Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, May 23, 1900, Page 3, Image 3

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    YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY
333
YALE ALUMNI NOTES.
‘ Col. Henry M. Boies has just
Bree to his home in Scranton, Pa.,
from a trip in Puerto Rico.
‘61—Dr. Francis R. Schmucker is at
Atlantic City recovering from an illness.
’62—Dr. William Dexter Anderson,
whose office has been at 150 Temple St.,
New Haven, for the past thirty years,
has removed to 1239 Chapel St. His old
house will be the site of the new Y. M.
Cc. A. building.
‘69—Mr. and Mrs. John C. Grant of
Chicago will got o their Summer home
in Maine, early in June.
’69—Eli Whitney was elected Presi-
dent of the New Haven Horticultural
Society at a reorganization meeting
of the Society, May 14.
’‘69—At the annual meeting of the
Council of the Archeological Institute
of America held May 12 in New York,
the report of Professor Rufus B. Rich-
ardson, Director of the American
School for Classical Study at Athens,
was read, showing the School to be a
flourishing condition.
‘74—Ansley Wilcox is presiding over
the Commission appointed by Gover-
nor Roosevelt, before whom the case of .
District Attorney Gardiner of New
York is being tried.
"75—The Rev. William R. Richards,
D.D., of Plainfield, N. J., will occupy
the college pulpit at Williams College,
Sunday, June 3.
‘78—Philip W. Moen sailed. from
Boston May 23, on the Dominion Iiner
New England, for Europe. Mrs.
Molen and their three children will ac-
company him. They will spend most of
the Summer in Scotland, and may visit
the Paris Exposition.
"78 L.S.—Mr. and Mrs. Charles A.
Colley of Waterbury, Conn., sailed for
a four months’ trip through Europe
early in May.
’80—Col. Norris G. Osborn has been
elected a delegate from St. John’s
Episcopal Church, New Haven, to the
Diocesan Convention.
’82—Mr. and Mrs. William Pollock
of Pittsfield, Mass., returned from Eu-
rope about the middle of this month.
’82—Frank R. Gallaher of Essex,
Conn., sailed for Europe May 16, on
the Oceanic. He is a member of the
Connecticut State Sewerage Commis-
sion and goes abroad to study the ques-
tion of sewage disposal in Great Bri-
tain and on the Continent.
°83—The infant son of Mr. and Mrs.
Sherman D. Thacher of Nordhoff, Cal.,
died the middle of April.
°84M.S.—Dr. Henry L. Swain of
New Haven has been elected President
of the American Laryngological Asso-
Clation.
84 M.S.—Professor Oliver T. Os-
borne represented the Yale Medical
School at the National Medicine Con-
5 ee held recently in Washington,
'85—Charles S. Dodge sailed on the
St. Louis, May 2, for a trip abroad.
’86—Mr. and Mrs. Sidney M. Col-.
gate of New York are at Bernardsville,
N. J., where they will spend the Sum-
mer,
'86—Stanford T. Crapo was elected
a Director of the Pere Marquette Rail-
road at a recent meeting of the stock-
holders.
’86—Mr. and Mrs. James W. Lee, Jr
who have been spending the Winter
in Nassau, have returned to their home
in Cleveland, O.
°86S.—Harrie S. Leonard has re-
cently been elected Assistant Treasurer
of the Winchester Repeating Arms
Lompany of New Haven.
’88—Bernard C. Steiner has edited a
‘ecent publication of the Maryland His-
‘orical Society entitled “Early Mary-
‘and Poetry.”
’88—Elbert R. Tillinghast is on his
way home after a trip of several months
‘pent in California for the interests of
the Provident Saving’s Life Assurance
Co., with which he is connected.
80—Robert Treat Platt of Portland,
Oregon, was in New Haven last week
’80—George W. Woodruff has been
engaged to coach the University of
Pennsylvania Football Team for another
season,
"89 Ph.D.—Professor Frank K. San-
ders of Yale will deliver the pe bere!
- Welles,
oy
ment address at Knox College, Gales-
burg, Ill., on June to.
*90—Dr. William C. Lusk sailed for
Europe, May 17.
‘9I—A son was born May Io, to Mr.
and Mrs. Charles M. Brown of Pitts-
burg. ae
‘91 S.—Brown Caldwell is at present
representing the Sargent Company of
Chicago and his present address is 1314
Havemeyer Building, New York City.
‘92—James A. Turnbull was ap-
pointed Actuary of the Connecticut
General Life Insurance Company, at
the annual meeting held May t.
’°92—F rank Julian Price sailed for Eu-
rope April 28, by the Holland-Ameri-
can Line, for a business trip of five or
six weeks. He will spend one week in
Paris at the Exposition.
92 S.—Arthur J. Slade has been ap-
pointed First Sergeant of Troop I,
Sttadrad ACN Goh ey
92 S.—Percy T. Walden and Harry
W. Foote, ’95 S., are taking courses in
Chemistry at Munich, Germany, and
will return to New Haven next Fall.
92 S.—Charles H. Nichols and Ed-
ward E. Minor, ’96S., both of New
Haven, have recently been elected As-
sociate Members of the American So-
ciety of Civil Engineers,
’93—William Maffitt has been made
Secretary of the newly formed Mer-
cantile Trust Company of St. Louis,
Mo.
’°93—-George T. Slade was appointed
General Manager of the Delaware Val-
ley & Kingston Railway Company,
_ May 9, in charge of all departments ex-
cept the Accounting Department, with
headquarters at Dunmore, Pa.
°94—The marriarge of Miss Mabel
Bond to Charles N. Loveland will take
place at Morristown, N. J., June 9) HH:
B. MacRoy, ’94, will be best man.
94 S.—Invitations have been sent out
for the marriage of Miss Alice Farle
Barrows, datighter of Mr. Roswell
Storrs Barrows, of Jamaica Plains,
Mass., to Robert T. Fowler, which will
take place at the bride’s home May
24. After the ceremony Mr. and Mrs.
Fowler will start on their wedding tour
reaching San Francisco June 13, where
they will sail for Auckland, New Zea-
land, where Mr. Fowler will be sta-
tioned for three years.
’95—William M. Richards has been
coaching the Track Team at Bowdoin
College this Spring.
’95—The May number of the Harvard
Law Review contains an article on
“The Significance of the Hay-Pauncefote
Convention,” by Charles Cheney Hyde.
’95—William Sloane has sailed for a
short trip to the Paris Exposition and
will return in time for the Matriage of
Francis B. Harrison, ’95, at whose wed-
ding, June 7, he will be an usher.
‘95—The marriage of Miss Mary
Crocker, daughter of the late Charles
F. Crocker of San Francisco, to Francis
B. Harrison will take place June 7, at
tuxedo, N. Y. . Frank L. Polk, ’94,
will be best man and Archibald C. Har.
rison, ’98, G. Morris, ’98, Arthur B.
Shepley, ’95, William Sloane, ’95, and
Allan A. Robbins, ’93 S., ‘wil be
ushers.
‘95 S.—Charles L. F. Robinson, Rear-
Commodore of the New York Yacht
Club, is now cruising in the Adriatic
Sea on his steam yacht.
95 S.—The marriage of Miss Harriet
Wooster of Albany to Edgar A. Van-
der Veer will take place at noon, June
5, at the First Presbyterian Church,
Albany. Among the ushers will be A.
Vander Veer, Jr., 1900.
95 S.—The marriage of Miss Lucy S.
Welles to Paul B. Belin took place at
Scranton, Pa., April 2r. Among the
ushers were James ferry; ’o0g Si: C. H.
Jigscog, and fi Belin, 1901
A. Belin, ’99, was best man.
_ ’96—D. C. Vaill will sail for Europe
in June.
°96—Sherman Day has recently been
appointed Corporal in Troop 3, Squad-
ron A; N.:G? iw ¥-
_ '96—M. D. McKee has gone to Wash-
ington, D. C., to make preparations for
his intended trip to Cape Nome.
’°96—David Stuart has been made a
Corporal of Troop I, Squadron A, Na-
tional Guard of New York State.
°96—The engagement has just been
announced of Miss Mary Elizabeth
Willis Munger, daughter of Rev. Dr.
T. T. Munger, ’51, to John C. Adams.
be
96 S.—The engagement is announced
of Miss Grace Holt, daughter of George
C. Holt, 66, of New York, to Ralph
Duryea Reed.
°96 S.—Robert A. Bright, Instructor
at Haverford College Grammar School,
will conduct a party of Phillips Andover
students through Europe this Summer.
96 S.—Dr. Holmes C. Jackson, As-
sistant in Physiological Chemistry in
the Sheffield Scientific School, intents
to sail for Europe July 14, to spend a
year in research in the German labora-
tories.
’97—George B. Cutten addressed the
general religious meeting of Yale Uni-
versity, May 13.
’97--W. S. K. Wetmore, who has
spent some months in Panama, United
States of Columbia, has returned to
Washington.
’°97—Henry S. Coffin spoke on “The
American Presbyterian Conception of
the Church,” at the graduating exer-
cises of the Union Theological Semi-
nary in New York on May 1s.
°97S.— George Langford has re-
covered sufficiently from his injury to
go to Kansas City, where he is now
staying.
97 S., and ’98—Colby M. Chester, Jr.,
has resigned from Squadron A, Na-
tional Guard, State of New York, and
has accepted a commission in the
Twelfth Regiment.
907 L.S.—G. Foster Sanford has made
preparations to go abroad June 1, with
the intention of competing at the ath-
letic contests at the Paris Exposition.
’98—C. E. Merrill, Jr., has been ad-
mitted to membership in the publishing
firm of Maynard, Merrill & Co., 20
East 19th St., New York.
°98—Abner P. Hayes has resigned his
position with the Pennsylvania Rail-
road at Pittsburg, and will enter the
Yale Law School in September.
"98 S.—A. Seton Post, Jr., has given
up his position with A. D. Juillard &
Company and is now a Credit Clerk of
the Merchants’ National Bank, 42 Wall
St., New York City.
’98—Archibald C. Harrison is in the
office of William Salomon, Chairman
of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
Reorganization Committee. His busi-
ness address is 2 Wall St., New York
City:
98 S.—Morrison B. Young leaves
June 1, for Cripple Creek, Col., where
he intends to study mining.
98 S.—Harold E. Carpenter, who is
connected with the Pittsburg Steel and
Iron Works, is spending a few weeks
with his father at his home in Williman-
tic, Conn.
'Oo-—-F. A. Gorham, 74. of -Grand
Rapids, Mich., is traveling in the East
on business and was in New Haven,
Wednesday, May 9.
’99—The engagement has just been an-
nounced of Miss Elsie French, daughter
of Mrs, Frances O. French of New
York, to Alfred G. Vanderbilt.
’990—The marriage of Miss Mary
Brooks of Cleveland, Ohio, to Harri-
son G. Otis, will take place in Cleve-
[Continued on page 335.]
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