Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, May 09, 1900, Page 7, Image 7

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    VALE -ALUMNT oWHEERLY
YALE ALUMNI NOTES.
[Continued from page 311. |
’9s S.—Francis H. Oldershaw has been
elected City Engineer of New Britain,
Conn.
’95 S—James A. McCrea of Pittsburg
is entirely recovered from a severe at-
tack of typhoid fever.
Ex-’95 S—The marriage of Miss
Loraine Field Hart, daughter of Mrs.
E. K. Hart of Albion, N. Y., to Walter
Birnie took place on Wednesday, April
18, at the residence of the bride's
mother. :
NATHAN A. SMYTH.
Coach of Yale Debaters.
’96—George L. Buist has received first
appointment at the Cancer Hospital in
New York. |
’96—John C. Hollister has received an
appointment as Interne for two years in
the St. Luke’s Hospital of Chicago.
’96 J. K. Berry’s business address
is now Lord’s Court Building, corner
William St. and Exchange Place, New
York City. His temporary residence
address is 25 East 24th St.
’96—Johnson deForest has left Messrs.
Strong & Cadwalader to enter the law
office of deForest Bros. His business
address in future will be The Johnston
Building, 30 Broad St., New York City.
’96—Henry S. Johnson and H. Augus-
tus Perkins sailed for Antwerp, May 2.
They intend to take a bicycle trip
through Europe, returning in September.
Their address is care of J. S. Morgan
& Co., London.
’96 L.S.—Charles E. Pickett, assistant
clerk of the United States Court, New
Haven, has been appointed Jury Com-
missioner for the Circuit and District
Courts of Connecticut.
’97—David I. Mead has opened an of-
fice at 350 Fulton St., Brooklyn, N. Y.,
for the general practice of the law.
’97—Walter D. Makepeace has re-
sumed his work at the Yale Law School
after an absence of three months spent
in traveling through the South.
’°97—Arthur J. Draper was elected a
member of the Executive Committee of
the Phillips Exeter Alumni Association
at its annual reunion held in Boston,
April 27. :
’97—Andrew C. Furbush, who is
studying at the Hartford Theological
Seminary, has accepted a call from the
First Congregational Church of Free-
port, Me., and will go there at the close
of the Seminary in May.
_’97S.—Henry P. Weaver has a posi-
tion as draughtsman with the Aultman
Taylor Company of Mansfield, Ohio.
97 S.—Louis E. Voorheis is Assist-
ant General Manager of the American
Tool Works Company of Cincinnati.
97 S.—Arthur Rodman Townsend has
given up his position with the American
Smelting and Refining Co., Leadville,
Col. and has come East for three or
four months.
97 S.—Clinton T. Bissell and C. H.
Berry are at work in Puerto Rico with
the United States Engineer Corps on the
survey and construction of military
roads. Their address is care of Robert
Giles, U. S. Engineer Corps, San Juan,
Puerto Rico.
’98—R. L. Evans is with the Brooks
Elevator Company at 18 Flour Ex-
change, Minneapolis, Minn.
‘98—Fred M. Gilbert spoke before the
Ecumenical Conference in New York,
April 28, on “The Work of the Stu.
dent Volunteer Movement at Yale.”
’98 S.—Robert D. Reynolds has been
elected Secretary of the Republican Club
of East Orange, N
98 S.—Edward F. Leeds of the Stam-
ford Yacht Club is having a sixty-five
foot gasoline launch built for use this
Summer.
98 S.— The engagement of Miss
Mabel L. Thomas, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. W. M. Thomas of Bridgeport,
Conn., to Irvin W. Sanford has just
been announced.
’99—The engagement is announced of
Miss Marjorie King, of West Newton,
Mass., a graduate of Smith College ’g9,
to W. Stewart Gilman. Mr. Gilman has
been appointed Assistant Cashier of the
ve State National Bank of Sioux
ity.
YALE “NOTICES.
[Class and Association Secretaries are invited to
contribute to this column.]
Eighty-Five Quin-Decennial
Reunion.
The celebration of the 15th anniver-
sary of our graduation will be held in
New Haven at Commencement in June
of this year. The regular business
meeting will be called to order in C
Osborn Hall, at noon on Tuesday, June
26th.
Sheff. business meeting June 26th, I1
A. M., North Sheffield Hall.
The ball game with Harvard takes
place on Tuesday, June 26th, and a spe-
cial car for the Class and band has been
procured to leave the New Haven House
at one o'clock. After the game we meet
in front of Osborn Hall (old fence cor-
ner), at six o'clock, for the purpose of
paying our respects in a body to the new
and to the old President; after which,
the Class dinner will bé served in the
Anderson Gymnasium, 307 York Street,
at seven o'clock. :
The boat races will be rowed at New
London on Thursday, June 28th. The
round trip fare from New Haven to
New London will be $1.75, and if fifty
signify their intention to go, we can
obtain a special car from New Haven up
and back. ‘Tickets for the boat race,
(seats on observation train), $2.50.
Rooms may be obtained in West Di-
vinity Hall on direct application to E.
F. Hill, 108 College Street. The price
is $1.00 a night, but no room will be
rented for less than two nights, so that
one night only will cost $2.00. Appli-
cation should be made at once.
f
FRANK A. LORD of Yale Debating Team.
Your Committee earnestly requests
that each member of the Class who con-
templates being present, will kindly re-
member that the price of the dinner
tickets does not fully cover all the neces-
sary expenses, but that it has always
been and now is necessary to raise an
extra fund. Your Committee has fixed
the amount to be paid by every one at-
tending the celebration at six dollars.
As in the past, a style of entertainment
has been planned, including a band, ad-
mission and reserved section for the
Class at the ball game, cigars and extras
at the dinner, etc., beyond this ex-
pense of six dollars per capita. To meet
this an extra fund must be raised and
each one is invited to add a subscrip-
tion to this to his remittance of six dol-
lars. It is hoped that the contribution
to this fund will be liberal. As a por-
tion of the expenses to be defrayed at
this time, such as for printing, postage,
stationery, etc., are incurred for the
benefit of the whole class and not con-
fined to the use of those attending the
celebration, it is requested that those
members who are unable to be present,
remit two dollars to the Committee to
be used for general Class purposes.
It is also most earnestly urged upon
each one who shall receive this notice
to give it as prompt a reply as possible,
so that the Committee may be saved
F. Q. BLANCHARD of Yale Debating Team.
trouble and expense, and at an early
date be placed in a position to make in-
telligently its arrangements with the
caterer and others.
Remittances should be made to. Emile
Schultze, Jr., 141 Broadway, New
Yorke City, wy:
WiLBuR L. Cross,
JosEpH A. BLAKE,
EMILE SCHULTZE, JR,
Percy JACKSON, 5. 5S. 5.
Committee.
Ninety-Four 8,
The Sexennial Committee and the
Secretary have each sent communica-
tions to the members of the Class re-
garding the coming Sexennial Reunion.
The members of the Class who have
received these communications are
strongly urged to answer them fully
and promptly. Those who on account
of change of address or other reason
have not received them are requested
to communicate at once with the Secre-
tary,
GeEOoRGE R. BREWSTER,
Newburgh, N. Y.
Special Ninety-Seven Meeting.
A meeting of the members of the
Class of Ninety-Seven residing in New
York and vicinity will be held at the
Yale Club, 17 Madison Square North,
Friday, May 11, at 8 o'clock P. M., to
take action on the death of Joseph W.
Alport of the Class of Ninety-Seven,
who died in the Philippines, on March
18, from wounds sustained in the battle
of Maruguino. 3
Ninety-Seven 8. Triennial.
The committee in charge of the
Ninety-Seven Sheff. Triennial are anxi-
ous to get the addresses of the men
whose names are printed below. Re-
sponses should be sent to the Secretary,
Amos F. Barnes, Box 224, New Haven,
Conn. :
C. T. Bissell. W. M. Ford.
C. H. Berry. Robert Morrison.
H. P. Noble. H. B. Quinan.
C. M. Gallup. J. S.,-Gatter,
R. §S. deGolyer.
<t.
or
>.
5 al
(Yale obituaries are printed elsewhere
tm this issue.)
ee A Soe
Yale Theological Alumni at
Boston.
At the meeting of the Congregational
International Council at Boston last
Fall, an alumni association of the Yale
Theological School graduates of Bos-
ton and vicinity was organized with
Rev. E. M. Noyes, Yale ’79, and ’82
TES. as: President, “and “hey, Ac
Davis, ’93 T.S., as Secretary. The first
annual meeting and banquet was held at
the American House, Boston, April 30,
Rev. C. EL, Morgan, D.D.. 95 7.5 are.
- siding. Professor L. O. Brastow was
the special guest. A long and earnest
discussion followed Professor Brastow’s
address on the present condition and
needs of the Theological School, and
was participated in by Rev. H. S. Bush,
OF Sch oe S. Macfarland, ’97
T.S., recently instructor in Biblical
Literature; Rev. C. S. Haynes, Hooker
Fellow of ’94 T.S.; Rev. A. W. Hitch-
cock, ’89T.S., and Rev. D. H. Evans, ’97
T.S. The oldest Yale alumnus present
was Rev. N. H. Egleston, ’40.
General approval was expressed of the
recent changes in the granting of
scholarships and in the enlarging of the’
curriculum. The Boston Association
numbers nearly seventy members. Rev.
C. L, « Morgan... Ds 27a ae
elected President and Rev. A. P. Davis,
‘93 [.5.. Secretary.
~<h
>
Portland University Club.
The University Club of Portland,
Oregon, has taken permanent quarters.
It was organized as a result of a move-
ment begun at a smoker given by the
Yale Alumni Association of Portland,
January 22, 1808, at the Portland Hotel.
It has given occasional dinners, but has
had until this Spring no permanent
quarters. It has now, however, secured
a room on the corner of Sixth and
Alder Streets and held a house warm-
ing on Saturday evening, April 28.
The membership of the Club is now
about ninety, of whom more than twenty
are Yale men. The prospects for an
increase of membership are good, and
those interested are confident of the
club’s stccess.
The Council consists of the following
men: Wm. L. Brewster, Amherst ’88;
Hon. Alfred F. Sears, Dartmouth °75;
C. A. Wo Shock, Annapolis ‘$3*" Be-¥.
Tucker, Harvard ’84; M. W. Smith,
Pacific University “78; N. E. Ayer,
86S.) and: HH. F, “Canner,' 7603'S:
hi Li.
ME all
Prof. Lounsbury Feecovering.
Professor Thomas R. Lounsbury, Yale
’59, has so far improved from the ab-
scesses in his ears, by which he has been
kept from his duties for more than a
month, that he has gone to Washington,
A. D. LEAVITT of Yale Debating Team.
were he will spend several weeks. He
will not take up his classes before next
Fall.
———
At a mass meeting of students of
Princeton, April 25, Francis Jordan
Hall, 1oo1, of Harrisburg, Pa., was
elected Manager of the Baseball Team,
and James Walker Lameson, I90I, was
elected Manager of the Track Team for
next year.
Cornell has decided to send a team,
of not more than seven men, to the
Olympian Games at the Paris Exposi-
tion, this Summer. The expenses of the
trip will be borne by the alumni of the
University. 7