Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, November 08, 1899, Page 3, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    wr AST SET UA TUTTI T OO SAT eae
67
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 peér-
sonals,
_’53—Rev. Kinsley Twining has an ar-
ticle on “The Inauguration at Yale” in
the current number of The Independent.
’53—Henry C. Robinson was elected a
Director of the New England Railroad
Company at the annual meeting held
in Hartford, October 26.
*50—Rev. Henry Upson attended the
Inauguration of President Hadley. In
connection with this fact, it is worth
noting that five representatives of his
school, Upson Seminary of New Pres-
ton, Conn., are at pres:nt in Yale. These
include a Senior and a Junior in the
Academic class and a Senior and two
Juniors in the Law Department.
’60—Rev. Henry E. Hart has resigned
his position as pastor of the Congrega-
tional Church of Franklin, Mass., to
take effect April Ist, 1900. Mr. Hart
has held the pastorship since 1884.
°64—Rev. Joseph Lanman, Ph.D., has
taken charge of the Presbyterian Church
in St. James, Minneapolis.
°64—Rev. Prof. Henry M. Whitney,
for many years at Beloit College, has
been recently appointed Librarian of the
Blackstone Memorial Library at Bran-
ford, Conn.
’°66—John M. Hall was elected a Di-
rector of the New England Railroad
Company at the annual meeting held in
Hartford, on October 26.
*732Rev. H. M. Denslow was a dele-
gate from Indiana at the recent meeting
in St. Louis, of the Missionary Council
of the Episcopal Church.
*74—-Edward D. Robbins was elected
a Director of the New England Rail-
road Company at the annual meeting
held in Hartford, October 26. 3
*75—A. Y. Smith has been nominated
for Registrar in Pittsburg, Pa.
’80—The Protestant Episcopal House
of Bishops, at their recent Council in
St. Louis, elected Rev. Sidney Catlin
Partridge as Missionary Bishop of that
Church, in Japan.
’82—Seymour C. Loomis was elected
President of the New Haven Orphan
Asylum at the annual meeting on Octo-
ber 26.
’°83—-Austin Lord Bowman is a Civil
and Consulting Engineer at 71 Broad-
way, New York.
°84—James F. Scott, M.D., has re-
turned from the Klondike and expects
to resume practice in Washington. He
came down the Yukon River alone in
a boat a distance of 1,500 miles, the trip
taking 47 days.
"85 T.S.—Rev. Cyrus D. Harp has re-
signed the pastorate of the Second Con-
geregational Church, Baltimore and has
accepted a call to Providence, R. I.
°87 S—George H. Wood was ap-
pointed July 5th, 1808, a First Lieuten-
ant in the 28th Regiment, U. S. V., or-
ganized at. Camp Meade, Pa., and is
now at The Presidio, San Francisco,
en route to Manila.
*88—H. W. Boies is Secretary and
General Manager. of Cornell Machine
Co., Chicago, manufacturers of special
machinery and gas engines.
’°88—Harry W. McCauley has returned
from Manila, where he served with the
First Colorado Volunteers. He is now
associated with The Denver Republican.
*88—The marriage of Miss Martha
Elizabeth Moffatt, daughter of Mr.
Samuel Moffatt, of Hudson, N. Y., to
Henry B. Brownell, took place in Christ
Church, Hudson, October 26.
’88 S.—Henry H. Ellis is stationed at
Cavite, Philippine Is'ands, in charge of
the United States stores.
’°89—A daughter was born November
3, to Mr. and Mrs, Lewis S. Welch.
°89 S.—Mr. and Mrs. Lewis B. Gawtry
sailed for Europe on the steamship St.
Louis, from New York, November 1,
on their wedding trip.
89 S.—T. R. Field was recently elected
Assistant Cashier of The Colorado
National Bank of Denver. George B.
Berger, ’88S., is cashier.
’89 L.S.—Edward G. Buckland was
elected a Director of the New England
Railroad Company at the annual meet-
ing held in Hartford on October 26.
’90—Joseph Lafon Winchell has been
placed in charge of the public school
of Glendale, Oregon.
’°90 S.—Philip Allen has left the Grand
Rapids office of the Lake Shore and
Michigan Southern Railroad and is now
Superintendent of the same company
at Youngstown, N. Y.
’90 T.S.— Rev. Claudius M. Severance
has accepted a call as pastor of the
Second Congregational Church, Balti-
more.
’91—Albert Lee, who was the editor
of Harper's Round Table, the publica-
tion of which has recently ceased, has
taken a position temporarily on the edi-
torial staff of McClure’s Magazine.
’91—William R. Moody has resigned
the editorship of The Record of Chris-
tian Work and will assume the editorial
management of the Northfield Echoes,
which will hereafter appear every month,
and be the regular organ for the work
at Northfield, Chicago and the North-
field Extension improvements.
791 S—A daughter was born Octo-
ber 7, 1899, to Mr. and Mrs. Frank H.
Funk of Bloomington, III.
’92—Rey. Albert L. Whittaker recently
accepted the pastorship of the Episco-
pal Church in Clinton, Mo.
’92 The engagement of Miss Ellen V.
Hown of Albany, N. Y., to Lewis R.
Parker, has been announced.
’92—James E. Wheeler was elected
Vice-President of the New Haven Or-
phan Asylum at the annual meeting,
October 26.
’92—-Alfred H. Swayne has resigned
his position of Assistant Manager of the
North American Trust Company’s
branch in Havana; Cuba, to become
Secretary of the Bankers’ Trust Com-
pany, which will commence business in
New York City on Nov. 1, 1899.
’93—The marriage of Miss Juliette
Winston Graham, daughter of Mrs. E.
H. Graham of Chicago, to H. L. Bixby,
will take place November 15.
’92 L.S.—George P. Steele has re-
turned from New Haven. He was the
delegate from Colorado at the inaugura-
tion of President Hadley.
93 S.—Phelps B. Hoyt was recently
elected Secretary of the Western Golf
Association.
793 S. and ’96M.S.—Dr. Samuel M.
Hammond has been elected a member
of the New Haven County Medical As-
sociation.
°94—George F. Eaton was married to
Miss Julia Henrietta Hammer, on Tues-
day, October 24th, at Branford, Conn.
’94—On Wednesday October 25th, oc-
curred the marriage of Origen S. Sey-
mour to Miss Frances Bolton Lord, at
ae pve Church, Far Rockaway, Long
sland.
’94—_W. E. Saunders has resigned his
position in the Michigan Military Acad-
emy and has taken charge of the Science
Department of the Detroit University
School, Detroit, Mich.
’94—James A. Hawes has recently left
Evarts, Choate & Beaman, where he has
been since graduation, and has formed
a partnership with Arthur C. Hume,
’92, with law offices at 18 Wall St., New
York City.
’*94—Dr. Harry W. Dunning and J.
C. Sawyer have formed a partnership
for the arrangement of Foreign Tours,
with offices in the Congregational House,
Boston. Dr. Dunning will personall-
conduct a tour through Egypt and the
Holy Land the coming Spring.
’94—The marriage of Miss Edith L.
Huse to Alphonso B. Brown took place
October 3, in the First Church, Dover,
N. H. William S. Beard, ’94, was best -
man and Harry W. Dunning, ’94, was
one of the ushers.
Dr. and Mrs. Brown will live at 100
High Street, Newburyport, Mass.,
where Dr. Brown has recently settled for
the practice of medicine.
7904 S.—G. A. Berry is engaged in the
Bridge Department of the New York
Central Railroad.
794 S.+Ernest R. Folger has recently
joined the firm of J. A. Folger & Com-
pany, importers in San Francisco, Cal.
Ex-’94 S.—V. B. Cole has entered the
employ of the American Trading Com-
pany, 100 William Street, New York
ity.
’95—George Dwight Kellogg is in
Rome for the Winter at the American
School of Classical Studies.
’95—The engagement of Miss Antoin-
ette Montgomery of Portland, Ore., to
Lewis F. Frissell, has been announced.
’95—Arthur Bumstead is pursuing
graduate studies at Yale in the Depart-
ment of Semitic Languages and Bibli-
cal Literature.
95 S.—The engagement of Miss Ana-
bel Ward of Evanston, Ill., to Lawrence
N. DeGolyer, has been announced.
05 5. eernest ~G.  Schurip “or “tie
Union Bridge Company, Athens, Pa.,
has returned to New Haven because of
the outbreak of yellow fever at Key
West, where he was engaged. Address,
105 Hamilton Street, New Haven.
Ex-’95 S.—The engagement of Miss
Jean Chisholm, daughter of Mr. Wil-
liam Chisholm of Cleveland, O., and sis-
ter of A. S. Chisholm ’93, to Francis
E. Drake, has been announced.
95 L.5.—Benedict M. Holden is on his
way to the Philippines with the regiment
he joined a short time ago.
’95 L.S.—The eneagement’ of Miss
Henrietta G. Mansfield, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Edward F. Mansfield, to C.
FE. Pickett has been announced.
’96—John M. Berdan is studying in
Paris, France.
’96—A. C. Tilton has just entered the
Yale Graduate Department.
’96—Russell Colgate and T. F. Arch-
bald have just returned from a trip
around the world.
’96— Alexander G. Bentley has onened
an office for the general practice of law
s 47? Louisiana Avenue, Washington,
’96—George S. Buck was elected Re-
publican District Committeeman in
Buffalo, defeating the organization can-
didate.
’96— William H. Wadhams has formed
a law partnership for general practice
under the firm name of Latting & Wad-
hams, with offices at 34 Pine Street,
New York City.
’96—J. G. Henri De Sibour has just
returned from Paris, where he has been
studying architecture at the Ecolé des
Beaux Arts, and is going into an archi-
tect’s office in New York shortly.
’96—Murray M. Shoemaker grad-
uated from the Albany -Law School,
passed the New York State bar exami-
nations in June and has opened an office
for the practice of law at Saratoga
Springs, New York.
’96-—Lieutenant Ward Cheney is at
present Acting Captain of Company H,
Fourth Regiment, U. S. A. which is
now in the Philippines. Lieut. Cheney
has been recommended for a brevet by
Major Bubb, who is in command of the
Battalion of the Fourth Regiment. This
is for gallantry in action at the fight last
Summer near Imus, in which his batta-
lion of the Fourth Infantry met and held
in check an army of 2,000. When the
regiment was relieved. their loss was
four killed and twenty wounded, and
they had ammunition for only half an
hour more.
’97—-The engagement is announced of
Miss’ Boland, of Yonkers, N. Y., to
Worrall Wilson.
’97—Larkin G. Mead has taken a posi-
tion on the staff of the Commercial Ad-
vertiser of New York City.
’97—M. Lester Wallace is Associate
Principal of the Columbia Heights Pri-
vate Day School for Boys in Washing-
ton, 1. CG.
’97—H. L. M. Hoffman is Athletic
Director at the Montclair, N. J., High
School, and is also studying art in New
York City. :
’97 T.S.—Rev. Co S. Macfarland. fas
an article on Dr. John Brown as Ly-
man Beecher Lecturer in the Septem-
ber number of the Congregationalist.
’97 S.— Franklin J. Ely will spend the
Winter in California for his health.
’97 S.—B. C. Chamberlain is coaching
the Leland Stanford University Foot-
ball Team.
’97 S.—John E. Shaw is studying law
at the Universitv of Minnesota, Minne-
apolis, Minn.
’97 S.— J. W. best is employed with
the Smuggler Iron Mining Company of
Tellerside, Col.
’97 T.S.—Rev. A. M. Hall of New
Haven has received a unanimous call
to the First Congregational Church of
Springfield, Ill.
’*98—L. G. Pettee is teaching in the
Westminster School at Dobbs Ferry,
New York.
°98—E. C. Noyes is teachine in the
Manual Training High School of In-
dianapolis, Ind.
98 S.—G. C. Greenway is with Beck-
ley & Hopkins, brokers, 40 Broad St.,
New York City.
98—The engagement is announced of
Miss Josephine Coenen of New York
City, to Ezra D. Whitaker.
’98—The engagement is announced of
Miss Florence Judd Anderson, Smith
College ’98, to Fred M. Gilbert.
’°98-——J. E. Johnson received the de-
gree of M.A. from Harvard for work
in the Classics -‘t the last Commence-
ment.
’98—Morton L. Fearey, Otto Gold-
smith, Pierre R. Porter and George H.
Abbott are in the first year at the Har-
vard Law School.
°98—Edwin B. King is again teaching
at St. Marks’ School, Southborough,.
Mass., and has been elected Secretary |
of the Alumni Association of the School.
’98 S.—Claude H. Miller was a dele-
gate at the recent Republican Conven-
tion in Morris Co., New Jersey.
Ex~98S.—R. L. Platt is taking a
course in bookkeeping at the Packard
Business College, New York City.
’99—-W. M. Wheeler is studying at the
Harvard Law School.
7o99—R. U. Strong is studying at the
New York Law School.
’90-—C. -E. Jordan is im business in
New Haven with the Sargent Hardware
Co:
’99—G. L. Wakefield is studying at the
shims Law School. Address, 8 Conant
all.
’990—Henry Clifford Colwell is study-
ing law in Philadelphia. His‘address is
1306 Walnut St.
799-—-C. T. Lark is at the Yale Law
school. Addréss,:.*$27 Pierson = Hall,
New Haven, Conn.
’°99—The marriage of Miss Helen
Humpstone to Winchester Noyes, will
take place Tuesday afternoon, Dec. 5,
at five o'clock in the Emanuel Baptist
Church of Brooklyn). Mr.-M. UU: Ely
’98, will act as best man, while the ushers
will be Dr. Paul Humpstone, Mr. R.
P. -oomis, “0G; Mr > K.. Clark,/o0;
Mr. Guy Wellman, ’99, and Mr. Joseph
A. Farley, ’9o.
a Sr
YALE OBITUARIES.
FRANCIS TOWNSEND JARMAN, 748.
Francis Townsend Jarman, ’48, died
at his home in New Haven, Sunday,
Nov. 5, of heart failure. A further
obituary sketch will appear in the next
issue of the paper.
REV. CHARLES HARDING, 753.
News of the death of Rev. Charles
Harding, ’53, at Sholapoor, in India,
September 29, was received by the
American Board of Missions authorities,
October 27.
Rev. Charles Harding, the son of Ly-
man Harding and Sylvia (Smith) Hard-
ing was born in Whately, Mass., No-
vember 21, 1826. After graduating he
studied in the Union Theological Semi-
nary until 1856 and in the middle of
August of that year he sailed with his
wife for Bombay, India, as a Missionary
of the A. B. C. F. M. He arrived in
Bombay in January, 1857, and continued
in his missionary work there until 1862,
when he removed to Sholapoor, re-
maining there until his death. Mr.
Harding was twice married.
[Continued on 69th page.|
BENSON & HEDGES,
TMPORIMRS OF HavanACiGaks AN» Eoxerian CiGARETTES.
HAVANA (CUBA ) CAIRO (EGYPT )
13 OLD BOND ST. LONDON,W.
DEPOTS AT
OXFORD, CAMBRIDGE, BRIGHTON,
AND
288 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK.
( BETWEEN HOLLAND HOUSE & WALDORF-ASTORIA. }
ST ANDREWS,N.B.
Fine Havana Cigars as imported into England.
Choice Egyptian Cigarettes. English Tobaccos.
London-made Briars and Meerschaum Pipes, silver
and gold mounted, real amber, horn and vulcanite
mouthpieces as used in the English Universities.
Cigar, cigarette and match cases of exclusive
English design and manufacture.