240
YALE ALUMNI
» ERS
orbin’s
orner
We have increased 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.
[38 My DAY IN NEW YorK is Thursday
Place, Astor House. Time, 12 to 4.
ORANGE DINNER.
[Continued from page 237.]
Richard M. Colgate, ’77, President of
the Association, presided and at: the
close of the dinner introduced President
Hadley, who received a warm New Jer-
sey welcome. President Hadley re-
sponded for Yale to the sentiment:
“Young art thou still, and young shalt
ever be
In spirit, as thou wast in years gone by;
The present, past, and future blend in
thee,
Rich as thou art in names that cannot
die,
And youthful hearts already beating
high
To emulate the glories won of yore;
That days to come may still the past
outvie,
And thy bright roll be lengthened more
and more
Of statesman, bard and
versed in noblest lore.”
sage, well
(A large part of President Hadley’s
speech was printed in the last issue of
the paper. )
At the close of President Hadley’s
address, John Reynolds, Harvard ’71,
of Montclair, N. J., responded for Har-
vard, in a humorous address, to the fol-
lowing sentiment:
“The torch still burns, and perhaps
more fiercely than ever, but innumerable
Rushlights, and Sulphur matches, kind-
led thereat, are also glancing in every
direction.”
At the close of Mr. Reynolds’s ad-
dress, “Fair Harvard” was sung very
acceptably by the quartet of the Uni-
versity Glee Club, which was present.
The next speaker was Dr. Charlton T.
Lewis, Yale ’53, who gave a most earn-
est address, taking as his subject “Yale
Culture—A Liberal Conservatism.” He
said that it was worth something to be-
long to an institution that had pérma-
nence and was rooted deep in the affec-
tions of days gone by. What is Yale
. to-day? Just what she has been from
the beginning. Love of truth is her
characteristic and that of her graduates.
It has always been so in the past— a
determined spirit of search for the truth
and a determination to follow it, let it
lead where it will. What is the wealth
of the country? What is the accumu-
lated property of the citizens of the
United States? Suppose that it was all
annihilated, swept out of existence, and
the citizens left standing alone on the
naked soil. In a generation it would
all be reproduced. Wealth is not told
GENTLEMEN’S
FURNISHINGS
We have created, and occupy
alone, a special field in this
Hie. . Bd me 5
On our shelves you will find
the best and latest from both
sides of the water. ae
W. H. GOWDY & CO.
| Opp. Osborn Hall,
in the figures of railroads, or jewels,
or ornaments, but it is in the intelli-
gence and the love of truth of the citi-
zens. This is the 1eda that should be
kept in our minds. President Hadley,
by his energy has transformed Yale
from an aggregation of separate schools
into one great university. We believe
not in an aggregation of units, but in
an organized life for the whole.
Robert H. McCarter, Princeton ’79,
of Newark, N. J., responded to the toast
“Orange and Black—and Blue.”
“We hear it calmly, though a ponderous
woe,
And still adore the hand that gives the
blow.”
Mr. McCarter at once announced that
he was a firm believer in college spirit
and in a four years’ course. He said
that he clung to the idea of a four-
years’ course as a man clings to his
children, and firmly believed that the
Harvard scheme of reducing the course
to three years would result in destroying
- that nameless something: so dear to
every Yale man and every Princeton
man, which we call “college life.”
The speaker referred to the lack of
spirit at Harvard, the result of which
is many vacant rooms on the Campus.
He also criticised the undergraduates
for leaving the Campus and living in
private apartments houses. The Prince-
ton spirit, the speaker claimed, would
render it impossible to have rooms va-
cant on the Princeton Campus; and
the old Yale spirit would cause Yale
men to love the Fence and the Campus.
Mr. McCarter then paid a most elo-
quent tribute to Judge Taft and referred
to his journey to the Philippine Islands
as a beautiful example of Yale spirit.
The last speaker was William T.
Hincks, Yale ’o1, of Bridgeport, Conn.,
who spoke from the standpoint of a
Connecticut man visiting New Jersey.
The following men were present:
Harvard—John Reynolds, ’71; Bay-
ard: Kirkpatrick, “95; Dr. R.- Co New-
ton, 74; > C.G. Kidder: e.
Princeton—Hon. Robert H. McCar-
ter 96.
New York University—E. M. Colie. -
Toronto University—R. Dun Doug-
las, ’64.
Rutgers—Edwin B. Williamson, ’71;
Drury Cooper. ’g2.
Yale ’43—Wm. A. Durrie; ’44—Ar-
thur Ward: ’52—Jacob Cooper; ’53—
Charlton” T....lewis? “45—Bentry N.
Cobb; ’71—Joseph Fewsmith; ’72—
George Richards, W. B. Wheeler, John
W. Wescott; 773—J. O. Heald: ’74—
D. A. Kennedy, George E. Dimock,
W. Campbell: ’75—T. J. Lee, William
R. Howe, E. D. Page, Wm. S. Righter,
"75.8S.;. ’76—President Arthur Hadley,
John Porter, C. H. Wilcox: ’77—R. M.
Colgate; °78—C. H. Kelsey, A. D.
Chandier, A. it, Sherman: ?79—T. C.
Sonn; ’80-—D. W. Richards; ’81—
Ferderick Seymour, A. E. Bostwick;
‘62—-C,- B. Storrs: 783—C. S. Kelsey,
H. T. Folsom: ’84—C. FE. Eaton, Jas.
Wood, C. A. Mead, R. M. Boyd, Jr.,
Geo. J. McAndrew, H. B. Twombly;
’85—E. Schultze, Jr.; 85s L.S.—FEdw.
Kenney; “Ss S.-J: M: Maghee: ’86—
A. Colgate, S. M. Colgate: ’87—C. L.
Brownson, S. E. Cobb, G. E. Hill, Paul
Spencer; °87S.—Louis Burgess: 00.5:
—Walter Dodge: ’o1—W. T. Hincks,
M. MacLear, Seward Davis, H. L.
Pangborn, F. A. Dillingham: ’91 T.S.—
C. H. Dickerson; ’92—E = Marshall.
M. J. Synnott; ’92S.—G. Meeker, H.
B. Atha; ’93—A. L. Faxon: *94—A.
S. Taylor; ’95—Paul Kennaday, Thos.
A. Keck; ’96—W. S. Woodhull, Rus-
sell Colgate; ’96 S—Harold Lee, Thos.
A. Gillespie; ’97—John L. Ewell, Jr.,
B.. R. Lehibach, R. D:: Mills; Geo. J.
Ferry, Jr., C. J. Hunt, E. W. Carelton:
07 S.—R. S. Kilbourne: ’98—R. G. D.
Douglas, J. L. Fewsmith. L. W. Wil-
liams, James D - Coe: 68.52. J).
Reynolds, C. H. Miller, R. Krementz,
C. G. Atha, and H. L. Gillespie; ’o9
W. S. Johnson, Jr., A. H. Atha.
-———_o0>_—_-
Alumni of Southern California.
The third annual dinner of the Yale
Alumni Association of Southern Cali-
fornia, was held at the California Club,
Los Angeles, Tuesday evening, Feb-
ruary 27. At the business meeting,
which followed the dinner, FE. V. Baker.
"77, and A. W. Armstrong. ’82 S., were
re-elected President and Vice-President.
and N. W. Bell. ’83, was again chosen
Secretary and Treasurer. C. EF. Rich-
ards, ’82. and Dr. F. B. Kellogg. 83,
are the Banquet Committee for 1901.
WEEKLY
The speeches and toasts were of a
general and informal nature and were
interspread with songs led by Messrs.
Kellogg, Richards, Bissel and Cravens.
S. D. Thacher, ’83, acted as toastmaster,
. ». Cravens, ’93, spoke on “New
Yale’; J. B. Wood, ’65, gave reminis-
cences of “Old Yale”; Rev. F. “L.
Ferguson, ’88 T.S., President of Pomona
College, spoke on “Yale’s Future’; W.
E. Lloyd, ’98 P.G., and a graduate of
Berkeley, gave his reasons for going to
Yale; and. 4. Richarde "So = re
sponded to the toast ‘Yale Men in
Public Life.”
Among those present were the fol-
lowing: Sherman D. Thacher, ’83;
James B. Mitchel, 63; John B. Wood,
653. ac Me Lyon, 7425 2B Vs Baker,
_?977; Rev. Frank A. Bissell, ’79 S.; Wil-
bur Parker, ’80; W. C. Warren, ’80S.;
A. W. Armstrong, ’82S.; C. E. Rich-
ards, 82; Clarence M. Smith, ’83; Dr.
F. B. Kellogg, ’83; N. W. Bell, ’83;
Rev. Franklin L. Ferguson, ’88 T.S.;
John S. Cravens, ’93; Howard J. Fish,
’93.S.; _E. P.’ Newton, ’97; Warren E.
Lloyd, ’98 P.G.
ce te re
Yale Football Schedule.
The University football schedule for
next season has just been announced
by Mr. Robert Hixon, President of the
Football Association. Twelve games
will be played beginning with Trinity as
usual, eight of them in New Haven.
Saturday, November 17 and Saturday,
November 24 are the dates set for the
Harvard and Princeton games, but it is
not yet decided which will be played —
first. The schedule follows:
Saturday, September
Trinity in New Haven.
Wednesday, October 3—Yale vs. Am-
herst in New Haven.
Saturday, October 6-—Yale vs. Tufts
in New Haven.
Wednesday, October 10—Yale_ vs.
Bates in New Haven.
Saturday, October 13—Yale vs. Dart-
mouth in Newton, Mass.
Wednesday, October
Bowdoin in New Haven.
Saturday, October 20—Yale vs. Wes-
leyan in New Haven.
Saturday, October 27—Yale vs. Co-
lumbia in New York.
Saturday, November 3—Yale vs. West
Point in West Point.
Saturday, November 10—Yale vs. Car-
lisle in New Haven.
Saturday, November 17 and Saturday,
November 24—Yale vs. Harvard at New
Haven, and Princeton at Princeton—
still unsettled as to which shall be
played first. 7
29—Yale_ vs.
17—Yale_ vs.
Spring Oxfords.
Double and Single Sole Wax
Calf, Russia Calf and Patent
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
1054 CHAPEL ST.
OPP. YALE ART SCHOOL
Please mention the paper in doing
business with advertisers,
F. B. WALKER & CO.
TAILORS
SUCCEEDING F. R. BLISS & CO.
CHURCH AND CHAPEL STREETS
FRANK B. WALKER
CHAS. P. WALKER
UNCHANGED
COMFORT.
Of course a good many things
change at a good hotel. There
are new ways to make guests
happy. But though adding
modern improvements constantly
the home flavor and conditions
of solid comfort are not dis-
turbed at
MOSELEY’S
NEW HAVEN HOUSE.
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. —
GRUENER BROTHERS
Tailors,
425 Temple St.
Graduate correspondence solicited.
Hurle & Co..
Tailors,
38 Center Street.
gre OS Wiz LEE , 2&2
ore
SOY
New Haven, Conn.
CHARLES T. PENNELL,
Successor to Wm. Franklin & Co.,
IMPORTING TAILOR,
40 Center St., New Haven, Conn.
J. Kaiser,
Tailor,
1042
Chapel Street,
(Opp. Vanderbilt Hall.)
[Vjory’s - -
=
. Louis Linder.
Established 1887,
ELIAS L. GLOUSKIN,
Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry,
162 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.
ail orders promptly attended to
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.