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About Yale Alumni Magazine | View Entire Issue (June 14, 1899)
WAT ALUMNI “WEEKLY ——— Stimson of New York City have been appointed a Standing Committee in charge of the future reunions of the Class of Eighty-eight. . They are en- deavoring to arrange a reunion for the Bi-centennial. *88—B. C. Steiner is the author of a book entitled ‘‘The Institutions and Civil Government of Maryland,’ pub- lished by Ginn & Co. Mr. Steiner has spent several years in the preparation of this work, which has.been adopted by the State Board of Education for use in the public schools. 88 S.—Francis H. Farquhar, who has been practising Law at 120 Broadway, New York, has removed to York, Pa. 88 M.S.—The present address of Dr. Thomas M. Cahill is 36 Elm st., New Haven, Conn. ’*89—Rev. Thomas G. Shearman, Jr., was in town last week and spent several days visiting at Briarcrest, Whitneyville. ’°90— Roger S. Baldwin sailed for Europe on Tuesday, May 23, to be gone three months. "790—C. P. Kellogg of Waterbury re- turned home, June 5, after representing the Connecticut Board of Charities of the National Conference held at Cin- cinnati. ’°900 S.—Dr. Alexander W. Evans, M.D., of the Sheffield Scientific School will spend the coming Summer travel- ing through Germany and Russia. ’90 T. S.—Rev. E. E. Smiley received an Honorary degree at the Commence- ment of the Syracuse University, June 7. ‘9i—Dr. H. L. Williams will spend the Summer studying in Vienna. *91—F. C. Walcott. will return to America from a trip in Japan, July 21. ’ot L.S.—Samuel M. Hotchkiss, father of Samuel S. Hotchkiss, ’91 L.S., died at his home in Hartford, Conn., May 20. ’91 L.S.—Stephen Brophy was a can- didate for the Ohio State Legislature on the Democratic ticket, but was de- feated bv Congressman Southard. ‘ot: T.Si+Rev. Harvey. 0S. Bush -has declined to reconsider his resignation from the Congregational Church of Al- mont, Mich. His permanent address is Port Huron, Mich. ’92—-F. A. Keller is a Medical Mis- sionary in the Yangshi Valley, China. His address is China Inland Mission, Shanghai. ’92—-A daughter was born to Rev. and Mrs. Albert L. Whittaker on May 17 at Clinton, Mo. ’92 S.— Dr. P. T. Walden, Instructor in Chemistry in the Sheffield Scientific School, will spend the ensuing year studying at Leipzig. ’92 L.S.—H. A. Hill has formed a law partnership under the firm name of Davenport & Hill with offices in the Marsh Building, Bridgeport, Conn. ’93—Arthur P. Lord will receive the degree of Ph.D. from Yale this June. ’93—R. H. Jordan coached the St. Joseph High School Track Team, which recently won the championship of Eastern Mo. ’93—-W. C. Scott has recently been elected Director and Secretary and Treasurer of the Newburgh Planing Mill Co., Newburgh, N. Y. °93—A daughter was born June 1, 1899, to Rev. and Mrs. G. F. Good- enough. °93—-Walter R. Marvin is to be mar- ried, June 13, to Miss Julia Armstrong Collins, daughter of Mrs. William Armstrong Collins, at Blue Ridge Sum- tite vt a ’93 S.—A misleading note appeared in a recent issue stating a child had re- cently been born to Mr. and Mrs. Phelps B. Hoyt. Mr. Hoyt has but one child; a daughter born June 4, 1806. ’93 S.—The marriage of Miss Eliza- beth Bonbright Evans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Franklin Evans of Twin Oaks, Morristown, to Oliver Chandler Billings of Cincinnati, will take place on Wednesday afternoon, June 14, in St. Peter’s Church, Morris- town, N. J. ’94—F rederick Love Keays was grad- uated from the Cornell Medical School, New York City, June 7, with honor and the. degree of M.D. He has re- ceived an appointment to the New York Hospital as an Interne and will begin his term of service July 1, on the medi- cal staff. ’94——The wedding of Miss Elizabeth K. Anderson of Washington, to Philip ~ H. McMillan, took place at noon, June Zs at St. John’s Church, Washington, fe ’94—The degree of Doctor of Medi- cine was conferred upon George H. Fox, George H. Ryder and Letchworth Smith at the recent commencement exercises of Columbia University. ’94—J. F. Kempfer has been appointed Instructor of Mathematics at Irving College in Pennsylvania. ex-’94—-The marriage of Miss Jose- phine Goodyear of Buffalo, and George M. Sicard, will take place, June 22. ’94—William H. Sallmon of Sidney, . S. W., will spend another year as Traveling Secretary of the Australian Student .Christian Union. *794—_Mr. and Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney will spend the Summer at their cottage in Newport. ’94 and ’96 L.S.—O. S. Seymour is a member of the law firm of Taylor & Seymour, recently formed in New York with offices at the Empire Building, 91 Broadway. ’94 S.—The marriage of Miss Mabel Lark of Millersburg, Pa., to William J. Gies, Instructor at Columbia Uni- versity, took place on May 24. Mr. and Mrs. Gies are now traveling abroad. ’95—H. K. Taylor, who has been ill with pneumonia, has returned to busi- ness, having entirely recovered. ’95—E. W. Hobart moved his law offices June 1, from the Carew Build- ing, to 12 Carlisle Building, Cincinnati, Ohio. ’95—_H. P. Driggs has entered the law office of Taylor & Seymour at gI Broadway, New York. ’95—Sherman K. Foote and A. _T. Osgood had the degree of Doctor of Medicine conferred upon them at the University of Columbia graduating exercises on June 7. ’95—R. B. Mason has been appointed Assistant Corporation Counsel of Chi- cago. ’°95—George D. Kellogg will sail for Hamburg on the steamship Patria, Sattirday. Jay 1. *95—E. W.. Beattie, Jr., has. moved from Helena to Butte, Montana, where he has enterd the law office of Judge We Drom: ’95—The marriage of Miss Harriet Barnard Thompson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. Thompson of Mil- ford, Conn., and Henry Ivison Parsons, took place June 7. The ushers were Guy R. McLane, Allen Wardwell, Wil- liam Carson, Hermann Thomas of Class of Ninety-Five, and J. G. Parsons, 1900 S. Mr. and Mrs. Parsons will spend the Summer in the Berkshires. ’95—Alburn E. Skinner of Ottawa, Kansas, has accepted the position of Cashier of the Chautauqua Assembly for the coming Summef. ’95 S.—An Asylum for Orphan Cuban Children has been established in Pinar- del-Rio, Cuba, in memory of the late Stephen Bogert Roe. The cots and necessary equipment have been sent and Dr. William L. Kneedler reports an institution in good condition and doing much good. A brass plate contains an inscription in both Spanish and Eng- lish marking it as a memorial. ’95 S.—The wedding of Miss Gertrude -~ Walker, daughter of Mrs. Eliza Walker, to Frank W. Jordan, took place June 6, in the Church of the Divine Pater- nity, New York. ’95 S.—H. G. Wells -has) received «a fellowship in Pathology from the Rush Medical College of Chicago. ’95 S—_The engagement of Miss Clementine Lewis of Portland, Ore., to Sherman R. Hall, has just been an- nounced. - 95 S.—A. J. Gilmour received the de- gree of Doctor of Medicine, June 7, at the commencement exercises of Colum- bia University. a 95 S.—Rankin Johnson has been pu in charge of an engineer’s corps work- ing on the Mexican International Rail- road. ’95 S—F. B. Stephenson and H. M. Keator, ’97 coached the University base- ball team recently. ’95 S.—Harry S. Waite has been given the position of General Yard Master of the Columbus, Hocking Valley & Toledo R. R. at Columbus, Ohio. 795 S.—George B. Massey has ac- cepted the position of Assistant Super- intendent with the South Milwaukee Iron Works. | ’95 T.S.—Rev. Geo. W. been appointed Chaplain of the Sec- ond Regiment, C. N. G ’°96—The marriage of Miss Margaret Olive Black, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Greene Vardiman Black, to Mark Bald- win of Duluth, Minn., will take place at the Congregational Church, Jackson- ville, Ill., Tuesday evening, June 20. ’96—Dr. Edward L. Trudeau, Jr., As- sistant Physician at Saranac Lake, N. Y., is one of the Harriman exploring party which left Portland, Ore., May 30, for a two months’ cruise in Alaskan waters. ’°96— Edward E. Denison will graduate from the Columbian University Law School, Washington, D. C., this June, taking the degrees of LL.B. and M.L. Mr. Denison is President of his Class. After graduation he will enter a law office in Chicago. ’96—The marriage of Miss Annetta Kerr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Kerr, to William Hall Brokaw, will take place at Yonkers, N. Y., June 15. Cards haev been issued for an “At Home,” after September 1, at the Church of the Advent Rectory, Browns- ville, Texas. ’°96—The marriage of Miss Catherine Terrill of New Hartford, Conn., to Arnon A. Alling of New Haven, will take place in the New Hartford Con- gregational Church on Thursday, June 15. ’°96 and 1900 M.S.—Frederick Coonley will spend the Summer substituting at the different New York hospitals. ’°90—-George S. Buck sailed for an extensive trip through the Lake Region, England, Holland, the Rhine and Nor- way, May 13. ’°96—The engagement is announced of Miss Ethel B. Gresham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Gresham of Hackensack, N. J., to Wesley Grove Vincent of Cottage City, Mass. ’96— E. S. Oviatt hasan article on Nathan Hale in the New York Times, Saturday Review of June 3. ’96 S.—Edwards Johnson has taken a house for the Summer at Easthampton, Long Island. | Ex-’96 Si—M. P. Warren is in the cattle business in Magdalen, New Mexico. ’°907—George B. Cutten, D.D., has re- signed his position as pastor of Monto- wese Church and has accepted the pas- torate of the Howard Avenue Baptist Church of New Haven. His new work will begin on June 20. . ’°97—Mr. and Mrs. M. Sonnenberg an- nounce the engagement of their daugh- ter, Miss Hettye, to Charles Heitler Studinski of Pueblo, Colorado. ’97—William S. K. Wetmore has just returned from a surveying trip in China, where he has been surveying a railroad from Hang Kow to Shanghai for an American syndicate. ’97—The following Ninety-Seven men took the Connecticut Bar Examinations this year: Knox Maddox, Theodore M. Connor, Michael T. Downes, Louis M. Sonnenberg, Albert F. Judd, Chas. H. Studinski, and E. R. Kelsey. ’o7—A. E. Kent, 2d, will study in Ger- many this Summer, and on returning to America will instruct in the Berkeley ’97—-A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. Lapham, April 20. The statement in a recent WEEKLY was in- correct. ’97—E. L. Heermance, who has been studying at the Free Church Theologi- cal School, Edinburgh, Scotland, is now taking a bicycle trip on the Continent and will return to New Haven in Sep- tember and continue his studies in the Yale Divinity School. ’97—Nathan A. Smyth was awarded the second prize at the Wayland Prize Debate held at the Law School on June 5. ’97—Charles M. Cooke, Jr., will re- turn to Yale next Fall and study for the degree of Ph.D. : ’97—The marriage of Miss Alice Andreesen to Luther L. Kountze will ~ take place, June 21, at Trinity Cathedral, Omaha, Neb. ’97—A. R. Brubacher will return to Yale next Fall to study for a Ph.D. degree. ’°97'S.— CC. H. Berry, Jr; sailed. for Cuba the middle of May last. He is engaged in engineering work in San- tiago Province. His address is Cen- tral “Teresa,” Ceiba Hueca, Manzanillo, Cuba. | Phillips has: —— ’97 S.—C. T. Bissell is with the con- tractors who are changing the Third ave. R. R., New York, to the under- ground trolley system. ’97 S.—Daniel D. Schenck is now en- gaged with the Coal Department of the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad Company, 314 Summit st., Toledo; Ohio. *98—W. R. Letcher has just been ad- mitted to the Kentucky bar and will practice in Richmond, Ky. ’98—Lewis M. Williams is with the Sherwin Williams Company of New York City. ’98. S.—Frank YV. Chappell has just been promoted to be Adjutant, with rank of Captain in the Third Regiment, UNG: ’98—_W. F. Dominick is - studying architecture at Columbia University. 798—C. D. Cheney and A. C. Harrison have gone to Virginia on a hunting trip. ’98—Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Tenney have taken up their residence at 4750 Vincen- nes avenue, Chicago. ’98—Arthur B. Williams, Jr., will go abroad this Summer, preparatory to en- tering a theological school. ’98—Robert Callender has recently been promoted to the entry desk in the Forbes & Wallace Company of Spring- field, Mass. ’98—Charles E. Farr of Athol, Mass., will return to Yale this Fall for a post graduate course. ’98—M. A. Colton, Instructor in Yale University, will sail for Paris during the first week of July, in order to continue his study of French. ’98—Henry B. Cogswell has been ap- pointed Assistant Manager of R. G Dun & Co., Mercantile Agency at Wor- cester, Mass. ’98—E. H. Knight will make an ex- tensive tour of the West during the Summer and early Fall. His address will be Indianapolis, Ind., after Sept. 1. THE PHOENIX ame () You may not have heard much about this policy, for there has not been much noise made about it. me it is very: much:to be doubted, if we may be allowed to say so, that you ever consid- ered a policy that had so many attractive points in the way of both investment and insurance. Write to us about it. PHOENIX MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE Co. HARTFORD, CONN. J. B. BUNCE, President. JOHN M. HOLCOMBE, Vice-Pres’ CHAS. H. LAWRENCE, Secretary. Some EPR Gas Lamps eae a require expensive special carbide cart- ridges. The “Search-Light ” Gas Lantern does not. Every lamp furnished with _ the new ‘ Wishbone” bracket. BRIDGEPORT BRASS COMPANY, Bridgeport, Conn. Name this paper and send 2-cent stamp for souvenil.