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About Yale Alumni Magazine | View Entire Issue (Aug. 1, 1900)
424 YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY [Continued from page 418.] F. W. Varker, 38 West oth St., New York City. James A. Veech, New Haven, Conn. Dr. Sanford H. Wadhams, Surgeon U. S. A., Humacao, Porto Rico. ae Joseph P. Wales, Wilmington, el. ae C. Waller, 335 Rush St., Chicago, F. D. Wanning, Derby, Conn. William M. Weller, Lima, O. Benjamin G. Wells, Philadelphia Press, Philadelphia, Pa. L. P. Wheeler, 333 York St., New ~ Haven, Conn. Dudley P. Wilkinson, Jr., 163 Rush St., Chicago, Ill. | Samuel P. Williams, 110 Kenyon St., Hartford, Conn. Meyer Wolodarsky, 167 Ave., New Haven, Conn. Edward T. Wright, Great Falls, Mont. Willis M. Wright, 42 Fairmont Ave., New Haven, Conn. Kimberly ADDRESSES WANTED. It is very much desired that the ad- dresses and occupations of those men- tioned below be secured at an early date. Information may be forwarded by the men themselves or by any who know them, to the YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY, from which it will also reach the Class officers promptly. The list follows: John L. Arden. H. I. Bartholomew. Willard Baylis. R. E. Dusinberre. A. B. Gwathmey, Jr. H. Lee Joyce. A. T. Kemp. A. S. Nathan. cK. Norris. J, 4_.ieek: G. H. Penfield. A. N. Ranney. S. M. Russell. Geo. St. J. Sheffield. James Walker. Lawrence Yates. - = —— Self-Help at Yale. [Dean Henry P. Wright of Yale College.) It is easier for a man of limited means to go through Yale to-day than it was thirty or forty years ago. While some expenses were lower then, there were fewer opportunities for self-help. The number of students in College who. can receive little or no aid from homes is increasing steadily. In the last ten classes 519 men have been graduated who earned while in College all or a considerable part of the money needed for their expenses, and of these III re- ceived no income whatever from any outside source. This means that several hundred have thus had the benefit of the best college training, to whom these privileges could not have been open thirty years ago. It is well worth while to encourage such men. They appreciate the cost of their education and are likely to make the most of their advantages. They are generally good students, often ranking among the highest, and are prominent in competition for scholar- - ships and literary prizes. Moreover, the sraduate who has been thrown upon his own resources in college often finds him- self much better fitted to meet the dif- ficulties which confront him in his busi- ness or profession than his classmate who received his liberal monthly allow- ance from home. -dt-19-still true at Yale: astt- has always <been, < that. -a man does not suffer in the esteem of his classmates because he is poor. He is ranked according to what he is and does, and not according to what he has. Here, as elsewhere, each one must, for the most part, find his own employment; but a person of good ability, who knows how to economize and is willing to en- gage in any honorable work, need not hesitate to come to Yale because of lack of opportunities for self-support. <> Lp, ome wee Death of Mrs. Woolsey. Mrs. Sarah Sears Woolsey, widow of ex-President of Yale Theodore Dwight Woolsey, died at her home in New Ha- ven, July 14. Three months before she was thrown from her carriage by a run- away horse and so severely injured that she never entirely recovered, failing in health steadily from that time. She is survived by three children, Dr. George Woolsey, Yale ’81; Mrs. A. T. Bacon of Denver, and Miss Edith Woolsey of New Haven. ; Hartford officers elected 1109; INDEX VOL. IX. Classified Reference to Yale news of 1899-1900. This index of Vol. IX. (1899-1900) of the YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY is placed under four general heads as follows: “Alumni News,’ “Athletic Sports,” “General News” and “Illustrations.” The figures which follow the indexed item indicate the number of the page; the letter “e” after the figures means “editorial,” and the letter “c” communi- cation.” The pages run from 1 to 410. AtumMNI News includes Association Meetings, Class News and Obituaries, the latter indexed alphabetically and by classes. ATHLETIC Sports include only Base- ball, Football, Rowing and Track Athletics. The minor sports, such as Basketball, Bicycling, Golf, Hockey, Lacrosse, Shooting, Tennis, Yachting, etc., are placed under their respective heads in “General News.” GENERAL NEws includes all the cur- rent happenings of the times not in- cluded in the two preceding general heads of “Alumni News” and “Athletic Sports.” ee ote ALUMNI NEWS ASSOCIATION NEWS Boston dinner 217; Officers elected 217 Buffalo dinner 232, 244; Officers elected 244 California meeting 360; Officers elected 360 Central and Western Massachusetts dinner 261, 275; Officers elected 275 Chicago dinner 148 Cincinnati dinner 183 Cleveland dinner 143; 148 Colorado dinner 159 Officers elected 159; Officers elected Denver, Colorado dinner 159; Officers elected 159 Eastern New York dinner 256, 272; Offi- cers elected 272 Essex County (N. J.) dinner 08, 117, 138, 187, 237 Dinner IOI Indiana dinner 158, 187 Kansas City dinner 159 Kentucky dinner 180; 180 Officers elected Litchfield County University Club dinner AII Long Island meeting 69; Dinners 90, 199; Officers elected 225 Maryland dinner 200, Officers 239 ; elected 239 New York dinner 90, 109, 115; Protest about cost of 138c Northwestern dinner I51; elected 156 Oregon prize awarded 216 Philadelphia dinner 157, 187, 216 Philadelphia scholarship 216 Pittsburg dinner 81; 165 Portland University Club formed 313; Officers 313 St. Louis dinner 163; Officers elected 105 Secretaries, notice to 261 Southern California dinner 240; Officers — elected 240 Washington dinner 214, 244 Wisconsin meeting 69; Officers elected 9 Wyoming Valley dinner 157; Officers elected 157 CLASS NEWS '40—Reunion 357, 399 45—Reunion 399 Officers | Officers elected | ’50—Reunion 345, 399 ’52—Supplement 129 . ’55—Reunion 117, 399 ’60—Reunion 381, 399 ’62—Class book 296 ’*65—Reunion 220, 373, 399 ’°67—Class record 358 *790—Reunion 399 *75——Reunion 229, 390 ’*80—Reunion 373, 309 ’*80S.—Addresses 346 ’*82—Yale Club dinner 214, 220, 237 ’85—Reunion 220, 313, 373, 381, 400; Yale Club dinner 248, 256 ’*88—Decennial record 17 ’*88S.—Decennial record 182 ’*89—Decennial record 297 ’90— Yale Club dinner 220, 229; cennial 345, 400 ’90S.—Addresses 262; 292, 304, 346, 400 ’9t—Yale Club dinner 277, 292; cennial 360; Addresses 364 ’92— Yale Club dinner 214 ’93—-Sexennial record, cheer and song De- Decennial 284, 10 ’94— Yale Club dinner 248; Sexennial 335, 373, 400 ’94 S.—Sexennial 313, 325, 360, 400; Ad- dresses 418 ’95—Yale Club dinner 232, 237 ’795S.—Yale Club dinner 284, 292, 305 ’96—Trriennial record 49, 117, 180; Yale Club dinner 137, 145, 157, 161, 192; Proposed memorial gateway to Ives and Cheney 168, 381 ’97—Yale Club dinner 237, 248, 272; Triennial 304, 335, 346, 381, 400 ’97S.—Triennial 158, 161, 313, 400; Yale Club dinner 217, 284 | ’98—Yale Club dinner 248, 276 *98S.—Addresses 232 ’99 “A Practical Joke’ 64, 68e; Yale Club dinner 220, 232, 237, 248, 265; ag Haven smoker 277; Addresses 262 ’99S.—Addresses 264 YALE OBITUARIES (By Classes) ’28—Oliver P. Hubbard 256 ’29—Willliam Watson 232, 248 *30—Dr. Henry Barnard 420 *23—John S. Davenport 221; Edward S. Moseley 304 : *35—Geo. W. Nichols 221 °26—Thomas -Darling 61; Wm. Thomp- son 221; Rev. R. H. Wilmer 420 38 William W. Rodman 261 *290—Charles J. Stille 5 ex-’39—Chauncey D. Rice 209 "a1. -, “Nichols Ao: Charles 7: Minor 335; g2t> Richard SS. Willis 3352. Prot Joseph Emerson 420 ex-’4I—Cyrus Swan 347 ’"43—Edward W. Robbins 211; Robert Aikman 335, 347 ex-’43—Nathan L. Birge 80 "46—John W. Birchmore 277 ’47—-Henry T. Wiswall 48; Calvin M. Brooks 420 ’48—George S. White 5; Francis T. Jar- man 67, 80 ex-’48 L.S.—George H. Sharpe 161 ’40—William L. ‘Clark 127; Shearjas- hub Bourne 256 ex-’490—Thomas Harland 305 ’50—Champion Bissell 256; William A. Baldwin 284; John R. Mills 374 ex-’51—John S. Bossler 211 ’51 M.S.—Francis C. Greene, 17; Wil- liam I. Soule 336, 347 *52—John B. Hendrickson 5; Henry C. Hallowell 5, 117; Marcus Lyon 117; William C. Mayo 284; Cooke Louns- bury 305; Melancthon Storrs 374; Henry McCormick 420 ex-’52—William M. Estes 232 *52-—-Charles Harding 67; Theodore Bacon 188; Henry C. Robinson 211, 210e 53 9.—Ben}. C. Jillson 17 ’s4—James K. Hill 5; Thomas Egles- ton 193; Edward Sanford 256 *ss—Charles P. Stetson 37; David’ L. Huntington 141, 188; Elijah Cone oT? ex-’55—Col. W. M. Grosvenor 420; Hon. Henry C. Platt 421 : *50—A. J.. Bartholmew 17; Gilbert F. Bailey 99; Louis C. Fisher 109; John D. Wood 212 | *5s8—John C. Day 17; William A. Magill 109; Walter S. Alexander 336, 347 ?60—F rederick L. Chapell 232 "61—Elijah Boardman 421 ex-’61—O. S. Newell 360 *62—Albert F. Judd 360 ’°63—Eleazar K. Foster 117; W. Gates-Fairbanks 336 *64—F rank H. Hooker 285 ’65—Wilbur R. Bacon 347, 401 67 S.—Luther H. Wood 17 ’°68—George W. Fisher 212; Julius M. Russell 248, 278; William H. Ferry 277 | Artemas De- | Charles P. Helfenstein - Football Next The Yale Eleven will be lined up in another month. Others will be playing before that. How hard and exciting and impossible of prediction is the short, snappy season ! how Some people used to fear this time as fraught with great danger to thousands of young men and boys. But the casualties are decreasing through handling and clever equipment. The armor of football makes a whole catalogue in itself — or rather it makes a big depart- ment in the Encyclopedic Ath- letic Sports Catalogue of A. G. Spalding & Bros. New York. intelligent Chicago. Denver. Please mention the paper in doing business with advertisers. The Improved BOSTON GARTER Is the recognized STANDARD for MEN’S WEAR. Keeps the Stocking Free from Wrinkles DOES NOT BIND THE fog yr otro | CLASP if Lies flat fo the leg. Does not tear the stock- ing, and will not’unfasten accidentally. r SOLD EVERYWHERE Sample Pair? Silk. 50c. by Mail Cotton, 25c. GEORGE FROST CO. BOSTON, MASS. Pages eee Please refer to the YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY in doing business with adver- ttSers. Vhe ‘*‘ UNIVERSITY ”’ is the name of this, one of our latest Easy Chairs. It is a brain worker’s chair. The back is adjustable. The arms lift up and turn over, forming shelves for writing, holding books, etc. We make five other lines of Reclining Chairs, the Regent, Columbine, Siesta, Manhattan, and Oriental. These are illustrated and described in our Catalogue C. Rolling Chairs. We make over 50 styles and can furnish a suitable chair for any case. Catalogue B Sargent’s Economic System of Devices for Brain Workers ts also something worth knowing about. It embraces Sargent’s Unrivaled Rotary Book Cases, Sargent’s various styles of Reading Stands, Diction- ary, Atlas, and Folio Holders, Adjustable Reading Desks, attachable to chairs, etc. Catalogue D, In writing, particularize. All catalogues free. GEO. F. SARGENT COMPANY, 289 Y Fourth Ave., next 23d Street, New York.