SATO ALUMNI WHEEKLY 305 States Courts and in 1862 was clerk of the Connecticut House of Representa- tives. Judge Lounsbury was Judge of YALE OBITUARIES. [Continued from page 304.] National Bank and Treasurer of Dum- mer Academy. He was married to Miss Charlotte A. Chapman, shortly after leaving College. Five children of that union are still living, Mrs. Moseley hav- ing died some years since. and ’66, and Prosecuting Attorney for Hartford County from March, 1875 to July, 1881. He was married twice, his first wife dying August 20, 1861. On June.7, 1864, he married Isabella Spald- ing, who survives him with three chil- dren, Mrs. Herbert E. Strong, James Allen Lounsbury and Ralph Reed Louns- bury, Yale ’o4. : THOMAS HARLAND, EX-’49. Thomas Harland, ex-’49, died of pneumonia at St. George, Staten Island, N. Y., Wednesday, April 25. Mr. Har- land was born at Norwich, Conn., and entered Yale with the Class of Forty- Nine. At the end of Freshman year, however, he left. College and began the study of law. After admission to the bar in New York, he was for a time associated with the late E. F. Under- hill, in the management of a coopera- tive home in East Fourteenth Street, in which Horace Greeley, Stephen P. An- drews and other reformers of that day were interested. Later he took a posi- tion on the editorial staff of the New York World, but when the Internal Revenue Bureau was established at Washington in 1862, he joined its force, where he did much valuable work. For a time he worked in the Patent Office, devising the American system which is now in use, but was later recalled to the Revenue Department as Deputy Commissioner, the office having been specially created for him. In 1867, Mr. Harland left Washington and began the practice of law in New York with Daniel G. Rollins, under the firm name of Harland & Rollins. At the time of his death he was consulting counsel in the firm of Rollins & Rollins, New York City. Mr, Harland’s surviving brother is General Edward Harland, Yale 753, of Norwich. He leaves a widow and one son, Henry Harland, the novelist and editor of “The Yellow Book,’ who resides in London. JONATHAN BOYNTON DILL, ’93. Jonathan Boynton Dill, ’93, died sud- day, April 29, at 3.40 Pp. Mm. Funeral services are held to-day (Wednesday, May 2) at I Pp. M., at the home of A. E. Patton, Curwinsville, Pa. << 0 Vuy Ninety-Five 8. Dinner. The following men were present at the Ninety-Five S. dinner held at the Yale Club in New York, April 28: H. Hollister Robinson, W. V. Par- sous. G.. H.- Southard, Jr.;° Hendon (ipo, vv. K. Black, A.: W. Dater, J. W. Roe, B. Barnes, C. R. Lindenberg, H. G. Wagner, C. S. Stephenson, J. S. Atkins, 796 S., F. B. Stephenson, G. S. Frank, H. V. Day, J. J. Fredericks, Chas. A. Morrough, F. W. Jordan, E. Marsh, WW Palmer, H. B. Cleland, ‘97 S:, R. W. Bartram, H. A. Fields, J. Willett Se iter FPall: THE GUARANTEE ON