VADH MALUMNIL WEEiai SS
879
YALE ALUMNI NOTES.
’40—General Lewis B. Parsons has
published a genealogy of the Parsons
and Hoar families. ‘
’43—The Rev. William W. Atterbury
sailed for Europe, June 9, on the
Etruria.
*46--Hon. Frederick K. Kingsbury,
of Waterbury, Conn., has resigned his
position as Treasurer of the Diocese
of Connecticut after twenty years
service.
’s0—The address of Mr. and Mrs.
Cyprian S. Brainerd for the Summer
will be Haddam, Conn.
*52—The Woburn Journal, of Wo-
burn, Mass., says: “On March 31, 1900,
Harvard University asked Dr. Ephriam
Cutter, the owner, to sell his Tolles */7s
inch objective, made in Boston in 1873
by order of G. B. Harriman, D.D.S.,
nephew of the late Dr. John Clough,
and for 27 years the most famous
microscope in the world—to be placed,
and not used, as the highest culmina-
tion of the technique of the micro-
scope. All kinds of microscopes are
to be in the collection, -which is
intended to be historical only, and kept
permanently for exhibition.
*57—Rev. Dr. Storrs O. Seymour was ©
re-elected a member of the Standing
Committee at the annual convention of
the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut,
held in Hartford, June 12.
58 S.—Mr. and Mrs. John Davenport
Wheeler have returned from Europe and
are at their home on Whitney Avenue,
New Haven.
’*59—Rev. Joseph H. Twichell has an
article in the Outlook for June, entitled
“Horace Bushnell in the Woods.”
*59—Mr. and Mrs. Burton N. Harri-
son have gone to Bar Harbor and will
spend the Summer there at their villa,
“Sea Urchins.”
’60—Rev. Henry C. Hart of Franklin,
Conn., has removed to West Hartford.
*60—Rev. A. L. P. Loomis has entered
upon the thirty-sixth year of his pas-
torate at Windsor, Wis.
’60—Maj. Clarence E. Dutton, U. S.
A. Ordinance Department, has been
ordered to proceed to the Rock Island
Arsenal, Illinois, on official business
pertaining to the installation of a small
arms plant at that arsenal.
’*61—F ranklin B. Dexter, of the Yale
Library, has recently published a small
edition of the Diary of David McClure,
Doctor of Divinity, 1748-1820.
‘61—Winthrop D. Sheldon, Vice-
President of Girard College, received
the degree of Doctor of Laws from
Ursinus College at the Commencement
held June 14.
’61—Simeon E. Baldwin has been ap-
pointed by the Department of State a
delegate from the United States to the
Sixth International Prison Congress, to
be held at Brussels in August.
‘62—Charles N. Judson has been
elected a member of the New York
Law Institute.
’62—Frederick A. Ward has been
chosen Recording Secretary of the Long
Island Historical Society.
’62—The Rev. Henry H. Stebbins of
Rochester, N. Y., will be one of the
speakers at the annual banquet of the
Phillips Academy Alumni Association
at Andover, Mass., June 27.
’63—Governor George E. Lounsbury
of Connecticut has been elected Presi-
dent of the First National Bank of
Ridgefield, Conn.
’63—The Rev. Dr. Leander T. Cham-
berlain of New York City will deliver
an address at the Commencement Ex-
ercises of Phillips Academy, Andover,
Mass., June 27.
’64—Rev. A. Douglas Miller has re-
signed the charge of the St. James
Church in Fair Haven, where he has
officiated during the past year.
_ ’64—Samuel C. Darling, President of
the Philomathian Society Association
at Andover, will preside at the dinner
celebrating the seventy-fifth anniversary
of the Society, at Andover, June 27.
’65—Professor Charles H. Smith of
Yale, delivered an address before the
Arbitration Conference at Lake Mo-
honk, N. Y., June 8.
’65—William Stocking has for the
present relinquished newspaper work
which has been his chief occupation
since graduation. He recently finished
an elaborate historical and industrial
sketch of Detroit, and is now engaged
in writing a history of the Republican
party with especial reference to Michi-
gan, where the party was founded.
°66—Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Betts’
address for the Summer will be Point
Pleasant, New Jersey.
°67—William H. Bishop, of Yale and
his family have gone to their Summer
home at Oxford, Conn., for the vaca-
tion.
°67—George Peabody Wetmore was
re-elected United States Senator from
Rhode Island at a special session of the
General Assembly in Providence, June
12.
’68—The Right Rev. Chauncey B.
Brewster, Bishop of the Diocese of
Connecticut, preached the baccalaureate
sermon for the graduating class of St.
Margaret’s School, Waterbury, Conn.,
June 3.
68 S.—Prof. Henry S. Williams of
Yale University has just published ‘The
Story of the 19th Century Science.”
‘This is a collection of his papers that
have from time to time appeared in
Harper's Magazine.
‘6go—Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Cam-
eron will spend the Summer at Hampton
House, Bridgehampton, Long Island.
’69—At a meeting of the Connecticut
Mayors’ Association held in New
Haven, June 12, Hon Cornelius T. Dris-
coll of New Haven was el-elected Presi-
dent for the ensuing year.
’69—Eli Whitney, President of the
New Haven Board of Education, was
one of the speakers at the dinner, June
12, in honor of Mr. C. N. Kendall, who
is about to retire from his position as
Superintendent of New Haven Schools.
69 S.—Professor and Mrs. A. Jay
DuBois will go to their country home
at Holderness, Mass., after Commence-
ment.
‘72—-Nine sons of members of the
Class of 1872 are at present enrolled in
the Academic Department of the Uni-
versity.
'72—The Rev. Edwin S. Lines, D.D.,
of New Haven, was elected Second
Vice-President of the Alumni Associa-
tion of the Berkeley Divinity School
at a meeting held at Middletown, Conn.,
June 6
"73 and ’77—The law firm of Tracy,
Boardman & Platt has been changed
by the retirement of Gen. B. F. Tracy.
The firm is now Boardman, Platt &
Soley, 35 Wall Street. Albert B.
Boardman graduated from Yale in 1873
and Frank H. Platt in 1877.
"73 S.—Professor Andrew W. Phillips
was one of the speakers at the dinner
in honor of Mr. C. N. Kendall, the re-
tiring Superintendent of Schools of New
Haven, June 12.
’74—David A. Kennedy, with his son,
Chauncey Clark Kennedy, sailed on the
Teutonic, June 13, for a three months’
trip on the Continent.
‘74 L.S.—Henry F. English has given
an addition of $1,000 to the formation
of the Alice Kimball English Prizes in
the University.
’"76—-James B. Dill addressed the Wil-
liams College literary societies, June 8,
on “The College Man and the Cor-
porate Proposition.”
"76—The degree of Doctor of Laws
was given President Arthur T. Hadley
at the Commencement exercises of Co-
lumbia University, Wednesday, June 13.
76 S.—James L. Houghteling of Chi-
cago, President of the National Council,
Brotherhood of St. Andrew, delivered
an address, Friday, June 8, to members
of the brotherhood in St. John’s Episco-
pal Church, Clifton, Staten Island, on
“The Brotherhood Outlook.”
Houghteling was in New Haven, June 9.
"77-—F. H. Platt is spending the Sum-
mer with his family at Monmouth
Beach, N. J.
Ex-’78—William H. Hunt, whose ap-
pointment as Secretary of Porto Rico has
been recorded in this column, has been
for the past twenty-one years a resident
of Montana, and for eleven years one of
its most distinguished jurists and
judges. On May 21 he resigned his
office as Associate Justice of the Su-
preme Court of Montana, to accept the
position tendered him by the President,
of Secretary of Porto Rico. Judge
Hunt only a few days prior to the above
appointment had been offered and had
accepted the position of Counsel to the
Chilian Claims Commission soon to
organize and sit in Washington for the
adjudication of certain claims of the
Chilian Government against the United
States. Judge Hunt has been a resident
Mr.
It You Smoke
of Montana since early manhood, at
first practicing law, then elected to the
District Judgeship at Helena,
Capital, and, over five years ago, elected
to the Supreme Court. During this
term he has been prominent in deciding
many important questions of law, and,
perhaps more than any other man
has been a factor in forming the
jurisprudence of this new State.
On the eve of his departure for the
East, lawyers from all sections of the
State assembled in Helena, and in a
meeting remarkable for its profound and
earnest expressions of respect and good
wishes, passed resolutions appropriate to
the occasion, and significant of the re-
gard in which the members of the bar’
hold him. Judge Hunt at once enters
upon the duties of his new position in
Porto Rico.
"79—Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Bulkley
will spend the Summer in Kennebunk-
port, Me., returning to their Brooklyn
home, 20 Remsen Street, October 15.
’°80 S.—George B. Phelps arrived on
the St. Paul from Southampton and
Cherbourg, June 2.
’80 T.S.—Prof. William F. Blackman,
whose family have been in Europe for
some time, is now in Paris with them.
They will return this Fall.
"80 T.S.—At the annual meeting of the
Outlook Committee of the Congrega-
tional Club held June 11 at Hartford,
the Rev. William W. Leete was elected
a member and delivered an address on
“Our Debt to Our Ancestors of the
New Haven Colony and What we may
Learn from Them.”
’°83—Miss Lillian Stevens, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Stevens, and
Harry Roberts Hillard, were married
Wednesday evening, June 13, at 47
Miami Avenue, Columbus, O
*83—Frank H. Beede was one of the
speakers at the dinner given June 12
in honor of Mr. C. N. Kendall, whom
he is about to succeed as Superintendent
of Schools of New Haven, on Mr.
Kendall’s resignation to accept a similar
position in Indianapolis.
’84—Professor Howard H. Higbee
has resigned the Childs Professorship of
Chemistry at Hamilton College, Clinton,
i Ores
’*85—Dr. Richard S. Storrs has been
elected President of the Long Island
Historical Society.
’°86—The Rev. Charles F. Clarke was
elected President of the New Haven
Congregational Club for the coming
year, June ITI.
’86—William B. Goodwin of New
York is one of the incorporators of the
newly formed Empire Silk Manufactur-
ing Co., capitalized at $600,000.
86 S.—Willis B. Herr is now practic-
ing law at Seattle, Wash.
’*87—Hon. James R. Sheffield of New
York City, has been elected President of
the newly-formed Republican Associa-
tion of College Men in New York.
’°87 S.—The wedding of Miss Mabel
Goodsell of East Orange and Joseph C.
Jackson, Jr., of New York, son of
General Joseph C. Jackson, ’57, took
place at Christ Church, East Orange,
June 14. The ceremony was performed
by Rev. Mr. Caskey, 65, pastor of the
American Church at Dresden, assisted
by Rev. Mr. Davis of. Christ Church
parish. The bride was given away by
her brother, Percy Hamilton Goodsell
of Christ Church, Oxford, and the best
man was the groom’s brother, John D.
Jackson, ’90. The ushers were Percy
Jackson, ’85S.; James H. Hayden,
tie
1 B9-S se Villiage TF ackson, Princeton
85; Samuel D. Parker, Harvard ’g0. _
*90—Dr. Ralph A. McDonnell of New
Haven attended the annual meeting of
the American Medical Association,
which was held at Atlantic City, N. J.,
during the first week of June. |
°90 T.S.—The Rev. Edward T. Ford
has accepted a call to the pastorate of
the First Congregational Church, Ta-
coma, Washington, and has entered on
the duties of the position. 7
*91—William R. Moody, of Mount
Hermon, Mass., spoke at the First Bap-
tist Church of Hartford, Conn., June
7, on the “Northfield Conference.”
’°92—A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mrs. Edward H. Mason of Denver,
Colorado, June 8.
Ex-’92—Dr. M. J. Synnott has opened
an office in his own building at 26 South
Fullerton Ave., Montclair, N. J., with
residence at 60 North Fullerton Ave.
He has been in practice for the past
five=years in‘ Little Falis- N.- J. His
practice there hereafter will be in charge
of Dr. W. W. MacAllister.
’93—Dr. Arthur L. Wheeler has been
elected Associate Professor and head of
the Latin Department at Bryn Mawr
College. He has resigned his position
at Yale and will enter upon his new
duties at the beginning of the next col-
lege year.
793 S.—Alexander J. Campbell is
General Superintendent of the San
Antonio Mine and several other mines
Tutor or Companion for the
Summer.
CURTIS H. WALKER, ’99,
97 Whitney Avenue,
New Haven, Conn.
Reference, Dean’s Office.
Elegant residence, 115 Dwight St.,
every convenience and luxury, for
sale or rent ; furnished or unfurnished.
Apply on the premises.
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