Ato VALUMNI. | 7 mie
Co»
oo
ual «
——
YALE ALUMNI NOTES.
If each alumnus will report all the
news about himself as fast as it is made,
this department of the Weekly will reach
its highest value and usefulness. The
alumni rightly demand such news of one
another and the Weekly is the place for
them to get it and get it promptly and
correctly. A great deal of time and
money is spent in testing the accuracy
of the notes that are handed in about
10,000 Yale men who live all over the
world. The surest way to absolutely
prevent error is to report the news directly
as soon as itis ready. Those who know
news about others, which has not ap-
peared, are also strongly urged to con-
tribute that news. <All communications
ought, of course, to be signed, and when
they are about any others than the writer,
it is well to indicate the source of the in-
formation, in order that every item may
be safeguarded.
’25—The New Haven Board of Edu-
cation have decided to name the new
Canner Street Public School ‘“Worth-
ington Hooker,” after the late Dr.
Hooker, who was a member of the
Board for several years.
°46— Frederick J. Kingsbury was
elected Governor of the Society of
Colonial Wars in the State of Connec-
ticut at the eighth general court held
May 2, in New Haven.
"48—The Rev. Henry Blodget of
Bridgeport, Conn., was a delegate to the
Ecumenical Conference in New Yoric.
*49—The Rev. Edward D. Morris,
lately Professor of Theology in Jane
Theological Seminary, Columbus, O.,
has completed a work on “Systematic
Theology.” : |
*52—In connection with the recent
twenty-fifth anniversary of Dr. Daniel
Coit Gilman as President of John Hop-
kins University, his colleagues in the
Faculty have presented a three-quarter
life-size oil portrait of him to the Uni-
versity.
55—Professor Charles F. Johnson of
Trinity College has recovered from his
recent severe attack of the grip.
*55—The Rev. Henry N. Cobb was
Chairman of the Executive Committee
of the Ecumenical Conference on For-
eign Missions held recently in New
York.
57—A little pamphlet entitled ‘“Sys-
tematic Benevolence,” -has recently been
published by the Rev. Dr. Stuart Dodge.
’57—At the Ecumenical Conference in
New York, April 23; the Rev. Augustus
H. Strong, President of the Rochester
Theological Seminary, delivered an ad-
dress on the “Authority and Purpose of
Foreign Missions.”
*58—Rev. W. S. Hubbell was elected
Chaplain of the New York State Com-
mandery of the Loyal Legion, May 2.
‘60—The Rev. Dr. Charles H. Rich-
ards of Philadelphia was a delegate to
the Ecumenical Conference in New
York.
’64—William E. Barnett, Vice-Presi-
dent of the New York, New Haven
and Hartford R. R., who has been
away some weeks for his health, re-
turned to his home in New Haven,
April 30.
‘65—At the thirty-second anniversary
of the Hampton Institute Conference,
April 26, the Rev. George S. Dickar-
eae of New Haven delivered an ad-
ress.
'67—Professor William H. Goodyear
has just completed a work entitled “Re-
naissance and Modern Att.”
‘68—J. Warren Greene, who went to
Mexico April 10, to attend to some law
business, is expected to return very soon.
’68—Rev. Chauncey B. Brewster was
elected Chaplain of the Society of
Colonial Wars in the State of Connecti-
cut, at the eighth general court held in
New Haven, May 2.
'72—Dr. Edward H. Jenkins was one
of the speakers at the dinner of the So-
ciety of Colonial Wars in the State of
Connecticut, held in New Haven, May 2.
’72—Theodore S. Woolsey was elected
Deputy Governor of the Society of
Colonial Wars in the State of Connecti-
cut at the eighth general court held in
New Haven, May 2.
'72—The New York Evening Post for
Saturday, April 28, published a three-
column article by Professor Theodore
S. Woolsey of the University on “Our
Relations with China.”
°72—The Rey. Charles C. Stearns was
elected Vice-President of the Twentieth ©
Century Club of Hartford, at the meet-
ing April 30. Judge Simeon E. Bald-
win, ’61, delivered an address on
“Socialism.”
72 S.—A son was born April 30 to
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Johnson of
New York.
'73—Atwood Collins returned to his
home in Hartford, Conn., April 25, after
a few weeks spent in Atlantic City, N. J
73'T.S.—The Rev. Franklin S. Fitch,
D.D., of Buffalo, N. Y., was a delegate
to the recent Ecumenical Conference in
New York.
’74$.—Lorenzo M. Johnson, general
manager of the Mexico International
Railway, has been investigating means
for the proposed railroad to run from
Durango, Mexico, to the Pacific Ocean.
’°75-——-The May issue of the Record of
Christian Works contains an article en-
titled “Golden Text Homilies,” by the
Rev. Reuben A. Torrey.
75 S.—Professor Russell H. Chitten-
den of the Sheffield Scientific School
attended the Congress of American
Physicians and Surgeons held in Wash-
ington, May 1.
75 T.S.—The Rev. Edward D. Eaton
was a delegate from Beloit, Wis., to
the recent Ecumenical Conference in
New York.
’76—President Arthur T. Hadley
spoke at the annual Founders’ Day
exercises at Vassar College on Friday,
April 24. :
‘77—Frank H. Platt sailed for a Sum-
mer in Europe, on the St. Louis, May 2.
‘77—Arthur Reed Kimball read a
paper on “A Popular Colonial Poet’
at the dinner of the Society of Colonial
Wars in the State of Connecticut, held
in New Haven, May 2.
78—The Rev. Harlan P. Beach of
Montclair was a delegate to the recent
Ecumenical Conference in New York.
79 S.—Frederick W. Paramore of St.
Louis has taken a cottage in James-
town, R. L., and will spend the Summer
there.
‘79 S.—The committee on the general
catalogue of Columbia University are
making inquiries as to the residence of
Dr. Francis H. Harrison, who graduated
from the Columbia Medical School in
‘82. Any one who knows his address
is requested to send it to H. W. Asher,
Secretary, Chapel Street, New Haven,
Conn.
*80—Governor Roosevelt of New
York has appointed Henry W. Taft to
serve on the New York City Charter
Revision Committee.
’S0o—Walter Camp acted as one of the
judges of track events at the annual
Athletic Carnival held at Philadelphia,
April 28, under the auspices of the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania.
’80—William R. Barbour, who has
been practicing law in Denver, Col., for
a number of years, has left Denver and
resumed practice in association with
Howard Mansfield, 71, at 35 Wall St.
’°81—At a recent meeting of the Di-
rectors of the Manufacturers National
Bank of Rockford, Ill., Norman F.
Thompson was elected Vice-President
and Manager.
’84—The marriage of Miss Ethel Bur-
ham to Arthur B. Wells took place at
Evanston, Ill., April 18.
’84—Edward Wells, Jr., attorney-at-
law, has removed his office from 35
Nassau Street to 141 Broadway, cor-
ner of Broadway and Liberty Street.
’°84—Henry Holt & Co. will soon pub-
lish an edition of Sudermann’s “Frau
Sorge,” which has been arranged and
edited by Professor Gustav Gruener of
the University.
84 S.—Russell Sargent will remove to
his new home on Edwards St., New Ha-
ven, sometime in June or July.
86 T.S.—The Rev. Cornelius H. Pat-
ton, D.D., of St. Louis, Mo., was a
delegate to the recent Ecumenical Con-
ference in New York.
88 S.—Dr. Charles A. Tuttle is the
author of an article published in the
Journal of the American Medical As-
sociation, for March 31, on “Albumi-
naria, its Prognostic Value in Chronic
Nephristis.”
’89—Charles S. King of Wabash, Ind.,
has been renominated for the General
Assembly of his State by the Republi-
cans of his district.
89 S.—A daughter was born to Mr.
and Mrs.. Boynton W. McFarland of
New Haven, March 18.
890 T.S.—James H. Tufts, formerly
Assistant Professor in Philosophy at the
University of Chicago, has been pro-
moted to a professorship in the same
department. | ee
‘90—The Rev. Wolcott W. Ellsworth
has just resigned as rector of the Epis-
copal Church in Unionville, Conn.
*90—Samuel A. York has recently
been elected a vestryman of St, Paul’s
Episcopal Church of New Haven.
’90 L.S.—James P. Bree of New Ha-
ven returned home May 1, after a stay
of five weeks in Saranac, N. Y., where
he had gone for his health.
90 M.S.—Dr. Edward R. Baldwin of
Saranac, N. Y., read a paper on “Bac-
teriology in Health and Disease,” at
the fifth triennial Congress of American
Physicians anl Surgeons in Washington,
May I. |
91 S.—George Sherwood Eddy, who
is at present in India, has an article in
the May number of the Missionary Re-
view, entitled “The Greatest Famine of
the Century.” He also has an article
_ in the current issue of the Intercollegiate
on “The Famine in India.”
’92—Erman J. Ridgway of New York
sailed on the “Germanic,” May 2, for a
visit to the Paris Exposition and a trip
on the continent.
’°92—Mr. and Mrs. L. P. W. Marvin
of Hartford will give a tea in honor of
the delegates to the Alpha Delta Phi
fraternity convention to be held in Hart-
ford, May to.
’°92—James E. Wheeler has recently
been elected a vestryman of St. Paul’s
Episcopal Church of New Haven.
‘92 T.S.—The Rev. Frank O. Hellier
has resigned from the pastorate of the
First Congregational Church of Rhine-
lander, Wis.
°94—The Rev. Charles J. Sniffen, who
has been curate at the Church of the
Holy Trinity, Middletown, Conn., for
a number of years, has tendered his
resignation, to take effect the middle
of June.
’94—Charles G. Osgood, Jr., instruc-
tor in English in the University, has just
published through the press of Henry
Holt & Co. a book which forms the
eighth of the Yale studies in English.
The title is “The Classical Mythology
of Milton’s English Poems.”
’94—Leland Stanford Stillman, ’o4;
Francis Landey Patton, Jr.; Robert
Hunter Patton and Robert Hunter Pat-
ton, 2d, formed May 1, a partnership
for the general practice of law under
the firm name of Patton, Stillman &
Patton, with offices at 40 Wall St., New
York.
94 L.S.—Announcement has just been
made of the marriage of Miss Fannie
Belle Bird of Tarrytown,’ N. Y., to
Oliver Perry Merritt on December 11.
Mr. Merritt went to California January
Ist for his health and his wife is now
on her way to join him.
795 S—_The May number of the Yale
Medical Journal contains an article on
“Small-pox in Porto Rico,” by Dr. San-
ford H. Wadhams, who is at present in
Porto Rico with the United States
Army. :
’95—Thomas M. DeBevoise became a
member of the firm of Perkins & Jack-
son, 115 Broadway, New York, May 1.
’95—The engagement has just been
announced of Miss Mary Crocker,
daughter of the late Charles F. Crocker
of California, to Francis B. Harrison.
’95——Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Morris
have changed their
residence from
Canner Street to No. 230 Prospect
Street, New Haven.
Morris home.
The latter is the
-’95—The Rev. Clement G. Clarke of
New Haven has accepted a call of the
Congregational
Church at Plainville,
Conn., and will assume charge at the
close of the Yale Divinity School which
he is attending.
’°95—The marriage of Miss Clara H.
Richardson of Brooklyn, N. Y., to I.
Richards took place April 17 at Brook-
lyn. The best man was D: B. Melick,
95.
The present address of Mr. and
Mrs. Richards is 394 First St., Brook-
in, NY:
’°95—Dr. Yandell Henderson, formerly
Assistant in Physiological Chemistry at
Yale, during the late war, has just com-
pleted a series of researches in physiol-
ogy carried out at the University of
Marburg, Germany. Dr. Henderson has
been traveling in Italy and Sicily and
has just begun a course of investiga-
tions in the Physiological Institute of
the University at Miinich.
[Continued on page 313.]
Bankers and Brokers,
Beg to announce their removal to
Lord’s Court Building, 40 Exchange
Place and 27 William Street, Rooms
308-309, New York.
CLARENCE S. Day & Co.
call attention to the fact that they have re-
moved their offices to
45 Wall St., New York.
lt 1s of advantage to the paper, the
advertiser and the reader, when you
mention the YaLeE ALUMNI
in doing business with the advertiser.
WEEKLY
Geno
Tes
<q
ANU 7
4 =
i ~*
AL
ot
iW,
NN
ADPDEALS
to every traveler. Our chef.is
the equal of any in NewYork,
our prices more moderate,
and our service equals the
best
The Grand Union Hotel
directly opposite the Grand
Central Station is a_high-
GOOD COOKING
lec class, comfortable, home-like .
Ait hotel, with moderate prices.
+ European Plan.
Pa
Rates, $1 a day and upwards
Shot by one of the ’99 Camp at Long Lake,
Allagash waters, in September.
KAHKOU CAMP % &
~ = AND ~~
% % CANOE TOURS.
A summer of real roughing in the woods
of Maine. Conducted by E. H. Wells (Yale
’93), lately of the Hopkinson School, Boston,
and by A. S. Gregg Clarke of the Gunnery
School, Washington, Conn.
left behind and the summer is spent on the
Penobscot and Allagash waters. Special and
Separate provision is made for those who
wish to be tutored for college examinations.
Address
ALUMNI WEEKLY or MR. WELLS,
72 Mansfield Street, New Haven, and a pros-
pectus will be sent.
Civilization is’