the February issue o7%
McClure’s Magazine, although the edit-
ors did not receive the poem until
after the Magazine was on the press.
The frontispiece was taken out, and
the poem was printed in its place. The
poem is of considerable length. Here
are given some extracts from it:
Take up the White Man’s burden—
Send forth the best ye breed—
Go, bind your sons to exile
To serve your captives’ need;
To wait, in heavy harness,
On fluttered folk and wild—
Your new-caught sullen neoples,
Half devil and half child.
*K *K * * *
Take up the White Man’s burden—
The savage wars of peace—
Fill full the mouth of Famine,
And bid the sickness cease;
* * ** * *
The ports ye shall not enter,
The roads ye shall not tread,
Go, make them with your living
And mark them with your dead.
* * * * *
By all ye will or whisper,
By all ye leave or do,
The silent sullen peoples
Shall weigh your God and you.
Kipling’s short stories in McClure’s
Magazine have turned out to be the most
successful fiction series that the pub-
lishers have ever secured. The Janu-
ary number is reported out of print,
with nearly 15,000 unsupplied subscri-
bers. The February edition of Mc-
Clure’s Magazine is 70,000 copies larger
than that of February of a year ago.
—————
Representation of Schools.
A comparison of the representation
from the principal preparatory schools
in the present Freshmen class with that
in last year’s Class is given below. For
this purpose ten of the leading prepara-
tory schools have been selected: An-
dover, St. Paul’s, Hotchkiss, Hillhouse
High School, Hartford High School,
Lawrenceville, Hill School, University
School, Cleveland, Cutler’s and Groton.
Andover as usual leads in the num-
ber entered, having sent down 69 this
year, against 59 last year. The Hotch-
kiss, Lawrenceville, and St. Paul dele-
gations continue about the same as last
year, but Hill School sends considera-
bly fewer numbers. The Hillhouse and
Hartford High Schools show a large
increase, and Groton and Cutler’s,
which had but few entered last year,
have now sent good-sized delegations.
The University School has the same
number in the Freshmen class this year
as last. The statistics are as follows:
7 op) =
SCHOOL. 4 fo ERS a = Ss
12) Oo fo) 2) ° re,
eo ee OR ee
Andover ..5... 40° "19°°$9 48 21 @&
ee OUR Bes ad 17 T SSS oT 3g we
PHotthkiss *. 7. . is - goa 18 3-2
Hillhouse High 9 5 14 10 14 2%
Hartford High. 10 4 14-17 -3 20
Laewiencevine *. 532.47 9. 9 ae
Hin ScHOm Se Be 16 Fe ae
i SCHOO! <9. Se 1 Ge ae
Cuier Sos Aare a eel ee
UA OtOn. ov 2 BS Ore. 47 ae