Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, June 13, 1900, Page 18, Image 18

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    384
YALE V-ALUMNI
WEEKLY
Coming Back ?
Stop in and see us, if you have
| time.
F. A. CORBIN,
1000 CHAPEL ST.,
New Haven, Conn.
(cs My bay IN NEw York is Thursday
Place, Astor House. Time, 12 to 4.
Townsend Speakers.
_The men who received the Townsend
premiums in the Class of Nineteen
Hundred, and who will speak in com-
petition for the DeForest Medal on
Friday of this week at 3 Pp. M. in Battell
Chapel, with a few words about each,
are the following:
Herbert Brewster Fuller, formerly of
Brunswick, Georgia, now of Glen Ridge,
N. J., prepared with tutors. He re-
ceived a First Disputes appointment in
Junior year. His subject is “The Battle
of Tours.” 3 :
Maurice P. Gould of Wabaunsee, Kan.,
took two years at Washburn College,
Topeka, Kansas and entered Nineteen
Hundred in Sophomore year. He is
now President of the German Club.
He was a member of the Wigwam, re-
ceived a Second Dispute appointment
in Junior year, and was one of the Ten
Eyck speakers at the Junior Exhibition.
He is one of the Class Historians.
His subject is “Maximilian, a Drama
of Mexico.” Mr. Gould is twenty-
seven years old. |
Henry Thomas Hunt of Cincinnati,
O., prepared at the Franklin School of
HERBERT BREWSTER FULLER
Townsend Speaker
that city. He was one of the TenEyck
prize speakers last year. His subject
is “Richelieu.” Mr. Hunt is twenty-
two years old.
William Moses Jones of Copeville,
Texas, prepared in the preparatory de-
partment of Baylor University and also
attended the university, from which he
received his B.A. in 1898. He entered
Yale the following Fall. His subject is
GENTLEMEN’S
FURNISHINGS
We have created, and occupy
alone, a special field in this
ine... Fd Se
On our shelves you will find
the best and latest from both
sides of the water. ot
W. H. GOWDY & CO.
Ypp. Osborn Hall. :
“Sir Thomas Moore and William Tyn-
dale.” Mr. Jones is twenty-four years
old.
John Henry Klosterman of Portland,
Ore., entered Yale from the Portland
Academy, after having studied a year in
preparation for West Point. He has
taken a lively interest in debating and
was one of the six selected by Mr.
Bailey to speak in competition for the
Sophomore Elocution Prize. His sub-
ject is “Edwin Booth in Hamlet.” Mr.
Klosterman is twenty-three years old.
Charlton Brice Thompson of Coving-
ton, Ky., prepared with a private tutor.
He received a First Dispute appointment
in Junior year and was one of the Ten
Eyck speakers of his class. He is also
one of the Class Historians. His sub-
ject is “Richelieu.” Mr. Thompson is
twenty-one years old.
—_—- + > >
John A. Porter Subjects.
The list of John A. Porter Prize
Essay subjects in the competition for
1901 will appear in the Commencement
issue of the Yale News and in the Com-
mencement number of the YALE ALUMNI
WEEKLY. This prize is a University
prize of $250.00. The essays in compe-
tition for the prize for 1901 will be due
May Ist of next year.
a
Professor Cook’s Poetry Prize.
The poetry prize, offered annually by
Professor Albert S. Cook, of the English
Language and Literature Department
of Yale, was awarded last week to
Charles Alexis Kellogg, Jr., 1900,
. Carthage, Mo., whose subject was,
“The Mother’s Sleep.” Honorable
mention was made of Ray Morris,
1901, New Haven, poem, “Anchorage
Song’; William Savage Johnson, 1900,
Meriden, Conn., poem, “Lyrics of
Evening,” and William Brian Hooker,
1902, Farmington, Conn., poem, “Cas-
sandra.” The judges were Prof. Charl-
ton M. Lewis of Yale; Prof. George E.
Woodbury of Columbia University, and
Prof. Charles E. Richardson of Dart-
mouth. : -
by
Be, lie 0
Commencement Week.
Following is the program of events
for Commencement week, including
athletic events:
Thursday, June 21—Yale vs. Harvard
baseball game at Cambridge.
Friday, June 22—3 Pp. M., Speaking for ,
the DeForest Prize Medal, in Battell
Chapel.
Saturday, June 23—10.30 A. M., class-
day exercises at the Sheffield Scientific
School; 4-7 P. M., reception in Winches-
ter Hall of the graduates and friends
of the Sheffield Scientific School.
Sunday, June 24—10.30 A. M., Bac-
calaureate Address, by the President, in
Battell Chapel.
Monday, June 25—II A. M., presenta-
tion exercises of the graduating class of
College, with the Class oration and poem,
in Battell Chapel; 1 Pp. M., annual meet-
ing of the Yale Law School Alumni
Association, with collation and ad-
dresses, in the Law School Building; 2
Pp. M., Reading of Class Histories on the
College Square, followed by planting of
the Class Ivy; 3 P. M., anniversary exer-
cises of the Law School, in College
Street Hall, with Townsend prize speak-
ing, and address to the graduating
classes by the Hon. W. Burke Cochran,
of New York, on “The Lawyer of the
Next Generation”; 8.15 Pp. m., Glee Club
concert, in the Hyperion Theatre; 10
P. M., promenade concert of the Senior
Class in Alumni Hall.
Tuesday, June 26—9.30 A. M., meeting
of the alumni, in Alumni Hall; I0 A. M.,
annual business meeting of the Yale
Medical School Alumni Association, at
the Medical School; 10 A. M.-I P. M.,
polls open in the Library for the election
of a member of the Corporation; 12 M.,
address before the Medical School, in
College Street Hall, by Professor J. M.
DaCosta, M.D., LL.D., of Philadelphia,
on “Questions of the Day in Medicine” ;
meetings will also be held, at different
hours on Tuesday, of the members of
the College Classes of 1840, 1850, 1855,
1860, 1865, 1870, 1875, 1880, 1885, 1890,
1894, and . 1897, as printed in the
Warekivs< 3°p; uw, Yale vs.- Harvard
baseball game at Yale Field.
Wednesday, June 27—10 A. M., pro-
cession from the Library to the Com-
mencement exercises in Battell Chapel;
2 P. M., dinner of the alumni, in Alumni
Hall; 9-11 Pp. M., reception of the Presi-
dent, in the Art School.
Thursday, June 28—» A. M., examina-
tions for admission to Yale College, the
Sheffield Scientific School, and the
Medical School; begin; Yale vs. Har-
vard, boat races at New London.
Saturday, June 30—Yale vs. Harvard,
baseball game on neutral grounds in
case of a tie.
— ae
Princeton, 9; Harvard, 2.
Princeton took the second baseball
game from Harvard, Wednesday, June
13, at Princeton, 9 to 2. Stillman was
in the box for Harvard, but in the first
four innings the Princeton batters fell
to hitting him as they hit Robertson in
the ninth inning of the Yale game, hard
and ran up the big total of nine runs.
Kernan was substituted for Stillman
in the fifth and kept the hits well down.
Hillebrand pitched a strong and steady
game for Princeton, and his men backed
him up magnificently. Harvard scored
one run in the third and one in the
seventh, the first through a three-base
hit by Coolidge and the last on Meier’s.
poor throw aided by Clark’s single.
When in town for your class reunions,
and other June ceremonies you might stop
at our store and let us fit you out with
up-to-date summer footwear.
THE NEW HAVEN SHOE COMPANY
842 and 846 CHAPEL STREET.
NEW KODAKS.
We have on exhibition several new styles
in KODAKS—the 34% x 44% and 24% x44
Folding Pocket, and the No. 3 Cartridge
Kodak, which makes a picture 34% x 44%.
Call orlet us send you a copy of the 1900 Kodak
Catalog.
THE CHARLES W. WHITTLESEY CO.,
281 State Street.
WARNER HALL....
,ee APARTMENTS
1044 Chapel Street,
New Haven, Conn.
Opp. YALE
\\
CAMPUS.
Best | OAG
Location "baa
— PAT LN hel?
‘i hgs tae are
Modern Be is
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See WN
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[ps
—
Equipm’ts oe
Low
Prices.
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Room 22. ee
Board $5 per week—Stewart Caterer.
AARAA’ABARBAAAABAA
@ CLASS SUPPERS ¢
and REUNIONS. ¢
About these days
we give special atten-
tion to Committeemen
droppingin to arrange
,
,
for their Supplies.
t pp /
é
EDW. E. HALL & SON,
38x STATE ST.
,
é
4
é
‘a
Danna ananerarrd
“CLASS REUNIONS.”
If you wish your Supper to be a success, address
the old Reliable Yale Caterer,
J. W. STEWART,
Warner Hall Restaurant,
New Haven, Conn.
UNCHANGED
COMFORT.
Of course a good many things
change at a good hotel. There
are new ways to make guests
happy. But though adding
modern improvements constantly
the home flavor and conditions
of solid comfort are not dis-
turbed at
MOSELEY’S
NEW HAVEN HOUSE.
S. H. MOORE
FLORIST
1054 CHAPEL ST.
OPP. YALE ART SCHOOL
GRUENER BROTHERS
Tailors,
F. B. WALKER & CO.
TAILORS
BUccrEDING F. R. BLISS & CO.
CHURCH AND CHAPEL STREETS
FRANK B. WALKER
CHAS. P. WALKER
New Haven House, New Haven, Ct.
Graduate correspondence solicited.
Hurle & Co.,
Tailors,
38 Center Street.
Faclors
Poros V3% 0
SOYLE
CHARLES T. PENNELL,
Successor to Wm. Franklin & Co.,
IMPORTING I AILOR,
40 Center St., New Haven, Conn.
FE. L. GLOUSKIN,
Elm cor. York.
The oldest Established Jeweler in Vicinity
of Yale University.
Best accommodations and Lowest Prices.
J. Kaiser,
Tailor,
1042
Chapel Street,
(Opp. Vanderbilt Hall.)
PACH BROS
COLLEGE PHOTOGRAPHERS,
1024 Chapel St., New Haven.
Branch of No. 935 Broadway. - New York
Mory’s - -
PE
>. . Louts Linder.