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, 753 M.S.—Dr. and Mrs. Francis Bacon will sail for Europe, Saturday, February 24, to spend the month of March in Southern Europe. *54—Hon. Charles H. Leeds has been elected Secretary and Treasurer of the Stamford Yacht Club. °54—Hon. Henry E. Howland has re- cently been elected President of the D. K. E. Club of New York City. 65 S.—William W. Skiddy has left the City of Mexico, and was at a recent report located in British Honduras. °73—Schuyler Merritt has been elected a Director of the Stamford Yacht Club. *74—An article by C. C. Starkweather entitled ‘““Miss Epitome,” one of a series of social satires, appeared in the Criter- ion for February 3. "74 L.S.—Professor Philip V. N. Myers has handed in his resignation from the Academic Faculty of the Uni- versity of Cincinnati. °81—Mr. and Mrs. George E. Ide sailed January 27, for Genoa, on the North German Lloyd steamer, Kaiser Wilhelm II. ’°81—Sherman L. Whipple represented Yale at the annual banquet of the Trinity College Alumni Association of Boston, held recently. ’°82—William Phelps Eno has an article called “Suggestions for the Management of Carriages at Entertainments,” in the Rider and Drwer of February Io. ’°83—The marriage of Miss Alice Bowie Carter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Carter of Baltimore, to Dr. Arthur Lyman Fisk of New York City, took place February 14 in St. Paul’s Church, Baltimore. Among the ushers was Otis B. Fisk, ’o2. 84 L.S.—James T. Moran has been elected a Director of the National Fold- ing Box and Paper Company of New Haven. °84—Prof. John Wurts of the Yale Law School, who contracted a severe cold some weeks ago which later de- veloped into a slight attack of pneu- monia, is at this writing considered out of danger and will be able to take up his work in a short. time. _ ’85—John C. Bridgman has been tak- ing a trip through the middle west on business. ’87--Edward H. Norton, Jr., has ac- cepted a position as Superintendent of the Subscription Department of the G. & C. Merriam Co., publishers of the Webster Dictionary. Mr. Norton was formerly connected with the publishing house of J. A. Hill & Co., New York City. 87 S.—W. P. Ordway appeared in the recent cadet show in Boston entitled “Milade and the Musketeers,” and in company with Mr. Livermore, he lead the “One For All” march in the second act. He never failed to receive an en- core. Ordway was the only Yale man in the production. °88—Winthrop Turney has been ap- pointed a trustee of the Queens Bor- ough Library of New. York City by Mayor Van Wyck. 88 S.—J. E. Dockendorff is Manager — of the export department of William Campbell & Co., Manufacturers of paper hangings and decorative novelties, 425- 435 East 23d St., New York City. Te sails for Europe on business. 88 T.S.—The Rev. J. C.° Wilson will lecture before the Leonard Bacon Club on the University during this term. _ 89—Dr. Ferdinand Schwill has a criti- cism of “Cosmo de’ Medici,” by K. Dorothea Ewart, late scholar of Somer. ville College, Oxford, England, in the current number of the American His- torical Review, °89 S.—Dr. and Mrs. Pau] S. Robin- son have returned from a trip to Wash- ington and are again in New Haven. WATE ATU Meee So L.S.—Daniel A. McWilliams. will enter into a law partnership with ex- Judge David Callahan in New York. Judge Callahan has been on the City Court Bench of New Haven and has represented the City in the State Legis- lature. *90—Richard T. Percy has planned to give a series of organ recitals at the Marble Collegiate Church, New York, of which he is organist, during Febru- ary and March. 790 S.—W. F. Judson is Captain in the Twenty-seventh United States Vol- unteers, On duty in the Philippines. ’91—Charles P. Cooley has sailed for Bermuda to be gone two weeks. He is accompanied by Joseph B. Hall, ’92 M.S. 79tI—A new book “The Gentleman Pensioner, a Romance of the Year 1560,” by Albert Lee, is being published by D. Appleton & Co. - ’91—The engagement has been an- nounced of Miss Elizabeth B. Thorne of Auburn, N.°-Y:, to Matthias. C. Arnot, Jrovef Eimira, Ney ’91—The Rev. Clifford G. Twombley of Newton Highlands, Mass., has ac- cepted a call from St. Matthew’s Epis- copal Church, San Mateo, Cal. and will assume charge at once. *91—The marriage of Miss Carrie Bell Webster, daughter of Mr. Isaiah N. Webster of Salem, N. H., to Rev. Wil- liam Tenney Bartley, took place Febru- ary 6, 1900. ’91 Si—Henry Wick, Jr., Treasurer of the Fox Furnace Co. of Cleveland, Ohio, has gone abroad for a five months’ trip. ‘ot S.—P. J. Wurts has left the American Telephone and Telegraph Co., and is now with W. A. Hall, manu- facturer of chemicals, with office at 100 Broadway, New York. ’92—-Mr. and Mrs. George G. Knowles have returned from London, where Mr. Knowles has been living for the past five years, and are now in Wilmington, Del. ’92—Mrs. Pearl Marie D. Farwell was married to Roy Knight Farwell at St. Mark’s Church, Chicago, February 14, at half after noon. Mr. and Mrs. Far- well will be at home at 250 Stephenson street, Freeport, Ill., after June 1. ’92—Arthur S. Barnes is recovering from a very serious illness. He was operated on about the middle of Novem- ber for a desperate case of appendicitis. He was in the New Haven Hospital from that time until February 9. He is in New Haven for the present but will go to his old home at Bristol for several weeks before returning to business. He is one of the directors of the new stock company, The Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Company. He was a member of the firm before it was made a stock company. , ’°92 S.—Dr. S. P. Goodhart, chemical assistant at the Vanderbilt clinic for nervous diseases and head of the clinic for nervous diseases at Bellevue Hos- pital, New York, has just been ap- pointed on the clinical staff at the Poly- clinic. Dr. Goodhart also has just been appointed on the Board of Pension Examining Surgeons for New York City. ’92 T.S.—Rev. Charles D. Milliken has resigned his charge at Sonoma, Cal. but has consented, at the request of the congregation, to remain until definitely called elsewhere. ’93—Professor Harry B. Jepson is giving his usual organ recitals at Battell Chapel this term. ’°93—James N. Hill has been elected President of the Spokane Falls & Northern R. R., to succeed his father, James J. Hill. _ 793 S.—Richard P. Strong, a surgeon in the United States Army, is at present stationed at Manila. 93 M.S.—Dr. Wilton Dickerman has resigned his position as Police Surgeon in Hartford, Conn. ’794—F. S. Chapman is a _ United States Supervisor of the improvements now being made on the New Haven Harbor. ’94—Harry B. Mackoy has been elected President of the Inverness Country Club, a club recently organized in Covington, Ky. 7904 S.—Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Hoyt of New Haven left February 7, for a short trip through the South and West. ’95—The Rev. Louis H. Holden of Newark, N. J., has accepted a call to become assistant pastor of the Second § gi rhe 98 ao ae Congregational Church at Waterbury, Conn. 7 795 S.—Harry S. Waite has resigned his position with the Hocking Valley Railroad and is now with the Case Man- ufacturing Company of Columbus, O. 795 S.—Richard Armstrong has _ ac- cepted the invitation of the Intercol- legiate Rowing Association to act as referee at the Poughkeepsie Regatta next ‘June. ~ ’95 L.S. Howard C. Webb, assistant city attorney of New Haven; has re- ceived the appointment of city attorney in the place made vacant by the death ot. Frank’). Brow, 93. ’96—Harvey W. Chapman is teaching in Morristown, New Jersey. ’96—Emory Hawes has been elected on the House Committee of the D. K. E. Club of New York City. ’96—Theodore Carleton is the Assist- ant in the Treasurer’s Department of the Western Electric Co., at Haverhill, Mass. ’96— Benjamin Adams, formerly with the Brooklyn Blue Book Publishing Co., is now Assistant at the Brooklyn Public Library. ’96— Fred F. Bennett has formed with A. L. Green (Wesleyan, 785) a partner-- ship for the general practice of law, with offices at 205 High st., Holyoke, Mass., under the firm name of Green & Bennett. °96 S.—Harold Lee is now with Lewis Nixon, shipbuilder, Elizabeth, N. J. His address is 57 Prospect Street, East Cratice. 4... f, Ex-’96 S.—The marriage of Miss Elizabeth Van Rensselaer to John Magee Ellsworth will take place February 27 in the Grace Church Chantry, New York City. ee °97-—-Clarence Winter is junior partner with his father in the practice of law. ’°97—E. S. Harkness sailed for Europe recently, to be gone about two months. ’97—-Shelton Bissell was one of the winners of the Fogg Scholarship at the Yale Theological School this year. ‘97—D. S. Tate has been made Secre- tary and Treasurer of Tate, Jones & Co., Incorporated, and Secretary of The Mil- ler Engineering Co. Both companies are at Pittsburg. ’97—-H. C. Parke, Jr., has left the General Theological Seminary in New York, on account of poor health and will be on a ranch in Southern Cali- fornia until next Fall. ’°97—Arthur H. Brown recently passed an examination for admission to the bar of New York State. Mr. Brown is at present with the law firm of Carver & Deyo in Binghamton, N. Y ’97 S.—The marriage of Miss Emilie De Mun Smith to J. D. Perry Francis, took place January 31 at 3558 Pine street, St. Louis. Knox Maddox, ’97, was best man and among the ushers’ were William S. Pope, ’94S.; Mancel T. Clark, ’97.S.; Edward M. West, ’97S., and D. R. Francis, Jr., Igoo. ‘97 S.—The class secretary has fur- nished the following changes in ad- dress: N. C. Bradley, 5102 Newhall st., Ger- mantown, Pa. Arthur Corlies, with Edward Sweet & Co., 38 Broad st., New York City. H. S. Humphrey, care The Parker Shirt Co., New Britain, Conn. Thos. G. Otis, Jr., 4467 Woodlawn av., Chicago, Ill. C. OQ. Purinton, 1142 Chapel st., New Haven until July. H.. W.--Peck, 303. Eddy- st., - Ithaca, Bee's . F, A. M. Schieffelin, 27 West 3oth st., New York City. Ex-’97 S.—J. Leon Alexander, Broad st., Elizabeth, N. J. ’98—The address of Warren P. Jack- son is 16 Ruggles st., Westboro, Mass. 8Io ’98—Lawrence Hitchcock has just en- tered the Kelly Lime Co. of Cleveland, Ohio. ’98—Thomas M. James has entered the wholesale crockery business in Kan- sas City. ’98—Warren B. Johnson has just been elected to the editorial board of the Yale Law School Journal. .’98—Fred M. Gilbert, traveling sec- retary of the Student Volunteer Move- ment, spoke recently before the Prince- ton Y. M. C. A. on “Missions as a Life Work.” . 3 98 S.—G. C. Greenway, Jr., is ill with appendicitis in New York. 209 98 S.—J. W. Alsop is manager of the Denver Land and Water Co. in Denver, Col. -’99—Robert C. Adams is with Red- field Brothers, 411 Pearl Street, New York City. ’99—Allen Warren is studying law in the office of Eaton & Lewis, attorneys at law, 44 Broad st. ; ’o99—Henry H. Tomkins, Jr., is with the Tomkins Hardware Company of Victor, Colorado. ’99—Coburn D. Berry, Jr., is with the Cumberland Telephone and Telegraph Company of Nashville, Tenn. ’99—Lawrence Tweedy is recovering from a severe attack of typhoid fever, having been ill for six weeks. ’99—S. G. Boyce and John Boyce, 99, are taking a course at the Albany Business College, Albany, N. Y. ’990— William S. Johnson, Jr., is with the Deering, Milliken Company and his address is 79 Leonard st., New York. City. ; ’99—John A. Wade is at present study- ing in the Divinity School and has address in 87 West Divinity, New Haven. ’og-—J. A. Ray has changed his ad- dress from Bailey, Texas to Rusk, Texas, where he is teaching in the East Texas Baptist Institute. ’99 S.—M. T. Townsend is at the Co- lumbia Law School. | ’99 S.—The marriage of Miss Anna Holmes Galpin, daughter of William D. Galpin: of Ansonia, Conn., to Nelson A. Howard took place at the West Pres- byterian Church, Forty Second Street, New York, Thursday afternoon, Feb- ruary 8. °99 L.S.—Theobald M. Connor is practising law at 94 Main Street, North- ampton, Mass. ’99 L.S.—George W. Skinner, Jr., is with Skinner Brothers, Adams and Market Streets, Chicago, Ill. ’99 L.S.—Arthur J. Raney has opened an office for the general practice of law at 540 Unity Building, Chicago, III. ’99 L.S.—Stanley P. Bradish has opened an office for the general practice of law at 385 Main St., Bridgeport, Conn. ’*99 T.S.—Rev. Chauncey J. Hawkins, pastor of the Ferry St. Congregational Church, New Haven, has accepted a call to Danvers, Mass. YALE NOTICES. [Class and Association Secretaries are invited to contribute to this column.]} Maryland Alumni. The fifth annual meeting of the Yale Alumni Association of Maryland will be held at the Merchants’ Club, Balti- more, on Thursday, March 8, 1900. President Arthur T. Hadley is expected to be present. The business meeting, at which officers for the next year are to be chosen, will begin at 7 o’clock Pp. M. The annual membership fee of one dollar is now due. Payment may be made by check drawn to the order of the Treasurer. At 7.30 o’clock Pp. M., a dinner will be served to the members, the cost of which will be three dollars for each person. Members are requested to notify the Secretary, Mr. Bernard C. Steiner, at the Enoch Pratt Free Library, Balti- more, whether they desire to attend the dinner, and, if so, to enclose four dollars, in return for which a receipt for annual dues and a dinner ticket will be sent. Additional tickets for guests approved by the Executive Committee may be obtained for three dollars each. | It is necessary that the Committee know in advance how many will attend the dinner, in order to make proper arrangements with the steward of the Merchants’ Club, about the dinner and about seating the members attending it. [See also page 214.] _ YALE OBITUARIES. REV, CHAUNCEY D. RICE, EX-’39. Rev. Chauncey Dutton Rice, ex-'39, died in Brooklyn, N. Y., February 7. Mr. Rice was born at Ludlow, Mass., [Continued on page 21I.|