Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, April 18, 1900, Page 6, Image 6

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    284
YALE =ALUMMNI WHEKRiIY
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.
(33 My DAY IN NEW YorK-is Thursday
Place, Astor House. Time, 12 to 4.
YALE ALUMNI NOTES.
[Continued from page 281.]
breakfast for the bridal party and the
immediate family, at the house of the
bride’s mother, 106 West 58th St.
95 T.S.—The Rev. George W. Phillips,
Assistant Rector of St. Paul’s. Episco-
pal Church of New Haven, is recovering
from a severe attack of pneumonia. .
’96—John M. Gaines, Assistant In-
structor in Political. Economy in Yale,
will leave his present position May 1
to enter the actuarial department of the
New York Life Insurance Company,
with offices at 346 Broadway.
796 S.— The engagement of Miss
Alysse Latham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank B. Latham, to Wyatt H. Allen,
has been announced.
°96 S.—Invitations have been issued
for the marriage of Charlotte E. Norton,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lemuel D.
Norton of Evanston, Ill., to Wallace R.
Condict, Jr., of Evanston, for Wednes-
day evening, April 25, 1900, at 8 o’clock,
No. 1806 Sheridan Road, Evanston, Ill.
96 L.S.—Edward L. Steele has been
elected a member of the Common Coun-
cil of Hartford, Conn. .
’97—Emerson D. Fite. is teaching at
the Mount Hermon School, Mount Her-
mon, Mass.
’°97—Frederick B. Luquiens will go
- abroad this Summer and spend a year in
France studying.
97 S.—Seth S. Spencer, Jr., is taking
a trip through France and will visit
the Paris Exposition. He is accom-
panied by John M. Satterfield, ’98 S.
97 S.—Burr C. Chamberlin, Captain
of the Football Team in 1898, has re-
turned from the South, where he has
been traveling, to his home in Dalton,
Mass.
97 S.—H. M. North, Jr., was unani-
mously re-elected Secretary of the
Democratic State Convention held at
Harrisburg, Pa., April 5. It is very
unusual to have the same Secretary for
two sticcessive conventions.
97 M.S.—Dr. J. B. Griggs has been
elected’ to membership in the Hartford
City Medical Association. 7
97 T.5.—At the New York Eastern
Conference of the Methodist Church,
April 7, H. F. Rall was elected an Elder.
‘98—At a recent banquet given by the
Pow Wow Club of. Harvard Henry
Fletcher tesponded to the ‘toast of
“Happy Hours in the Law School.”
98 S.—Morrison B. Yung is studying
at the Columbia School of Mines, not at
Cornell as was announced recently in
the ALUMNI WEEKLY.
’99—Dwight H. Day of Indianapolis,
Ind., has been spending the past week in
New Haven.
°99—Joseph W. Wear of St. Louis,
GENTLEMEN’S
FURNISHINGS
We have created, and occupy
alone, a special field in this
line. Ue &
On our shelves you will find
the best and latest from both
sides of the water. me
W. H. GOWDY & CO.
pp. Osborn Hall.
Mo., was in New Haven just before the
Easter recess. es
: The engagement of Miss it
Harsis Newell of Kenosha, Wis., daugh-
ter of Mr. Octavius S. Newell, Yale
’61, to Mr. Charles Frederick Childs, is
announced from India.
’°99 S.—Hunter Morrison has a position
with the Denver and Rio Grande Rail-
road at Salida, Col. His address is 124
E St., Salida, Col.
’°99 L.S.—Clifford C. Mix has returned
to Hartford, after a considerable ab-
sence on business in New Haven.
’99 L.S.—Otis H. Burnett of William-
son County, IIl., has been nominated
for State Senator on the Republican
ticket.
———~+0o—___—__
YALE: NOTICES.
[Class and Association Secretaries are invited to
contribute to this column.]
To Alumni in and about New
York.
The University Glee, Banjo and Man-
dolin Clubs will give a concert for the
benefit of the University Crew at the
Waldor-Astoria on Wednesday evening,
April 25, at 8.15 o’clock. After the con-
cert there will be a reception and dance
from 10.30 to 12.30. _
The Crew is in urgent need of funds.
The committee of arrangements con-
sists of H. E. Howland, 54; W. W.
Skiddy, ’65S.; G. A. Phelps, ’os: G. G.
Faven; Jf, 7372 >. Ro Betts “754
‘Thacher, °71 +: @. ¥..Bannard, 76: H.S.
Brooks, 786; J. H. McCullough, ’96; W.
A. Copp, ’69; A. H. Mosle, ’89; Julian
W--Curtiss;"70- 7-3 “Barnes fr or
William Sloane, ’95; J. F. Eagle, ’96.
Tickets may be secured by applying to ©
Je. Sage ot the Yale Clim. §
ae
Ninety 8S.
To the Members of ’90S.:
- Our Decennial Reunion will be held
at New Haven, on Tuesday, June 26th.
The committee urge you to make an
especial effort to be present at this time.
The price of the dinner and inciden-
tal expenses, exclusive of wines, will be
$5. Arrangements will be made to at-
tend the ball game in a body, probably
in .the same section with or next to
Ninety, Academic.
The committee wish to publish a Class
record as complete as possible. They
therefore ask every member of the Class
whether they intend to come to the re-
union or not to send $2.00 to H. B.
Cheney, South Manchester, Conn. They
do not think it right that this expense
should be borne only by those who make
the effort to come to the reunion, though
they hope that everyone will be there.
We call your attention to the notice of
the Class Secretary and ask that every
man without fail answer the questions
which are necessary to compile the rec-
ord. If any member of the Class has
not received one of the blanks, please
send address to H. B: Cheney, who
would also be glad to receive any in-
formation about members or ex-members
of the Class from any source. H. G.
Day, 153 Church St., New Haven, will
also be glad to receive or give any in-
formation.
CuHartes T. RrcuMmonp,
GrorcE P. Bissett,
Horace B. CHENEY,
_ Decennial Committee.
South Manchester, Conn., April 7, 1900.
Ninety-Five S. Dinner. .
The annual Ninety-Five Scientific
dinner of the New York Alumni will
be held at the Yale Club on April 28th
next, at 8 o’clock Pp mu. All Ninety-Five
heff. men are cordially invited. The
subscription of $2.00 per man may be
sent to J. Willet Hall, Yale Club, 17
East 26th Street, New York City.
Ninety-Seven §8. Dinner.
All those who have not made arrange-
ments for the Ninety-Seven Sheff. din-
ner to be held at the Yale Club, New
York City, on April 27th, at seven
o'clock, kindly communicate at once wi
; e with
Marcus Goodbody, 39 Broad Street.
M. Goopzopy.
F. B. CLeLanp,
- ALUMNI
YALE OBITUARIES.
WILLIAM A. BALDWIN, ’50.
The Class Secretary, Rev. A. Booth,
reports that William A. Baldwin, ’50,
died in New York City June, 1899.
Mr. Baldwin was born in Killingworth,
Conn., Feb. 23, 1824.
He studied at Yale and Bangor semi-
naries and preached at Peru, Ill, Morris,
Ill., Whitewater, Wis., and Fond du Lac,
Wis., but on account of a change in
his religious-views he studied law from
1860 to 1862 and was admitted to the
bar in May, 1862, in Wisconsin. The
next year on account of ill health he
came East and subsequently practised
law in Philadelphia and New York.
Mr. Baldwin was twice married and
left a widow with two sons. By a former
marriage he had four daughters and one
son. In 1896 he had a paralytic stroke
from which he suffered the last years of
his life both mentally and physically.
WILLIAM CARRINGTON MAYO, 52.
William C. Mayo, a translator in the
United States Department of State, died
after two weeks’ illness at Washing-
ton, °C. on April i2th:
He was the son of Edward C. Mayo
(Yale, 1811), his mother being a sis-
ter of Gen. Winfield Scott. He was
born at Richmond, Va., Jan. 8, 1834,
and, after preparation at Burlington, N.
J., entered the Class of Fifty-Two at
the beginning of Junior year. For two
years after graduation he was a Civil
_ Engineer on railroad surveys in Penn-
_ sylvania, Ohio and Virginia, and then
spent two years traveling in Europe,
visiting the Holy Land. In 1857 he
went to the coast of Africa, as cap-
tain’s clerk on the U. S. Sloop of War
Dale; he resigned in the following year,
and revisited Europe for a long stay.
The outbreak of the Civil War found
him at Paris, laid up with a broken leg,
and owing to an unskillful surgeon it
was six months before he was able to
travel. He then crossed to England,
thence came to Nassau, and finally suc-
ceeded in running the blockade’ into
Charleston.
He joined the army of Northern Vir-
ginia aS a private, and took part in the
battle of Chancellorsville, Gettysburg,
the Wilderness and Spottsylvania, being
shot through the body in the latter bat-
tle. After recovery he rejoined his regi-
ment and was at the battle of Hatcher’s
Run, and the closing scenes of the war.
He was paroled at Appomattox, having
risen to be Orderly Sergeant of Com-
pany G, tI2th Virginia Infantry, Ma-
hone’s Brigade. He was wounded six
times during the war.
[Continued on page 285.]
Spring Oxfords
Double Sole Wax Calf, Russia Calf
and Patent Leather New Lasts.
The New Haven Shoe Company
842 and 846 Chapel Street.
“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
_
In doing business with the Yar
! WEEKLY advertisers, please
mention this paper.
_ Branch of No. 935 Broadway, -
S. H. MOORE
FLORIST
1054 CHAPEL ST.
OPP. YALE ART SCHOOL
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
3 Tailors,
123 Temple Si.,
Graduate correspondence solictted.
Hurle & Co.,
Tailors,
38 Center Street.
gig 8 og
Pood V3 GeO
SOUL.
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.)
(Viory’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.
PACGH-BROS.., ©
COLLEGE PHOTOGRAPHERS,
1024 Chapel St., New Haven.
New York