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About Yale Alumni Magazine | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1899)
YALE ALUMNI WHEKLY cus 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, *40—Hon. C. F. Burnam was on the 7th of Nov., 1899, elected without op- position to a full term of four years in the Senate of Kentucky, for the 29th District. Mr. Burnam is a Republican. *50—Ex-President Martin Kellogg of the University of California is in Japan on his way around the world. ’590—In The Nation of October 26th, James M. Hubbard has a short sketch of “The Boer Government.” ’'590—Professor T. R. Lounsbury of Yale has written a satirical paper taking “A Philistine View of a Browning Play,” which will appear shortly in the Atlantic Monthly. ‘61—Anthony Higgins, ex-U. S. Sena- tor from Delaware, has resumed his residence at Wilmington, Del. ’66—Ex-Judge John M. Hall was on Saturday last elected President of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Company. He has held the ofice of Vice-President since 1893. ’67—Isaac J. Wild was re-elected Treasurer of the Men’s Club of the United Church, New Haven, at its an- nual meeting held Nov. 8. ’67—J. A. Cartwright has recently been elected to the office of Attorney for Davidson County, Tenn. He has also been elected to a position on the Board of Education of Nashville. ’68—At a recent meeting of the College Church of New Haven, Prof. H. P. Wright was elected to the Standing Committee. Ex-’70—The members of Seventy will be interested in the information that their classmate, Russell Adams Cate, who died during the vacation following Sophomore year, was a brother of the wife of President Dole of Hawaii. ’74—Hon. George M. Gunn has been elected President of the Milford Board oi Education. 74—John Seymour Wood was elected to membership in the Authors Club, New York, October 5. ‘76—President Hadley has an article on “Trusts: Their Formation and Con- trol” in the November number of Scrib- ners Magazine. "77 S.—The marriage of Miss Susan Willing, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed- ward S$. Willing of Philadelphia, to Frank C. Lawrance, Jr., took place in Trinity Church, Newport, November 2. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrance will spend the Winter in the south of France. '78—James Briggs McEwan has been re-elected a member of the New York Assembly from Albany County. ‘79—Colonel Lucien F. Burpee was elected President of the Officers’ Asso- ciation of the Second Regiment, C. N. s at the annual meeting held Novem- er 3. '79—Rev. E. M. Noyes recently won for the third successive year the cham- pionship of the Newton Center Golf Club, and thereby became possessor of the handsome silver loving cup, which had to be won three times to be held permanently. The previous week, Mr. Noyes also won a similar cup represent- ing the championship of the city, which has five golf clubs within its limits whose members entered this competition. Mr. Wadsworth, of the victorious Har- vard team, was Mr. in the club finals. 81 S.—Edward Bailey has been made President of the Central Iron & Steel Company of Harrisburg, Pa., the posi- tion previously held by his father. °83—-Charles Seward Foote was the Republican nominee from Union County for the New York Assembly at the re- cent elections. ’88—A daughter was born N to Mr. and Mrs. E, M. Tillinghast.” 88 S.—Charles E. Curtis was re- elected Vice-President of the Men’s Round Table Conference Noyes’ opponent. Club of the United Church, New Haven, at its annual meeting held Nov. 8 ’89—Lewis S. Welch was re-elected President of the Men’s Club of the United Church, New Haven, at its an- nual meeting held Nov. 8. ’89 S.—James B. Bailey has been made Purchasing Agent for the Central Iron & Steel Co., of Harrisburg, Pa. *790—Charles P. Kellogg was elected Assistant Secretary of the National Prison Congress at a recent meeting held at Hartford. : ’90—Herbert Parsons has just been elected Alderman on the Republican and Citizen’s Union ticket, from the 25th District, Borough of Manhattan, New York City. Ex-’90 S.—N. S. Kaime has removed to Denver and is in businéss with his brother under the firm name of E. F. Kaime & Bro., real estate and mining brokers, 606 Boston Building. °79I—A son, Gordon North Estill, was born to Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Estill, Sep- tember 18. 7o1—J. G. Estill was leader of the in Mathe- matics, High School Section, at the re- cent meeting of the Connecticut State Teachers’ Association, and was also elected one of the Vice-Presidents of the Association at that time. *o1—A recent letter from S: C. Thomp- son, dated Johannesburg, South Africa, Sept. 19, said: “A peaceable settlement of disputed points between Great Bri- tain and the Transvaal is still hoped for, but I have no anxiety for my personal safety, in the event of war.” ‘91— The following, from the New York Observer, is the correct statement in regard to Mr. Moody, of whom infor- .mation contained in a recent alumnus note was incorrect: “Attention was called last week to the proposed change in the character of The Northfield Echoes, and the editorial management of W. R. Moody. It has since been decided to abandon the plan of issuing The Echoes as a monthly paper, and instead The Record of Chris- tian Work, beginning January, will be published at Northfield, as the author- ized organ of the many interests center- ing there and at the Bible Institute in Chicago. Special attention will be given in the magazine to the Northfield Exten- sion Movement, which has been insti- tuted to meet a long felt and steadily in- creasing demand for the wider dissemi- nation of the influence of the Northfield Conferences and Bible schools.” 91 S.—A daughter was born recently to Mr. and Mrs. Milton H. Robbins, Jr. °92—Henry B. McCormick has been elected President of the Board of Man- agers of the Harrisburg Hospital, Har- risburg, Pa. ’92—-F. J. Price has just been elected a member of the New York State As- sembly from the 12th District of Brook- lyn, on the Republican ticket. | ’°93—John H. Morgan has just been elected a member of the New York State Assembly from the 1st District of Brook- lyn, on the Republican ticket. 93—The marriage of Samuel Scoville, Jr., and Miss Katharine G. Trumbull, daughter of Rev. H. Clay Trumbull, of Philadelphia, took place at the Walnut Street Presbyterian Church of Phila- delphia, October 17. ’93—The marriage of Miss Florence Lavinia Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Brown, of Brooklyn, N. Y., to William Lewis Newton, oc- curred October 19, at the Church of the Pilgrims in Brooklyn. Albert J. Shaw, 93, acted as best man, and John H. Morgan, ’93; Frederick R. Dwight, and Charles L. Fincke, ’96, were among the ushers. _ 93 S.—The engagement is announced of Miss Chapin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Chapin of Springfield, Mass., to Edward Olin Smith. Ex-’93 S—Samuel C. Pierce is in the mining brokerage business with Tucker, Ballard & Shepard, Cripple Creek, Col. ‘94—James R. Trowbridge’s present address is Box 621, Colorado Springs, Col. 904 S.—C. W. Hoyt is Secretary of The Hoyt Beef and Produce Company of New Haven. 94 S.—M. C. Lilley has recently been elected Treasurer of The Kinnear Calk Company, Columbus, O. 94 S—William S. Pope, Jr., is with the American Arithmometer Co., with offices in the Glob Democrat Building, 6th and Pine Streets, St. Louis, Mo. 04 S.—F. E. Olmsted has spent the past year in various parts of Germany, pursuing the study of Forestry; Novem- ber 9, he sails from Marseilles to Bom- bay, India, where his intention is to spend three or four months in the North- west Provinces for study of the Indian Forestry System as carried on by the British Government. He returns next Spring to the United States. His ad- dress is Care Union Bank of London ed, 2 SP risicess St; London, Hi-C:. Eng. 94 L.S.—James FE. O’Connor’s pres- ent address is 18 Exchange Building, New Haven, Conn. | ’°95—Charles S. Thurston has opened an office for the general practice of the law at 53 Devonshire St., Boston, Mass. 95 S.—The marriage of Miss Verona Mitchell Spencer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Spencer, to James Dawson Layng, took place at St. Thomas’s Protestant Episcopal Church in’ New York, October 29. . °96—Walter P. Paret has entered the office of Parkins & Jackson, lawyers, 115 Broadway, New York. ’°96—-H. S. Johnston is practising in the law office of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company, New York City. ’96—George X. McLanahan has ac- cepted a position with Curtis, Mallett, Prevost & Colt, 30 Broad St., New York. ’96—Charles W. Miller was the Demo- cratic nominee for Representative in the Kentucky Legislature, for the 73d Dis- trict. . ’o7—J]. Robert McNeille is Private Secretary to the President of The Inter- national Paper Co. of New York City. ’°97—C. R. Hemenway, of Manchester, Vermont, is teaching English and Mathe- matics at Oahu College, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. ’97—Frederick R. Lehlbach has left the office of Riker & Riker, and has opened law offices at 701-705 Prudential Building, Newark, N. J. ’97 S.—The address of A. R. Town- send until next June will be Care of Union Plant, American Smelting and Refining Co., Leadville, Col. ’97—Mr. and Mrs. William G. Cooke have just returned from their wedding trip to England and will make their _home for the present in Oakland, Cali- fornia. ’97 and ’oo L. S.—W. H. H. Hewitt has entered into a law partnership under the firm name of Newton, Church & Hewitt, of New Haven, as junior mem- ber of the firm. ’97—Albert P. Tuller has changed his address from Bloomfield, Conn., to 7 Clinton Street, Morristown, N. J., where he is teaching French, German and Science at the Morris Academy. ’97 S.—The marriage of Harriet Sawin Bigelow, daughter of Mr. | Elliot Bigelow of Brooklyn Heights, Brooklyn, N. Y., and Richard Irving Neithercut, took place November 8, at the First Presbyterian Church, Brook- lyn, Rev. L. Mason Clarke officiating. Philip Worcester Bill, ’97S., was the best man, and among the ushers were: Samuel F. Beardsley, ’95; Robert H. Gould, ’98, and Morris U. Ely, ’08. 07.1.5. and Oo Pan’) Dr. Charles S. Macfarland has an article in the cur- rent Independent, on “Theological Con- trasts in England and America,” and an illustrated article on President Hadley’s Inauguration, in the Congregationalist. Ex-’97—-A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Cooke, August 25. *98—A’ daughter was born, October 21, to Mr. and Mrs. John R. Livermore. ‘98—J. H. Hart has been appointed Instructor in Physics in Yale University. *98—Leeds Johnson is with the firm of R. J. Kimball & Co., brokers and bankers, New York City. ’98—Zenas M. Briggs is in the machine shop of the Calumet & Hecla R. R. Address, 6 Willow Ave., Calumet, Mich. ’98—The engagement of Miss Florence Judd Anderson Smith, of Brooklyn, N. Y., to Fred Macdonald Gilbert is .an- nounced. 798 S.—Albert C. Smith is with the American Fire Engine Co., of Seneca Peis. NY. 98 S.—Richard Krementz is working © in the drafting department of Krementz & Company, Newark, N. J. 98 L.S.—W. L. Burdick, Ph.D., is Professor of Criminal Law in the Uni- versity of Kansas. 98 M.S.—Dr. A. E. Cobb is located at Falls Village, Conn. | and Mrs. et ee ‘90—W. A. Barstow will spend the Winter abroad. ’99-—The address of C. S. Shippen is Anacostia, D. C. °99—John Bicknell has entered the Yale Divinity School. ’99—-L. D. Armstrong is studying at the Columbia Law School. ’99—J. W. Greene, Jr., is a student in the New York Law School. ’99—MaclIntosh Kellogg is studying at the New York Law School. ’99—The address of C. A. Powers is 1621 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, O. ’99—Huntington Mason will spend the Winter in Newport and Washington, tutoring. ’99—George P. Hutchins sailed for Germany, Sept. 30, expecting to return in about six weeks. ‘990—G. L. Ward is studying law in Washington. Address, 517 Sixth Street, W. W. Washington, D. C. ’99-—Ord Preston will sail from Eng- land, November Io, on a trip around the world. He will be gone a year. ’o99—F. B. Fallon is studying law in Washington, D. C. Address, 517 Sixth Street, W. W. Washington, D. C. *99—Howard Laurence O’Fallon is in the Mechanics’ Bank of St. Louis. His present address is 3606 Delinai Ave. ’99 —-G. H. Smith is employed with the Lyman D. Morse Advertising Agency, 38 Park Row, New York City. ’990-—D. M. Boyd is “night car ac- countant” in the General Yard Master’s office of the Delaware, Lackawanna &. Western R. R. Co., at Hoboken. Ad- Ny 333 Hudson Street, Hoboken, i ’99—Edward T. Noble is studying law in the New York Law School and is also working in the law firm of Dillon & Hubbard. His address is either 42 Washington Square, N. Y., or 195 Broadway. ’*90 S.J. T. Walker is making a trip around the world. : 799 S.—O. A. Day is studying at the Yale Law School. ’99 S.—The address of H. S. Clark is 1231 Grand Ave., Denver. Col. 99 S.—Richard F. Grant is studying at the New York Law School. ’99 S.—H. F. Van Every is a student in the New York Law School. ’99 S.—J. C. Greenleaf is studying architecture at Columbia University. °99 S.—E. M. Eddy is in the. lumber business with his father at Bay City, Mich. 799 S.A. H. Durston is with the Howlett Gun Company of Syracuse, ea °99 S— Walter R. Clark is with the General Electric Co. of Schenectady, iY, ’99 S.—W.. W.. Knight and E. A. Mc- Cullough are spending the Winter in Taiss. ‘00 5.—-G. J. W. labee, fr., of Den- ver is in charge of a mine at Central City, Col. ’99 S.—Lee Wilson Dodd is studying law at the New York Law School, New York City. ’99 S.—The address of P. F. Dashiell is “The Linden,” Germantown, Phila- delphia, Pa. ex-’99 S.—George Peavy is employed with the Peavy Company of Muinne- apolis, Minn. ’°99 S.—B. F. Tritch is employed with the Tritch Hardware Company of Den- ver, Colorado. [Continued on 80th page.| ae 4p \E? : pn 4.THE prince oF ™ BENSON & HEDGES, ImMpor?HRs OF HavawACiGars anb Eoxverian CiGARETTES. HAVANA (CUBA ) CAIRO (EGYPT ) 13 OLD BOND ST. LONDON,W. DEPOTS AT OXFORD, CAMBRIDGE, BRIGHTON, AND 288 FIFTIL AVENUE, NEW YORK. (BETWEEN HOLLAND HOUSE & WALDORF-ASTORIA. } 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 Engiish Universities. 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