360
YALE ALUMNI Ww EEEXKLY
now an Instructor in Mathematics at
Morgan Park Academy, Morgan Park,
Ill.
’87 L.S.—Charles H. Hayden of New
Haven, Conn., will leave about June 25,
for “Fairyland,” one of the Thousand
Islands, Alexander Bay, N. Y., where
he will spend the Summer.
’88—Prof. Irving Fisher will spend
the Summer at Colorado Springs, Col.
’*88—L. Johnson Carmalt has been ap-
pointed Engineer in charge of the Penn-
sylvania division of the New York Cen-
tral Railroad.
88S —_W. H. Bean will conduct the
Yale entrance examinations at Buffalo
this year.
285 --C. i Curtis. was. elected to
the Executive Committee of the Con-
necticut Bankers’ Association at the
meeting held in Hartford, June 13.
’8o5—W. H. Page will conduct the
Yale entrance examinations at Colum-
bus this year.
’89—Prof. O. H. Richardson will con-
duct the Yale entrance examinations at
Concord, N. H., this vear.
’89—Mr. and Mrs. Walter S. Brews-
ter of Brooklyn, are spending the Sum-
mer at Point Pleasant, N. J., and will
remain there until the first of October.
’°89 S.—John H. Klock was in New
Haven recently.
’°90—_S. A. York was recently elected
Secretary of the New Haven Ice Com-
pany.
’90—Charles P. Kellogg of Waterbury
has been elected Assistant Secretary
of the National Society of Charities and
Corrections.
*790—Dr. Arthur W. Colton contrib-
utes a story to the current number of
the Youth's Companion entitled ‘The
Wreck of the John Andrews.”
’90 S.—William H. Butler sailed for
Europe on the St. Louis, June 14.
’90 S.—Charles N. Gunn of New York
City will sail for Europe on July 1.
’91—A. M. Coats is a member of the
first golf club of the Agawam Hunt of
Providence.
’91—Alfred M. Coats is in the office
of J. & P. Coats, thread manufacturers,
Pawtucket, R. I.
’?9i—John Q. Tilson was recently
elected Captain of Company D, Second
Regiment, C. N. G.
ex-’91—Marshal J. Root has recently
been appointed Secretary and Manager
of the Vartray Water Co., Buffalo,
Niet
’o1—The marriage of Miss May Cole
of Cleveland, Ohio, to Prof. Hippolyte
Greuner took place in Cleveland on
June 21.
91 L.S.—Stephen Brophy is engaged
in the practice of Law with offices at
63 Produce Exchange, Toledo, Ohio.
’92—Dr. James A. Moore will spend
the Summer at his cottage at Saratoga
Springs, N. Y.
’92—Rev. Arthur W. Shaw was or-
dained a priest of the Protestant Epis-
copal Church by Bishop Littlejohn of
Long Island, May 28.
°92—Clive Day will conduct the Yale
entrance examinations in Paris this
year. This is the first time they have
ever been held there.
’92—Alfred ii. Swayne has recently
been appointed Manager of the Havana
Branch of the North American Trust
Co. with offices at 27 Cuba st., Flavana.
92 S.—Albert L. Sessions has entered
the hardware business in Bristol, Conn.
Everything
Changes.
Even the style of KNOX
HATS. But the quality
does not change, except
perhaps as that which
seems to be the highest
perfection of manufacture
comes even yet nearer to
the absolutely perfect.
‘92 S—Mr. and Mrs. John H. Ham-
mond sailed for Europe on Wednesday,
June 14.
’92 S.— Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Coe
of New Haven, Conn., sailed Tuesday,
June 6, for Europe. They are planning
to be gone about three months.
’92 S.—A farewell dinner was given at
Savin Rock, to Dr. P. T. Walden of the
Sheffield Scientific School, Dr. George
D. Kellogg, ’95, and John M. Berdan,
796, by their friends in honor of their
departure for Europe.
’93—Dr. Arthur L. Wheeler will
spend the Summer in Greensboro, Vt.
’93—Dr. T. W. Heermance will spend
the Summer bicycling in France and
Germany.
°93—Mr. and Mrs. Arthur P. Lord
will leave New Haven shortly for a
Summer's outing in California.
’93—The engagement is announced
of Miss Juliet Collins, of Hagerstown,
Md., and W. R. Marvin of Philadelphia.
’93—Dr. Edson F. Gallaudet will as-
sist in giving the semi-annual examina-
tions to the members of the University
Crew and substitutes now at Gales
Ferry.
93 S.—The engagement is announced
of Miss Mary E. Dilworth and R. S.
Suydam, both of Pittsburg.
’93 S.—The engagement is announced
of Miss Elsie Yandell, youngest daugh-
ter of the late Dr. Lunsford P. Yandell
of Louisville, Ky., to Donn Barber, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Barber of
New York.
93 L.S.—The report in several of the
New Haven papers that James D.
Dewell, Jr., was soon to sail for Eu-
rope is an error.
93 T.S.—James W. Moulton was or-
dained a Congregational minister on
June 6.
°93—A log kept by Geo. B. Spalding
on the trip of the yacht Coronet about
Cape Horn during the return from the
recent Eclipse Expedition to Japan,
forms a considerable part of the book
published by Mr. Arthur Curtis James
of New York, the promoter of the ex-
pedition.
If you miss any name or names in the
Yale War Record, published in the special
issue of June 7, will you not communicate
as soon as you see this, with the YALE
ALUMNI WEEKLY office? A supplemen-
tary record will be printed in the Com-
mencement number. Three or four names
have already been secured to add to the
total, and there should be others.
’94—Frank E. McDuffee has moved
from Brooklyn and is now practicing
law in Troy, N. Y.
’94—Dr. Ralph Tousey has just fin-
ished his service as House Surgeon at
the City Hospital, New York.
-’94—-The marriage of Miss Martha P.
Bennett of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., and L.
B. Jones, took place june 15.
'04-—F, T. Persons, Instructor in
Cheshire Academy, will study German
in Hanover, Germany, this Summer.
_ '94—Frederick C. Perkins is practis-
ing Law in Pittsburg, Pa. His perma-
ri address is care of the Pittsburg
ub.
’94—Dr. Edward B. Reed conducted
the examinations at Gales Ferry for the
members of the University Crew and
substitutes.
’94—Lloyd M. Howell was appointed
Assistant United States District Attor-
ney for Suffolk County, New York,
June Io.
094—James R. Trowbridge has gone
to Cripple Creek, Col., for his health,
having resigned his position with the
Union Special Sewing Machine Co. of
Chicago, III.
’04—Meredith Hare and Frank W. M.
Cutcheon have formed a partnership,
under the firm name of Cutcheon &
Hare, for the general practice of law,
with offices at No. 40 Wall st., New
York City.
’94 S.—Lawrence Yates received the
degree of M.D. from the Johns Hop-
kins University. June 13.
’94 S—John C. Minor of New York
City will spend his vacation in his cot-
tage at Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
04 S.—Charles B. Brown hczs recently
been elected a Director of the newly
incorporated Penn Yan, Lake Keuka,
and Southern Railway.
04 L.S.— The marriage of Miss
Mollie Macy Talcott, daughter of Mrs.
W. H. Talcott of Pittsfield and Brook-
lyn, to Arthur Hubbard Wood, took
place at St. Stephen’s Church, Pitts-
field, Mass., on Saturday evening, June
10.
’95—John L. Hutchins, is teaching in
the Bridgeport Public High School.
’95—George Jacobus will conduct the
Yale entrance examinations at Garden
City, L. L, this year.
’95—H. A. Baker is practising law in
the office of George D. Reynolds, Esq,.,
510 Pine st., St. Louis, Mo.
’95—L. W. Ladd and P. S. Evans,
Jr., received the degree of M.D. from
the Johns Hopkins University, June 13.
’95—Samuel Peterson will spend the
following year studying abroad. He
will confine himself mainly to France
and Switzerland.
’95—Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Vander-
bilt, Jr., will occupy the Baker villa,
West Cliffe, on the Ledge Road, New-
port, during the Summer.
’95—Mr. and Mrs. Phelps Mont-
gomery of New Haven have rented a
cottage at Saugatuck, where they will
pass the Summer.
’95—Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Bald-
win are taking a trip through the Great
Lakes, and will come to New Haven
in the latter part of June for commence-
ment.
’95—The engagement is announced of
Miss Edith Wetherill, daughter of. Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Wetherill of Phila-
delphia, to Frederick Ives of New
Haven.
’95—Alfred T. Osgood, who grad-
uates from the College of Physicians
and Surgeons of Columbia University
this June, has received an appointment
to the Presbyterian Hospital of New
York City.
95 S.—E. E. Brownell, J. S. Davis,
R. H. Follis and F. H. Verhoeff re-
ceived the degree of M.D. from the
Johns Hopkins University, June 13.
795 S.i—James A. McCrea has been re-
cently appointed Assistant Engineer of
the Eastern Division in the department
of Maintenance of Way of the Pennsyl-
vania Railroad.
795 S—W. W. Palmer received the
degree of Doctor of Medicine from the
University of New York and Bellevue
Hospital Medical College on May 24th.
He has accepted an appointment on the
House Staff of Bellevue Hospital; to
commence July Ist.
95 S.—George B. Massey has re-
turned to his home in Watertown, N.
Y., to recuperate from an attack of
typhoid fever contracted in the Philip-
pines while on duty there. He was one
of the last three volunteer naval engi-
neers to leave the service.
News of what the alumni of Yale are
doing or going to do this Summer is
wanted for insertion in the Commencement
and mid-Summer issues of the paper.
Readers of the WEEKLY are urged to send
im reports concerning themselves and their
friends.
’96—George H. Nettleton will sail for
Europe on the Patria, July 1.
’°96 S.—-Otto H. Miller is with the
Guardian Trust Co., Cleveland, Ohio.
’96—John M. Gaines will return to
Yale next Fall and study for a degree
Of Ph.D:
’96—Mr. and Mrs, Harry H. Benedict
will sail for Europe June 28, on the
steamship St. Paul.
’96—Chauncey W. Wells will conduct
the Yale entrance examinations at Gro-
ton, Mass., this year.
’96—Mr. and Mrs. Frederick O.
Robbins sailed for Europe on the Tour-
raine on Saturday, June 17.
-’96—A. L. Curtiss has accepted a
position with the law firm of Thacher,
Simpson & Barnum, New York.
’96—Johnston deForest has accepted
a position with the law firm of Strong
and Cadwalader, 40 Wall st., New York.
’96—William S. Woodhull, who re-
cently graduated from the New York
Law School, has opened a law office in
New York. )
*"96—A. C. Jones was ordained a
deacon of the Episcopal Church at the
Holy Trinity Church, Middletown,
Conn., June 7.
’96—W. G. Baker has just received
the degree of LL.B. from the Univer-
sity of Maryland and has been admitted
to the Baltimore bar.
°96—A. E. VonTobel, who has just
graduated from the Yale Medical
School, will start to practice imme-
diately at Torrington, Conn.
’96—The marriage of Miss Margaret
Olive Black of Jacksonville, Ill., to
Mark Baldwin, took place June 20.
A FAMOUS
Yale Year
Will be closed by the Com-
mencement of 1899. The
ALUMNI WEEKLY will
wind up this record with
‘much completeness. The
Commencement Dinner,
with its double signifi-
cance of a retiring and
an incoming President,
will be given very full
treatment. The Class_
meetings will be recorded,
the honors chronicled, the
addresses on the presenta-
tion of the honorary de-
grees will be reproduced,
the boat race described,
the ball game covered.
The year and the closing
epoch will be reviewed in
retrospect and the story
of the Commencement
will mean a look at the
future.
The Commencement WEEKLY can be
ordered in advance, price 10 cts.,
by sending to this office.
®
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