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About Yale Alumni Magazine | View Entire Issue (Oct. 18, 1899)
36 Aen ATU MNT VV EO bors TY 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 glad to send postals to those who are in the way of getting, more or less often, Yale news and Yale per- sonals. ’41—D. G. Mitchell has just published a second volume of “American Lands and Letters.” ’53—Rev. Theodore J. Holmes is sup- plying the pulpit of the First Congrega- tional Church, Baltimore. ’53—-Theodore Bacon arrived in New York, October 11, on board the North German Lloyd steamship “Ems,” after an extended trip abroad. °61—John D. Tucker has been elected Vice-President of the Veteran Corps of the First Company, Guard of Connecticut. °66—Dr. S. Hartwell Chapman, who has been spending the Summer in Eu- rope, returned to New Haven recently. ’°66-—George C. Holt has been nomi- nated for one of the two Justices of the Supreme Court of New York on the Re- publican ticket. °67—Wallace Bruce has a poem _ en- titled “Old Ironsides to Olympia,” in Harper's Weekly of October Io. ’68—Hon. James M. Varnum has been ‘nominated on the Republican ticket as Surrogate of New York City. ’6go—Rev. Dr. Charles F. Canedy has been elected President of the Board of Education of New Rochelle, N. Y. ’69—-Eli Whitney and Thomas Hooker have just returned to New Haven from a four weeks hunting trip in the Moose- land region of Maine. _’74—-Daniel R. Howe has returned to Hartford, Conn., from a trip abroad. 73. L.S.—Hon. Hobart L. Hotchkiss has just returned from a hunting trip in the Maine woods. '73—Gardiner Greene has been ~ap- pointed by Gov. Lounsbury a member on a committee of six to revise the stat- utes of the State of Connecticut. ‘"74—The marriage of Miss Lucy P. Trowbridge to Francis G. Ingersoll took place at the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. William P. Trowbridge, in New Haven, October Io. "74. L.S. and ’79 T.S.—Rev. F. Stanley Root has written a book entitled “Tousled Hair,” which has recently come from the press of F. Tennyson Neeley, publisher, London, New York and Chicago. ex-’74 $.—Louis E. A. de Goll will be married to Miss Nannie Archer of Hart- ford County, Md., October 28. ex-'75 S.—George H. Beckwith has formed a law partnership with A. L. Smith. Address, 52 Produce Exchange Building, Toledo, Ohio. ’76—President A. T. Hadley attended the inauguration of Rev. Dr. George Harris as President of Amherst Col- lege, October 11. : ‘77 and 79 L.S.—James P. Andrews has been appointed by Gov. Lounsbury a member on a committee of six to re- vise the statutes of the State of. Con- necticut. ANYWHERE! That’s where you can buy a Knox | _ Hat. For if by any chance the hat sole at your home is not a Knox store, a line to the main _oftice, Fifth Avenue Hotel Build- ing, New York City, will start a sample your way. Governor’s Foot ’o7 S.—John A. Weekes, Jr., has been nominated on the Republican ticket for Assemblyman from the XXVth District for the New York Assembly. ’86-— William D. Murray will address the Baptist Young People’s Union of Boston, November 6, on “The Student Work of the Y. M. C. A.” ’871 and ’83 L.S.—Henry C. White has been appointed by Gov. Lounsbury a member on a committee of six to revise the statutes of the State of Connecticut. ’°83—Professor E. G. Bourne has an article in the North American Review for October, entitled “A Trained Colonial Civil Service.” ’83—-Cleveland L. Moffett has been traveling in the Holy Land during the Summer months collecting material for a lecture on the “Life of Christ,’ which he will deliver this Winter under the management of the S. S. McClure Lec- ture Bureau. The lecture will be illus- trated with colored photographs of the famous Tissot paintings. ’°87—Hon. Thomas H. Penney has been nominated by the Republicans for Dis- trict Attorney of Erie County. He is the present incumbent, having been ap- pointed by Gov. Roosevelt to fill an un- expired term. ’87_Dr. George Woodward is candi- date for member of the Common Coun- cil of Philadelphia from the 22d ward. At:the caucus on August 22, for nomina- tion, he received the votes of thirty- eight ott of thirty-nine delegates. The election will be held next month. ’88- Dr. Brownlee R. Ward, U. S. N., is traveling in Europe. : ’89—F rederick A. Scott, clerk of the Connecticut Senate, is recovering from his recent illness. He is at his home in Plymouth. : "So. 1.5—Reév. G. BP. Pease las ac- cepted a call to the pastorate of the Con- eregational Church at Plattsville, Conn., and will enter upon his duties on the last Sunday of October. —89-1.S,-Rev,. Dr. Harlan: Creelman, who resigned from Yale last year to take the chair of Old Testament Language and Literature in the Montreal (Can.) Congregational College, delivered his in- troductory address in his new position Monday, Oct. 2. *790—A. G. McClintock has gone to Canada for a month’s shooting trip. ’°90— Elihu M. Griswold has been ap- pointed Manager of the Griswold Mfg. Co; ot Forte; Pa: ’90—Herbert Parsons is the Republi- can and Citizens Union candidate for the New York Board of Alderman, in the 25th Assembly District. ’91 M.S.—The marriage of Miss Mar- garet McKiernan, daughter of Mrs. R. McKiernan of No. 16 Park Street, New Haven;, to: Dr. Harry A. Elcock,. will take place quietly, Tuesday, October 206. ‘90-—John ‘D. Jackson, Business Mana- ger of the New Haven Register, has ac- quired a controlling interest in the Wor- cester Gazette, and will handle the -af- fairs of that paper as well as of the Register. ‘90—George D. Yeomans is Demo- cratic candidate for District Attorney of Erie County (Buffalo) N. Y. His nom- ination was opposed by the regular or- ganization and he carried the convention by a close vote after a hard fight. ’91 S.—H. W. Gregory has been elected dds of the Probate Court of Norwalk, onn. ’92—-Frank J. Price has been nomi- nated for the Legislature in a Republi- can district of Brooklyn. °93—H. B. Barnes, Jr., has opened a law office at 156 Fifth Avenue, New York City> ’93—Miss A. Louise Rogers of Spring- field, Mass., and W. E. Breckenridge were married July 12. ’93—W. E. Breckenridge is instructor in mathematics in the Mixed Hig School, New York City. ae ’93—A. P. Lord has returned to Paris for the Winter. His address is II Villa Dupont, Rue Pergolese. ’93—-Charles J. Fay has entered the law office of Seward, Guthrie & Steele, 40 Wall Street, New York City. ’°93—The wedding of Miss Lucy Bowen of Springfield, Illinois, to Logan Hay, will take place in November. ’93— William H. Murphy is the trainer of the athletic teams of Leland Stan- ford University, California, this year. ’93—Lemuel A. Welles has been nomi- nated for Alderman of the XXVth As- &6 hat Yale Wants © That is the way lots of sentences begin nowadays, when wise dogs meet and creation is analyzed. We really think we know what Yale wants—in certain important directions. CHASE & Outfitters, New Haven House sembly District of New York City, on the Republican ticket. 793 S.—Mark Ewing has removed his law office from 411 Olive Street to Room 724 Rialto Building, S. E. cor. 4th and Olive Sts., St. Louis, Mo. Jf; ’93—George B. Spalding, isc member of the Senior class at Auburn Theological Seminary. His address is 93 North Street, Auburn, N. Y. ’°93——Dr.- Adrian -V. S. Lambert will spend this year in studying medicine in Vienna. _His address is care of J.-S. Morgan & Co., London, England. ’93—George G. Martin.has been ap- pointed Superintendent of the Arkansas and Texas District of the Long Dis- tance Telephone Company, and is located at Little Rock, Ark. ’93—-The wedding of Miss Florence Lavina Brown, daughter of Joseph Espes Brown, Esq., 01 Brooklyn, N.Y. to William L. Newton, will take place at the Church of the Pilgrims in Brooklyn, Thursday evening, October I9, at 8 o'clock. 93 S.—A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Hill at Elberon, N27 ¥.. August 27. ’93 S.—Harry P. Ritchie returned to St. Paul, Minn., October 11, with the Thirteenth Regiment, Minnesota Vol- unteers, which has just come back from Manila. 93 L.S.--David ~ T:::- McNamara “has been appointed Examiner of Records of New Haven, to succeed W. S. Thomp- son. ’94—Dr. Letchworth Smith sailed for Ireland July 15, for two months’ prac- tice in the Rotunda Hospital of Dublin. ’94—James A. Hawes was the candi- date of the Republicans of the 27th New York District, opposed to the Citizens’ Union, in the caucus for nomination for Alderman. In the final ballot, he re- ceived 18% votes to 66%4 for Alderman Oatman, who was thus renominated. ’94—The marriage of Miss Anne Glover Beebe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Beebe, to Warwick James Price, took place at the bride’s home in Springfield, Mass., October II. Among the ushers were W. R. Cal- lender, ’94, and R. W. Holmes, ’94. Mr. and Mrs. Price will live in New York. 794 S.—F. H. Lee is Superintendent of the W..: ly. Scott Goal Go;. Erie, Pa; 795 S.—A daughter was born August 20, to Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Waite of Columbus, O. ex-’94—The engagement is announced of Miss Lulu M. Kimberly, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Kimberly of Neenah, Es and Clinton J. Curtis of Redlands, al, 795—Percy W. Crane has become a member of the Association of the Bar of New York City. ’95—Edward C. Baldwin has resigned his position in the Duluth High School to accept an appointment as instructor in English in Adelbert College of Medi- cine. ’95 The engagement is announced of Miss Ethel Hill, daughter of Warren E. Hill of Brooklyn, N. Y., to Tracy Peck, Come and see if we dont. CO.. Jr. The marriage is to take place Octo- ber 25. ’95—Henry G. Miller, Jr., is practic- ing law in Chicago, with the firm of Dupee, Judah, Williard & Wolf, whose offices are in the Adams Exchange Building. ’95—Charles A. Kimball has given up his position in Fitchburg, Mass., be- cause of ill health and is now in Little- ton, Mass. This will be his address for the present. 795 S.—George W. Shaw is in business with his father in the firm of Shaw, Sassaman & Company, of Toledo, O. 95 S.—The New York Electrical World and Engineer of September 16 has the following: “Mr. George Har- vey Seward, in charge of the Publication Bureau of the Crocker-Wheeler Com- pany, at Ampere, N. J., has gone to Rochester, N. Y., to accept a position with the Bausch & Lomb Optical Com- pany, in the same line of work. In mak- ing this engagement, he re-enters the optical and photographic field. Mr. Seward is a graduate from the Sheffield Scientific School. This and his practi- cal experience has eminently fitted him for his special work. He was in the em- ploy of the Short Electrical Company, on street railway construction; with the Sargent Manufacturing Company, New Haven, Conn., and the Mergenthaler Linotype Company, of Brooklyn, N. Y., as draughtsman, and with J. B. Colt & Co., lantern manufacturers, and the F. A. Ringler Company, of this city, on advertising, engraving and photographic work. Mr. Seward has now engaged to work up the Bausch-Lomb catalogues, which are necessarily highly technical _and deal with every branch of optics and many physical lines. He will be asso- - ciated with Mr. L. B. Elliott, editor of the Journal of Applied Microscopy, is- sued from the publication department of the firm.” pe *°96—W. J. Starkweather, will leave Cleveland, Ohio, in October and spend the Winter in California. ’96 J. Frederick Eagle has taken up the practice of law with the firm of Har- mon & Mathewson, 40 Wall Street, New York City. ’96—The marriage of Miss Irene M. Gillette of New Haven to Dr. John L. Burnham, took place October 4, in New Haven. Dr. and Mrs. Burnham are liv- ing in Old Lyme, where Dr. Burnham has a large practice. 796 S.—Mr. and Mrs. John F. Have- meyer, who were married on October 5, will live at 251 West Ejighty-First St., New York City. _ ex-’96S.—C. A. Worrall is engaged in Havana, Cuba, as an electrical engi- neer. ’97—Frank M. Cobb is now practicing law in the office of Dickey, Brewer & McGowan, Cleveland, O. ’97—Carl H. Shultz is pursuing grad- uate studies in Chemistry at Johns Hop- kins. ‘o7—Arthur W. Ewell is pursuing graduate studies in Physics at the Johns Hopkins. ’97 S.—Harry B. Snell, Civil Engineer of the Hartford Street R. R., is very ill