Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, October 04, 1899, Page 4, Image 4

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    16
VAT ae ALUMNI  WEeEbaLy
eee
YALE ALUMNI NOTES.
Please report concerning yourself,
facts which should be recorded in this
column. Make report, also, about Yale
men you know, and on matters, proper
for record here, concerning which you
have definite record. This will make
the page of the greatest possible
value. On request the Alumni Weekly
will be giad to send postals to those
who are in the way of getting, more or
less often, Yale news and Yale per-
sonals.
—_—_—
236—Frederick S. Hoppin of Provi-
dence has been staying in town for a few
days as the guest of Prof. Hoppin, his
uncle.
’s6—Justice Brewer of the Supreme
Court has spent his entire Summer in
Paris, where he has served.on the Ven-
ezuelan Commission.
’e6—Charles T. Catlin of Brooklyn
opened his season in the new hall at
Passaic, N. J., by taking part in the pre-
sentation of “The Ticket-of-Leave Man”
and “David Garrick.”
*56—Rev. Dr. W. J. Harris continues
to issue The Mountain Echo at Rut-
land, Vt., while ministering to a parish
at Barre in the same State. Here he is
in intimate relations with Dr. Lewis of
Fifty-Two, the pastor of the Church at
Montpelier, where the famous Dewey
family are attendants.
’*61—Judge Simeon E. Baldwin, Presi-
dent of the American Social Science
Association, read a paper at the annual
meeting of the Association, Sept. 4th,
on “The Natural Right to a Natural
Death.” The paper has excited wide
discussion.
’*64—David B. Lyman is traveling in
Europe for his health.
’65—The New England Magazine pub-
lished in its September issue an article
on Ezekiah Rogers, which was written
by the Rev. Prof. John L. Ewell of
Howard University, Washington, D. C.
°68—Frank Cramer has been spending
the Summer in Europe.
*70—A book on “The Indians of To-
day,” by George Bird Grinnell, will
shortly come from the press of Herbert
S. Stone & Co., Chicago. , 3
’71—>-Ftenry.. Baldwin, 237. East. 77th
St., «New... York Gity;. class. secretary;
desires the addresses of the following
non-graduate members of the Class of
Seventy-One: John C. Benton, C. L.
Bodurtha, Joseph DeForest, James F.
Littlefield, Frank Richardson, Frank
Sanborn. Edwin Pulsifer, Henry  T.
West. The address is also desired of
John S$. Sanborn, graduate.
*71—The Commencement records of
different institutions last June showed
that the children of Seventy-One ac-
_ quitted themselves well. E. F. Sweet’s
son took the DeForest at Yale; A. W.
Cooper’s elder son divided a Greek frrize
at Wesleyan; A. W. Curtis’s daughters
were valedictorian and salutatorian of
their class at the Spencer (Mass.) High
School; Charles Lyman’s daughter, al-
though the youngest in her class at
school, led it and had the highest per-
centage of any young lady in the school.
In seven studies out of ten in which the
class was examined she stood first,
Mr. Beemer’s son led his class in one of
the New York High Schools and R. E.
Williams’ son graduated with honor at
the Institute of Technology, Boston.
Ex-’71—Mr. Farrington is a licensed
preacher of the Baptist denomination,
but continues to practice medicine.
*"72-James Oakey has a daughter in
the Junior class at Carleton College,
Northfield, Minn.
’*72—A Allerton Murch, rector Christ
Church, Salmon Falls, N. H., has re-
cently published a small volume of 154
pages, “The Story of the Prayer Book.”
George W. Jacobs & Co., Philadelphia.
*72——H,, W. Cady has* charge of the
Washington (D. C.) office of Steuart &
Steuart, attorneys at law, of 25 Pine St.,
New York, and Washington Loan &
Trust Co. Building, Washington, Coun-
sellors in Patent. and Trade Mark
Causes. Mr. Cady was an examiner in
the U. S. Patent Office from 1875 to
1887, and has been in practice outside
ever since. i
’76—Charles L. Bartlett and Frederick
Sprague, ’87, are respectively President
and Secretary of the new Orangeine
Chemical Company of Chicago.
’77_Arthur Reed Kimball of Water-
bury read a paper before the American
Social Science Association at Saratoga
this month on “The Invasion of the
Newspaper of Various Fields,—How it
Educates People without their Know-
ing it.”
’78—James. M. Lamberton has re-
signed his position as Master in St.
Paul’s School, Concord, N. H., and has
reopened his law office at his former ad- .
dress, No. 216 Market St., Harrisburg,
Pa:
’*79—In the absence of Brigadier-Gen-
eral Russell. Frost, ’77, Colonel L. B.
Burpee is acting as Brigadier-General
of the troops in Connecticut.
*79—Rev. Edward M. Noyes assisted
at the recent installation of Rev. Alex-
ander Milne as pastor of the Pilgrim
Congregational Church of Duluth.
’83—Dr. Samuel B. Childs, who went
to Denver, Colorado, for his health, has
located there permanently.
’°84 S—A girl was born to Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Sargent of New Haven.
’86—The September number of Har-
per's Magazine contains a poem entitled
“Tsrafel,” by. Charlton M. Lewis.
’86—George E. Eliot, Jr., has been
apopinted to succeed Dr. Dwight Hol-
brook as principal of the Morgan School
at Clinton, Conn:
’°87—George G. Haven, Jr., returned
from an extended trip in Europe, Sep-
tember 27, arriving in New York on
board. the Teutonic.
’*88—William:D. Washburn has just
returned to Minneapolis from an ex-
tended trip abroad.
’°88—Bernard C. Steiner has formed a
partnership for the practice of law in
Baltimore City with George C. Morri-
son and Charles B. Penrose, under the
firm name of Morrison, Steiner & Pen-
rose.
788:S.—_R. oo M.- Wilcox, -fr., “who for
ten years has been an instructor in Civil
Engineering at Lehigh University, has
opened an office in Middletown, Conn.
’791—Dr. Vertner Kenerson has re-
turned from his service in the United
States army and has resumed his medi-
cal practice at Buffalo, N. Y.
*91-—Norman McClintock, who was
formerly engaged in the gas engine
business in Canton, Ohio, is now with
an automobile firm at his horne in Pitts-
burg; Pa.
‘or S.—Thomas. C: 8B. Snell “has: been
appointed First Lieutenant and Com-
manding Officer of the First Section,
Sional: Corps; G. No G:
’92—_I. W. Riley began work this year
at St:--Patl’s. School; Concerd, IN. i.
’92—A daughter was born recently to
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Franklin at Lan-
caster, Penn.
’92— William B. Wright, Jr., is in the
Buffalo Hospital recovering from an
operation for appendicitis.
’°92 M.A.—Dr. James HH. “Breasted;
Professor of Egyptology in the Univer-
sity of Chicago and Secretary of the
Chicago Society for Egyptian Research,
will spend the next year in study
abroad. He goes for further study of
the literature and language of the an-
‘cient peoples of the Nile Valley and to
assist a body of German scholars in
compiling a new lexicon of the Egyptian
language. His study of Egyptology was
begun as.a graduate student of Yale in
1801. :
ex-’92—Dr. and Mrs. M. J. Synnott
of Little Falls, New Jersey, are on a va-
cation trip to Saratoga, Hotel Cham-
plain, Montreal and Quebec.
’°93—Miss Mary C. Lewis of Wood-
bridge and Joseph Anderson, Jr., of
Waterbury, were married at Bridgeport,
September 12.
’93—J. D. Warnock has resigned his
position at Cheshire Academy, Cheshire,
Conn., and has accepted one at the Hill
School, Pottstown, Pa.
‘their daughter,
’93—Charles: D. Jones has returned
from a trip around the world for his
health with John M. Ferguson, 94, and
has renewed his practice of law in Cin-
cinnati, Ohio. :
794A. W. Elting has entered upon
the practice of medicine in Albany, N. Y.
794 —W. R. Clarke will study at Har-
vard this year in the Divinity School
and also in the Graduate School.
’94—The marriage of Miss
Glover, daughter of Mr.
Anne
and Mrs.
Henry Jared Beebe, to Warwick James
Price, will take place Wednesday even-
ing, Oct. 11, at Springfield, Mass.
’94 S.—F rederick Z. Brown has re-
cently received a position in the office of
the Gerard Life Insurance Company in
Philadelphia, Pa. :
93 S.—Louis W. Hill has been elected
Superintendent of the Easton Minnesota
Railroad, left vacant by the retirement
of J. N. Hill, ’93, from this office.
794 S.—Jerome 5S. Chaffee, who en-
tered the Volunteer Navy on July arst,
1898, and who during service was on
board the Monadnock and Boston, has
resigned his position as Assistant Sur-
geon in the Navy.
’95—A daughter was born i Mr. and
Mrs. Cornelis Vanderbilt, Jr., Septem- _
ber 25.
’95—Philip S. Evans has become In-
tercollegiate Secretary of the Baltimore
VY MGA:
’95—A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mrs. ‘Raymond 5. White, Sept = at >
Babylon, 1. 7.
’95—The engagement is announced of
Miss Edith Corwin of Hartford, to
Emerson G. Taylor.
’°95 and ’97 L.S.—The engagement of
Miss Mildred L. Stoughton, daughter of
Mrs. A. R. Stoughton of New Haven,
to Benjamin I. Spock, has been an-
nounced.
*95—Mr. and Mrs. - Charles Lester
Woodbridge announce the marriage of
Elizabeth, to Charles
Gould Morris, Wednesday, Sept. 27, at
50 Strong Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
’95—F. R. Galacar has accepted the
appointment as Supervising Agent and
Loss Adjuster for New England of the
Union Fire Assurance Society of Lon-
don. His address is 35 Kilby St., Bos-
ton, Mass.
795 S.—A son was born to Mr. and
Mrs. Henry P. Coburn, July 23.
95 S.—Walter L. Mitchell, who was
engaged at the Agricultural Experiment
Station in New Haven last year, has ac-
cepted the position of head chemist in
the Scovill Manufacturing Company of
Waterbury, Conn. |
95 L.S.—Benedict M. Holden, who
has been practicing law in the vicinity
of Hartford since graduation, has en-
tered the United States Infantry and is
stationed at Houston, Texas. Mr. Hol-
den was a Corporal in Company E, First
Regiment C. N. G., during the Spnanish-
American War.
795 T.S.—A son was born to Mr. and
Mrs.- George S. Godard, Wednesday,
August 9. 3
*96—Charles L. Fincke, Jr., has been
appointed resident physician of the
Brooklyn City Hospital.
’96—George S. Buck has opened an
office at 496 Ellicott Square Building,
eee N. Y., for the general practice
of law.
°96—Richard J. Goodman has opened
an office for the general practice of
law at 73 First National Bank Building,
50 State St., Hartford, Conn.
’96—Mrs. Edgar S. Auchincloss,
mother of Edgar S. Auchincloss, ’96,
and H. S. Auchincloss, 1901, died Sep-
tember 3, at her home in New York
City.
’96—Thomas A. Tracy, who has been
local Editor and Manager of the Bristol
Herald for the past six months, has
accepted a position as a proof reader on
the Chicago Inter-Ocean.
°96—At the recent primaries in New
York, Fenry S. Johnston and E. Hawes
were candidates on one of the Republi-
can tickets, in the XXVIIth Assembly
District, as delegates to the Assembly
District Convention. |
Derbies
and Derbies
They can be of several different
Styles this year and still be
in good style. Between the
Henry Heath and the Victor
~ Jay & Company’s hats of
London and our own makes,
we have some variety and
rauch quality.
CHASE & CO..,
NEW HAVEN HOUSE BLOCK.
Any furnishing gooas can go
by mail wherever the Alamni
Weekly goes.
ex-'96 S.—C. A. Worrall has accepted
a position as electrical engineer in
Havana, Cuba.
’96. S.—Lee DeForest is with
Western Electric Co. of Chicago.
96 S.—Otto H. Miller has accepted a
position as traveling man for Lamprecht
‘Bros.; bankers, of Cleveland, O.
’97—Lucius G. Fisher, Jr., is now with
Wheeler, Fisher & Co., Fisher Building;
Chicago, Ill.
’97—The engagement is announced of
Miss Palmer, of Omaha, Neb., to Her-
man D, Kountze. 3
’97—Albert E. Kent spent the Sum-
mer studying in Germany and traveling
on the continent.
’97—Wendell P. Keeler sailed for
Europe, September 30th, and will spend
the year in study at Oxford University.
’97—-C. S. Leavenworth is under five
years contract with the Chinese Govern-
ment as Professor of History in Nan-
gang College, Shanghai. Mr. Leaven-
the
worth sailed from San Francisco, July
26.
’97—At. the recent primaries in New
York, Frank Brookfield was one of the
candidates on the regular Republican
ticket, in the XXVIIth Assembly Dis-
trict, for delegates to the Assembly Dis-
trict Convention.
’97—The wedding of Miss Lily Dun-
can Voorhies, of Lexington, Ky., and
Arthur Joy Draper, was celebrated at
Christ Church Cathedral, Lexington, on
Thursday, September 7. Clare H.
Draper, 1900, a brother of the groom,
acted as best man, and among the ushers
were R..S. Brewster, G. P. Day, L. G.
Fisher, Jr., Henry Ledyard, and F. T.
Murphy, all of Ninety-Seven. Mr. and
Mrs. Draper will take a house at Cam-
bridge, Mass., for the coming Winter,
Mr. Draper having one year more of
- study in the Harvard Law School.
’97 S—A_ son was born to Mr. and
Mrs. John B. Rose, Sept. 21, at their
home in Newburgh, N. Y. ©
’°97 S—Winsor P. French was ad-
mitted to the bar, July 6, and is prac-
ticing law under the firm name of Win-
sor B. French & Son, at Saratoga
Springs, N. Y.
’97 S.—Hugh M. North, Jr., Chair:
man of the Lancaster County delegation,
was the Secretary of the Democratic
State Convention held at Harrisburg,
Penn., this year.
798 S.—M. B. Yung is a Sophomore
in the Columbia School of Mines.
’*98—E.. F. Bell will study at the Hart-
ford Theological Seminary this year.
’98—Job E. Johnson has received the
degree of M.A. from Harvard for work
in the Classics.
’98—The engagement is announced of
Miss Edith Curtis of Hartford to
Howard S. Borden.
ave you your FALL KNOX yet?