Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, June 06, 1900, Page 6, Image 6

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    360
WA so ee LLU aT oO eee
ceding Commencement) at the house
of our classmate, Prof. Hoppin, 47 Hill-
house Avenue, at 6 P. M.
It is earnestly hoped that you will, if
possible, be present at this meeting.
If you can furnish information about
any of our classmates, that will help to
complete our class history, we shall be
glad to receive it.
A reply is requested.
Your friends and classmates,
Joun C. Hottister, Secretary,
Lucius W. FitcH,
James M. Hoppin,
CHARLES R. INGERSOLL.
New Haven, Conn.,
May 10, 1900.
P. S.—Graduated
living,
10o2—only 15 now
Ninety-One Decennial,
The vote recently held to decide the
time of the Decennial Reunion has re-
sulted in the choice, by a large majority,
of June, 1901, rather than of October,
the time of the Bi-centennial celebration
of Yale.
HippoLyTE GRUENER.
Secretary.
Ninety-Four 8. Reunion.
The reunion of Ninety-Four Sheff.
promises to be the largest of any class
yet returning. The committee have
assurance at this writing that eighty-one
men will be present to uphold the repu-
tation of the Class and hope that this
number will be considerably increased
before the procession starts. They es-
pecially urge every man who has not
advised them of his intention to be
present, to do so at once, that arrange-
ments may be made for them, and,
should there be any one who has not
received Sexennial notice, such fact
should be made known at once.
The business meeting takes place June
26, at 10 A. M., in North Sheffield Hall.
The Class will meet at Osborn Hall at
1.00 Pp. M. and, headed by the Second
Regiment band and their drum and
bugle corps, will march to the Field,
where seats have been secured for the
Class ina body. On arrival at the Field
a Sexennial photograph will be taken by
Phelps. A selection especially appropri-
ate to this Class will be played as they
make their appearance on the Field.
After the game the order will be as
follows: Down Chapel to College, stop-
ping at ex-President Dwight’s in order
to pay our respects to the President of
our day; continuing our way to Presi-
dent Hadley’s, that we may indulge in
our first greeting as a class to the new
President; thence proceeding to Prof.
Brush’s and Prof. Chittenden’s, after
which we wend our way down Orange
Street to Chapel to Warner Hall, where
the Class Dinner will be served, and the
Class Cup presented, following which
the usual illumination and festivities will
take place.
The following men will be present:
Albree Hoyt
Aldrich Hurlburt
Allen, W. B. Hotchkiss
Anderson Jennings
Babcock i Johnson, C. Be
Berry Johnson, F. A.
' Bishop Johnson, H. S.
Brainerd Knapp
Brewer Kilbourne
Brewster Krom.
Brewster Ladd
Brown, C. B. Lewis
Brown, E. M. Lilley
Brown, 2. Z. Maples
Burrell Messler
Carhart Minor
Catlin Nettleton
Chaffee Owen
Colt -Parmelee
Cox ‘Patterson
Daly Pike
Dickson Pinney
Elliott Pope
Ely Proctor
Erskine Rice
Farnsworth | Robinson
Ferguson Root —
Gies Savage
Gillespie Sargent
Glenny einith, if. 2
Goetchius Spencer
Graham Steele
Hamilton Stoddard
Hart, tH: Stevenson
Piatt ta A. Toquet
Hart, M.S. Tilton
Heller Trowbridge
Uhl Wheeler
Veech Wright, W. M.
Wanning Wolodarsky
Wells
Ninety-Four S. Sexennial Committee.
YALE OBITUARIES.
HON. 0. S. NEWELL, EX-’OI.
Hon. O. S. Newell, ex-’61, died at his
home in Kenosha, Wisconsin, April 17.
He was a member of the Class of Sixty-
One for the first two years of the course,
but was obliged to leave on account of
illness. For several years he was Mayor
of Kenosha, but retired early from pub-
lic life, although he continued to wield
his influence indirectly throughout his
prolonged illness,
HON. ALBERT FRANCIS JUDD, 762.
Hon. Albert Francis Judd, ’62, died at
his home in Honolulu, on the 20th of
May, 1900.
Mr. Judd was the son of Dr. and
Mrs. Gerrit P. Judd, who went to Hono-
lulu under the auspices of the American
Board of Commissioners for Foreign
Missions, on the ship Partheon, arriving
there March 30th, 1828. He was born
in Honolulu, January 7th, 1838.
His early education, carried on under
the difficulties that surrounded the edu-
cation of the children of the first mis-
sionaries, was received at the Royal
School, then a school for the education
of the chiefs and their children. He
completed his preparation for College at
Oahu College, Honolulu, and entered
the Junior class at Yale in 1860, taking
his Bachelor’s degree with the Class of
Sixty-Two. The Master’s degree was
given him by Yale in 1865, and the de-
eree of LL.D. was conferred upon him
in 1894. While in College Mr. Judd
was a member of Alpha Delta Phi and
Phi Beta Kappa. |
His legal education was obtained at
the Harvard Law School, from which
he was graduated in 1864. He returned
at once to Honolulu and began the
practice of law.
His political career commenced with
his appointment as Attorney-General
under King Lunalilo in 1873. He held
that office during the reign of Lunalilo
and on his death resumed the practice
of his profession. On February 18th,
1874, he was appointed Second Asso-
ciate Justice of the Supreme Court of
the Hawaiian Kingdom, to succeed A.
-S. Hartwell, Harvard ’58, who entered
the Royal Cabinet. Mr. Judd became
First Associate Justice three years later
on February Ist, 1877, and on the death
of Chief Justice Harris became Chief
Justice on November 5th, 1881. When
he went on the bench during the stormy
period that marked the beginning of
Kalakaua’s reign, Honolulu was prac-
tically occupied by a foreign naval force,
landed to preserve order and to protect
the property of foreigners from the riots
growing out of the contest for the
throne between Kalakaua and Queen
Emma. Chief Justice Judd’s decisions in
the many important cases arising from
this bitter contest, though hotly assailed
when rendered, have stood the test of
time. Following the overthrow of the
monarchy in 1893, there were a number
of other cases of great importance, hav-
ing a political origin, which he was
called upon to decide. With annexation
and the transfer of the sovereignty to
the United States came another series
of important cases, which came before
the Supreme Court. The principles of
Chief Justice Judd’s decision that the
constitution of the United States was
not extended to the Hawaiian Islands by
the mere force of the annexation resolu-
tion have been the principles recently
approved by Congress and the Admin-
istration. His career on the bench ex-
tended over at least four periods of criti-
cal importance in Hawaiian history.
In the Fall of last year Chief Justice
Judd’s failing health led him ‘to seek
rest and recuperation in Central New
“York. An attack of the grip in Febru-
ary, when at Lakewood, New Jersey,
accelerated his decline, and he returned
home in April last. |
Mr. Judd married Miss Agnes H.
Boyd of Geneva, New York on April
4th, 1872. His widow and nine children
survive him.
bert F., Jr., James R., Allen W., Henry
P., Charles S., Sophie B., Gerrit P., and
Lawrence M. C. Judd. The three eldest
They are: Agnes E., Al-:
sons have been at Yale, and the fourth |
is a member of the present Junior class.
The late Chief Justice has written his
name indelibly on the history of Hawaii
as an able jurist, as his father did as an
able administrative officer. He, as his
father had done before him, served the
monarchy, but he served it as an honor-
able American gentleman could. Hawaii
was the land of his birth, but the United
States was the land of his ancestry and
education. He rejoiced to see Hawaii
taken under the wing of the great repub-
lic, for he knew that political and com-
mercial safety lay that way, but he loved
Hawaii for herself, and he loved her
native people, and was anxious to do all
in his power for them by advice and
example. Thoroughly acquainted, as he
was, with the Hawaiian mind, thought
and traditions, he occupied a peculiar
position of influence and affection among
the Hawaiian people. As President of
the Hawaiian Board of Missions he
strove to fight the demoralizing influ-
ences at work among the natives.
His private life was the admiration of
all who knew him familiarly. A more
devoted husband and father could not
be found, nor a truer friend when once
he had given his friendship. His public
character was able, industrious and
patriotic; it commanded respect from
those who were not in accord with him;
it won the esteem of those who were.
The funeral was held at his late resi-
dence on Hunuanu Avenue, Honolulu, on
May 2ist. While the last rites were
simple, the six sons at home acting as
pall bearers, yet a throng of people at-
tended, including government officials,
and men and women of all nationalities,
to offer the last tributes of affection. ,
California Alumni Association.
At the regular annual meeting of the
California Yale Alumni Association, held
in San Francisco, May 22, 1900, Prof.
E. B. Clapp, ’86 Ph.D., of Berkeley, was
elected President, and Knox Maddox,
’97, was elected Secretary for the ensu-
ing year. The other officers are: Vice-
President, William Mayo Newhall, ’76;
Treasurer, Nathan W. Wilson, ’94;
Executive Committee, Frank L. Owen,
’89, and Willard N. Drown, ’06.
The regular annual dinner, usually
held in the Fall, was omitted last year
and instead a Yale dinner was given
Judge Taft. It was held at the Cali-
fornia Hotel, on the night of Friday,
April the 13th, and was the most suc-
cessful dinner the Association has yet
given. There were present about sixty
Yale men and a number of guests.
Samuel Knight, ’87, the then President
of the Association, acted as toastmaster,
and the toasts were responded to in the
following order: Judge Taft, 78; Presi-
dent Benjamin Ide Wheeler, of the Uni-
versity of California: Knox Maddox,
07; Judge J. M. Seawell, Harvard;
Prot. “Thomas RR. Baton, 9723 Prou<&.
B.. Clapp, ’86: . and: General. W.. H.-L.
Barnes. During the evening the Bo-
hemian Club quartette, led by Henry H.
Haight, 88, sang Yale songs.
- Third Bicycle Tour
For ten students to Italian Lakes, Switzerland,
Tirol, Passton Play, the Rhine, Parzs Eaposttion.
The party leaves New York July 7, on S. S. Kaiser
Wm. Il, and will return Sept. 1o—Cost, $500. Ap-
plications should be sent at once to L. D. Bissell,
Ph.D., or A. B. Hall, Masters in the Hotchkiss
School, Lakeville, Conn.
Sporting Rifle for Sale.
The best rifle made by one of the best
rifle manufacturers in the country. Person
owning it prefers cash just now and will sell
at much less than the rifle can be bought for.
It has not been used at all.
Address “RIFLE,’’ care Yale
Weekly, New Haven, Ct.
Alumni
NEW KODAKS.
We have on exhibition several new styles
in KODAKS—the 3% x 44% and 24 x4Y
Folding Pocket, and the No. 3 Cartridge
Kodak, which makes a picture 3% x 4%.
Call or let us send you a copy of the 1900 Kodak
Catalog.
THE CHARLES W. WHITTLESEY CoO.,
281 State Street.
PITY ABOUT
BASEBALL
Everybody used to play it and ama-
teur baseball is as much good
sport as any game on the foot-
stool. But first it was tennis
that took people away and then
it was golf.
But the college nines keep it up and
the preparatory schools and the
next month shows. the glory of
it. In this, as in every other
branch of sport, the name on all
supplies is that of
A. G.
SPALDING
& BROS.
NEW YORK.
CHICAGO.
DENVER.
The YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY its bene-
fited, if nou refer to it in doing business
with advertisers.
A SHARP POINT
can be kept on Dixon’s American Graphite
Pené¢ils without breaking off every minute. They
come in 11 degrees of hardness and are unequalled
for uniformity of grading.
Can be bought at the Yale Co-op. and all
stationers.
JOSEPH DIXON CRUCIBLE CO., Jersey City, N. J
“dt SAICE
to a pipe-
fut is
one rea-
son why
Old Eng-
lish Curve
Cut pipe
tobacco
f IS SO pop-
- nities \\]Q¢, [he
curved tin box that fits any
pocket is another reason. No
other pipe tobacco has ever
made as many friends in so
short a time.
“Tt disappoints no one.”
A trial box will be sent to any one anywhere
on receipt of ten cents in stamps. Address
Old English Department, The American
Tobacco Co., 111 Fifth Avenue, New York
City. All dealers sell it.
Please mention the paper in doing
business with advertisers.
=
SSS
S
SS
cexuiss KREMENTZ
One-Piece Collar Button
Has the name “‘Krementz’’ stamped on the back,
showing quality, whether solid or plate, as our
plate outwears some solid buttons. Beware of
imitations. You get a new one without charge in
case a genuine Krementz button is damaged from
any cause. Special styles for Ladies’ Shirt Waists
= and Children’s Dresses.
Sold by all Jewelers.
The Story of a Collar Button
. free on request.
KREMENTZ & CO., \
45 Chestnut St., “qrars ‘