Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, April 11, 1900, Page 6, Image 6

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    276
vALE ALUMNI WEEKLY
orbin’s
orner
If you are going to have a spring
suit, its better to get it now,
before your special delight, in the
way of a pattern, is taken by
some one else.
F. A. CORBIN,
1000 CHAPEL ST.,
New Haven, Conn. |
(s> My DAY IN NEw York is Thursday
Place, Astor House. Time, 12 to 4.
YALE ALUMNI NOTES.
[Continued from page 273.]
a member of the executive committee
for the year.
Jt:
95 S.—George E. Thompson,
Superintendent of Construction for the
Industrial Construction Co. of Detroit,
Mich., has resigned his position with
that company to accept the position of
Assistant Engineer of Construction with
C. W. Blakeslee & Sons, in the construc-
tion of the 4o-mile third rail road be-
tween Albany and Hudson, N. Y.
’7960—H. S. Johnson and Henry A.
Perkins will sail for Europe May a2,
and will be abroad about five months.
*96—George A. Smith has given up his
position as instructor at the Cascadilla
Academy, jlthacac;: Niu ¥.-: and. 46.08
present in New Haven.
’*96— William W. Chandler, the organ-
ist of the Prospect M. E. Church, Bris-
tol, Conn., gave an organ recital in Bat- -
tell Chapel on Tuesday, April to.
’96—Charles Collins expects to sail
very soon for Europe. He will spend
the Summer in England, and will cross
over to France to study architecture.
’96—Kneeland Ball, George S. Buck
and Theodore M. Gowans have been
recently elected to the membership com-
ie of the University Club of Buf-
alo.
’96—Edgar §. Auchincloss has been
appointed general agent in the freight
department of the Delaware, Lacka-
wanna & Western R. R., with head-
quarters at 26 Exchange Place, New
York.
’*96— William Wallace Chace was ad-
mitted, April 2, to partnership in the
firm “of A...FPrank B. Chace. & Sons,
Hudson, N. Y. The other members of
the firm are A. Frank B. Chace, Alfred
Bruee, Chace, Yale .’92, and Jie Begak
Chace, ’94.
’96—Douglas Stewart, who was re-
cently appointed. Assistant Director of
the Carnegie Museum of Pittsburg,
Pa., sailed for Europe, March 3, on the
Kaiser Wilhelm II. Mr. Stewart is a
member of the American Committee on
Museums at the Paris Exposition, and
will probably remain abroad till Fall.
’°96 S.—The marriage of Miss Louise
S. Fitch, daughter of Mrs. J. M. Fitch,
of New Haven, to Lemuel R. Hopton,
took place April 4, at the Church of the
Redeemer, New Haven. Among the
ushers were: Roger W. Tuttle, ’95;
Holmes C. Jackson, ’96S., and C. Ru-
dolph Schultz, ’97 S.
’97—Frank E. Spaulding is instructor
at the Wilmington Military Academy,
Wilmington, Del., which was. started
last year.
’°97—-Edward S. Brackett gave up his
position last Fall as Assistant Principal
of the Rockville High School, Rock-
a
GENTLEMEN’S
FURNISHINGS
We have created, and occupy
alone, a special field in this
line. om 5d ed
On our shelves you will find
the best and latest from: both
sides of the water. om
_W.H. GOWDY & CO.
VYpp. Osborn Hall.
ville, Conn., and is now studying in the
Yale Medical School.
’°97 S.—Amos F. Barnes of New Haven
has gone to Hot Springs,
where he will remain until Easter.
’97 S.—G. Barrett Rich has recently
been elected to the membership commit-
tee of the University Club of Buffalo.
’97 T.S.—Rev. Miles B. Fisher, assist-
ant pastor of the Congregational Church
at Adams, Mass., has resigned to accept
the pastorate of a church at Mill Val-
ley, Cal.
’97 T.S.—H. F. Rall, who has been
studying for the past two years in Ger-
many, is now delivering a course of six
lectures in the Divinity School. His
subject is “Theological Method and the
Ritschlian Theology.”
’98—_R. B. Glaenzer is now in the
publishing house of Charles Scribner’s
Sons, New York City.
’98—_F. M. Gilbert has an article in
the April IJntercollegian on “Who
Should Attend the Summer Confer-
ences ?”
’98—-D. Brewer Eddy is to be one of
the speakers at the Ecumenical Mission-
ary Conference to be held in New York
City at the end of April. He will de-
liver an address on the “Missionary
Movement among Students and Young
People.”
798. S.—A. M. Spear, Jr., is now in
Pittsburg, Pa., with the Fidelity Title
& Trust Company of that city.
798 M.S.—Dr. Lewis B. Porter and
Dr. Frederick M. Hulseberg, who have
both been connectel with the New Haven
Hospital for some time, will sail for
Manila in May, for service in the United
States Army.
Ex-’98 S.—William Orville Hickok,
IV, has lately taken a position with the
Westinghouse Electric Company of
Pittsburg.
’799—Joseph W. Greene, Jr., has re-
turned to Brooklyn, N. Y., from a short
business trip to New Haven. -
7990—W. B. Neergaard is now with
McVickar & Company, real
brokers, 1368 Broadway, New York City.
*99—Oliver S. Bryant, who is study-
ing at the Harvard Law School, acted
as referee at the annual whist match
between Yale and Harvard this year.
*99—J. V. Doniphan, Jr., will go to
Germany April 7, to study Forestry,
and will be gone about four months.
His address while abroad will be, Care
Brown, Shipley & Co., 123 Pall Mall,
S. W., London.
‘99 S.—A. M. Bell, who spent a few
days in New Haven late in March, is
going on a hunting trip to the West
very soon,
’99 S.—Richmond M. Graff has re-
cently obtained a position with the
Westinghouse Electric Company of
Pittsburg, Pa.
799 S.—Leeds Mitchell has recently
taken a position with Otis, Wilcox &
Company, stock brokers, 186 La Salle
Street, Chicago.
99 L.S.—Homer H. Shepard and J.
E. Blatchley have opened an office in
Room 20, Glebe Building, New Haven,
Conn., for the general practice of law.
- @Ys
= oe
The Ninety-Eight Dinner.
[From a Special Correspondent.]
A typical ’98 “game” was held at the
Yale Club last Saturday night. The
game was disguised as the annual class
dinner and the following were the ma-
jority shareholders: Male, Ray, Curran,
Reeve, Cowdry, Loewi, Paxton, Lock-
man, A. R. Baldwin, Kennedy, H. B.
Clark, Recknagel, Merrill, Gallaudet,
_ Garrison, D. E. Peck, Leeds Johnson,
Blumenthal, Glaenzer, Turnbull, Ben-
jamin, Grenville Parker, Kernochan,
Fitch, Dominick, Bridge, Booth, Shall,
Gehrman, Crane, Ely, T. M. Smith, H.
P. Wilson, Sawyer, David ° Rogers,
Scheftel and Milliken. |
Frank Simmons managed the dinner
and ran the “game,” and no one could
have done it better. The oratory of the
evening began with a few bursts of
words from Ashbel Fitch. “My fellow
citizens,” said Fitch, hastily getting up,
I rise to my feet with great reluctance
—a purely mental act.” Then he de-
scribed Borden’s wedding in a few har-
Towing statements and sat down amid
great applause. Merrill was then called
on and responded with an alliterative
class alphabet in rhyme. A letter from
Marsh, representing the Ninety-Eight
Virginia, |
estate
men at the Harvard Law School, was
then read. It began with the following
poetical eruption:
To the legions of the shiftless. To the
cohorts of the
To our brethren in their law schools
over seas,
Sing the loafers up in Cambridge, al-
ways tired, never crammed,
And students of old Harvard if you
please.
Yea! students of old Harvard,
we're on a tack to starboard,
Oh we've gone the pace and still are
going blind,
Our lessons we don’t know, to lectures
seldom go
So Baldwin’s acting somewhat less
than kind.
CHORUS.
We're poor little stiffs who loaf all day,
Baa-baa-baa !
We're little black sheep as bad as Gay,
Baa-baa-baa-
Shiftless law students out on a spree
Cursed by Pop and faculty:
Heaven have mercy on such as we
Baa-baa-baa.
tho’
Curran was then called on to speak on
“Journalism as Opposed to Tribunism.”
He began with the. following logical
gem, “Once in a while three years ago.”
The remainder of his remarks bore out
this brilliant beginning. He was fol-
lowed by winged words from Hudson
perpetrated by D. E. Peck. . Peck had
just completed a scientific feat which will
go echoing down the corridors of time,
in discovering Lockman, the human
glyptodon, buried 6,000 feet in a bed of
auriferous gravel. He told the crowd
about it and then sat down. Turnbull
was next called on to discourse on the
[Continued on page 277.|
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
“CLASS REUNIONS.”
If you wish your Supper to bea success, address
the old Reliable Yale Caterer,
J. W. STEWART,
Warner Hall Restaurant,
New Haven, Conn.
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
YALE
please
In doing business with the
ALUMNI WEEKLY advertisers,
mention this paper.
PACH BROS.,
COLLEGE PHOTOGRAPHERS,
1024 Chapel St., New Haven.
Branch of No. 935 Broadway, - New York
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.
Please mention the paper in doing
business with advertisers.
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 Si.,
Graduate correspondence solicited.
New Haven, Conn.
Hlurle & Co.,
Tailors,
38 Center Street.
The CSO NHE2AL LE
VFautkors
fi BLES L3G GH
SOYLL
CHARLES T. PENNELL,
Successor to Wm. Franklin & Co.,
IMPORTING | AILOR,
40 Center St., New Haven, Conn.
J. Kaiser,
Tailor,
O42
Chapel Street,
(Opp. Vanderbilt Hall.)
. 9
Mory’s - -
===
- . « Louis Linder.
E. L. GLOUSKIN,
Elm cor. York.
The oldest Established Jeweler in Vicinity
of Yale University.
Best accommodations and Lowest Prices.
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,
Propristor.