YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY — Junior Appointments. The Junior appointments of the Class of 1901 were announced last Saturday and show a loss of 62 from the appoint- ments of 1900. The decrease is due not to a falling off in scholarship, but to a difference in the size of the classes amounting to 60 members. The ap- pointments follow: | . Philosophical Orations—Arthur Dwight Allen of Louisville, Ky.; Henry Her- bert Babcock of Watertown, N. Y.; John Dutton Bogart of New York City; Francis Gordon Brown. Jr., of Flush- ing, Y.; Lacey “Davis* Caskey «of Dresden, Germany; John Bullard Chamberlain of Unionville, Conn.; Charles Mills DeForest of New Haven, Conn.; Eldridge Lyon Eliason Chestertown, Md.; Robert Earle Brough- ton Hall of New Haven, Conn.; Harold Storrs Hetrick of Norwich, Conn.; Paul Bowen Alden Johnson of Wash- ington, D. C.; William Mills Maltbie of Granby, Conn.; Russell Hubbard Nevins of Stamford, Conn.; Frank Mc- Donnell Camp Robertson of New York City; Ralph Earnest Rogers of Roches- ter, N. Y.; Howard Frank Taylor of New Haven, Conn.; Edwin Hotchkiss Tuttle of New Haven, Conn.; William Howe Warren of Holden, Mass.; Oliver Martin Wiard of New Britain, Conn. ; Alfred Parks Wright of New Haven, Conn.; Arthur Jewitt Young of Bruns- wick, Me. High Orations—Henry Hall Christian of Minneapolis, Minn.; Oliver Hall Eddy of Evanston, Ill.; John William Joy of Waterbury, Conn.; Charles Ed- sar Rogers, Jr., of Brooklyn, N. Y.; Thomas Wright Russell, Jr., of Hart- ford, Conn.; Frederick Richard Ryan of New Haven, Conn.; Malvern Hall Tillitt of Elizabeth City, N..C.; Harry Edwin Ward of Clinton, Conn.; Albert Micajah Webb of Bell Buckle, Tenn.; Wilhelmus David Allen. Westfall of Montague, N. J. Orations—E. Adams, J. Allen, Ander- son, A. Chamberlain, Christie, E. Curtis, Fiske, Gleason, Griffiths, Harris, Healy, Kingsley, Lovell, Meeks, G. Smith, ~ Tolles, Vaile,, Wells, C. White, Wyler. Dissertations—C. Allen, Cahn, Gard- ner, Hamilton, Killen, King, Pearce. First Disputes—Auchincloss, E. HH. Brown, Butler, Crawford, Downs, Haus- berg, Holmes, McFadon Makepeace, Marckwald, Schulz, Serles, Walcott, E. Wilson, C. Woolsey. Second Disputes—Arlt, Bradstreet, Bronson, Cady, Carver, Chandler, S. : Clapp, G. Clark, Colton, Donnelly, Eise- man, Fletcher, Flint, W. D. Howe, Mc- Cord, Morgan, Mott, Mulford, Resor, Skiff, Stillman, C. Thomas, EK. Thomp- son, Wear, Welch, Whaples. 6f = First Collaquies — Ames, Baldwin, Bonner, L. Brown, Carlisle, Clyde, H. Curtiss, Dupee, Edwards, Findley, Hop- pin, Hutchinson, F. Kellogg, Linden- berger, Linthicum, Manierre, F. Mason, Meyer, Mitchell, Mohr, Morris, Osborn, J. Parker, Scott, Shaw, R: V. Spencer, Terry, Tredway, L. Tuttle, Walsh, Waterman, O. White, Williams. Second Colloques—F. Adams, H. Brown, Catlin, Coxe, Dodson, Gilpat- rick, Gray, Hord, Hutchins, Jarvis, Leidigh, McCall, Noyes, Penny, T. Robertson, Scoville, Silverman, Struby, Taintor, A. Thomas, P. Thompson, Twichell, Twining, VanWicklen, Wat- tles. a 6, Deospolis Parva Antiquities, The Peabody Museum has recently received a very valuable collection of antiquities from the committee of the Egyptian Exploration Fund, which has been at work at Deospolis Parva, on the Upper Nile. This fund is made up of contributions from various countries and institutions, and the collection which has come to Yale is Connecticut’s portion due from the contributions of her peo- ple. The collection includes pre-historic relics and vases cut from different kinds of stone, dating from the time of the early dynasties. There are also orna- mented skulls of various species of animals which were used as bric-a-brac in the same period. a Se Sophomore Deacons. The election for Sophomore Deacons was held in Dwight Hall, Monday, October 16. The following nominations were made on the informal ballot: P. G. White, E. A. Stebbins, Frank H. Sincerbeaux, FE. L. Skinner, James Wright, W. F. Roberts, Mason Trow- bridge, Graham Brush, G. A. Dewey, Hugh Satterlee. The following were elected: Edwin Allen Stebbins of Rochester, N. Y.; Percy Gardiner White of Gardiner, Me.; Frank Huestis Sincerbeaux of Moravia, N. Y.; Edward Levi Skinner of Westfield, N. Y. Four Nines Out. Harvard has already had two weeks of Fall baseball practice and in the ex- ceptionally fine weather has accom- plished a great deal of good work which will make Spring improvement con- siderably more rapid. The squad is so large that it has been divided into four nines with substitutes and games The “Old Reliable Parker” Always in Evidence, At the Chamberlain Cartridge & Target Co.’s Tournament, held at Cleveland, Ohio, ine 14th and 15th, 1899, it won First and Sec form continuous hard work, is excelled by none. ond High Average in the AMATEUR Class, and First High Average in the EXPERT Class, with scores aS follow: 97.88% in AMATEUR Class and 90.4% in EXPERT Class. Fred Gilbert, with a Parker Gun, at Sioux City, Iowa, June 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th, shoot- ing at 910 targets scored, 97.3%. These Records show that the Parker Gun for close, hard shooting, and ability to per- SEND FOR CATALOGUE TO PARKER BROS., MERIDEN, CONN. New York Salesroom, 96 Chambers St. are played between these nines every day to give the men actual practice on the field. Captain Reid is much; pleased with the outlook for a very strong nine next Summer. OF HAMILTON PLACE 3 BOSTON. Best Line (Ta to | “Ao ute e St. Paul : Minneapolis ‘