256
e 9
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.
[=~ My Day IN NEW YorK is Thursday
Place, Astor House. Time, 12 to 4. -
YALE ALUMNI NOTES.
[Continued from page 253 |
New Haven from Nassau, Bermuda
Islands.
°99—J. K. Clark has been elected to
the editorial board of the Harvard Law
Review.
’99-—Edward Seymour Woodruff has
been elected Captain of the Johns Hop-
kins University Track Team.
*99—Mr. and Mrs. Murray W. Dodge,
who have been taking a coaching trip
through Italy, are at present staying in
Naples.
°99 S.—Henry S. Clark is in Colorado
inspecting mines.
99 S.—W. McK. Brown is engaged in
construction work for the Boston &
Maine Railroad.
99 S.—John M. Henderson has ac-
cepted a position in the draughting room
of the Ansonia Brass & Copper Com-
pany, Ansonia, Conn.
’99 L.S.—A. Oswald Pallman of New
Haven, Conn., was admitted March 9,
to practice law in the United States
Courts.
YALE NOTICES:
[Class and Association Secretaries are invited to
contribute to this column.]
Ninety-Seven Dinner,
For particulars of Ninety-Seven din-
ner at the Yale Club, 17 East 26th St.,
March 31, 7 Pp. M., see the last issue of
the WEEKLY, and communicate directly
with Ninety-Seven Dinner Committee,
17 East 26th St., New York City.
Ninety-Eight Dinner.
Those members of Ninety-Eight who
have not made their arrangements to at-
tend the second annual dinner at the
Yale Club, 17 East 26th St., 7.30 o’clock
Saturday evening, April 7, are requested
to communicate at once with Frank H.
Simmons, 190 New York Avenue,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Eastern New York Dinner.
The annual meeting and dinner of the
Yale Alumni Association of Eastern
New York will occur on the evening
GENTLEMEN’S
FURNISHINGS
We have created, and occupy
alone, a special field in this
line. a a ae
On our shelves you will find
the best and latest from both
sides of the water. 2%
‘W. H. GOWDY & CO.
Opp. Osborn Hall.
ma Pin “ATU Minti
of March 28, at the Fort Orange Club,
Albany, N. Y., and a large attendance 1s
expected. Those who have the arrange-
ments in hand for this year are: Lieut.-
Governor T. L. Woodruff, "79; Lewis R.
Parker, ’92; Col. George Curtis Tread-
well, 93 S.; Charles E. McElroy, ’95 S.,
and Mr. McChesney of Troy. A quar-
tette from the Yale Glee Club is ex-
pected and some representative of the
Yale Faculty, Julian T. Curtiss of New
York City and several other out of town
speakers will be present.
—_—___~++e—___—_
Eighty-Five Reunion.
The members of the Class of Eighty-
Five, from New York City and near to
it, held an annual reunion on the even-
ing of March 23, at the Yale Club. It
proved a most successful affair. The
quin-decennial committee made a pre-
liminary report, and suggestions as to
the celebration to be held in New Haven
in June were made by different men.
The notice for that celebration will be
sent out in the course of a few weeks.
Speeches were informal and_ singing
seemed to fill the bill. The following
were the subscribers and nearly all of
them were present: Adee, Anderson,
Brooks, Bertron, Blake, J. L. Buel, S.
Brace, Bigelow, Carhart, Cross, Cutler,
Colt, Colgate, Culbert, S. Ely, Eaton,
Fresenius, Flint, Green, Hunter, Hub-
bard, Hough, S. Jackson, Mansfield,
Mangam, S. Maxwell, Napier, Schultze,
Storrs, Sands, Tomes, Terry, Vernon,
Williams, S. Worcester.
YALE OBITUARIES.
DR OLIVER PAYSON HUBBARD, ’28.
Dr. Oliver Payson Hubbard, ’28, the
last member of the Class, died at his
home in New York City, Saturday,
March o.
Dr. Hubbard was born at Pomfret,
Conn., March 31, 1809. -After spending
two years at Hamilton College he en-
tered Yale in the Junior year of the
Class of 1828 After graduation he
spent three years in teaching in Geneva,
Y., and from 1831 till 1836 was
assistant to Professor Benjamin Silliman |
in the Yale Chemical Laboratory, where
he aided Charles Goodyear in his early |
In the
experiments with India rubber.
latter year he was appointed to the pro-
fessorship of Chemistry, Mineralogy and
Geology in Dartmouth College, retain-
ing that position for thirty years. He
resigned his work of that chair in 1866, |
but retained his lectures in the Medical
School connected with the College until
1883, when he was made Professor
Emeritus. Dr. Hubbard was one of the
founders of the American Association
for the Advancement of Science in 1848
and was Secretary of the Association
from 1885 to 1892 and President from
1892 to 1803. He was also one of the
founders of the Association of American
Geologists and Naturalists, in 1&4t.
Through the greater part of his life he
wrote for historical and scientific maga-
zines and published among others, these
works: “Early History of the New
Hampshire Medical Institution. and its
founder, Dr. Nathan Smith”: “Transac-
tions of New Hampshire State Medical
Society,” and a history of Chandler
School (Dartmouth College). Dr. Hub-
bard published, in 1808, when he was
the sole survivor of his class, a very
complete list of biographical sketches of
his clasmates, together with a great deal
of interesting information about college
customs in 1828. He received the de-
grees of M.A. from Yale and Dartmouth.
of M.D. from South Carolina Medical
College and of LL.D. from Hamilton
College.
Dr. Hubbard was married May 17,
1837, to Faith Wadsworth, daughter of
Prof. Benjamin Silliman, who died in
1887. Two children survive him.
THE REV SHEARJASHUB BOURNE, ’40.
The Rev. Shearjashub Bourne,’ 40, died ©
at his home in New York City, March
21, of a general breaking up of the Sys-
tem, due to old age.
Mr. Bourne was born at Bristol, L. i
Ne¥ssDec: 28, 1822. After a short time
spent in teaching school in Kentucky, he
entered the Andover Theological Sem-
inary, where he studied three years. In
1854 he was called to the Congrega-
tional Church in Flushing, L. I., where
he preached till ill-health compelled him
Other Poems.”
W HEKLY
to give up the work in 1859 and engage
in business. In 1862 he resumed _ his
work in the ministry and established a
Congregational Church in Harlem, N.
Y., of which he was pastor till 1870.
Returning ill-health compelled him to
travel abroad for some time. Later he
held pastorates at Ellington, Conn., and
Paterson, N. J. In 1889 he organized
the Fourth Congregational Church of
New York, and was its pastor until his
retirement from active duties in 1895.
Mr. Bourne married Miss Susan Ket-
chum, July 15, 1863. Six of his seven
children are living.
CHAMPION BISSELL, ’50.
Champion Bissell, ’50; died at his
_home in New York City, Jan. 1, 1900,
of heart failure brought on by an attack
of the grip.
Mr. Bissell has been engaged in mer-—
cantile pursuits in New York City most
of the time since graduation. In 1852
he edited and published the American
Whig Review, and later published the
Tolland County (Conn.) Herald. He
also published, for a time, the Paper
Lrade Reporter in New York City. In
1860 published a volume “The Panic and
Mr. Bissell was married
twice. Seven children survive him.
EDWARD SANFORD, 754.
Edward Sanford, ’54, died Sunday,
March 18, at his home in Morris, Ill.
of prt amonia.
Mr. Sanford was born at Saybrook,
Conn., August 28, 1833. Immediately
after graduation he moved to Morris,
Ill., where he has made -his home ever
since. He was Principal of the Morris
Normal and Scientific School for several
years, but in the late fifties began the
study of law and was admitted to the
Illinois bar. At the time of his death
he was Solicitor, in his vicinity, for the
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, and the
Chicago, St. Louis and Western Rail-
roads. Besides this he devoted a con-
siderable part of his time to real estate
business. Mr. Sanford was married in
1855 to Miss Reading, daughter of Hon.
James N. Reading of Morris, Ill., who
survives him with three sons and a
daughter.
CHARLES WASHBURN CADY,
Charles Washburn Cady, 1901, the
youngest son of ex-Lieutenant Governor
Cady of Connecticut, died of pn,emonia,
at his home in Hartford, Sunday, March
IQOT.
. 25, after an illness of only a few days.
[Continued on page 257.|
Spring Oxfords
Double Sole Wax Calf, Russia Calf
and Patent Leather New Lasts.
The New Haven Shoe Company
842 and 846 Chapel Street.
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
g) 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,
123 Temple St., New Haven, Conn.
Graduate correspondence solictted.
Hurle & Co.,
Tailors,
38 Center Street.
THE. OFHENALLE
i oe
SOYL
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.)
Ory Ss - -
M ig
- - « Loudts Linder.
Established 1887,
ELIAS L. GLOUSKIN,
Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry,
162 ELM ST., cor. YORK, NEW HAVEN, CONN
Fine Watch and Mustc Box Repairing.
Fine Assortment of Yale Souvenirs, Loving
Cups and Steins with Yale Seal a specialty.
Mail 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.