232 ™~ ATE ALO Mat @ orbin’s orner We have incréased our storage capac- ity to such an extent that we can now offer you FREE STORAGE for your Dress and Frock Suits. There will be no charge for this service other than the regular charge for pressing when the gar- ments are taken out for use. F. A. CORBIN, 1000 CHAPEL ST,, New Haven, Conn. (=> My DAY IN NEW YORK is Thursday Place, Astor House. Time, 12 to 4. YALE NOTICES. [Continued from page 229.]| All members of the Class are cor- dially invited, and are asked to send word not later than March 7 to Willard Parker, Jr., 135 Front St., New York City. Ninety-Five Reunion. There will be a Ninety-Five dinner at the. Yale .Club, Saturday;..March-17;/ at 7.00. Every Ninety-Five man in New York or its vicinity, whether a mem- ber of the Yale. Club: or: not, 4s cor- dially invited to be present. Two dol- lars, which will cover all, may be sent to me, or paid in person the evening of the 17th to a member of the Reunion Committee. Please inform me at your earliest convenience, whether or not we may count upon your presence. Show up and make the affaira “go!” LANIER McKEE, 17 East 26th St., New York City. For the Committee. Changed Notice of Ninety-Nine Dinner. The first annual Ninety-Nine dinner is to be held at the Yale Club, No. 17 East 26th Street, New York, on Sat- urday, March 24. Do not miss the op- portunity to attend the first large gather- ing of Ninety-Nine men since gradua- tion. The syndicate composing the com- mittee begs to announce that S. M. Hawley, 17 East 26th Street, New York, is authorized to sell shares in the game at two dollars per. An early reply is requested. Every Ninety- Nine man is invited. Personal notice will be sent only to those living in and near New York City. Committee, E. T. Noble, S. M. Haw- ley, E. S. Parmelee, W. H. Field. Buffalo Dinner. The annual dinner of the Yale Alumni Association of Buffalo, N. Y., will be held Tuesday evening, March 13, at the Buffalo Club. President Hadley and the Hon Timothy S. Woodruff, ’79, will be present. Alumni living in the vicinity of Buffalo are urged to be present. Tickets ($3.00 a seat) may be obtained on application from Knee- land Ball, Secretary, 80 Broad of Trade Building, Buffalo, N. Y. A TWELVE DOLLAR SHIRT! A good deal of money for such an article of wear, you Say, but don’t judge until you have seen the material. Of course we have others. W. H. GOWDY & CO. Opp. Osborn Hall. time in Australia. YALE OBITUARIES. WILLIAM WATSON, ’20. William Watson, ’29, died at his home in New York, Wednesday, February 28. He was QI years old. An _ obituary notice will appear next week. MAJOR WILLIAM M. ESTES, EX-’52. Major William M. Estes, ex-’52, died at “Walters Park, Pa.; Feb. 17; after a long sickness. ) He was born in 1841, at Cincinnati. He entered Yale, but left in his Junior year to enter Harvard, where he grad- uated in 1852. The three years following he spent in traveling in all parts of the world, going into business for a short After studying law for a time in Cincinnati in 1856, he be- gan traveling again and visited, on his trip of a number of years, Central America, Mexico and many places in the Orient. When the war broke out he re- turned to the United States and entered the army as Second Lieutenant of the 20th Ohio Volunteers. Later he was promoted to be Major, but was obliged to resign on account of failing eyesight. Major Estes was married in 1862 to Miss Goddard of Brooklyn, N. Y. He has three sons. REV. FREDERICK L. CHAPELL, ’60. Rev. Frederick L. Chapell, ’60, died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. J. F. Fleming, at Newport, R. I., February 16, of Bright’s disease. He was born at Waterford, Conn., Noveinber 9, 1836. After graduation he studied in the Rochester Divinity School and then went to Middletown, Ohio, where he preached for a number of years. In July, 1871, he accepted a call to the Baptist Church in Evanston, Ill, and in 1878 took a pastorate in Janesville, Wis. At the time of his death he was Dean of the Gordon Mis- sionary Training School in Boston. DR. CLARENCE EDWIN BEEBE, 771. Dr. Clarence Edwin Beebe, ’71, died at his home, 3 West Thirty-Seventh Street, New York, March 1. He was born in Brooklyn,-N. Y., June 4, 1849, and was the youngest son of William J. Beebe and Elizabeth Hin- man Beebe. | Flushing Institute prepared him for College and he entered the Class of 1871 at Yale, where he was a member of Psi Upsilon and Scroll and Key. After his graduation he took a course in medicine in the University of New York, where he was Valedictorian of -th Class of Seventy-Three. : in? 1874 he matried. Miss = Maria Louise White, by whom he had three children, William Jackson, Roderick, and Lillian Morris. Dr. Beebe, besides being a member of a large number of Medical Societies and Colleges, was the founder of the Ophthalmic Hospital in New York, and President of the same. He was also President at different times of the Homeepathic Medical Society of New York, the New York Jahr Club, the New York Medico-Chirurgical Society and Editor of the New York Homao- pathic Medical Times, and of the North American Journal of Homeopathy. For a number of years he was a mem- ber of the Ninth Company of the Seventh Regiment and at the time of his death was Assistant Surgeon of the Seventh Regiment Veterans. He was also a member of the Yale Club and Alumni Association of New York. —_—_—_#0¢---_—_ Addresses of Ninety-Eight 8. A. K. Alford, Torrington, Conn. Joseph W. Alsop, University Club, Denver, Col. : F. T. _Anderson, General Electric Company, Lynn, Mass. J. N. Anderson, General Electric Company, Lynn, Mass. Ce-G. Atha; 756° Hich st., Newark, . Nie} Alfred Anstell, 119 Wall st., New Haven. Ny M. Ayres, Fairview, Bergen Co., Rowan Ayres, Care H. L. Bridgeman, Linares, Mexico. R. N. Barnum, Lime Rock, Conn. Stanley Yale Beach, Stratford, Conn. B. Beinecke, 23 W. 76th st., New York City. WHE KLY H. F. Benjamin, Garrisons-on-Hud- Bey: FE. C. Blackman, 106 Bak Webuc ie aker st., Fort R. E. Broatch, Middletown, Conn. G. L. Brown, 52 Bedford st.; Stame ford, Conn. P. J. Brown, P. O. B. 445. Schenec- tatty, oN. KR DeBrown? Care: Eis CsR: RK Oss kaloosa, Iowa. D.-Fo Buckingham, .P.-.Q. B. 100; Eagle Pass, Texas. FE. P. Campbell, 592 Park av., Pater- son, N. J. HH. 2s --Garpetter,;:- PQ: B: Sewickley, Pa. F. V. Chappell, 38 Huntington st., New London, Conn. L. A. Chase, 144 Jackson pl., Balti- more, Md. G. S. Chauncey, 257 Henry st., Brook- lyn, Nue¥- A. Cheney, Care Fraser & Chalmers, Chicago, II]. W. F. Cochran, Yonkers, N. Y. C. W. Cunningham, Tioga and a2ist st., Philadelphia, Pa. Poot Wavis,:. (are Aflac. “Tack (Co. Taunton, Mass. S. S. Day, New Haven, Conn. A. H. Dowell, Care J. C. Dowell, Loe and Trust Building, Washington, 120, 13. brake 140 WW .-7ist st. New York. Gry BJ. Drimmond, 136° Ws 72d st. New York City. G. W. Delaney, Care Western Grain Co., Winona, Wis. R, F. Dyer, 9 Erie Co.; Bank Build- ing, -Bifialo, IN: Y, A. C. Eustis, 1410 Jackson av., New Orleans, La. FG. Ferrey, 32 W. Housatonic st., Pittsfield, Mass. N. S. Ferrey, 144 Jackson pl., Balti- more, Md. i Hutch > Cate Obie, oa Co. at. Paul, Minn. E. L. Freeland, 164 W. 77th st., New York. F. G. Gause, Panna ay. & Clayton st, Wilmington, Del. W. F. Gibson, 396 Porter av., Buffalo, Nox J.-F Grant, 144 Jackson pi. Baiti- more, M G. C. Greenway, 346 W. 58 st., New York City. G. D. Gordon, Euclid Heights, Cleve- land, Ohio. it Pall. 274 -i tatty ay. kansas City, -Mo. A. S. Hamlin, 26 Storm av., Jersey City; Ney: J: Fress; 113 Ferry st. Baston, Pa. J.-L Howard, 150 Collins st., Hart- ford, Conn. E.. -T.: Howes, Stamtord, Conn. G. H. Hulbert, Cromwell, Conn. E. R. Ingraham, P. O. B. to9, Eagle Pass, Texas. ; [Continued on page 233.] ‘Spring Oxfords. Double and Single Sole Wax Cail. aussi. Calt and . Pare Leather new Lasts. We make a Specialty of foot to measure. The New Haven Shoe Company, 842 and 846 Chapel St. S. H. MOORE FLORIST SF. 1054 CHAPEL OPP. YALE ART SCHOOL F. B. WALKER & CO. TAILORS SUCCEEDING F. R. BLISS & CO. CHURCH AND CHAPEL STREETS FRANK B. WALKER GHAS. P. WALKER Going to Paris ? Take a COLUMBIA BICYCLE. They are the recognized Stan- dard all over the world. Send for Catalogue. Weaver’s Columbia Agency, 516 and 520 State Street. The C. W. Whittlesey Co. 281 State St. Our line of Photographic Materials and Supplies is larger and more complete than - ever before. Our facilities for doing amateur work are unexcelled. The best advertisers appreciate the value of the YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY constituency. Let their faith be con- stantly confirmed and strengthened by visible returns. GRUENER BROTHERS Tailors, 123 Temple Si., Graduate correspondence solicited. Hurle & Co., — Tailors, 38 Center Street. the COS HE2ALBAE Vaclors Pood V3 GVH SOYLAA New Haven, Conn. CUARLES.f. PeaSeclli, Successor to Wm. Franklin & Co., [MPORTING TAILOR, 40 Center St., New Haven, Conn. J. Kaiser, Tailor, 3 1042 2 Chapel Street, (Opp. Vanderbilt Hall.) } § Miory’s - - == . Louts Linder. Established 1887. ELIAS L.. GLOUSKIN, Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry, 462 ELM.ST., cor. YORK, NEW HAVEN, CONN Fine Watch and Music Box Repairing. Fine Assortment of Yale Souvenirs, Loving Cups and Steins with Yale Seal a specialty. Aail orders promptly attended to. Please mention the paper in doing business with advertisers. COLLEGE MEN will find exceedingly comfortable and well kept quarters at a most reasonable price at MILLER’S HOTEL 39 West 26th St., - New York City. This house is patronized largely by Yale, Princeton, Cornell, Vassar, Wellesley, Smith and other Colleges, to the students of which special rates are made. SEND FOR CIRCULAR. CHARLES H. HAYNES, Proprietor.