EXCHANGE THE CLASS v Every man is as nearly as possible, in IS VICENNIAL lace he occupied twenty years before VICENNIAL RECORD OF YALE '93 AND AN ACCOUNT OF THE VICENNIAL REUNION JUNE 17, 1913 PUBLISHED BY NOAH H. SWAYNE, 2ND CLASS SECRETARY PENNSYLVANIA BUILDING, PHILADELPHIA 1913 THE INTERNATIONAL PRINTING Co. Philadelphia INDEX. Page The Vicennial Reunion 5 List of Those at Vicennial Reunion 43 Biographical 44. Biographical, Non-Graduates 132 Deceased 137 Summary 138 Locality Index 139 Addresses 143 Addresses, Non-Graduates 146 ILLUSTRATIONS. The Class at Vicennial Frontispiece Birdsall and Others 5 At Jepson's Luncheon 7 Newton and His Twins 8 Mr. and Mrs. Jepson, Mr. and Mrs. Gushing 8 Barnes and Others 10 Bottome and Others 10 Leaving the Luncheon on Tuesday n Smith and Others 1 1 Lo, the Poor J. Weston 13 He Has Broken Cover 16 Dorsey and Others 17 Gibbs and Others 18 Hackett and Others 18 Nominations for Class Secretary 19 Mathison and Staff 20, 23 On the Way to Yale Field 21 Harvard Practice 22 At 93 Whitney Avenue 24 Before the Ball Game 25 Taylor and Others 30 Rogers and Others 3& On the Bleachers 52, 34 Sutphen and Others ^6 Roby and Others 3& Toastmaster Morgan 38 Entering Yale Field 39 Spalding and Others 39 Contest of Raconteurs 4 1 268079 THE VICENNIAL REUNION The Vicennial was undoubtedly the most successful reunion that the Class has held. The thanks of the Class are due to the Committee in Charge : Morgan, Chairman. Barnes, Secretary. Fay. Hackett. The Class headquarters were located in the Altemont, 124- 126 Wall Street, where dormitory accommodations were pro- vided for all who came. A commodious tent set up on the lawn in the rear of the building, and lighted by electricity, provided a comfortable gathering place. Each man, as he registered, was presented with a copy of the preliminary edi- tion of the biographical pages of this book. BIRDSALL, DONNELLY, GOODENOUGH The first arrivals were Morse and Roby, who opened the Headquarters at 10 A. M. on Saturday, June 14, 1913. They were closely followed by Swayne, Eccles and Hastings in the order given. These five lunched together at the Graduates' Club, and immediately afterwards were joined by Ferguson, E. H. Wells, Jepson and Wheeler, making a party of nine who attended the Yale-Cornell baseball game at Yale Field in the afternoon. The victory of the Yale nine and their aggres- sive style of play forecast the coming victory over Harvard on Class Day. Saturday afternoon arrivals were Barnes, Spalding, Shaw, Judson, Boardman, Wheelock, Williams, Ficken, Spencer, Birdsall and Morgan. At six o'clock nineteen men went by trolley to Momauguin for a shore supper, at which they were joined later in the evening by H. C. Allen, J. W. Allen, New- ton and Wright. There were no speeches and no other for- malities, the evening being spent in talk and in singing old songs from the Yale '93 Song Book, printed for use at the Vicennial. "Tub" Allen enlivened the occasion by rendering several verses of his famous twisted song. Upon the return to Headquarters it was found that late arrivals had brought the number present up to thirty-two. Commencing with breakfast on Sunday, June I5th, meals were provided at the University Dining Hall, where special tables were reserved for us by E. C. Johnson. A large num- ber attended the Chapel on Sunday morning to hear the Bac- calaureate Sermon, and at the conclusion of the Chapel serv- ices the entire party, now numbering thirty-nine, journeyed to Hamden Hali, the beautiful home of Doctor Cushing's school, on the shore of Lake Whitney, where, through the courtesy of Doctor and Mrs. Cushing, the Class were given an elegant luncheon by Jepson and his wife. The enjoyment of this most delightful entertainment was greatly enhanced by the presence of Doctor and Mrs. Cushing, Mrs. Jepson, Mrs. Newton, Airs. Hackett, Mrs. H. A. Bumstead, Miss Eleanor Bumstead, Mrs. Walter E. Coe and Newton's twins, Joseph and Nathan. 8 XEVVTON AND His TWINS MR. GUSHING, MRS. GUSHING, MRS. JEPSON, JEPSON The luncheon was followed by a brief song recital in the school auditorium by Swayne, accompanied on the piano by Jepson. The programme was as follows : Bois Epais Lully Der Doppelganger Schubert Nature's Adoration Beethoven Annie Laurie Scott Invictus Huhn Die beiden Grenadiere Schumann As a supplement to this recital, by special request Swayne told of "The Discovery of America" and Birdsall gave his imitation of President Hadley. At five o'clock Jepson gave his annual Commencement Or- gan Recital on the Newberry Memorial Organ in Woolsey Hall, before a large and appreciative audience. The pro- gramme was as follows : Widor Eighth Organ Symphony, Op. 42 ; I Allegro Risoluto. Jepson Recitative ; . Giocoso ; from the Sonata in G Minor. Bonnet El f es. Faulkes Fantasia in D Major. Bach Fugue in G Minor. Pierne Serenade. Kroeger Marche Pittoresque. Acadelt Ave Maria. Widor Eighth Organ Symphony, Op. 42 ; VI. Finale. After this recital forty-three of the Class, accompanied by the Class Boy, went by trolley to the Shoreham for dinner, where they were joined a little later by Burchard, Lambert, Rathbone, Scott and Sutphen. There were no formalities and the evening was spent in singing old songs from the Yale '93 Song Book, or from memory. When the Committee paid the bill for the dinner they were interested to note that exactly ninety-three bottles of beer had been consumed. 10 BARNES, L. WELLES, C. MILLS, BRISTOL, BEADLESTON, THE CLASS BOY BARNES, BOTTOME, BROWNSON, BGWNS, EWING, BOSWORTH 1 1 LEAVING THE LUNCHEON ON TUESDAY SMITH, WILLIAMS, HARVEY, TAYLOR 12 On Monday morning, June i6th, was held the annual meeting of the Yale Alumni Advisory Board, at which Gibbs repre- sented the Yale Alumni Association of Maryland; Rathbone, the Alumni Association of Northern California, and Swayne, the Alumni Association of Philadelphia. Swayne was elected a member of the Executive Committee of the Board for a three-year term. After luncheon, at the University Dining Hall, the men spent the afternoon at tennis or golf, or in loafing about headquarters. Late in the afternoon seventy-seven men gathered at the New Haven Country Club for dinner. Shortly before dinner Harm- stad pulled off the first of his two remarkably successful sport- ing events, a fat men's race, seventy-five yards straight away on the lawn in front of the Clubhouse. "Skee" proclaimed Weston Allen as his favorite and offered to back him against any man weighing over 190 pounds. The entries were Dorsey, Goodenough and Weston Allen. "Skee" acted as promoter, referee and starter, with Maffttt as judge. Dorsey, running in his shoes, was left at the post ; Allen, in stocking feet, fell at the half-way post, and Goodenough, bare- footed, won in a walk. Seventy-seven men sat down to dinner and the number was increased to eighty-one somewhat later by the arrival of Bosworth, W. E. Dwight, Hutchins and Tyler. Swayne, acting as Toastmaster, announced that the Vicennial Committee had decided to devote this dinner to serious speeches concerning their life work by four men engaged in different occupations; At this point Parsons interrupted and read a poem entitled : "TWENTY YEARS AFTER." From all the roads of all the world We're back again today, To sing the songs we used to sing; Beneath the elms to play At nigger-baby, marbles Or rolling hoops again; We're back to dear old Mother Yale And dear old Popper Swayne! The man who says we're growing old Has got a lying tongue ; We're still the folks we used to be When all the world was young ; Young Bowns is playing pool still And Skee rakes in the mon, Just as he did in those old days When we were twenty-one. They say Bob Wade is wearing yet Those Trouserloons so bright, That dimmed the sun on every day And glorified each night ; That Rathbone soldier, merchant Still wears the same old hair New Haven ladies liked so much Those ladies frail and fair ! They say that Dwight is getting fame In corporation lore, But you will find beneath his vest The same boy as before ; Stan Moore is running railroads And piling up the pence, But he can still sing "Old Madrid" When sitting on the fence. In dear old London our young Irv. Is representing us And fussing with the suffragettes And raising quite a muss ; Ed Gallaudet 's a flier, He flies both high and low, And drives his little hydroplane As once he used to row. John Robinson 's been holding down A fed'ral job they say. He 's apt to mix in politics And so they say is Hay. But senators, or "what-not," We do not care a cuss, We only know their souls are true And they belong to us. We cannot tell in these few lines The tale of all the Class, They 're here and there and everywhere And, as the season's pass, They may be getting fatter, Some grey hairs we may see, But every man's interior 's Just as it used to be. We 're home again, we 're home again ! The years are swept away ! East Rock looks down on us tonight, On high the elm boughs sway; The chapel bells ring softly The chimes of 'ninety-three; From all the roads of all the world We 're back, Old Yale, to thee ! So throw your working cares away, We 're twenty-one tonight ! Will Stoughtenborough 's on the fence, And every thing 's all right ; But don't forget, when leaving, To take our well-earned rest, That that good adage still is true "The old friends are the best." The serious talks of the evening were as follows : Preparatory Schools Warnock The Northwest Wheelock The Public Health Roby The Science of Aviation Gallaudet Each man spoke about twenty minutes, and it was the gen- eral opinion that the Committee had done a great service in providing this opportunity for the Class to hear at first hand of the serious work of some of its members. On Tuesday morning, June i/th, the proceedings began with the Class Meeting in the headquarters tent. The Class Secre- tary presided, and reported for the Vicennial Committee that enough money had been collected to pay all the reunion ex- i6 penses, to complete the Heermance Memorial Fund, to give $5,000 to the University, and to leave a balance in the Class Fund. Attention was called to the fact that in the Wright Mem- orial Dormitory there were a suite of rooms named for the Class, a suite named in memory of Ives, and a recitation room He has broken cover" named in memory of Lloyd. Announcement was made that these rooms were open for inspection by members of the Class. The Chairman appointed Bottome, Torbert and Birdsall a Committee to nominate the Quinvicesimal Committee. The Chairman was instructed to appoint a Committee to prepare suitable resolutions to be sent in the name of the Class to the families of Wigginton, Briggs and Leavitt, whose deaths had occurred since the last formal meeting. Scoville read a letter from Quintard in reference to his maga- zine agency, and Xewell reported for the Special Committee ap- pointed at the New York dinner in January, 1913, that his Com- mittee had prepared a circular which members of the Class might send to their friends, concerning this subject. The Com- DORSEY, JONES, EWING mittee was instructed to send twenty copies of this circular to each member of the Class. Spalding and Williams were elected a Committee to send greetings to absentees. Williams read a letter from Gatchel, expressing his regret at being compelled to be absent. iS GIBBS, FERGUSON, RUNK, ROGERS, YATES, SUTPHEN, CHISHOLM SWAYNE, HACKETT, MORGAN, FAY The Class Secretary was re-elected to serve until Quinvicesi- mal. The Nominating Committee nominated the following Quinvicesimal Committee, who were thereupon elected by ac- clamation : Fay, Chairman ; Begg, Borden, Hackett, Williams. After votes of thanks to the Vicennial Committee, to Jep- son, and to the Class Secretary the meeting adjourned. "Nominations for" Glaus Secretary are o:rAe*T" ^ Luncheon was served in the President's room in the Uni- versity Dining Hall, and was attended by 100 men of the Class and also by Mrs. Newton with three children, Bradford Board- man, A. K. Merritt, Jr., and H. C. Allen's sisters. Immediately after luncheon, preceded by Colt's Band, the Class marched through the dining. hall and across the campus 20 to Osborn Hall, where the Class picture (frontispiece) was taken. The Class uniform consisted of dark-blue coat, white trousers, blue hatband, and armband with the number 1893 m silver, and light cane. A //Standard -bearer Mathiscm Staff Included in the picture are the Class Boy, Mathison's three daughters and two sons, Newton's twins, Bradford Boardman and A. K. Merritt, Jr. Proceeding to Yale Field by special trolley cars the Class joined in the parade around the field, preceded by the Class 21 22 Boy and the ten other children mentioned. Mathison bearing the banner and with his children grouped about him was easily one of the most striking features of the parade, the girls espe- cially attracting comment and applause. The game was a good one from the standpoint of baseball as well as from the Yale point of view, and the afternoon was entirely satisfactory. The return from the field was made in special trolley cars, and the Class then marched together to call on Professor H. P. MATHISON AND His STAFF Wright, Professor A. W. Phillips, President Dwight, and Pres- ident Hadley. The remarks of President Hadley, as printed in the Yale Alumni Weekly, were as follows: "When we get here together, it does not seem so far back to the days in Ai Osborn when we were comparing notes on our views of economic questions. I remember that the Class of 1893 contributed some very remarkable theorems to the sub- 24 ject of political economy. It was a member of your Class who made the extraordinary, the very extraordinary, contribu- tion to the date on which the modern science began. I had At 93 Whitney- that Adam Smith wrote 'The Wealth of Nations' in 1776, and it was a '93 man, proud of the accuracy of his knowledge, who introduced into his examination, though I had not asked the question, the statement that it began in 1492. One thing 25 you could always rely on with regard to the members of your Class whatever knowledge they had, they knew how to make it go just as far as possible. I am delighted to see you at this reunion. It is quite an inspiration to see the way in which the Class of '93 is led up by '93 boys and girls in blue who belong to the Class of '93 and belong to Yale. I have not a doubt that they had no small part in inspiring the nine to hit today when BEFORE THE BALL GAME hits were needed. There is one other thing. If there is a grad- uate of Yale who arouses the enthusiasm of the alumni body and knows how to get what we call the Yale spirit out of an audience, it is Swayne of '93." The Class then marched to Harmonic Hall for the dinner, at which there were 105 present, including the Class Boy. The menu and -toast list follow. 26 TALE '93 VICENNIAL DINNER HARMONIE HALL NEW HAVEN JUNE 17.1913 Radishes Salted Almonds Olives Cold Consomme Filet of Sea Bass - Meuniere Saddle of Lamb Currant Jelly Hashed Brown Potatoes Broiled Spring Chicken ^ Creamed Asparagus Boiled New Potatoes Lettuce and Tomato Salad Vanilla Ice Cream Native Strawberries Fancy Cake Fruit Cheese Crackers Coffee (Fnast ffitat Toast master John Hill Morgan "Man, proud man, drest in a little brief authority." Shakespeare Dissertation Rufus Macqueen Gibbs "Songs of our youth ecstatic dream, Has all your friendship been in vain ? Not so, a hundred voices cry; Not so, a hundred echoes call." Gibbs High Oration Charles Wilder Bosworth He now prepared to speak.. ..attention held them mute. Milton First Colloquy Lawrence Greer In his youth he had the wit which I can well observe to-day. Shakespeare 2Q Class song books had been provided and after the singing of "Beer, Beer, Glorious Beer," as a solo by Swayne, with the Class joining in the chorus, and by special request, "Is That You Madge" with gestures, by Bottome, Morgan, who acted as Toastmaster, introduced the first toast as follows : "My Classmates, since our graduation twenty years ago, the following men have passed from among us onward to the better life: Elliot Stone Curtis, Richard Edward Dunham, William James McKenna, Robert Edwin Rowley, Morris Woodruff, Robert Storer Tracy, Albert Wells Pettibone, Jr., Frank James Brown, Jonathan Boynton Dill, Alfred Henry Jones, Henry Llewellyn Bixby, Frank Howard Button, Frederick Merwin Lloyd, Richard Charles Wells Wadsworth, Theodore Woolsley Heermance, William Henry Alurphy, George Greene Martin, Sherwood Bissell Ives, Henry Crosby Stetson, Frederick As- bury Hill, Robert Kerr Dickerman, John Harvey Wigginton, George Justus Briggs, Burton Emerson Leavitt. "It is fitting that we, the living, should pay honor and re- spect to those whom unhappy chance has taken from our ranks, and I ask you to join with me, all standing, in a toast to the dead in the words of the song which we so often sing at Yale: " 'Here's a health to the dead already,' " 'And here's to the next man that dies'." Gibbs, who responded to the first regular toast in the eve- ning, was introduced as follows : The Toastmaster "When Rufus Gibbs was in college, he presented for criticism an epic poem in seven thousand stanzas, to that celebrated gentleman whose name was so much more convivial than his face Professor Beers. On the Professor taking exception to some of the metre, Gibbs haughtily re- plied that he did not believe in machine poetry, that poets were born, not made. 'Go on, Mr. Gibbs, go on,' replied Beers, 'lay all the blame on your poor father and mother.' It may be that in the words of the immortal Breeze, 'Here 's to Rufus Gibbs who spends his time a writing pomes for oyster labels' ; .., TAYLOR, RATHBONE, CHISHOLM ROGERS, RUNK, WILLIAMS it may be that the canning of the delectable lobster and the curing of the evanescent smelt has lured our rhymster so that he no longer drinks deep at the Pierian Spring it may be that the raising of a large family and the accumulation of an ap- propriate bank account, does not commend one to the virgin Calliope ; but be it our pride to believe that high among the im- mortals will one day appear the name of our Rufus and that he comes back twenty years after, and twenty years better." Gibbs then read the following poem : Do yon remember, years ago, That day in June, that magic hour, We breasted first life's undertow, Strong in the consciousness of power ; The power to shape things as we chose, The power in action to be free, The power that breeds itself in those Whom youth has blessed unsparingly? We wanted only to be great ; The great things of the mighty earth, They beckoned to us soon and late, They called us from our hours of mirth. They called us from our outworn books, From play-time and the insidious snare , That lurked in Hilda's fatal looks, Or the slight curl of Lydia's hair. And we were ready, all and each ; We yearred for living ard its race ; Life was at last within our reach. And fame in place of commonplace. For we were friends of old with fame : What else in history did we know, Save this or that resplendent name Caesar, Augustus, Cicero. What other regions did we hold Worth seeking, save where heroes trod ; And those resistless ones of old Climbed almost up from earth to God. 3 2 33 Ours was the path where glory stood, And ours the acclaim in spite of scars ; For these and such as these we would Have raided Heaven and its stars. For lesser men, the lesser land; The ploughshare or the untroubled street; For us, the infinitely grand, And the whole world at passion heat. Set us upon some earth-wide stage, Uplifted from the ignoble mob; Where kingdoms fall, and parties rage, And life is at its upmost throb. There we shall stand while others creep, There we shall mix with queens and kings, Until at last there comes the sweep Of God's immeasurable wings. Earth must again her portion claim ; But not until the immortal soul Has seen its own immortal name High on the world's immortal roll. And so when other boys and men Shall read the story of our age, They'll find us mentioned now and then, On this, and still another page. spirit of the ambitious mind, Eternal counsellor of. youth, When manhood comes, how soon you find Just what is false and what is truth. How soon the vanities that dread The thought of life amid repose Are overswept, and in their stead A sense of true proportion grows. 1 grant you that the fire is cold That once was kindled in my breast; Why yesterday I would have sold My hopes of Heaven to win a crest. ON THE BLEACHERS 35 Today I'd toss the crest away, And where's the king upon his throne, For whose magnificence I'd pay What God has let me call my own. And you? you must have seen, I guess, The truth behind the world's disguise : That one finds no such happiness In being great as being wise. Call Alexander back to earth, And Caesar's dust from Caesar's urn ; Ask them if all their power was worth What it denied them in return. Bring Helen and poor Antoinette, And all their sister Josephines ; Ask them what value they would set On the inheritance of queens. No matter if they answer naught, No matter if they cannot come ; You sense the truth and catch the thought That life is sweetest in the home. Let not the world and its desires Persuade your soul that any strife Is worth the winning that requires Forgetfulness of child or wife. Be steadfast unto these through all, And life itself shall be your proof That each man finds his noblest call At home and under his own roof. Here is the temple of the race, And nations boastful of their power, Yet scorning this, come face to face With ruin in a single hour. Here let your passion for renown Be molded to another sort, Careless alike of crest and crown And all the vanities of court. SUTPHEN, COOKE, SMITH ROBY, BOWNS, BOTTOME 37 And you shall count for more than earls, Though claimed by no historian's pen, Who make true women of your girls And of your boys make honest men. O Mother Yale, teach us thy sons, And all thy many sons to come, That even to be cast in bronze, Voids not the sanctity of home. Teach us that love is more than fame, That simple worth is more than power That many a fine heroic name Rings hollow at the judgment hour. And when all these are understood, Teach us this lesson soon or late That earth is better for its good, And only greater for its great. The Toastmaster introduced Taylor as a voluntary taking the place of Greer, who was unable to be present. Taylor ex- pressed his own views on the benefit of college training and what Yale has done for him. The Toastmaster : "Gentlemen, I have a sad announcement to make. I too am a poet. At one of the meetings which the Re- union Committee had in New York when the plans for Vicen- nial were being discussed and laid out, Harmstad threatened to make me make a speech. Now a speech is a serious thing, it must be carefully prepared, and I told Harmstad that if he tried to badger me into making a speech I would make one which would have for its hero, none other than 'Skee' himself. I then dared him to make me make a speech. I think he has lost his nerve, but I am prepared, and as I have it ready, I must get it off. When I was preparing some few days ago, and wondering what under heaven I should say, suddenly the idea of a magnificent epic in heroic hexameter upon the activities and adventures of our one and only Skee, occurred to me. 38 Feverishly seizing my pen, I wrote the following verses which I respectfully offer, and I ask that you join in the refrain of the last line." The Toastmaster then read a poem, to which the following title had been given: "Skee Harmstad was the Man!" which by special request of the victim, has not been inserted. The Toastmaster : Toastmaster Morgan. - lie reads a "pome" "A scientific friend of mine once asserted that oysters are endowed with the power of reason. On being asked why, he replied, 'Because they know when to shut up.' A Toastmaster, as I take it, must interject himself between speeches, not like the pleasing thirst which comes between drinks, but like the necessary evil which by comparison makes our blessings appear the brighter. The trouble with most Toastmasters is that they talk too much and are like the Englishman who, on being joked 39 ENTERING YALE FIELD SPALDING, YATES, SCOVILLE, E. WELLS 40 because he was continually caught talking to himself, ex- plained it on two grounds : First, 'Because he always liked to talk to an intelligent man ; and second, because he liked to hear an intelligent man talk.' "In introducing the next speaker, I know of no more appro- priate thought than that contributed by Munger, '97, to his Class Book, on The Things That Really Count at Yale.' 'I have clean forgot the elements of Anthropol-o-gee, And I couldn't scan to save myself from jail, And the Lord knows who discovered the Caribbean Sea, And I do not know why turtles have a tail ; But here we learned the elements of things that count, To shut up and still play out our hand, To keep on smiling, though we're not given a mount, Or put in the division with the band.' "In college some of us got into the limelight early and many have been tasting nothing but the lime ever since. Charlie Bos worth learned the elements of things that count he shut his mouth, he kept on smiling, and he played out his hand and he has made good from the very minute he left. It is with great pleasure, then, that I introduce as the last speaker of the evening, Charles W. Bosworth." After Bosworth's interesting speech the evening was thrown open for request numbers. Birdsall gave his imitations of Hadley and Stinker Moore, and Bates rendered his imitations of good old Tim Dwight, Goat Seymour, Andy Philips and others. Hen Allen, by special request, rendered the "Badmin- ton Club." The Vicennial Committee announced that they had awarded twin long distance cups to Cravens and Rathbone, and souvenir Yale pins to the children who joined in the parade. Telegrams to absentees were read and a toast to them was drunk. The Toastmaster read a telegram from Hodge and one from Quintard. The Class then marched to the campus in a blaze of red fire, with band playing "Onward Christian Soldiers." After a brief stay there the procession moved to headquarters, where the 42 turkey trot was demonstrated by Parsons and Gallaudet, and Harmstad and Williams, and the tango by Bottome and Bea- dleston. In the interludes Slade was called upon to speak upon rail- roads and corporations and Bacon to speak in reply. Henry Allen repeated his repertoire of songs and stories, and then Harmstad crowned the evening by pulling off his second great sporting event, a story-telling contest between Vaile and Goodenough. Vaile appointed Swayne as his judge, and Goodenough appointed Bottome to represent him. Skee appointed himself conductor and referee. The contest was run off in three heats. Each man's judge decided against him and Skee declared the contest a dead heat, and adjourned it to be continued to a conclusion at Quinvicesimal. The band departed shortly after midnight and the rest of the night was devoted to talk and to informal singing. On Wednesday about 100 men attended the Alumni Dinner, at which announcement was made of our gift of $5,000 to the Alumni Fund, and of the completion of the Heermance Mem- orial Fund of $1,000. With this dinner the reunion ended and departures began. A few men remained for the Yale-Harvard regatta on Friday, concerning which enough has already been said. The Class is indebted for the pen and ink sketches in this book to Bates, and for the Kodak pictures to Fay and Tyler. This record of the Vicennial Reunion and the biographical statistics attached are as nearly accurate as painstaking effort can make them. The Class Secretary takes this opportunity to acknowledge his indebtedness to the Class and his apprecia- tion of the many marks of affection which the Class has shown him. He hopes that the reunion has brought the Class nearer to each other and has demonstrated the value of the effort to keep alive the Spirit of '93. 43 The list of those who attended the Vicennial is as follows Abbe Cravens Jones Slade Allen, H. C. Day Jordan Smith Allen, J. W. Donnelly Joy Spalding Avery, J. W. Dorsey Judson Spencer Babbitt Dwight, H. R. Lambert Stoeckel Bacon Dwight, W. E. Maffitt Strong Barnes Eccles Marvin Sutphen Bates Eddy Mathison Swayne Beadleston Ewing Merritt Taylor Begg Fay Mills, C. W. Thomas Birdsall Ferguson Morgan Thomson Bliss Ficken Morse Torbert Boardman Gallaudet Nadler Tyler Borden Gibbs Newell Vaile Bosworth Goodenough Newton Wachsman Bottome Hackett Parsons Warnock Bowns Harmstad Peck Welles Bristol Harvey Peirce Wells Brownson Hastings Rathbone Wheeler Bull Hay Robinson Wheelock Burchard Hickox Roby Wilcox Candee Higgins Rogers Williams Cartwright Hobbie Runk Woolner Chatneld Hurlbert Scott Wright Chisholm Hutchins Scoville Yates Clarke, J. D. Jepson Sedgwick 1 06 in all Cooke Johnson, E. C. Shaw 44 BIOGRAPHICAL FRANKLIN JONES ABBE, teacher in D. M. Hunt School, Falls Village, Conn., 1893-94. Teacher Center School, Farmington, Conn., 1894-95. Principal same school, 1895-96. Senior mem- ber of firm of Abbe, Adam & Co., fire insurance brokers, Canaan, Conn., 1896-99. Sold out insurance business, Janu- ary i, 1899, because adverse legislation had rendered business unprofitable. Was a reporter on the Worcester, Mass., Evening Gazette, from January, 1899, to February, 1901. Was with the Evening News of Newark, N. J., February, 1901, to Jan- uary, 1902. Returned at that time to Worcester Evening Gazette as city editor. In 1903, was made managing editor. In April, 1904, was appointed telegraph and county editor of the Brockton Times, Brockton, Mass. In December, 1906, formed an insurance partnership with H. L. Jones, under the firm name of Abbe & Jones, with offices at Brockton, Mass. In 1912 he sold this business to devote himself to handling real estate. MARRIED, December 21, 1894, Miss Olive Wilcox, daughter of Edwin H. Wilcox, Esq., of Falls Village, Conn. Children: Francis, born November 22, 1895; Alfred C, born April 22, 1897; Douglas, born April 17, 1902. HENRY CROSBY ALLEN, student of New York Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B. and admitted to New Jersey bar, November, 1895. Practicing in Paterson, N. J., and residing at Little Falls, N. J., since 1895. In 1904 was elected to Con- gress from the Sixth (Paterson) District of New Jersey, on the Republican ticket. During his term of office he served on the Committee on Manufactures, and the Committee on the 45 Militia. Was elected First Reader of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Paterson, in December, 1911, for a term of three years. JOHN WESTON ALLEN, student Harvard Law School, 1893- 96; received degree LL.B. 1896. March, 1897, admitted to Suffolk County, Mass., bar. Until 1909 he practiced in the office of Long & Hemenway, Boston. At that time he formed a partnership with Lyon Weyburn under the name of Allen & Weyburn, which was subsequently changed by the admission of another partner to Allen, Weyburn & Holmes. He spent the fall of 1909 on the White Earth Indian Reservation in Northern Minnesota assisting in the investigation of land and timber frauds. While there he was made a member of the tribe and given the name of the old chief Mezhuckegeshig. He has been a member of the Boston Indian Citizenship Commit- tee since 1910 and is at present vice-chairman. From 1893-98 he acted as Harvard correspondent for certain Boston, New York and Philadelphia newspapers. He has also been for sev- eral years manager of Trinity Hall, a Harvard dormitory. MARRIED, June 12, 1901, Miss Caroline Cheney Hills, daugh- ter of the late Henry Francis Hills, of Amherst, Mass. Children : Helen Spencer, born April 8, 1902 ; Grace Weston, born November 5, 1905. LAFON ALLEN, student Louisville Law School, 1893-94. Admitted to Kentucky bar, June, 1894. Practicing law in Louisville, since 1894. Has had published in American Law Review, for November and December, 1895, articles on the "Powers of the United States Supreme Court." Has been, since 1897, assistant secretary and treasurer and a member of the executive committee of Louisville Good City Government Club. Was, in 1900, secretary and treasurer of an organization of Louisville citizens to secure a "fair election law" to replace the so-called "Goebel Election Law." He was Republican nominee for County Attorney in 1904, and for Chancellor in 1909. In 1912 he formed a partnership with Alex G. Barrett and Eugene R. Atkisson under the name of Barrett, Allen & Atkisson. 4 6 MARRIED, September 21, 1911, Miss Emma Hunter Powell, daughter of Dr. Hunter H. Powell, of Cleveland, O. Child: Elizabeth Powell, born October 9, 1912. JOSEPH ANDERSON, JR., student Yale Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B., June, 1895. Admitted to Connecticut bar, June, 1895. Practicing at Waterbury, Conn., 1895 to 1899. In November, 1899, moved to Porto Rico and has since that date been practicing law at San Juan. In 1901 was appointed United States Commissioner for the District of Porto Rico. In 1912 was elected president of the Yale Alumni Association of Porto Rico. MARRIED, September 12, 1899, Miss Mary A. Lewis, daugh- ter of Thomas C. Lewis, Esq., of Westville, Conn. Children : Mary Rose, born June 10, 1905 ; Anna Gildersleeve, born December 28, 1908. CHRISTOPHER LESTER AVERY, JR., teaching at Central Uni- versity, Richmond, Ky., 1893-95. Student at the Yale Law School, 1895-97. Graduated LL.B. in 1897. Admitted to the New York bar, 1898. Practiced law with Seward, Guthrie & Steele, New York City, 1898-1900. In 1898 enlisted with Brooklyn Naval Militia, New York, for war with Spain. Sub- sequently appointed Quartermaster United States Navy, and assigned to coast defence. Served five months, was then hon- orably discharged and resumed practice of law ; in 1900 opened his own law office at 120 Broadway, New York City. Since 1904, has been practicing in New London, Conn., and residing at Groton, Conn. In 1908 he was nominated Congressman-at- Large from the State of Connecticut on the Democratic ticket. In January, 1911, he was appointed Paymaster General with the rank of Colonel on the staff of Governor Baldwin. He was elected to the Connecticut House of Representatives in November, 1912, from the Town of Groton. He served as a member of the Judiciary Committee. MARRIED, January 2, 1901, Miss Betsey Ann Bouse, daugh- ter of Isaac P. Bouse, Esq., of Groton, Conn. Child : Christopher Lester, 3d, was born August 25, 1902. 47 Mrs. Avery died of heart paralysis, March 3, 1903. MARRIED, October 17, 1906, Miss Elizabeth Anderson Brander, daughter of William Brander, Esq., of New London, Conn. Children : Betsey Ann, born December 22, 1907. William Brander, born January 12, 1911. JOHN WHITNEY AVERY, student Post Graduate Department at Yale, taking courses in Ancient Languages, 1893-96. Teach- ing Media, Penna., Academy, 1896-97. Teaching St. John's Military Academy, Sing Sing, N. Y., 1897-99. Teaching at Gunnery School, Washington, Conn., 1899-1900. Post-grad- uate student at Yale 1900-1901. Instructor at Mt. Beacon Mili- tary Academy, Fishkill-on-Hudson, N. Y., 1901 to 1903. In 1903-1904 was Instructor in Greek at the Princeton Prepara- tory School, Princeton, N. J., after which time he taught at the Manor School, Stamford, Conn., until 1912, when he re- tired to devote his time to family affairs. JAMES ADDISON BABBITT, College Registrar and Physical Instructor, Haverford College, Haverford, Penna., 1893-1903. Received the degree of M.A. from Haverford in 1896. Also student University of Pennsylvania Medical School, 1894-98. Graduated M.D. and admitted to practice in Pennsylvania, December, 1898. Practicing medicine in Philadelphia since 1898 in addition to his college work, and in the summer vaca- tions Director of the "Boys' Department, Chautauqua, N. Y., and member of the Medical Board of the Chautauqua Lodge Hospital, of which he is the Attending Laryngologist, Otologist and Ophthalmologist. Publishes also each year the Haverford College Athletic Annual of one hundred pages, and several abstracts in current medical journals. For several years, com- mencing with the year 1902, was secretary of the Society of College Gymnasium Directors, and president of the Penn- sylvania Branch of the American Association for the Advance- ment of Physical Education. In 1903 was appointed Associate Professor of Physiology, at Haverford, in ad- dition to his other duties there. In 1905, was appointed 48 Assistant Laryngologist, Children's Hospital, Philadelphia; also Clinical Assistant, Ear Department, Pennsylvania Hos- pital, and in the Nose and Throat Department of the Polyclinic Hospital. In 1907 was appointed Laryngologist of the Out- patient Department of the Children's Hospital, Philadelphia. In 1909 was appointed Laryngologist and Aurist to the Phila- delphia Home for Training in Speech of Deaf Children. In 1910 was appointed Chief of the Nose, Throat and Ear Out- patient Clinic and Assistant Laryngologist to the House, in the German Hospital, Philadelphia. In 1910 was appointed Assistant in the Ear Department of the University Hospital, Philadelphia. In 1912 was promoted to Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education at Haverford and was elected Assistant Instructor in Otology in the University of Pennsylvania. Has been for several years Instructor in Diseases of the Nose and Throat at the Polyclinic Hospital, Philadelphia. He is a Fellow of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, a member and past president of the A. M. P. O. Medical Fraternity, a fellow of the American Laryngological, Otological and Rhinological Society, etc. Since 1906 has been a member of the American Intercollegiate Football Rules Committee and chairman of the Central Board on Officials. Since 1911 has been secretary of the National Collegiate Athletic Association Soccer Committee. MARRIED, September n, 1895, Miss Mary A. Adams, daugh- ter of Hon. E. Payson Adams, of Swanton, Vt. Children: Mary Evelyn, born June 21, 1896; Helen Adams, born August 15, 1899; Elizabeth Dixie, born November 22, 1906; died November 25, 1906; Mary Adams, born March 31, 1911. Mrs. Babbitt died March 31, 1911. HENRY SELDEN BACON, studied law in his father's office, Rochester, N. Y., 1893-94; at Harvard Law School, 1894-96. Admitted New York bar, 1896. Since that time practicing in Rochester. He was a candidate for Congress on the Demo- cratic ticket in 1904. In January, 1911, was appointed Second 49 Deputy Attorney General of the State of New York. Was promoted to First Deputy on July i, 1911. HENRY BURR BARNES, student Columbia Law School, 1893- 94. Traveling in Europe, 1894-95. Columbia Law School, 1895-97. Graduated LL.B. June, 1897. Admitted to New York bar, 1897. Since that time practicing in New York City. In June, 1911, became a member of the firm of Moen & D wight. MARRIED, March 27, 1911, Miss Mabel Irving Jones, daugh- ter of the late Edward Renshaw Jones, of New York City. Child: Henry Burr, Jr., born August 12, 1912. ELLERY ALPHONSO BATES, private tutor, Westfield, Mass., 1893-95. Tutoring and studying at Art Students' League, New York City, 1895-98. Teaching in Chicago Latin School, 1808- 1904. In 1905, moved to New York City to accept a position in the Art Department of the American Lithographic Com- pany, designing advertising matter. In 1907, was employed by a syndicate illustrating and editing a humorous pictorial paper. Has since that time been engaged in commercial de- signing upon his own account. MARRIED, June 20, 1907, Miss Ida R. Stahl, daughter of John Stahl, Esq., of Chicago, 111. HENRY COLWELL BEADLESTON, student New York Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B. cum lande, 1895. Admitted to New York bar, June, 1895. Practicing since that time in New York City. MARRIED, December 22, 1896, Miss Alice L. Post, daughter of Alfred Seton Post, Esq., of New York City. Child : Alice Lee, born July 16, 1903. GEORGE PALMER BEEBE, student New York Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B., June, 1895. Admitted New York bar, 1894. With corporation counsel of city of Brooklyn, 1895-97. Practicing on his own account in Brooklyn from 1897 to 1905, and since 1905 in the borough of Manhattan, New York City. 50 MARRIED, December 8, 1900, Miss Frances Peele, daughter of Edward Peele, Esq., of Jersey City, N. J. WILLIAM REYNOLDS BEGG, student Yale Law School, 1893- 94. In the office of legal department, Great Northern Rail- way Co., St. Paul, Minn., 1894-99. Student Minneapolis, Minn., Law School, 1894-95. Admitted to Minnesota bar, 1895. Member of law firm of Squires & Begg, 1900-1902; of firm of Armstrong & Begg, 1902. In 1903, appointed assist- ant general solicitor for the Great Northern Railway Co., St. Paul, Minn. In 1907, was advanced to general counsel for the same company. In 1909, resigned, to become a member of the law firm of Byrne & Cutcheon, New York City. MARRIED, April 21, 1897, Miss Louise Spencer, daughter of Norman H. Spencer, Esq., of Hartford, Conn. Child : William Spencer, born November 24, 1907. RALPH BIRDSALL, engaged in newspaper work in New Haven, 1893-95. Student General Theological Seminary, New York, 1895-96. Student Berkeley Divinity School, Middle- town, Conn., 1896-97. Ordained Deacon, Episcopal Church, in 1897. Assistant Minister, St. Paul's Church, Albany, N. Y., 1897. Ordained Priest by Bishop Doane, 1898. Rector St. Andrew's Church, Albany, N. Y., 1899-1902. Rector Christ Church, Cooperstown, N. Y., since 1903. In 1907, was chair- man of the Cooperstown Centennial Celebration, and is secre- tary of the Fenimore Cooper Statue Association. Published, 1911, through the Grafton Press, N. Y., "Fenimore Coopers Grave and Christ Churchyard." Received the degree of M.A. from Yale, June, 1911. Published, 1911, through Crist & Co., Cooperstown, "Sermons in Summer." W T as elected a deputy to the General Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in 1913. Was appointed Archdeacon of the Susquehanna by the Bishop of Albany, 1913. MARRIED, August 25, 1904, Miss Jessie Cicely Reid, daugh- ter of Judge Harry M. Reid, of Atlanta, Ga. Children : Gertrude, born June 29, 1905 ; Ralph, Jr., born April 14, 1912. *HENRY LLEWELLYN BIXBY was born at Los Cerritos, near Long Beach, Cal., on December 20, 1870, and was the son of Jotham Bixby, who was prominently connected with farming interests. Bixby prepared for college at Andover. After gradu- ation he engaged in ranching at Long Beach, Cal., 1893-94. He was a student at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, 1894-96, but was compelled by ill-health to suspend his medical studies in June, 1896. He engaged in sheep rais- ing in Arizona from 1896 until he died of appendicitis, Octo- ber 20, 1902. MARRIED, November 15, 1899, Miss Juliette Winston Gra- ham, daughter of Mrs. Ellen H. Graham, of Chicago, 111. Child : Henry Llewellyn, Jr., born August 27, 1900. CLIFFORD DOUGLASS BLISS, in his father's office in New York, 1893-96. During 1896 was with Armour & Co., Indianapolis, Ind. Left Armour & Co., in 1897, to accept a position with Standard Oil Co., Wichita, Kan. In his father's office in New York, 1898-1901. Agent for construction department, New York Telephone Co., 1901. Traveling salesman for Weidman Silk Co., Paterson, N. J., from 1902 to 1908. Salesman for Belding Bros., silks, Cincinnati, O., 1909. Traveling salesman for Printz-Biederman Co., manufacturers of cloaks and suits, Cleveland, O., 1910-11. Since 1912, salesman in the Boston, Mass., branch of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. WILLIAM BRADFORD BOARDMAN, teaching at the University School, Bridgeport, Conn., 1893-96. Student Yale Law School, 1896-98. Graduated LL.B., 1898. Admitted to Con- necticut bar, January, 1898. Practicing with Stoddard & Bishop, Bridgeport, Conn., 1898 to 1902. Was, in 1902, made a member of the firm of Stoddard, Marsh & Boardman. Sep- tember 15, 1906, was appointed assistant attorney of the New York, New Haven and Hartford R. R. Co., with offices in New Haven. He resigned this position in November, 1907, *Deceased. 52 and has been since that time a member of the law firm of Hill & Boardman, Bridgeport, Conn., in partnership with George E. Hill, Yale, '87. In June, 1907, was appointed a member and in January, 1912, was elected secretary of the State Bar Exam- ining Committee of Connecticut. In March, 1912, was elected member and later secretary of the Board of Education of Bridgeport. MARRIED, February 22, 1901, Miss Alice Burr Hall, daughter of Judge Frederic B. Hall, of Bridgeport, Conn. Child: Bradford, born December 5, 1901. GERALD MARK BORDEN, student Chicago Law School, 1893- 95. Graduated, LL.B., June, 1895. Admitted to Illinois bar, 1895. Practicing in Chicago, 111., 1895 to 1901. Moved to Pasadena, Cal., in 1901, and lived there somewhat over a year. In 1903, moved to New York City, to accept an executive posi- tion with the United Lead Co. He was somewhat later elected secretary and vice-president of the American Smelting and Refining Co., which position he held until 1908. MARRIED, February 14, 1898, Miss Lucille Papin, daughter of Theophile Papin, Esq., of St. Louis, Mo. CHARLES WILDER BOSWORTH, law student in his father's of- fice, Springfield, Mass., 1893-95. Admitted to Massachusetts bar, June, 1894. Practicing since 1894 in Springfield, Mass. Appointed referee in bankruptcy United States District Court for Hampden County, Mass., in 1908. In 1905 was President and in 1913 was elected Vice-President of the Yale Alumni Association of Western Massachusetts. Since 1906 has been president of the Union Trust Co., of Springfield. HARRY HOWARD BOTTOM E, student New York Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B. cum laude, and admitted to New York bar, June, 1895. Was assistant solicitor of New York Life Insurance Co., N. Y., June, 1895, to May, 1903. Was general solicitor, 1903-1905. On January i, 1905, he resigned practice. In 1911 was appointed counsel for the New York Life Insurance Co. 53 MARRIED, February 27, 1904, Miss Mary Madeline Morgan, daughter of the late Richard Morgan, of New York City. HOWARD SIDNEY BOWNS, wholesale coal business, in New York City since graduation. He is -treasurer of the Bowns- Pattison Transportation Co., and member of the firm of Patti- son & Bowns. He is also president of the Buck Ridge Coal Mining Co. of Shamokin, Pa. MARRIED, January 15, 1902, Mary Bliss Kelley, daughter of George V. Kelley, Esq., of Bay Ridge, N. Y. Children: Priscilla, born December 13, 1902; Howard S., Jr., born March 6, 1905. HOWARD DANA BRADLEY, surveyor in New Haven, Conn., 1893-96. With the Photene Co., dealers in electrical supplies, Brooklyn, N. Y., 1897-98. In 1898, was secretary and treasurer of the Eagle Realty Co., New York City. From 1898 until December, 1902, was engaged in real estate and insurance busi- ness in his own name in Brooklyn, N. Y. Left his place of business at that time and has not since communicated with his office nor with his family. WILLIAM EDWIN BRECKENRIDGE, teaching at Siglars School, Newburgh, N. Y., 1893-94. Teaching at Haverford Gram- mar School, Haverford, Penna., 1894-95. Teaching Mont- clair High School, Montclair, N. J., 1895-99, and also studying in absentia in Post-Graduate Department, Yale University. Teaching at mixed high school, New York City, 1899-1900; in Peter Cooper High School, New York City, 1900-1905. Re- ceived degree of M.A. at Yale, in 1902. Was elected mem- ber of American Mathematical Society, 1903. Teaching, since 1905, at the Stuyvesant High School, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. In 1906, was chairman of the Department of Mathematics, N. Y. Central High School Teachers' Association ; and since 1907 has been vice-president of the Association of Teachers of Mathematics of the Middle States and Maryland, and chair- man of the New York Section. Is auditor of the American 54 Mathematical Society. On July i, 1911, was appointed Lec- turer in Mathematics in the Teachers' College, Columbia Uni- versity, N. Y. Was co-author of "Shop Problems in Math- ematics," by Breckenridge, Mersereau and Moore, published July i, 1910, by Ginn & Co., a book for use in manual training schools, trade schools, Y. M. C. A.'s, etc. The fourth edition of this book was published in May, 1913. MARRIED, July 12, 1899, Miss Addie Louise Rogers, daughter of William H. Rogers, Esq., of Palmer, Mass. Children : Harvey Kellogg, born October 28, 1902 ; Austin Dickinson Moore, born April 26, 1911. THOMAS HAMILTON BREEZE, student Yale Law School, 1893- 95. Graduated, LL.B., June, 1895. Admitted to Connecticut bar, 1895, an d to California bar, 1896. Practicing in San Francisco, 1896-97. Practicing Stockton, Cal., 1897-1900. Member firm of Fairall & Breeze, Stockton, Cal., May i, 1899, to July, 1900. With firm of Reddy, Campbell & Metson, San Francisco, Cal., July, 1900, to January, 1903. Admitted to membership in firm of Campbell, Metson & Campbell, January i, 1903. MARRIED, August 5, 1905, Miss Frances Hay Moore, daugh- ter of Austin D. Moore, Esq., of San Francisco, Cal. Child : Thomas H., Jr., born October 24, 1906. *GEORGE JUSTUS BRIGGS, son of George W. Briggs, super- intendent of cotton mills, was born in Governordale, Conn., on July 23, 1871. He prepared for college at Worcester (Mass.) Academy. After graduation he taught at Leal's School, Plain- field, N. J., 1893-94. He was in Providence, R. I., as repre- sentative of Leonard & Ellis, dealers in oils, Boston, Mass., 1894-97. He was in Yokohama, Japan, as representative of American Trading Co., 1897-1900; and from 1900-1905 at Kobe, Japan, as sole agent in Japan for valvoline oils of the Crew-Levick Co. In 1905 he was general agent in Japan for the White automobile. From 1906 to 1909 he was engaged in *Deceased. 55 raising poultry at Petaluna, Cal. In December, 1909, he was appointed general agent in Rhode Island for the White auto- mobiles. He died, June 15, 1911, in Atlanta, Ga., of locomotor-ataxia. He was buried at Anthony, R. I., near his old home. MARRIED, November 26, 1906, Miss Sara Marvine Giberson, daughter of the late L. Giberson, of St. John's, O. THEODORE? Louis BRISTOL, has been treasurer of the Bristol Drug Co., and the McArthur Hypophosphite Co., Ansonia, Conn., since 1893. Has been president and manager of the Ansonia Water Co., a director of the Ansonia National Bank, and treasurer of the Ansonia Novelty Co., since 1903. In 1903 was member of the Connecticut General Assembly from Ansonia. From 1909 to 1913 has been president of the Con- necticut Forestry Association, and since 1913 president of the Ansonia Forest Products Co., and of the Board of Public Works of Ansonia. MARRIED, October 5, 1893, Miss Florence Espe, daughter of Charles Espe, Esq., of Ansonia, Conn. Children : Theodore Louis, Jr., the Class Boy, born May 6, Frances, born June 21, 1899; Florence, born July 16, 1903 ; Ellida, born May 3, 1905 ; John Thorwald, born March 7, 1911. *FRANK JAMES BROWN, died in New Haven, February 14, 1900, after a long and trying illness, brought on by over-work. He was the son of Benjamin S. Brown and was born in War- ren, Penna., February 22, 1866. He came to New Haven, in 1888, with a strong physique and a determination to acquire an education. Without money, he accepted the opportunities which offered to pay his expenses while in college. His first work was in the office of one of the city papers, and each morning *Deceased. 56 he began work at two o'clock. He continued this strain for more than a year and then went into the Coop., and later was at the head of the Boys' Club and then a teacher in, and for three years principal of, the New Haven evening schools. During all this time he was working hard in his studies and took a good place in his class. He was editor of the class book at graduation, and was also an editor of the Yale Shingle, the annual of the Yale Law School, from which he gradu- ated, with the degree of LL.B., in 1895. He immediately began the practice of law in New Haven and, throwing the same energy and determination into that work, was very suc- cessful. In July, 1897, he was appointed city attorney, which office he held until his death. Mr. Brown was a self-made man and a fine product of Yale. He lost his life in the pursuit of an education, and yet no word of complaint or regret ever escaped his lips during his long illness. He was always cheer- ful and hopeful, and more ready to help others than to ask for help himself. His strong characteristics were his judgment of men and his power of organization. His life was one con- tinual struggle, but he always said that he would prefer to live a short and useful life to a long and monotonous one. In a book, in which he had written quotations and which he used continuously, was the following, aptly expressing his idea of life: "Better to sail life's craft where surges beat; Better the tempest and the wild winds free Than idle drifting on a stagnant sea." LAWRENCE EDWARD BROWN, teaching "Yale School," New York City, 1893-94. Also studying law, 1893-97. Admitted to New York bar, June, 1897. Has been practicing in New York City since 1897. Member of the firm of Hone & Brown from April i, 1898 to 1906. Was also member of Assembly in State Legislature during 1897. Is a member of the Union League Club, of New York City. MARRIED, June i, 1906, Miss Janet Lamond Massey, daugh- ter of the late George Massey, of New York City. Children: Lawrence E., Jr., born March 19, 1907; Stuart Flint, born April 25, 1911. 57 WENDELL GREENE BROWNSON, student Yale Law School, 1893-95. Graduated, LL.B., 1895. Admitted to Massachu- setts bar December, 1895. Practicing since 1895 in Springfield, Mass. In January, 1903, formed a partnership with James L. Doherty, Bowdoin, '89, under the firm name of Doherty & Brownson. In June, 1913, was elected Vice-President of the Yale Law School Alumni Association. MARRIED, April 21, 1897, Miss Adelaide Place, daughter of Alfred C. Place, Esq., of Taunton, Mass. Child: Alfred Gardner, born April 15, 1899. Mrs. Brownson died April 12, 1904. CORNELIUS SANFORD BULL, with Waterbury Watch Co., Waterbury, Conn., as purchasing agent, 1893-98. From 1898 to 1905 with New England Watch Co., same place. Was, in November, 1905, admitted to the firm of C. L. Holmes & Co., since changed to Holmes & Bull, dealers in investment securi- ties, at Waterbury, Conn. MARRIED, October 24, 1906, Miss Helen Ives Smith, daughter of J. Richard Smith, Esq., of Waterbury, Conn. Ross BURCHARD, with J. V. Farwell Co., dry goods, Chicago, 111., 1893-95. With same concern in New York City, 1895- 1912. During 1912, engaged in real estate business in Nor- walk, Conn. Since January i, 1913, has been with Sweet, Orr & Co., manufacturers of men's clothing, New York City. MARRIED, October 27, 1904, Miss Mabel Sweet, daughter of Clayton E. Sweet, Esq., of Newburgh, N. Y. Child : Mabel Manning, born September -23, 1905. *FRANK HOWARD BUTTON, died at Peekskill, N. Y., of quick consumption, November I, 1902. He was born at Scotch Plains, N. J., December 24, 1866, and was the son of William Button. He prepared for Yale at Hopkins Grammar School, New Haven; after graduation he studied law at the New 'Deceased. 58 York Law School, and was graduated LL.B. and admitted to the New York bar in 1895. He immediately entered upon the practice of his profession at Buffalo, N. Y., and continued there until shortly before his death. MARRIED, June 25, 1895, Miss Maude Sultzbach, daughter of Henry Sultzbach, Esq., of Patterson, Kan. Child: Dorothy Maude, born July 2, 1897. HARVEY PETERS Buxz, studying, traveling and writing occa- sionally for newspapers, 1893-95, in Breinigsville, Penna. Tu- toring at same place 1895-96. Was, for a time, treasurer of Lyceum Theatre, Reading, Penna. Has of late years been engaged in mercantile business in Breinigsville. NEHEMIAH CANDEE, teaching Media Academy, Media, Penna., 1893-94. Assistant principal Circleville High School, Circleville, O., 1894-95. Student Yale Law School, 1895-97. Graduated, LL.B., 1897. Editor Yale Law School Shingle, 1897. Practicing in 1897 and 1898 with Thompson, Clark & Wilkins, Chicago, 111., and from 1898 to 1907 in New Haven, Conn. Quiz Master Yale Law School, 1898. Member of firm of Candee & Morse, New Haven, January, 1899, to May, 1907. Was elected a Selectman of the town of New Haven in April, 1901. In 1907, moved to Chicago to become a member of the firm of Magruder, Thompson & Candee, the senior partner being the Hon. B. D. Magruder, formerly Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Illinois. In January, 1908, he removed to South Norwalk, Conn., and formed a law partnership with John Keough, under the firm name of Keough & Candee. In 1911 he was elected president of the Board of Trade of South Norwalk. MARRIED, June 29, 1901, Miss Annie B. Chunn, daughter of Mark B. Chunn, Esq., of Chaptico, Md. Children: Mark Chunn, \ , ^ , _ T . . ' > born October 22, 1903; Marjone Dent, j Randolph Frederick, born June 29, 1905, died July 14, 1909; Dorothy Caroline, born April 19, 1911. 59 WILLIAM THOMAS CAPPS, with Jacksonville Woolen Mills, Jacksonville, 111., since 1893, except for a few months traveling for his health in 1896. Is also a director of the Southern Gypsum Company. MARRIED, April 27, 1897, Miss May Potts, daughter of James F. Potts, Esq., of Carrollton, 111. Mrs. Capps died, November 13, 1901. MARRIED, October 5, 1905, Miss Louise Stryker, daughter of Henry Stryker, Esq., of Jacksonville, 111. Children : William, 3d, born February 12, 1908 ; Henry McClure, born November 26, 1910. OTHO GRANFORD CARTWRIGHT, teaching Betts Academy, Stamford, Conn., 1893-95 ; Taft's School, Watertown, Conn., 1895-97; William Penn Charter School, Philadelphia, Penna., 1897-98. Engaged in journalism summer of 1898. Teaching in Taft's School, Watertown, Conn., 1898-1900. Post-gradu- ate student of history at Yale, 1900 to 1903. Received the degree of M.A. in 1901. Teaching history at the Horace Mann School, Columbia University, 1903-1908. From 1905-1908 was recording secretary and treasurer of the Association of History Teachers of the Middle States and Maryland, and secretary of the Schoolmasters' Association of New York and Vicinity, as well as editor of the reports of each of these associations. In June, 1908, he resigned, to enter the publishing business in New York City, with Donald W. Newton, under the firm name of Newton & Cartwright. Upon the dissolution of this firm in 1909, he continued the business in his own name for a brief time. In the latter part of 1909 he became associated with the Russell Sage Foundation, for which he wrote, in 1910, a "His- torical Study of the Hell's Kitchen District of New York City." From 1910-12 he was director of the West Chester County Research Bureau. During this period he prepared several Budget Exhibits in different towns, and cooperated with various organizations in revision of tax laws. He pub- lished in the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, May, 1912, an article on "Efficiency in 6o County Government" and in the Municipal Journal, September 5, 1912, an article on 'Tax Law and Its Enforcement." Re- signed, October, 1912, to accept a position with Lybrand, Ross Brothers & Montgomery, Certified Public Accountants, New York City. MARRIED, July 15, 1908, Miss Harriet May Carton, daughter of Samuel Carton, Esq., of Des Moines, la. Child: Roger Carton, born April 26, 1911. THOMAS IVES CHATFIELD, student Columbia Law School, 1893-96, except winter of 1894-95, when he was traveling in the South for his health. Graduated LL.B., June, 1896. Admit- ted to New York bar, July I, 1896. Practicing with Miller & Miller, New York City, 1896-1902. In May, 1902, became a member of the firm of Decker, Allen & Chatfield, with offices in New York City. Was, on January I, 1903, appointed First Assistant United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York. Was, on January 7, 1907, appointed Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York. MARRIED, June 7, 1899, Miss Laura Dwight Ayer, daughter D Dr. Warren LeRoy Ayer, of Owego, N. Y. Children : Katharine Ives, born January 29, 1901 ; Helen Ayer, born May 30, 1903 ; Thomas Dwight, born September 21, 1910. ALVAH STONE CHISHOLM, with Cleveland Rolling Mill Co. (now American Steel and Wire Co.), as assistant to the presi- dent, since 1893. Is also a director of the Citizens' Savings id Trust Co., of the Bank of Commerce, the Pennsylvania & .ake Erie Dock Co., Newburgh & South Shore Railway Co., nd various other industrial companies. Was president of the ale Alumni Association of Cleveland, in 1912. MARRIED, November 24, 1896, Miss Adele Corning, daugh- ter of Warren H. Corning, Esq., of Cleveland, O. 6i Children: Adele, born September n, 1897; Alvah Stone, Jr., born January 6, 1899, died July 26, 1900; William, 2d, born December 29, 1901 ; Helen Corning, born February 2, 1908. CHARLES WALKER CLARK, engaged in mining and smelting, Butte, Mont., and Jerome, Ariz., since 1893. MARRIED, June 30, 1896, Miss Katharine Quin Roberts, daughter of Mrs. Margaret L. Cunningham, of Butte, Mont. Mrs. Clark died, , 1904. MARRIED, August 4, 1904, Miss Cecilia Tobin, daughter of Richard Tobin, Esq., of . Children: Mary Cecilia, born December 20, 1905. Virginia Elizabeth, born March 17, 1907. Agnes, born May 15, 1908. JOHN DARLING CLARKE, studied law in office of Albert E. Addis, Esq., Northampton, Mass., 1893-96. Elected president of Common Council, Northampton, Mass., January, 1896, for a term of two years. Admitted to Hampshire County bar, January, 1897. Practicing at Northampton, Mass., 1897-98; at Springfield, Mass., since 1898. MARRIED, March 7, 1900, Miss Clara V. Brown, daughter of George M. Brown, Esq., of Palmer, Mass. Children : Cressa Elizabeth, born September 28, 1901 ; Ruth Darling, born July 13, 1903 ; Alta Enola, born August 13, 1905; John Darling, Jr., born August 28, 1906; Thelma Viola, born April 2, 1909. JAMES BARCLAY COOKE, with Passaic Rolling Mill Co., Pater- son, N. J., in various positions, 1893-1902. Since that time has been secretary and treasurer of the Passaic Steel Co., and the Passaic Structural Steel Co., successors of the former company. JOHN SMITH CRAVENS, with Liggett & Myers, tobacco man- ufacturers, 1893-96, in St. Louis, Mo. In 1899, moved to Los Angeles, Cal., and was elected president of the Edison Electric 62 Co., of that place. In 1901, was elected president of the South- western National Bank of Los Angeles. In 1906 this bank was absorbed by the First National Bank, since which time he has been vice-president of the latter. MARRIED, December 28, 1893, Miss Mildred Mary Myers, daughter of George S. Myers, Esq., of St. Louis, Mo. GEORGE MASON CREEVEY, student College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City, 1893-96. Graduated M.D., June, 1896. Licensed to practice in New York, July, 1896. Appointed to house staff, Roosevelt Hospital, 1896, for four years' serv- ice. Accepted position as assistant to Dr. McBurney, New York City, May, 1899. Has been practicing in New York since that time. In January, 1901, was appointed attending surgeon at the Cornell University Medical School Dispensary, New York City. MARRIED, September 5, 1901, Miss Lucy Morris Ellsworth, daughter of W. W. Ellsworth, Esq., of New York City. Children: Carlotta, born September 13, 1902; Kennedy, born July 13, 1905 ; Eileen, born July 20, 1910. BEECHER MAYNARD CROUSE, with John M. Grouse & Son, wholesale grocers, Utica, N. Y., 1893-98. Has since that time been secretary and treasurer of the Avalon Knitwear Co. In 1900, was elected director of the First National Bank of Utica, and in 1902, a director of the Utica Trust and Deposit Co. In 1903 and 1904, was president of the Yale Club of Utica, and one of the governors of the Fort Schuyler Club. Is a director of three cotton mill companies and other enterprises. In 1910, was appointed Park Commissioner of the City of Utica. MARRIED, September 5, 1894, Miss Louise Shultas Knous, daughter of Jacob Knous, Esq., of Hartford, Conn. Children: Caroline Shultas, born February 26, 1896; died January 4, 1913; Catharine Maynard, born November 26, 1902. 63 *ELLIOT STONE CURTIS, son of Elliot M. Curtis, was born at Tidioute, Warren County, Penna., on June 18, 1871. After graduation he engaged in business in Tidioute, Penna., 1893-94. On July i, 1894, he was killed by a stroke of lightning. He had been out on a lake in an open boat, when a thunderstorm came up. He went ashore and sought shelter under a large tree. The tree was struck by lightning and the same current killed him. HOWARD DORRANCE DAY, Instructor in English in Brown University, 1893-94. Studied physical science and mathe- matics for three years under Dr. Carl Burns, at Brown Uni- versity. Received M.A. at Brown, June, 1899. Instructor in Science in the English High School at Providence, R. L, since 1895. ^ROBERT KERR DICKERMAN, son of Lemuel Dickerman, M.D., was born on June 29, 1870, in Foxboro, Norfolk County, Mass. After graduation he was a student at the Harvard Law School, 1893-95. He was admitted to Massa- chusetts bar, September, 1896, and practiced in Boston, 1896- 1907. He died, September 4, 1907, by suicide at the Fletcher Sanitarium, Salem, Mass., where he had been, for a short time previously, undergoing treatment for nervous trouble. He was for some years after his admission to the bar associated with Mr. W. B. French, of Boston, and from that time became engaged in active practice on his own account. He met with very good success and handled a considerable amount of cor- poration and bankruptcy business. He was associated with Chas. G. Bancroft, at i Congress Street, Boston, during the last six years of his life. He was a member of the Boston Bar Association and of the Yale and University Clubs. He engineered two or three large land deals in property near Boston and at the time of his death was associated with Henry M. Whitney in developing a large tract of land in Salem, Mass. 'Deceased. 6 4 MARRIED, August 27, 1904, Miss Lorita Hollander, daughter of Louis Preston Hollander, Esq., of Marblehead Neck, Mass. Child : Emma, born October 4, 1907. *JONATHAN BOYNTON DILL, died at his home at Hastings, Cambria County, Pa., April 29, 1900, of acute spinal meningitis, after an illness of less than twenty-four hours. He was the son of the Rev. William H. Dill and was born at Clearfield, Penna., January 30, 1871. After graduation he went into the coal business at Hastings, which he thereafter made his home. In 1897 he was made manager of the Alport Coal Co., and acquired an interest in the Byrnes Run Supply Co., of Spang- ler, Penna. In February, 1900, he was elected to the office of Chief Burgess of Hastings, which he held at the time of his death. FRANK EDWARD DONNELLY, student Yale Law School, 1893- 95. Graduated LL.B., June, 1895. Admitted to New York bar, December, 1895. Admitted to Pennsylvania bar, June, 1896. Practicing in Wilkes-Barre, Penna., 1896-1900. In 1900 moved to Scranton, Penna., and formed a partnership with Rice, '93, under the firm name of Rice & Donnelly. This firm was dissolved in 1902, since when has been practicing alone. Was Vice-President during 1906 and President during 1907 of the Yale Alumni Association, of Scranton. MARRIED, November 27, 1901, Miss Jean Lee, daughter of Conrad Lee, Esq., of Wilkes-Barre, Penna. Children : Frank Lee, born January 14, 1905 ; Jean Lee, born February 4, 1912. FRANCIS OSWALD DORSEY, student College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1893-96. Graduated M.D. and licensed to practice in New York, June, 1896. Received third Harsen Prize of $200 from Medical School for excellence of work of the whole course. Appointed to house staff of Sloane Maternity Hos- pital, New York City, December i, 1896, for term of three 'Deceased. 65 months. Appointed, as result of competitive examination, to house staff of Presbyterian Hospital, New York City, April 22, 1897, for two years' service beginning July i, 1897. Re- turned to Indianapolis, Ind., in October, 1899, and has been practicing there since that time. Was, on October I, 1899, appointed Assistant Professor of Principles and Practice of Medicine in Indiana Medical College. In January, 1900, was appointed attending physician at the Eleanor Hospital for Chil- dren. In October, 1900, was appointed Assistant Demonstra- tor in Pathology, Indiana Medical College, and Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics in Indiana Dental College, which post he held until September, 1904, when he resigned. In January, 1902, consulting physician, Indianapolis City Dis- pensary. In 1903, was elected to membership in the Indianap- olis and Indiana State Medical Societies, and the American Medical Association. Was, in 1904, appointed assistant attend- ing physician and surgeon to the Indianapolis City Hospital, and consulting surgeon to the City Dispensary. In January, 1906, he was advanced to attending physician, City Hospital, and was, in November, 1906, elected a member of the Advisory Board of the Eleanor Hospital for Children. In May, 1907, was appointed Associate Professor of Medicine, in the Indiana Medical College, the School of Medicine of Purdue University; and, in May, 1908, Associate Professor of Medicine in the Indiana University School of Medicine. MARRIED, October 15, 1902, Miss Edith Maria Smith, daugh- ter of William H. Smith, Esq., of Indianapolis, Ind. *RICHARD EDWARD DUNHAM, son of James Dunham, was born in Warren, Penna., on January 29, 1865. He was en- gaged in teaching in New York City, 1893-94, and at the high school, New Milford, Conn., 1894-96. He died of blood-poison- ing March 22, 1896, at his home in Warren, Penna. HENRY RUTHERFORD DWIGHT, with Dominick & Dickerman, bankers, New York City, 1893-97. Was elected assistant sec- *Deceased. 66 retary, Merchants' Safe Deposit Co., New York, 1897. Elected treasurer of Wool Exchange, New York City, January, 1898. From May, 1899, to October, 1900, was with the American Thread Co., New York City. From 1900-1906 was a member of firm of E. S. Willard & Co., real estate. From 1906-13 transacted a general real estate business in his own name. In 1913 he combined his business with that of the firm of S. B. Goodale & Perry, in a corporation known as Goodale, Perry & D wight, of which he is secretary, treasurer and a director. He is also director of La Tula (Mexico) Mining Co. WINTHROP EDWARDS D WIGHT, student of economics, Post- graduate Department at Yale, 1893-94. Yale Law School, 1894-96. Editor Yale Law Journal, 1896. Received degrees of Ph.D. at Yale, June, 1895 ; LL.B. in June, 1896. Admitted to Connecticut bar, 1896. Took the John A. Porter Prize at Yale, June, 1896. Special student in Balliol College, Oxford, Eng- land, 1896-97. Student of French Language and Literature in Paris, France, 1897-98. Admitted to New York bar, April, 1899. With Simpson, Thacher & Barnum, New York City, 1899-1901. In 1900, was assistant counsel for the Tenement House Commission of the State of New York. On October 15, 1901, opened a law office in New York City for general practice. WILLIAM WALTON ECCLES, engaged in manufacture of car- riage hardware at Auburn, N. Y., since 1893. Has been sec- retary and treasurer since 1912. MARRIED, October 18, 1899, Miss Margaret Allan Anderson, daughter of William Anderson, Esq., of Auburn, N. Y. Children : Marion Allan, born December 9, 1900 ; Robert Anderson, born June 6, 1902 ; Arthur Walton, born December 6, 1904. CHARLES BROWN EDDY, student Yale Law School, 1893-94; New York Law School, 1894-95. Graduated LL.B., June, 1895. Admitted to New York bar, December, 1895. Practicing since 67 then in New York City. Since August i, 1901, with Simpson, Thacher, Barnum and Bartlett, of which firm he has been a member since 1906. MARRIED, June 7, 1902, Miss Ellen Coolidge Burke, daughter of John W. Burke, Esq., of Alexandria, Va. Children : James H., born January 29, 1907 ; Charles Brown, Jr., born October 19, 1908 ; John Burke, born November 15, 1910. JOHN PERCIVAL EDMISON, student of law Sioux Falls, S. D., 1893-94. Admitted to South Dakota bar, December, 1894. Practicing at Sioux Falls, S. D., 1894-97, and at St. Paul, Minn., 1897-98. With St. Paul, Minn., Pioneer Press since 1898; assistant city editor, 1900; city editor, 1907; associate editor, 1912. Published in 1909 through the Penn Publish- ing Co. a book on Scandinavian Mythology, entitled "Myths of the Northmen." CHARLES HULL EWING, in charge of Yale exhibit at World's Columbian Exposition, 1893. Student Northwestern Univer- sity Law School, 1893-94. Manager Moorhead Stave Co., Moorhead, Miss., 1895-96. From May i, 1896, to July I, 1908, he was manager of the Helen Culver Fund of the Uni- versity of Chicago, and also transacting a general real estate, insurance and investment business in Chicago, which he still continues. He was president of the Lake Street Business Men's Association in 1905 ; secretary in 1906, and treasurer, 1907 to 1913. He has also been president of the People's Water & Light Co., in Harrisburg, 111., since 1906. Has been secretary and treasurer of the Southern Gypsum Co. since 1906 ; a direc- tor of the Midland Casualty Co. since 1909, and of other com- panies. MARRIED, October 8, 1906, Miss Mary Sleight Everts, daugh- ter of Dr. Thomas H. Everts, of Minneapolis, Minn. Children : Katherine Everts, born November 8, 1908 ; Helen Culver, born December 5, 1909. 68 ARCHER LYNWOOD FAXON, teaching at Glenwood Collegiate Institute, Matawan, N. J., 1893-94. High School, South Orange, N. J., 1894-99. Vice- Principal of High School of South Orange, N. J., May I, 1899-1900; 1901 to 1905 with Faxon & Ludden, shoe manufacturers, Lynn, Mass. From 1905-1909 teaching in Utica, N. Y. Since 1909 teaching in the Boston Latin School, Boston, Mass. MARRIED, June 30, 1904, Miss Katharine Hall, daughter of George M. Hall, Esq., of Boston, Mass. Children: Barbara Adams, born January i, 1906; Raymond Hall, born November 23, 1907 ; George Ryder, born January 29, 1909. CHARLES JARVIS FAY, teaching at Morristown, N. J., 1893- 94, and at Cincinnati, O., 1894-95. Student at New York Law School, 1895-96. Student at Columbia Law School, 1896-99. Graduated LL.B. and admitted to New York bar, June, 1899. With Seward, Guthrie & Steele, New York City, 1899-1900. From October, 1900, to 1907, with Lord, Day & Lord, New York City, of which firm he was a member from June I, 1905, until February I, 1907, when he withdrew to become a member of the firm of White & Case, New York City. MARRIED, June 26, 1909, Miss Emily Bartlett Ives, daughter of Walter Ives, Esq., of Newburgh, N. Y. Children: John Gilbert, born June 2, 1910; Jane Ely, born November 20, 1911. IRVING BRUCE FERGUSON, with New York Life Insurance Co., at St. Paul, Minn., 1893-96. Appointed cashier of West Superior, Wis., office, July, 1896. Occupied that position 1896-1901. In 1901 he became general manager Holoplane Glass Co., New York City. From December, 1905 to 1913, he was secretary and auditor of the American District Telegraph Co., New York City. In 1907 he passed the examinations of the New York State Board of Regents and received the de- gree of Certified Public Accountant. In 1913 he became asso- ciated with Townsend & Dix, C.P.A., New York City. In 1911 6 9 was elected trustee of the village of Pelham, N. Y., where he resides, and of which he is also Street Commissioner and Second Deputy Chief of the Volunteer Fire Department. MARRIED, October 2, 1900, Miss Julia Stanley Chapin, daughter of Arthur B. Chapin, Esq., of Duluth, Minn. Children : Irving Bruce, Jr., born October 24, 1901 ; Dudley Chapin, born November 14, 1906; Jean, born July 4, 1911. HENRY HORLBECK FICKEN, student Yale Law School, 1893-94. Admitted to South Carolina bar, 1894. Has since been practicing in Charleston, S. C. A member of the firm of Ficken, Hughes & Ficken, until 1902, and since that time of the firm of Ficken & Erckman. Has been since 1902, vice- president South Carolina Loan and Trust Co., and, since 1908, president of the Security Savings Bank. MARRIED, June 23, 1896, Miss Julia Ball, daughter of Isaac Ball, Esq., of Rice Hope Plantation, St. John's Parish, Cooper River, S. C. Children: Katherine M., born June 22, 1898; Loti Moultrie, born August 2, 1902. JOHN HOWE FIELD, student of law at Rutland, Vt, 1893-94. With Ogdensburgh Transit Co., Ogdensburgh, N. Y., April to September, 1894. In the office of the State Treasurer, at Rutland, Vt., 1894-95. With thepreat Eastern Fertilizer Co., Rutland, Vt., 1895-99. Since 1899, secretary Milson Ren- dering and Fertilizer Co., Buffalo, N. Y., now a branch of the American Agricultural Chemical Co. MARRIED, October 29, 1895, Miss Amorette Lockwood, daughter of Erastus C. Lockwood, Esq., of Cleveland, O. Children: John Howe, 2d ) , - \ Vborn October 20, 1896; Amorette Jane J Maurice Goddard, born February 25, 1902. 70 GEORGE ERNEST FOLK, teaching history and economics at Ball High School, Galveston, Tex., 1893-95. Received the de- gree of M.A. from Yale in 1894. Principal of Cleburne High School, Cleburne, Tex., 1895-97. Examiner in Patent Office at Washington, D. C., 1898 to 1905. Admitted to practice in the courts of the District of Columbia, in 1904. In 1905, he entered upon the practice of patent law in Chicago, 111., and has been since July i, 1906, a member of the firm of Barton, Tanner & Folk, of that place. MARRIED, June 6, 1895, Miss Mamie Jackson, daughter of B. W. Jackson, Esq., of Cleburne, Tex. Children: Eloise, born May 9, 1897; died April 4, 1900; Margaret Lois, born June 21, 1903. GEORGE MARK Foos, in machine shops, Springfield, O., 1893. Secretary Baton Rouge Sugar Co., Baton Rouge, La., 1894-96. With Foos Gas Engine Co., Springfield, O., 1897-99. Spent the year 1900 prospecting for gold in Cape Nome region. Re- turned to Baton Rouge Sugar Co., 1901. Since 1905, has been engaged in planting at Hope Villa, La. MARRIED, April 25, 1905, Miss Leah Margaret Kelly, daughter of Edwin S. Kelly, Esq., of Springfield, O. Children : Patti Linn, born October 10, 1906 ; Edwin Kelly, born October 21, 1908; Mary Theodosia, born June 20, 1910. JAMES CHARLES Fox, Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue at Middletown, Conn., 1893-98. January i, 1898, became a member of firm of Fox & Becker, to deal in marble and gran- ite, in Middletown, Conn. Is now president of Fox-Becker Granite Co., successor of the firm. Is also director of the First National Bank of Middletown, and of the Middletown Trust Co.; trustee of the Farmers' and Mechanics' Savings Bank, and the Middlesex Banking Company; and vice-president of the Central National Bank. MARRIED, April n, 1894, Miss Florence W. Becker, daugh- ter of C. E. Becker, Esq., of Niantic, Conn. Children : James Charles, Jr., born September 20, 1895 ; Frederick Curtis, born September 19, 1902. EDSON FESSENDEN GALLAUDET, student of electrical engi- neering at Johns Hopkins University, 1893-96. Received Ph.D. there June, 1896. With Westinghouse Electrical Co., Pitts- burgh, Penna., 1896-97. Instructor in Physics at Yale 1897- 1900. Head coach of Yale Crew, 1899. July, 1900, with William Cramp & Sons' Ship and Engine Building Co., Phila- delphia, in the engineering department. February, 1903, left Cramp & Sons to accept a position with National Cash Register Co., of Dayton, O. Resigned, July I, 1903, to become assistant to the president of the Stillwell-Bierce & Smith- Vaile Co., of Dayton, O. Upon the reorganization of this company as the Platt Iron Works he was made general superintendent. Upon January I, 1908, he resigned and organized the Gallaudet Engi- neering Co., Mechanical and Consulting Engineers, at Norwich, Conn., of which he is president. For the past three years he has devoted his attention to aeronautical engineering. He se- cured an aviator's license of the Aero Club of America with a Wright biplane, at Garden City, N. Y., on July 16, 1911 ; and a pilot's brevet of the Aero Club of France with a Nieuport monoplane, at Mourmelon, France, on November 28, 1911. MARRIED, February 14, 1903, Miss Marion Cockrell, daugh- ter of Hon. Francis M. Cockrell, United States Senator from Missouri. Children: Francis Cockrell, born April 14, 1904; Marion, born February 10, 1907; Denise, born November 27, 1909. THOMAS AUGUSTUS GARDINER, with Redmon, Kerr & Co., bankers, New York City, 1894 to 1904. Was a member of the firm from January i, 1898, to July i, 1904, when he withdrew to become a member of the firm of Plympton, Gardiner & Co., bankers, of New York City. FRANK EDWIN GATCHEL, with W. D. Gatchel & Sons, dealers in photographic supplies, Louisville, Ky., since 1893. 72 MARRIED, April 14, 1903, Miss Alice Craig, daughter of the late Austin Peay, of Pewee Valley, Ky. Children: Frances Craig, born April 5, 1904; William Culbertson, born March i, 1908. Mrs. Gatchel died March 8, 1908. RUFUS MACQUEEN GIBBS, with University Magazine, New York City, 1893-94. With Gibbs Preserving Co., of Baltimore, Md., since 1894, and was vice-president of company until 1902. Since 1902, president of Gibbs Preserving Co., and of the Canned Goods Exchange of Baltimore. In 1913 he was elected president of the Board of Trade of Baltimore, and a director of the Maryland Trust Co. MARRIED, April 20, 1898, Miss Cornelia Noyes Andrews, daughter of James F. Andrews, Esq., of New York City. Children: Helen Macqueen, born March 2, 1899; Harriet C, born June 21, 1900; Frederick A., born February 9, 1903 ; Marian Hungerford, born May 17, 1904. GILES FREDERIC GOODENOUGH, student at Hartford Theo- logical Seminary, 1893-96. Ordained to the ministry of the Congregational Church by a council at Nepaug, Conn., May 26, 1896. Entered upon pastorate of church at Ellsworth, Conn., January I, 1898, where he served until June, 1903. From 1903 to 1907, he was pastor at Torringford, Conn. Author, 1901, of "A Leisurely Gossip About a Country Parish of the Hills (Ellsworth, Conn.) for a Century." Acting vis- itor of public schools of Sharon, Conn., 1901-1903. Since August 15, 1907, he has been pastor of the Congregational Church at Northfield, Conn. He was registrar of the Litch- field Northeast Conference and president of the Winsted Union Christian Endeavor, 1905-1907. He was chaplain of the State Grange of Connecticut, 1910-11. In 1912 was elected member of the School Board of the Town of Litchfield. MARRIED, June 17, 1898, Miss Jessie May Beckwith, daughter of G. C. Beckwith, Esq., of Nepaug, Conn. 73 Children: Dorothy Augusta, born June i, 1899; Frieda Merrill, born May 19, 1902; Barbara Allen, born October 14, 1903. Mrs. Goodenough died August 30, 1905. MARRIED, July 31, 1907, Miss Nellie Virginia Davis, daugh- ter of the late Edson W. Davis, of Torringford, Conn. Children: Virginia Alice, born August i, 1908; Arthur Griswold, born April 27, 1911. JAMES EDWARD GRAFTON, Principal of Evening High School, Norwich, Conn., 1893-95. Teaching Latin, Greek and Mathe- matics in the Crosby High School, Waterbury, Conn., since 1895. He was appointed Vice-Principal of this school. CHARLES ANDREW GRAHAM, student at University of Penn- sylvania Medical School, 1893-98. Graduated M. D., June, 1898. Pursuing post-graduate studies in Vienna, Austria, 1898-1900. Practicing in Denver, Colo., since 1900. Since 1902 has been physician to the Denver City and County Hos- pital ; 1903, Associate Professor of Medicine in Denver and Gross College of Medicine, Denver, Colo. MARRIED, December 6, 1904, Miss Alice McClintock, daugh- ter of Washington McClintock, Esq., of Denver, Colo. Children: Elizabeth, born January 2, 1906; Charles Andrew, Jr., born January 10, 1908. LAWRENCE GREER, student at New York Law School, 1893- 95. Graduated LL.B. and admitted to New York bar, June, 1895. Practicing in the office of John F. Dillon, New York City, 1895. Is at present a member of the firm of Pierce & Greer. MARRIED, October 19, 1896, Miss Georgiana Oakes, daughter of Thomas Fletcher Oakes, Esq., of Mamaroneck, N. Y. Child: Dorothy, born January 13, 1898. WILLIAM HENRY HACKETT, Instructor in Ancient Lan- guages at Hillhouse Department, New Haven High School, 74 New Haven, Conn., 1894-1909. Principal of evening session of Hillhouse High School, October, 1899, to 1906; 1906-1909, Principal evening session, Boardman Department, New Haven High School. In 1904, he was president of the New Haven High School Athletic Association. From 1905-1909 he was Senior Class officer, New Haven High School, president of the New Haven Teachers' League, and editor in chief of the New Haven Teachers' Journal. In the fall of 1909 he was elected Tax Collector of New Haven, on the Democratic ticket, and assumed his duties on January i, 1910. He was re-elected in the fall of 1911. In 1912 he was elected presi- dent of the Connecticut Tax Collectors' Association. MARRIED, June 30, 1897, Miss Elizabeth Mildred Connor, daughter of William Connor, Esq., of New -Haven, Conn. Children: Mildred Louise, born April 23, 1898; Thomas William, born February 28, 1900. DONALD CAMERON HALDEMAN, law student Harrisburg, Penna., 1893-95. Admitted to Pennsylvania bar, June, 1895. Practicing in Harrisburg, Penna., 1895-1909. He was trustee of the Pennsylvania State Lunatic Asylum at Harrisburg, a manager of the Harrisburg Hospital, a director of Harrisburg Bridge Co., and of the First National Bank, Harrisburg; and vice-president of the Hagerstown Railway Company, until De- cember, 1909, when he was compelled by a complete nervous breakdown to retire from all business activities. He has been almost continuously in a sanitarium in Philadelphia since that time. MARRIED, August 30, 1909, Miss Mary Kelly, of Harrisburg, Penna. MONTGOMERY HARE, student at Columbia Law School, 1893- 96. Graduated LL.B., in June, 1906. Admitted to New York bar, July, 1896. Practicing since 1896 in New York City. Was in May, 1902, appointed Assistant Corporation Counsel, City of New York. In November, 1905, was an unsuccessful can- 75 didate for member of the Board of Aldermen of New York City, on the Democratic ticket. Is at present a member of the firm of Barbour, Rush, Hare & Holter, the other members of the firm being Barbour, '80; Hare, '94, and Holter, '94. MARRIED, March n, 1908, Miss Constance Parsons, daughter of John E. Parsons, Esq., of New York City. Children: Meredith, 2d, born January 17, 1909; , born August 21, 1911. CLARENCE CLIFFORD HARMSTAD, student at New York Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B. and admitted to New York bar, June, 1895. Practicing 1895-1901 in New York City. In partnership with Robert E. L. Lewis, under the firm name of Lewis & Harmstad, May I, 1900, until December I, 1901. Since then with Title, Guarantee and Trust Co., of which he was elected assistant secretary in 1909. Since 1906, has also been secretary of the New York Investors' Corporation, and since 1912 vice-president of the Fire Brokerage Co. ALLYN FITCH HARVEY, studying bookkeeping, 1893-94. With Pickands, Mather & Co., iron ore brokers, Cleveland, O., 1894 to 1901. Has since that time been with the Pitts- burgh Steamship Co. (U. S. Steel Corporation), of which he was assistant general manager until 1907, since which time he has been general manager. FRANK WILLIAM HASTINGS, JR., law student at Bradford, Penna., 1893-94. Admitted to Pennsylvania bar, 1894. Prac- ticing at Bradford, Penna., 1894-98. Practicing at Jersey City, N. J., since November, 1898. Was appointed Special Master in Chancery in April, 1912. Has been secretary of the Hud- son County Bar Association since 1909. MARRIED, September 14, 1898, Miss Edith Janet Straight, daughter of Russell James Straight, Esq., of Bradford, Penna. Children: Russell Straight, born August 4, 1899; Barbara Tudor, born August 12, 1901 ; Seth Truman, born March 3, 1904; 7 6 Randall, born November 25, 1905 ; Janet Shirley, born February 4, 1910. LOGAN HAY, post-graduate student of economics at Yale, 1893-94. Student at Harvard Law School, 1894-97. Editor Harvard Law Journal, 1895-97. Graduated LL.B. cum laude, and admitted to Illinois bar, 1897. Member of firm of Brown, Wheeler, Brown & Hay, Springfield, 111., since 1897. Has been a member of the Illinois State Senate since 1906. MARRIED, November 9, 1899, Miss Lucy Langdon Bowen, daughter of the late George P. Bowen, of Springfield, 111. Children: Mary Douglass, born October 21, 1900; Alice Houghton, born December 18, 1901. *THEODORE WOOLSEY HEERMANCE, a grandson of President Woolsey, for whom he was named, and the son of the Rev. Edgar L. Heermance, Yale, '58, was born in New Haven, March 22, 1872. He entered Yale with the class and held high rank in scholarship throughout the course, graduating with Philosophical Oration Appointment. He was a student at the American School at Athens, Greece, 1894-96, and instructor in Greek and Archaeology at Yale, 1896-1902. He received the degree of Ph.D. at Yale in 1898. He spent the years 1900 and 1901 making researches in Berlin and Rome. He returned to Greece in 1902, to serve as Secretary of the American School at Athens for the year 1902-1903, and to succeed in the fall of 1903, as director of that institution, Professor Rufus B. Richardson (Yale, '69), who was about to retire. He died of typhoid fever in Athens, September 29, 1905. His death came as a great shock to his friends in this country, who knew nothing of his illness. One who knew him well said of him, shortly after his death : "Dr. Heermance's friends and older associates looked forward with pleasure and confidence to his return to Yale in a few years as professor of classical archaeology. *Deceased. 77 "Dr. Heermance's plans for work were broad and high. Like his distinguished grandfather, though modest and far from any self-assertion, he did not lack confidence in his own powers, and shrank from no clear duty, preparing himself with conscientious care for all that he had to do. He was particularly interested in the study of architecture, and made himself a competent surveyor and draughtsman, appreciating his need of this skill and facility in the conduct of archaeological excavations and explorations. In his col- lege days he had seemed fitted for scholarship rather than affairs, but he proved himself an admirable administrator and excellent master of details. Both in the Classical Club at Yale and in the School at Athens he showed himself an excellent librarian. Last spring at the opening meeting of a great congress of archaeologists in the Parthenon at Athens, he spoke so well that an American scholar wrote that our countrymen were proud of their representa- tive. His published work is slight. He had gathered extensive material for a work on Greek architecture, but this is not likely to be in shape for publication. The historical introduction and de- scriptions which are to accompany the publication of drawings of the Erechtheum recently made by the architect of the School, are believed to be nearly ready for the printer. "As a scholar Dr. Heermance was sure of high distinction in the future, being broad and independent, as well as unusually thorough and accurate. As a man he deserved many good epithets, but, per- haps in particular, he was cheerful, kindly, generous, frank and true." Under his will the Department of Archaeology of the Uni- versity came into possession of the valuable collection of photographs and pottery made by Dr. Heermance during his work in Greece as Director of the American School at Athens. The collection includes about a thousand photographs of speci- mens of Greek and Roman sculpture, among which are many pictures of the recent excavations at Olympia and Athens. Among the plasters in the collection is one of the head of a horse from the east pediment of the Parthenon and a large collection of fragments of Greek pottery. Of particular value is a collection of eighty squeezes of Greek inscriptions taken direct from the originals by Dr. Heermance. There are many specimens of marbles. 78 CHARLES RALPH HICKOX, student at Harvard Law School, 1893-96. Graduated LL.B., and admitted to Suffolk County, Mass., bar in September, 1896, and to New York bar, Janu- ary, 1897. Practicing in New York since 1896. In May, 1898, was mustered into the service of the United States for the war with Spain with Trqop A, New York Volunteer Cavalry. Was appointed Second Lieutenant, U. S. A. (regulars), July, 1898, and assigned to Second Infantry. Joined his regiment at Santi- ago de Cuba on August i, shortly after the surrender. Re- turned with regiment to Montauk Point, Long Island, August 1 6. Resigned his commission. Was taken ill with malaria and typhoid fever shortly after and spent several weeks in Roose- velt Hospital, New York City. On his recovery resumed the practice of his profession. He was also (1897-1902) secre- tary of Committee on Admissions, Yale Club of New York, of which he was one of the incorporators. With Convers & Kirlin, New York City, since October, 1899. Was admitted to partnership in this firm March I, 1908. WILLIAM McKiMMiE HIGGINS, teaching in University School at Kansas City, Mo., 1893-94. Principal of Butler .Academy, Bulter, Mo., 1894-97. Student at Yale Medical School, 1898-1902. During this course was also in the Yale Co-operative Store. Graduated M.D., 1902. Served a term as pathological externe, Presbyterian Hospital, New York City, after which he entered upon general practice in New York City. In 1906, was appointed assistant chief physician of the Good Samaritan Dispensary. In 1908, he gave up general practice to specialize in pathology and to conduct two private laboratories, known as The Higgins Laboratories, and The Sydenham Laboratories, in New York City. On July i, 1910, he was appointed Pathologist to the Lincoln Hospital, New York City. MARRIED, June 27, 1906, Miss Ella Louise Ford, daughter of William J. Ford, Esq., of Baltimore, Md. 79 * FREDERICK ASBURY HILL, died August 31, 1907, of typhoid fever complicated by injuries received in falling from his horse at the State Militia Camp. He was born in Norwalk, Conn., July 4, 1869, and was the son of Ebenezer J. Hill. He en- tered college with the class of '92, and joined our class in the Sophomore year. After graduation he studied law at the Yale Law School and graduated LL.B. in June, 1895. He was admitted to the Connecticut bar, and entered upon the prac- tice of his profession in Norwalk, Conn. Upon the outbreak of the Spanish war he volunteered for active service. He enlisted in the First Division of the Naval Battalion, Con- necticut National Guard, in 1893, and served until 1895. He became Captain of Company D, Fourth Infantry, of the Con- necticut National Guard, in 1897, and held that command until 1898. He was appointed by President McKinley Lieutenant Colonel and Judge Advocate of the United States Volunteer Army on May 9, 1898. On arriving at Ponce, Porto Rico, he was placed in charge of the customs and internal revenues of the district by General Wilson, and was the senior officer in that department until the taking of San Juan. He was honor- ably discharged from the United States service on June 24, 1899, and, returning to Norwalk, took the position of secretary and treasurer of the Norwalk Mills Company, at Winnepauk, which place he filled at the time of his death. He was ap- pointed, in 1899, Captain and Aide-de-Camp on the Staff of General Russell Frost, commanding the brigade, Connecticut National Guard, and on July 20, 1900, he was promoted to be Major and Judge Advocate. On August i, 1902, he was made Brigade Inspector, with the rank of Major, which office he held at the time of his death. JAMES NORMAN HILL, with the Great Northern Railway, St. Paul, Minn., occupying various positions, since 1893. Was vice-president of the Great Northern Railway; president of the Spokane Falls Northern Railway; vice-president of the *Deceased. 8o Northern Pacific Railway, and director and member of the Executive Committee of the Erie Railroad, until July, 1912, when he retired from active participation in railroad work. MARRIED, August 23, 1912, Mrs. Margaret Sawyer Fahne- stock, daughter of Arthur W. Sawyer, Esq., of Boston, Mass. JOHN PAYSON HOBBIE, with the Syracuse (N. Y.) Morning Courier, 1893-94. Secretary of Good Government Clubs in New York City during municipal election campaign in the fall of 1894. With Syracuse, N. Y., Courier, 1895. Member of firm of C. J. Hildebrandt & Co., advertising agents, Syra- cuse, N. Y., 1896-97. From October, 1897, to January I, 1900, carried on the same business in his own name. January i, 1900, sold out Syracuse business. February i became a member of the firm of Abram Hyatt & Co., real estate, New York City and Sing Sing, N. Y., living in New York City. In July, 1905, succeeded to the business of Abram Hyatt & Co. MARRIED, July 20, 1898, Miss Alice Louise Hyatt, daughter of Abram Hyatt, Esq., of Sing Sing, N. Y. BENJAMIN HODGE, student of mining engineering at Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology, 1893-95. Engaged as mining engineer, St. Paul, Minn., 1896-97. Assistant engineer of Lon- don and British Columbia Gold Fields Co., Nelson, B. C., 1898- 1904. Engaged in mining engineering at Platteville, Wis., 1904-1909, and was also a member of the firm of Jarrett & Hodge Co., dealers in mining supplies at Platteville. In July, 1909, he moved to Redlands, California, on account of his wife's ill health. Her health having been restored, he settled there and has since that time engaged in raising oranges. MARRIED, January 18, 1899, Miss Ruth Stickney, daughter of A. B. Stickney, Esq., of St. Paul, Minn. Children : May Norton, born December 22, 1901 ; Benjamin, born March 17, 1904; Ruth Ursula, born December 13, 1907. 8i RICHARD THAYER HOLBROOK, student of modern languages in Europe, chiefly in Paris, 1893-96. Tutor in Romance Lan- guages at Yale, 1896-1900. February, 1900, author of a book called "Boys and Men," published by Scribners, second edition, July, 1900. Spent summer of 1900 in San Sebastian, Spain. Author of "Dante and the Animal Kingdom," Macmillan, 1902. In 1902-1903, member of Faculty of Romance Languages at Columbia University, from which he received the degree of Ph.D. in 1902. Assistant editor of the International Encyclo- pedia, 1902. In 1904, Englished the farce of Master Pierre Patelin for the Arts Club of New York City. In 1905, this work was published by Houghton, Mifflin & Co., illustrated with facsimiles of the woodcuts in the edition of Pierre Levet, Paris, circa 1489. Since 1906 has been head of the department of Italian and Old French Philology at Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pa. In 1906, he found two hitherto unknown letters of Lord Byron. Is at present Associate Professor of Italian and Old French at Bryn Mawr College. He is a mem- ber of the Societe des Anciens Textes Francais, of Paris. In 1908 and 1909 he collaborated with William S. Booth on his work "Some Acrostic Signatures of Francis Bacon." In 1909 he composed "A Poet and his Music," an account of John Mil- ton's relation to music and musicians. In 1911 his "Portraits of Dante" was published by the Medici Society, London. In 1913 edited a critical edition of Balzac's Gobsec, etc., Oxford University Press, 1913. JOHN LEROY HURLBERT, teaching at Dunkirk, N. Y., High School, 1893-98, serving as Principal of the school, 1897-98. At the same time studied law, and was admitted to New York bar, October, 1897, since when he has been practicing law at Dunkirk, N. Y. In 1912 he was elected a director of the Merchants' National Bank of Dunkirk, and of the American Lux Light Co. MARRIED, February 14, 1906, Miss Helen Maude Hequem- bourg, daughter of Charles E. Hequembourg, Esq., of Dun- kirk, N. Y. 82 Children: Jessie Florence, born .September 25, 1908; Le Roy Hequembourg, born April 6, 1913. SHUBAEL CADY HUTCHINS, dealer in electrical supplies in Providence, R. L, and in New York City, 1893-96. With the American Oil Co., Providence, R. L, 1897-1903. From 1903- 1909 was not in very good health and was not actively engaged in business. He resides at Danielson, Conn. From 1909-1912 he was agent for the Franklin automobile in Hartford, Conn. On March 21, 1913, while seated in the library of his home, he was shot by an unknown assailant, who fired at him through the window. He was very seriously wounded, but is recov- ering. No cause for the attack is known. MARRIED, October 30, 1907, Miss Helen Raphael Finnegan, daughter of Michael Burke Finnegan, Esq., of Boston, Mass. Children: John Cady, born April 15, 1909; died April 15, 1909; Helen Gladding, born January 21, 1911. *SHERWOOD BISSELL IVES, son of Brayton Ives, '61, was born in New York City, December 30, 1870, and was prepared for college at Groton School, Groton, Mass. During Freshman year he won a place on the University crew, and in Senior year was captain of the crew, rowing with an ease and power seldom combined. After graduation he was a student at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1893-96. He graduated M.D. and was licensed to practice in New York, June, 1896. He was appointed to the house staff of Presbyterian Hospital, New York City, for two years' service, beginning January i, 1897, and was appointed attending physician to Colored Home and Hospital, January, 1899. He was appointed instructor, Cornell Medical College, 1899. His health failing, he gave up active practice in the winter of 1900, and resided almost con- tinuously on a ranch at Datil, New Mexico. He died there on February 16, 1907, of peritonitis resulting from a wound caused by the accidental discharge of a revolver which he had 'Deceased. been carrying. In commenting upon his death one of the local papers said of him: "He was beloved from the Datil to the Rio Grande. Never did he refuse to travel any distance at any time in any weather to give aid to a sick cowboy or sheep-herder, and seldom would he accept payment for such a service." A resident of the country in which he thus labored said of him that no man ever came into that country who was so uni- versally beloved by the poor or so much of a good influence in their lives. HARRY BENJAMIN JEPSON, organist of Center Church, New Haven, and assistant organist of College Chapel, 1893-94. Or- ganist of College Chapel since 1894. Student in Musical De- partment at Yale, 1894-96. Received degree of Mus.B. at Yale in 1896. Instructor in organ playing and in harmony at Yale, 1896-99. He is the composer of a large number of com- positions for organ, including a sonata, and a concerto for organ and orchestra, and also a cantata for male voices. Studied abroad during 1899, 1901, 1903, 1904. Appointed Assistant Professor of Harmony and the Theory of Music at Yale, October 18, 1899. Gave a series of organ recitals at Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 1901. In 1903, appointed Curator and Official Organist of the Newberry memorial organ, Woolsey Hall. In 1907, he published a volume of "University Hymns," arranged for male voices and de- signed for use in the Yale Chapel. In October, 1907, he re- ceived the degree of M.A. from Yale, and was appointed, in addition to his other duties, Professor of Applied Music. He was elected president of the New Haven Oratorio Society in 1908. MARRIED, August i, 1895, Miss Mabel Preston Wyatt, daughter of Rev. Albert H. Wyatt, of Norwalk, Conn. JESSE BRELAND JOHNSON, post-graduate student of mathe- matics at Yale, 1893-95, holding a university fellowship. Re- ceived the degree of Ph.D. in June, 1895. Instructor in Lan- guages, Henry College, Campbell, Texas, 1895-96. Student of 8 4 mathematics at University of Chicago, 1897-98. Professor of Mathematics at Burleson College, Greenville, Texas, 1898-99. Professor of Mathematics, Baylor University, Waco, Texas, since 1899. MARRIED, December 20, 1895, Miss Jessie C. Brown, daugh- ter of John H. Brown, Esq., of Whitewright, Texas. Children : Frederick Edgerton 1 , in in- u ^u /-born November 17. 1898; Florence Elizabeth I Jessie Brown, born June 25, 1902 ; H albert, born January 6, 1905 ; Catherine, born January 12, 1908; Jesse Breeland, Jr., born October 12, 1910. *ALFRED HENRY JONES, son of Charles Jones, of St. Louis, Mo., was born in that city on April 17, 1868. He was fitted for college at Smith Academy, St. Louis. While in college he took much interest in athletics and was captain of the Track Athletic team in Senior year. After graduation he was a student at the St. Louis Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B. and admitted to the Missouri bar, June, 1895 ; he practiced in St. Louis from that time until his death. In June, 1900, he suf- fered an attack of meningitis which was followed in August by an attack of tyhoid fever and pneumonia. These at- tacks resulted in galloping consumption, which developed in September. In November, he rallied sufficiently to be taken to New Mexico, where he seemed to be much improved. Early in January, 1900, he was taken with grippe, which, coupled with consumption, was the cause of his death on January 15, 1901, at Las Vegas, N. M. MARRIED, November 17, 1896, Miss Sophia Bates John- son, daughter of Dr. J. B. Johnson, of St. Louis, Mo. Children: Emilie Teoteist, born November 23, 1897; Alfred H., Jr., born October i, i< CHARLES DAVIES JONES, student at Cincinnati Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B. and admitted to Ohio bar, June, *Deceased. 85 1895, practicing since 1895 in Cincinnati, O. Was secretary of Yale Alumni Association, of Cincinnati, O., 1894-96. In January, 1901, was elected a director of the Central Trust and Safe Deposit Co., of Cincinnati, O. In May, 1906, he was elected a director of the Dayton and Michigan R. R. Co., and in May, 1908, secretary and treasurer of the Little Miami R. R. Co. Was elected president of the Yale Alumni Association, of Cincinnati, in March, 1911. MARRIED, January 19, 1904, Miss Grace Ella Hinchman, daughter of Ford de Camp Hinchman, Esq., of Detroit, Mich. Children : Francis Johnston, 2d, born February 3, 1906 ; Ford Hinchman, born May 25, 1908. RIVERDA HARDING JORDAN, cashier of R. Douglas Crockery Co., St. Joseph, Mo., 1893-95. With Johnson, Rusk & String- fellow, lawyers, St. Joseph, Mo., 1895-96. With Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company, St. Joseph, Mo., 1896-97. Instructor in Mathematics at Central High School, St. Joseph, Mo., June, 1897, to 1902. Instructor in Latin and Greek from 1902-1904, when he was appointed Principal. In January, 1901, was elected secretary of the Northwestern Mis- souri Teachers' Association; also president of the Missouri Valley Athletic Association. In 1902, 1903 and 1904, was treasurer of Missouri State Teachers' Association. Was vice-president of the Missouri Society of Sciences and Mathe- matics, and secretary of the Missouri Classical Society, 1908- 1911. He contributed to "Southern Educational Association Proceedings" for 1908 a paper entitled "Some Advantages of a Group System of Electives in the High School Curriculum." In February, 1910, he issued the "Handbook of the Missouri Valley Interscholastic Athletic Association," which was fol- lowed by a Biennial Supplement in 1912. In the fall of 1911 he was appointed Principal of the West High School, Minne- apolis, Minn. In April, 1912, he was elected chairman of a committee of the Minneapolis Schoolmasters' Club, to confer with employers and representatives of labor on the best meth- ods of bringing employees and the public schools into closer 86 relationship. He read a paper at the 1912 meeting of the Na- tional Educational Association on "The Relation of the Pro- posed Geometry Course to the Manual Training Department in High Schools," and in June of that year contributed to the Journal of Education, a paper on "Co-operation of the School and the Employer Relative to the Employee." Received the degree of M.A. at Yale in June, 1913. MARRIED, August 3, 1909, Miss Mary Vinette Hoover, daughter of George Henry Hoover, Esq., of St. Joseph, Mo. Child: Richard Hollister, born September 21, 1911. HOMER THRALL JOY, student at College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City, 1893-96. Graduated M.D. and licensed to practice in New York, June, 1896. Appointed to house staff of Bellevue Hospital, New York City, 1897, for two years' service, medical side. After completing medical service, accepted an appointment to surgical service. Is at present practicing in New York City. MARRIED, November 9, 1905, Miss Elizabeth Josephine van Beuren, daughter of Frederick T. van Beuren, Esq., of New York City. Child: Homer van Beuren, born September 16, 1907. WALTER PARMELEE JUDSON, in business with Russell Bros., grocers, in New Haven, 1893-94. Student at Yale Law School, 1894-96; also teaching at Highwood School, 1895-96. Grad- uated LL.B. and admitted to Connecticut bar, June, 1896. Practicing since 1896 in New Haven, Conn. ADRIAN VAN SINDEREN LAMBERT, student at College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City, 1893-96. Graduated M.D. and licensed to practice in New York, June, 1896. Ap- pointed to house staff, medical service, New York Hospital, July i, 1896. Completed service, January i, 1898, and was reappointed to house staff, surgical service, New York Hos- pital for eighteen months' service. July i, 1899, completed hospital service and went abroad to study one year in Munich, 8; Vienna and Berlin. Returned in 1900 and has since that time been practicing in New York City. His hospital and college work has been as follows : Assistant Surgeon, New York Lying- in Hospital, 1900-1904; Attending Surgeon, Lincoln Hospital, 1906-1909; Assistant Surgeon, Bellevue Hospital, since 1905; Assistant Surgeon, Roosevelt Hospital, since 1908; Demon- strator of Anatomy, College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1900- 1905; Instructor in Surgery, same institution, 1905-1908; Chief Surgeon, Vanderbilt Clinic, same institution, since 1908. Was appointed Associate Professor of Surgery, College of Physi- cians and Surgeons, New York, in 1913, and also Associate Attending Surgeon, Presbyterian Hospital, New York. Mem- ber of the New York Surgical Society since 1911. He was one of the authors of "A Terminology of Diseases, to Facilitate the Classification of Histories in Hospitals, published in 1911. MARRIED, June i, 1905, Miss Mary Shipman Robinson, daughter of the late Henry C. Robinson, of Hartford, Conn. Children : Mary Robinson, born March 4, 1908 ; Adrian, born September 21, 1909; John Trumbull, born August 24, 1912. EDWIN RUTHVEN LAMSON, with Carter, Dinsmore & Co., manufacturers of inks, etc., Boston, Mass., 1893-94. Engaged in advertising business (E. R. Lamson Company) in Boston, Mass., 1894-95. Senior member of firm of Lamson, Wolffe & Co., publishers, Boston, Mass., 1895-99. New York represen- tative of Guardian Trust Company, June, i899-January, 1901. January, 1901, with Schwart, Dupee & Co., stocks, New York City. Was manager of the New Haven branch office of Amer- ican Finance and Securities Company, of New York City, from 1901-1903. Was with the Cathin-Powell Company, brokers, New York City, from 1901-1911, since when he has been a director of the Proprietary Mines Company of America, and vice-president of the Dustoline for Roads Company, of Sum- mit, N. J., where he lives. 88 WILLIAM JUDSON LAMSON, student at College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City, 1893-96. Graduated M.D. and licensed to practice in New York, June, 1896. Studied in Ber- lin and Vienna, 1896-97. Appointed to house staff, St. Luke's Hospital, New York City, 1897, to serve till July i, 1899. At- tending physician Demilt Dispensary, New York City, 1900- 1901. Moved to Summit, N. J., to practice, 1902. He is vice-president of the Highland Club, and secretary of the Sum- mit Medical Society. In 1909 he was appointed Police Sur- geon and Medical Inspector of Schools of Summit, and a member of the Union County Medical Milk Commission. IRWIN BOYLE LAUGH LIN, spent the year 1893-94 in a trip around the world. With Jones & Laughlin, iron and steel, Pittsburgh, Penna., 1894-97. Spent the winter of 1897-98 in study of French at Tours, France. Spent the winter of 1898- 99, in a trip to Japan and the Philippines. From 1899 to 1903, was treasurer of Jones & Laughlin Steel Company, in Pitts- burgh, Penna. In November, 1903, he was appointed private secretary to the United States Minister to Japan, at Tokio. In January, 1905, he was advanced to Second Secretary of Lega- tion at Tokio. He acted as First Secretary of Legation there from June to November, 1906. He was appointed Secretary of Legation and Consul General at Bangkok, Siam, in June, 1906. He was appointed Second Secretary of Legation at Peking, in March, 1907, and transferred there as acting first secretary, where he remained until September, 1907. He was appointed Second Secretary of the United States Embassy to St. Petersburg in June, 1907. He holds the decoration of the Fourth Class of the Order of the Rising Sun, conferred upon him by the Mikado of Japan "as an expression of his high appreciation of the services rendered to Japan during the recent war between Japan and Russia." In September, 1908, he was transferred to Athens, Greece, as First Secretary of Legation. On July 31, 1909, he was advanced to Second Secretary of Embassy, at Paris ; in December, 1909, to First Secretary of 8 9 Embassy, at Berlin, and in February, 1913, to First Secretary of Embassy, at London. MARRIED, September 18, 1912, Miss Therese Iselin, daughter of Adrian Iselin, Esq., of New York. *BURTON EMERSON LEAVITT, died of sarcoma in Putnam, Conn., on November 19, 1912. He was born in Scotland, Conn., on October 13, 1871, and was the son of Nason W. Leavitt, at that time a traveling salesman, who subse- quently became teacher of music in the public schools of Willimantic, Conn. His preliminary education was ob- tained in the public schools. He early manifested a talent for music and during the last three or four years before entering college, he was a member of an organization called "The Stars of New York," with whom he appeared as a solo cornetist on many occasions. He was also, prior to graduation, a member of Miller's Orchestra at Watch Hill, Conn., and later of Blaisdell's Orchestra at Ports- mouth, N. H. During the year before he entered college, he composed an original opera, "The Frogs of Windham." During the four years of his college course, this opera was produced in every city and large town in Connecticut, with the exception of Bridgeport three performances in each place. His father preceded him to the place of perform- ance and drilled the local performers in the opera and when the company was ready, Leavitt absented himself from col- lege to conduct the performance. This happened about once in every three weeks during his four years of college. Despite the handicap resulting from this absence, he kept well up in his studies and received both junior and senior appointments. In the early part of his college course, music was first introduced as an elective study and Leavitt was one of the two pupils in the first class, of Professor Stoeckel, and for a time the only pupil. After graduation, he con- tinued his work in music at Yale and in June, 1894, re- ceived from the University the degree of Bachelor of Music. * Deceased. 90 The wide popularity of "The Frogs of Windham" prompted him to continue in work of this same character. Within the fifteen years following his graduation, he composed six other operas, all of them founded on local legends and all teaching "a lesson of revolt against wrongs of the human race." During this period, he produced also a short grand opera, called "Chocorua's Curse" a legend of the White Mountains. In all of his work, Indian characters figure. He spent a large part of his time traveling in New England, producing these operas wherever he found the best local talent. He composed a great many songs, the best known of which, "The Factory to the Potter's Field," on the child labor problem, created quite a sensation, the title page and the poem being used as a cartoon in many newspapers. He also published two books, "The Music of the Lakes" and "Songs of Protest," a Socialist publication. In politics he was a Socialist, and in 1906 he was nominated on the Socialists' ticket for Congressman-at-Large from Connec- ticut. He was for the last four years of his life editor of a magazine known as Our Race Quarterly, founded by Pro- fessor C. A. L. Totten. About five years ago, when his mother, and a short time after, an uncle died, he was com- pelled to devote his attention to family affairs. After that he appeared in public only twice. On these occasions, he directed pageants on a large scale at Norwich and New London, Conn., commemorating the history of these settle- ments. For these pageants he wrote original music adapted to each scene presented, arranged for a large band. In each of these pageants, over 1000 people took part. As a result of these pageants, he obtained a wide reputation for work of that character and was invited to undertake similar work in many other places. At the time of his death, he was engaged upon the composition of a biblical opera, entitled "Tea-Tephi," which is to be published shortly. He was unmarried. The sole surviving member of his family is his father, with whom he had always lived, and who is now in his eighty-first year. ^FREDERICK MERWIN LLOYD, only son of Samuel Lloyd, of New Haven, Conn., was born in that city March 23, 1871. He prepared for college in the Hillhouse High School. After graduation he held various positions with the Security Insur- ance Company, New Haven, Conn., from 1893 until Janu- ary, 1904, when he was elected secretary of the company. He died at New Haven on May 13, 1905, after a long and painful illness. His death removed from New Haven one of the most promising of its younger business men. His character, in- dustry and ability won him the responsible position which he held, and promised for the future a still larger field of use- fulness. The insurance newspaper, The Standard, of Boston, in chronicling his death, speaks of "the widespread regret that the career of a man of such charming personality and high character should have thus been brought to an untimely close." An older man, with whom he had been closely associated in business, wrote of him: "Patient through great suffering, hopeful under discouragement, and thoughtful in every conscious hour for those whom he loved, he has left our sight forever. The genuine sorrow that falls upon all who knew him testifies to the affection and respect in which he was held. Able in his chosen work, with strong convictions for the right, courteous in all things, affable yet self-controlled, it has seemed that he attuned his life to the highest word which has yet been spoken, and bore amid the many activities of business the serene example of a heart of faith. We who knew him intimately, powerless before the inscrutable mystery of his early death, offer this humble tribute to his memory." MARRIED, June 6, 1901, Miss Bertha Frances Herrick, daughter of Dwight S. Herrick, Esq., of New Haven, Conn. ARTHUR POWER LORD, studying art in Paris, France, 1893- 98. Received M.A. at Yale, June, 1896. Studying in Post- graduate Department at Yale, 1898-99. Received Ph.D. at Yale, June, 1899. Returned to Paris, October, 1899, and re- mained there until 1903, when he returned to New York to Deceased. 92 live. Author of "Regency of Marie de Medicis," published by Henry Holt & Co., New York. While in France acted as agent of the University Library, purchasing with University funds necessary books for different departments. He has also made generous gifts to the University Library of books nec- essary to make the department of French History complete. In 1904, he reorganized the Athens Knitting Company, and in 1905, was elected vice-president of the company. He was from 1907-1908 vice-president of the Morrison Oil Company, treas- urer of the Seneca Falls Woolen Company, and in September, 1907, was appointed general manager Eastern Division of the Indian Refining Company, with offices in New York City. He published, in 1896, a sketch of Frederick the Great, and, in 1899, "Regency of Marie de Medicis." Appointed president of the Bridgeport Oil Company, September, 1907. On July i, 1908, he moved to Cincinnati, O., in connection with his duties with the Indian Refining Company. Early in 1909, he returned to New York, as Eastern and Foreign manager of this com- pany, and in May of that year moved to Paris, to take charge of the company's foreign headquarters. In 1911, he was ap- pointed assistant to the president, and returned to New York, but continued to direct the foreign business of the company. He resigned in 1912, and has since been living in Paris, where he represents the E. I. duPont de Nemours Powder Co., of which he was appointed assistant to the vice-president in Jan- uary, 1913. MARRIED, February 8, 1897, Miss Marion Louderback, daughter of Andrew Anderson Louderback, Esq., of San Francisco, Cal. Child: Arthur Andrew, born November 20, 1897. IRVING PHILLIPS LYON, student at Johns Hopkins Medical School, Baltimore, Md., 1893-97. Graduated M.D., June, 1897. Spent summer of 1894 in work at Johns Hopkins Dispensary; the summer of 1895, traveling in Europe. In 1896, was ap- pointed Bacteriologist and Pathologist at Wilson Sanitarium, Baltimore, Md. Spent summer of 1897 studying in Germany. 93 Served on the house staff of Johns Hopkins Hospital, Balti- more, Md., 1897-98. Opened an office in Buffalo, N. Y., De- cember, 1898. He has for years been a contributor to American and foreign medical journals and textbooks. Amongst his recent works are the chapters on "Diseases of the Spleen," in Osier's Modern Medicine, 1908 ; and the "Rad- ical Cure of Habitual Constipation by Psychotherapy," in the Transactions of the Association of American Physicians, Vol. XXIII. He is a member of the American Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists and the Association of Amer- ican Physicians. He has held the following positions : Clinical Pathologist, New York State Pathological Laboratory, 1900- 1903 ; Chief of the Medical Service, Dispensary of the Uni- versity of Buffalo, 1901-1903; Clinical Pathologist, German Deaconess Hospital ; Pathologist, Charity Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital of Erie County ; Instructor in Clinical Medicine, Uni- versity of Buffalo; Assistant Attending Physician, Buffalo General Hospital, and Librarian, Medical Department, Univer- sity of Buffalo. MARRIED, October 23, 1900, Miss Kate Parker Lathrop, daughter of Hervey Williams Lathrop, Esq., of Savannah, Ga. Children: Kate Lathrop, born October 9, 1901; died Octo- ber 23, 1901 ; Mary Phillips, born December 20, 1903 ; Kate Lathrop, born August I, 1908. *WILLIAM JAMES MCKENNA, son of Francis McKenna, was born in Westboro, Mass., on February 9, 1870. After grad- uation he entered the Harvard Medical School, and remained there until the spring of 1895. In April of that year he went to Colorado for his health, but the change failed to benefit him, and he returned to his home in July, 1896, and died there of tuberculosis on December 18, 1896. STUART MCKNIGHT, student at Louisville Law School, 1893- 95. Graduated LL.B., June, 1895; also at the same time with *Deceased. 94 W. H. McKnight, Sons & Co., carpet dealers, Louisville, Ky. Was admitted to the Kentucky bar, in January, 1896, and also to the firm of W. H. McKnight, Sons & Co. In 1902, when the firm was incorporated, he was elected secretary, and in 1908 was elected treasurer also. He was for several years also secretary of the Yale Alumni Association of Kentucky. In 1911 W. H. McKnight, Sons & Co., retired from business, and he then entered the real estate and insurance business in his own name. In 1913 he was elected president of the Buy & Sell Co., dealing in real estate. WILLIAM MAFFITT, engaged in street railroad work in St. Louis, Mo., 1893-94. Superintendent abattoir, Union Stock Yards, St. Louis, Mo., 1894-96. Assistant treasurer Mercan- tile Trust Company, St. Louis, Mo., 1900; treasurer, 1905; vice-president, 1908. In 1909 he was elected also vice-presi- dent of the Mercantile National Bank. In 1911 and 1912 he was president of the Yale Alumni Association, of St. Louis. MARRIED, January 28, 1902, Miss Ellen Humphreys Walsh, daughter of Julius S. Walsh, Esq., of St. Louis, Mo. ARTHUR JAMES MARTIN, student at New York Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B. and admitted to New York bar, June, 1896. Practicing since 1896 in New York City. MARRIED, April 26, 1910, Miss Emily E. Apgar, daughter of the late Louis J. Apgar, of Jersey City, N. J. Child: Arthur James, Jr., born November 21, 1911. *GEORGE GREENE MARTIN, son of George Martin, was born February 22, 1871, in New Orleans, La., but in early life re- moved to St. Louis, Mo. After graduation he was with the National Bank of Commerce, St. Louis, Mo., 1893-94; in the employ of Internal Revenue Department at St. Louis, Mo., and also student at St. Louis Law School, 1894-95. He was with American Telephone and Telegraph Company, Indian- apolis, Ind., 1895. He served as manager of that company's long- distance telephone system at St. Louis, Mo., 1895-99. He was ^Deceased. 95 appointed superintendent of company's Arkansas and Texas division, October, 1899, located at Little Rock, Ark. In the latter part of 1906 he was compelled to abandon his work on account of an attack of tuberculosis of the lungs. He returned to his former home in St. Louis, Mo., for treatment, but failed rapidly and died there, February 24, 1907. WALTER RUMSEY MARVIN, with Marvin Bakery of United States Baking Company, Pittsburgh, Penna., 1893-97. With same company in Boston, Mass., 1898. In 1898 and 1899 with Lion Tea Company, Philadelphia, Penna. With National Bis- cuit Company, Philadelphia, 1900. With same concern, New York City, since 1901. MARRIED, June 13, 1899, Miss Julia Armstrong Collins, daughter of the late William A. Collins, of Blue Ridge Sum- mit, Penna. Children: Walter Rumsey, Jr., born August 15, 1900; Judith Huntingdon, born October 19, 1903. EDWARD THOMSON MATHISON, student at Berkeley Divinity School, Middletown, Conn., 1893-95. Graduated 1895 and ordained in Protestant Episcopal Church. Rector of parish at Marbledale, Conn., 1895-96. Rector of Parish at Ansonia, Conn., 1896-1900. Rector of St. Michael's Church, Brattleboro, Vt, 1900-1907. In April, 1907, he moved to Massillon, O., to become rector of St. Timothy's Church there. In October, 1910, he became rector of Grace Church, Oak Park, Chicago, 111., the second largest church of his denomination in Illinois. On March 31, 1913, he was elected Associate Rector of the Shattuck School, Faribault, Minn., with equal authority with the Rector and with right of succession to the rectorship upon the death or retirement of the Rector. He will assume his new duties on August i, 1913. MARRIED, February 16, 1898, Miss Elizabeth Hull Colburn, daughter of Frederick E. Colburn, Esq., of Ansonia, Conn. Children: Flora Annette, born December 24, i! Catharine, born January 21, 1900; 9 6 Elizabeth, born June 16, 1901 ; Robert Edward, born January 26, 1903; Frederick Huntingdon, born March 23, 1907. ALFRED KINDRED MERRITT, Registrar of Yale College since 1893. MARRIED, January 24, 1904, Miss Nettie L. Hoyt, daughter of Frank S. Hoyt, Esq., of New Haven, Conn. Child: Alfred Kindred, Jr., born December 30, 1904. GEORGE EDWARD MILLS, student at Cincinnati Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B. with first honors, and admitted to Ohio bar, June, 1895. Practicing, Cincinnati, O., since 1895. From February 5, 1901, to March, 1905, was a member law firm Coffey, Mallon, Mills & Vordenberg. Has since that time been practicing alone. He resided in Norwood, O., a suburb of Cincinnati, until 1910, when he moved his residence into the city. April i, 1901, elected Mayor of Norwood, O., on Cit- izens' ticket. He held this office until January i, 1906. He was for one year first vice-president of the Norwood Savings Bank and Trust Company, and is a director of the Norwood National Bank and of the Meadow Marble Company. MARRIED, October 19, 1904, Miss Marcia Olive Lloyd, daugh- ter of N. Ashley Lloyd, Esq., of Cincinnati, O. Children : Mary Lloyd, born December 28, 1905 ; Edward Lloyd, born May 19, 1907; Olive Lloyd, born December 30, 1912. CHARLES WILLIAM MILLS, engaged in banking business, Denver, Colo., 1893-98. Special agent of Northwestern Mu- tual Life Insurance Company, 1898-1902. January, 1901, re- moved to Alameda, Cal. November, 1902, manager Union Central Life Insurance Company of San Francisco, for State of California. In 1904 was made inspector of agencies for the Equitable Life Assurance Society of New York, with head- quarters in New York City. In 1905 was general agent for 97 Greater New York of the Union Central Life Insurance Com- pany. In 1906 he engaged in the manufacture of blasting powder at Clearfield, Penna., and was seriously injured in an explosion of the powder mill. Upon his recovery he was ap- pointed secretary and treasurer of the Coal Operators' Asso- ciation of Central Pennsylvania at Clearfield. In 1907 his office was moved to Philadelphia, Penna., from which point the affairs of the association are managed. In January, 1911, he resigned to become president of the Climax Coal Company, operating a mine in Central Pennsylvania, and with headquar- ters in Philadelphia, where he still resides. MARRIED, December 6, 1893, Miss Elizabeth Davenport Bur- rail, daughter of Charles Burrall, Esq., of Stamford, Conn. Children : Louise Ritch, born February 27, 1895 ; Mary Havens, born May 10, 1904. FRANKLIN ARTHUR MOORE, spent the year 1893-94 travel- ing round the world. Traveling in Europe 1895-96. President Merchants' Truck Company, Detroit, Mich., 1897-98. No occu- pation since 1898. JOHN STANLEY MOORE, traveling in Europe, 1893-94. With Sanderson Brothers Steel Company, Syracuse, N. Y., 1894- 98. Ranching in Texas, 1898-1900. Secretary National Mer- cantile Agency, New York City, 1900. Engaged in farming at Skaneateles, N. Y., from 1900-1909, during which time he was water inspector of Skaneateles Lake and trustee of the schools of Onondaga County, N. Y. In 1909 he was ap- pointed to his present position as General Passenger Agent of the Rochester, Syracuse & Eastern (Electric) Railway; the Auburn & Syracuse Electric Railway ; the Syracuse, Lake Shore & Northern (Electric) Railway; the Syracuse & South Bay Electric Railway; and the Auburn & Northern Electric Railway, with headquarters in Syracuse. JOHN HILL MORGAN, student at Columbia Law School, 1893-94. Student at Yale Law School, 1894-96. Graduated 9 8 LL.B., cum laude, and admitted to New York bar, 1896. Was editor of Yale Lavj Journal, 1896. Practiced with Parker & Aaron, New York City, 1896-1900. Has been, since 1897, a member of Republican County Committee, Kings County, N. Y. Elected Assemblyman from First Brooklyn District on Republican ticket, November 7, 1899, for one year. Member Committee on General Laws, Trade and Manufacture, Federal Relations. Re-elected November 6, 1900 Commitees, Judi- ciary, Public Education and Revision. Elected third term November, 1901, by 2000 majority. Chairman, 1902, Com- mittee on Taxation and Retrenchment; member Committees on Canals, Public Lands and Forestry. Re-elected November 5, 1902. Appointed Chairman Judiciary Committee and mem- ber Committee on Rules ; and deputy leader of the Republican majority in the House. In February, 1904, formed a law partnership with James McKeen and Walter S. Brewster, '89, under the firm name of McKeen, Brewster & Morgan. In January, 1905, he declined an appointment as Assistant At- torney General of the State of New York. In December, 1905, he was chairman of the committee appointed by the Re- publican Committee of Kings County to reorganize the party in that county. He was counsel for the Republican organiza- tion in the contested election for Surrogate of Kings County in 1907. In 1910 he was retained by the Attorney General of New York State as special counsel to try on behalf of the State Board of Tax Commissioners eight Special Franchise Tax cases involving assessments on franchises of certain pub- lic service corporations. During a service of eleven months he tried or adjusted actions involving $47,000,000 of assess- ments in Kings and Queens Counties. In 1911 he was elected a director and member of the Executive Committee of the Nassau Electric Railroad Company, a subsidiary of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company. In the same year he was elected trustee of the Brooklyn Public Library and secretary of the Board. In 1913 he was elected a trustee of Brooklyn Bar Association, and member of the Citizens' Municipal Com- mittee to nominate a fusion mayoralty ticket. 99 MARRIED, November 10, 1903, Miss Lelia Augusta Myers, daughter of the late William B. Myers, of Richmond, Va. CHILD: Lelia Pegram, born May 30, 1907. ALBERT HOOKER MORSE, teaching at Episcopal Academy, Cheshire, Conn., 1893-94. Teaching at Boadman Manual Training School, New Haven, 1894-96. Superintendent of Schools at Webster, Mass., from 1897-1904. In 1904 was made manager for Balch Brothers, publishers, Boston, Mass. He was connected with that house until 1913, since when he has been manager for Houghton, Mifflin & Co. He resides in Rochester, N. Y. MARRIED, December 24, 1895, Miss Nellie V. Angus, daugh- ter of Albert Warren Angus, Esq., of New Haven, Conn. Children: Alice Burnham, born August 22, 1896; Emma Diantha, born November 28, 1897; Nellie V., born July 7, 1899; Harvey Francis, born February 22, 1901 ; Henry Kingman, born May 18, 1903 ; Elizabeth, born April 13, 1905; Roger Winfield, born July 9, 1906; Gilbert Balch, born May n, 1908; Donald Stewart, born July 4, 1911. *WILLIAM HENRY MURPHY, son of James D. Murphy, was born in Southville, in the town of Southboro, Mass., October n, 1869. He was captain of the University nine in Junior year. He played on the New York Baseball Club team, 1893- 94. He was a student at Bellevue Medical College, New York City, 1894-97. He graduated M.D. and was licensed to prac- tice in New York State, June, 1897. He practiced in Phila- delphia, Penna., and acted as coach to University of Pennsyl- vania Baseball team, 1897-99. He was athletic trainer Leland Stanford University, 1899-1900. He practiced medicine in Palo Alto, Cal., 1901. He served as coach of the Yale Uni- versity Baseball team 1903 to 1904, and as trainer of the ^Deceased. 100 United States Naval Academy Baseball and Football teams from 1904 until early in 1906, when he went to Saranac Lake, N. Y., for treatment for a recently developed lung trouble His malady progressed rapidly and he was taken to his former home in Westboro, Mass., where he died on February 14, 1906. ALFRED GOLDSTEIN NADLER, student at Yale Medical School, 1893-96. Graduated M.D., and licensed to practice in Con- necticut, June, 1896. Served on the house staff of New Haven Hospital, 1896-97. Practicing in New Haven since 1897. January, 1900, elected secretary New Haven Medical Asso- ciation. Assistant in Pathological Laboratory at Yale, 1900- 1906. Assistant in Pediatrics, 1902-1906. Assistant in Der- matology, since 1906. Spent the year 1909 in the study of dermatology in Paris, Berne, Breslau, Berlin and Vienna. Elected member of the American Society of Roentgenology in 1911, and second vice-president of the New Haven Medical Association in 1912. Medical inspector public schools of New Haven, 1901. Attending physician at Springside Hospital from 1902-1909. EMERSON ROOT NEWELL, studied law at Bristol, Conn., 1893-95. Admitted to Connecticut bar, 1895. Examiner in Patent Office, Washington, D. C, 1895-98. Student in Post- graduate Department, Columbian University, Washington, D. C., 1895-98. Received degree of LL.M., and admitted to bar of District of Columbia, June, 1896, and received the degree of Master of Patent Laws, June, 1897. Practicing patent law in New York City since 1898. On March i, 1910, formed a partnership with Chester T. Neal, Y, 1905. MARRIED, November 24, 1907, Miss Ella Sealy, daughter of the late George Sealy, of Galveston, Tex. Child: George Sealy, born May 23, 1910. WILLIAM LEWIS NEWTON, with Albro J. Newton Com- pany, Brooklyn, N. Y, since 1893. Is now a director and sec- retary and treasurer of the company. He is also a trustee of the South Brooklyn Savings Institution. 101 MARRIED, October 19, 1899, Miss Florence Lavinia Brown, daughter of Joseph Epes Brown, of Brooklyn, New York City. Children : Florence, born February 4, 1901 ; Joseph Epes, ) "L Jf Vborn November 4, 1902; Nathan Brown, J William Lewis, Jr., born March n, 1910. WILLIAM ALLAN OSBORN, graduate student in chemistry at Yale, 1893-94. Received the degree of M.A. from Yale in 1895. Chemist of Cleveland Rolling Mill Company (now American Steel and Wire Company), Cleveland, O., 1894- 1900. Has been engaged in general chemical work in connec- tion with photography since 1900. WILLIAM WHITE WILSON PARKER, studying law in Pitts- burgh, Penna., 1893-95. Admitted to Pennsylvania bar, No- vember, 1895. Practicing in Pittsburgh, 1895 to 1900. Vice- president Alaska Banking and Safe Deposit Company, Nome City, Alaska, in 1900. From 1901-1909 assistant cashier Na- tional Metropolitan Bank, Washington, D. C. In February, 1909, resumed the practice of the law in Pittsbugh, Penna. FRANCIS PARSONS, reporter for Hartford, Conn., Courant, 1893-95. Student at Yale Law School, 1895-97. Graduated LL.B. and admitted to Connecticut bar, June, 1897. Took the John A. Porter prize at Yale, June, 1897. Practicing at Hart- ford, Conn., since 1897. Assistant Quartermaster-General on staff of Governor of Connecticut, 1899-1900. In November, 1904, was elected secretary, trustee and trust officer of the Security Company of Hartford, Conn. In 1906 was elected member of the Board of School Visitors, and in 1908 member of the Board of Park Commissioners of Hartford. Was presi- dent of the Hartford- Yale Alumni Association, 1907 and 1908. Was promoted to vice-president of the Security Company in 1912. From time to time he has contributed editorial and other articles to the Hartford Courant, and published some fiction 102 in magazines. He has also done some historical writing, and a paper of his on Elisha Williams, the fourth President of Yale, is printed in a recent volume of the Proceedings of the New Haven County Historical Society. MARRIED, June 22, 1897, Miss Elizabeth Alden Hutchins, daughter of the late Robert A. Hutchins, of Brandon, Vt. Children: Mary, born May 13, 1898; John Caldwell, born April 26, 1900; Francis, born September 14, 1905 ; died September 16, 1905 ; Elizabeth Hutchins, born February 25, 1909. GEORGE LEETE PECK, student at Yale Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B. and admitted to Connecticut bar, June, 1895. Practicing since 1895 at New Haven, Conn. Is a member of firm of Clark, Hall & Peck. MARRIED, December 16, 1897, Miss Katherine May Tolles, daughter of James Tolles, Esq., of New Haven, Conn. Children : George Morris, born July 3, 1902 ; Lawrence Tolles, born February 21, 1905. ALTON WILLIAM PEIRCE, graduate student and assistant in chemistry at Yale, 1893-96. Received Ph.D. at Yale, June, 1896. Principal of High School, Shelton, Conn., 1896 to 1903. Author of an article in American Journal of Science for June, 1896, on "The Gravimetric Determination of Selenium." Was, in 1903, elected Superintendent of Schools at Hunting- ton, Conn., which position he resigned to accept an election as principal of the Punchard Free High School, Andover, Mass., for the year 1903-1904. He was principal of the Murdock School, Winchendon, Mass., 1904-1906. Traveling salesman for the International Time Recording Company, of Bingham- ton, N. Y., 1906-13, residing at Worcester, Mass. Since early in 1913 has been special agent of the Northwestern Mu- tual Life Insurance Company. MARRIED, December 12, 1894, Miss Alice Lillian Rice, daughter of Asa F. Rice, Esq., of Oakdale, Mass. io 3 Children: Meredith, born July 4, 1896; Lillian Evelyn, born April 24, 1905. *ALBERT WELLS PETTIBONE, JR., was born in Hannibal, Mo., on January 30, 1870, but entered college from La Crosse, Wis. Immediately after graduation he took a position with Hanni- bal Saw Mill Company, Hannibal, Mo., which he held 1893- 96. He was with the same company at La Crosse, Wis., 1896- 99. He died September 29, 1899, at La Crosse, of pneumonia. MARRIED, January 8, 1895, Miss Jessie C. Newell, daugh- ter of H. A. Newell, Esq., of Brooklyn, N. Y. Children : John Samuel, born September 20, 1895 ; Wilson Newell, born February 6, 1897. CHARLES MACAULEY POPE, reporter on New York Evening Sun, 1893-94. Treasurer St. Nicholas Ice Skating Club, New York City, 1895-97. Engaged in real estate brokerage busi- ness in New York City, 1897-1900, as president of Standard Realty Company, and later as member of the firm of Pope & Jones. With the Sovereign Bank of Canada, 1903. He has not communicated with the class secretary since 1903. In- formation received states that in 1908 he was in Goldfield, Nev., and in 1912, was treasurer of the Havers Sales Com- pany, dealers in automobiles, in New York City. He is at present in theatrical production business in New York City. MARRIED, December 18, 1905, Miss Katherine Roberts, daughter of Charles Pease, Esq., of . Child : Charles Roberts, born October 26, 1906. ALBERT HUTCHINSON PUTNEY, student at Boston Univer- sity Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B. and admitted to Massachusetts bar, June, 1895. Practicing in Boston, Mass., 1895-97. Abandoned his practice in 1897 and moved to Sioux Falls, S. D., on account of ill health. Practicing law in Chi- cago, 111., 1898 to 1904. Editor Bench and Bar, monthly legal paper published in Chicago, 1901. Formed law partnership with J. E. Ricketts (Ricketts & Putney), 1901. Professor of International Law, Domestic Relations and Evidence at *Deceased. 104 the Illinois College of Law. In 1903 and 1904 he was in the office of the Attorney General of the Philippine Islands, at Manila. He returned to Chicago in 1905, to resume his prac- tice there, and was in that year elected dean of the Illinois College of Law. He is the author of "United States Con- stitutional History and Law" (1908), and "Law Library" (1908), an outline of the law in twelve volumes; "Currency, Banking and Exchange" (1909), and "Bar Examination Re- view" (1910). In 1911 he was elected president of the Regu- lar Second Ward Democratic Club of Chicago, and a. member of the Executive Committee of the Cook County Democracy. MARRIED, April 6, 1911, Miss Pearl L. Avery, daughter of the late Jesse O. Avery, of Chicago, 111. HARRY CAMPBELL QUINTARD, teaching at the University School, Bridgeport, Conn., from 1893 to 1901. June, 1901, resigned from University School to accept a position with Nonpareil Cork Manufacturing Company, of New York City. November, 1902, moved to Camden, N. J., as manager of Camden Works of Nonpareil Cork Manufacturing Company. From 1906 to 1913 he was in charge of the New York office of the Insulation Department of the Armstrong Cork Com- pany, of Pittsburgh, Pa. He resigned his position in February, 1913, on account of ill health. In the early fall he will conduct a magazine subscription agency, with headquarters in Stam- ford, Conn., where he resides. He reports that his health has greatly improved. MARRIED, June 28, 1894, Miss Ada M. Averill, daughter of Samuel P. Averill, Esq., of South Britain, Conn. Children : Dorothy, born February 4, 1896 ; Elizabeth, born November 13, 1897; Frank Averill, born March 22, 1900; Virginia Schofield, born June 4, 1910. Mrs. Quintard died October 8, 1905. MARRIED, January 7, 1909, Miss Frances Isabel Scofield, daughter of Samuel F. Scofield, Esq., of Stamford, Conn. GERALD LAURENCE RATHBONE, in the Cleveland, O., office of Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railroad Company, 1893-95. With Macondray & Company, exporters and com- mission merchants, San Francisco, Cal., since 1895. In No- vember, 1898, was appointed volunteer aide to General Greene, and went with him to Manila. Saw all the fighting between the United States and Spanish troops and participated in the attack and capture of Manila. Was commended for conspicu- ous gallantry in General Greene's official report. After Gen- eral Greene was ordered home, Rathbone remained in the Orient for a month and then traveled home by way of Japan, China and Corea in the interest of his business. MARRIED, June 30, 1908, Miss Gertrude Greenwood Jos- selyn, daughter of Charles Josselyn, Esq., of San Francisco, Cal. GEORGE HOWARD RICE, teaching at San Mateo, Cal., 1893-95. Lawyer at Phoenix, Ariz., 1895-96. District Attorney of Gila County, Ariz., 1896-97. Practicing law at Scranton, Penna., 1898-1910. In partnership with Donnelly, '93, 1900 to 1902. While in Scranton he was a director and secretary of Fargo & Moorhead Street Railroad Company, Fargo, N. D. ; Harrison Silk Manufacturing Company, Scranton, Penna. ; and Chen- ango Silk Company, Scranton, Penna. In May, 1904, was elected Solicitor of Dickson City, Penna. Was Vice-President of the Yale Alumni Association of Scranton, Penna., in 1908. He left Scranton in 1910, to enter upon the practice of the law in New York City, where he now resides. MARRIED, December 2, 1896, Miss Agnes Graham Rey- nolds, daughter of George B. Reynolds, Esq., of Scranton, Penna. Children : A son, born December 27, 1897 ; died - ; Elizabeth, born June 21, 1899; Eleanor, born August 31, 1902. JOHN TRUMBULL ROBINSON, law student at Hartford, Conn., 1893-96. Admitted to Connecticut bar, January, 1896. Prac- ticing as a member of the firm of Robinson and Robinson, io6 Hartford, from 1896-1913, when the firm was changed by the admission of another partner to Robinson, Robinson & Cole. During 1901 and 1902 was executive secretary to Governor of Connecticut. In December, 1902, was elected chairman of the Hartford Republican Town Committee, and successfully managed the campaign which resulted in the election of a Republican mayor in April, 1904. On April 2, 1908, he was appointed United States Attorney for the Dis- trict of Connecticut. MARRIED, April 25, 1905, Miss Gertrude Doolittle Coxe, daughter of Judge Alfred Conkling Coxe, of Utica, N. Y. Child : Gertrude Trumbull, born February 12, 1906. JOSEPH ROBY, student at College of Physicians and Sur- geons, New York City, 1893-96. Graduated M.D. and licensed to practice in New York, June, 1896. Received first Harsen prize of $500 at College of Physicians and Surgeons for high- est scholarship in his class throughout the entire course. Ap- pointed by competitive examination to house staff of New York Hospital for eighteen months' term, beginning July i, 1896. Appointed house surgeon of Nursery and Child's Hospital, New York City, January i, 1898, for one year's service. Practicing in Rochester, N. Y., since January, 1899. On the out-patient staff of Rochester City Hospital, 1899-1908; since 1908, Assistant Physician. Has done a great deal of very im- portant and very highly creditable work in connection with the Health Department of Rochester in securing proper inspection and distribution of the milk supply of that city. He read at the meeting of the New York State Dairymen's Association at Binghamton, in 1904, a paper on "A Scheme for the Pro- duction of Clean Milk for Large Cities," which was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 1905. Received a diploma of honor for this scheme from the Milan Exposition, 1906. Read at the Academy of Medicine in New York and published in the New York Medical Journal, in 1907, a paper on "Pasteurization of Milk; its Advantages and Dis- advantages for the Municipality." In 1910 he was appointed medical expert of the New York State Board of Health. In 1911 he was appointed attending physician to the Rochester General Hospital, and in 1912 chief of staff of the Infants' Summer Hospital in Charlotte, N. Y., a suburb of Rochester. The May, 1911, Review, of the Rochester General Hospital, contains an account of "Simple Apparatus for Giving the Ehrlich-Hata Remedy," devised by Dr. Roby. MARRIED, December 2, 1902, Miss Alice Montgomery Rogers, daughter of Clinton Rogers, Esq., of Rochester, N. Y. Children: Joseph, Jr., born February 20, 1906; Helen Rogers, born October 25, 1912. DERBY ROGERS, student at Harvard Law School, 1893-95. In the office of Parsons, Shepard and Ogden, New York City, 1895-98. Admitted to New York bar, 1896. Ranching in Nevada, 1898-99. Tutoring at Bourne, Mass., June, 1900. No occupation 1900-1907. Living at New Canaan, Conn., and engaged in teaching in Stamford, Conn., since 1907. *ROBERT EDWIN ROWLEY, son of E. A. Rowley, was born in Williamsport, Penna., March 30, 1869, and was fitted for college at Andover. After graduation he became a member of the firm of Rowley & Hermance, manufacturers of wood- working machinery at Williamsport, Penna. Soon after his marriage he built a country house just outside of the city and moved there to live. He was there stricken with pneu- monia, and after a short illness died on March 14, 1897. MARRIED, December 3, 1895, Miss Anne Crammond Woods, daughter of Rev. E. A. Woods, D.D., of Williams- port, Penna. Louis BARCROFT RUNK, student at University of Pennsyl- vania Law School, 1893-96. Graduated LL.B. and admitted to Pennsylvania bar, June, 1896. Has been practicing in Phila- delphia, Penna., since 1896. January, 1901, admitted to firm *Deceased. io8 of Read & Pettit, lawyers, Philadelphia, Penna., which firm, in December, 1908, became Read, Gill & Runk. October, 1902, nominated on Democratic and Municipal League tickets for State Senator, Sixth District of Pennsylvania a part of the city of Philadelphia. Received degree of M.A. at Yale, June, 1903, for post-graduate work in economics. In 1905 and 1906 he was chairman of the executive committee of the Yale Alumni Association of Philadelphia, and in 1912 was elected first vice-president, and has been chairman of its schol- arship committee since 1908. He was secretary of the Law Association of Philadelphia from 1909-12, and was correspond- ing secretary of the Church Club of Philadelphia from 1899- 1904, and recording secretary 1906-1913. He was elected to the Board of Governors of the Law Association in 1912. He delivered an address on March 9, 1911, before the Society of Colonial Wars in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on "Fort Louisburg; its Two Sieges, and its Site To-day," which was subsequently published by the society. On July I, 1912, he withdrew from his firm, and formed a law partnership with Francis Fisher Kane, under the name of Kane & Runk. MARRIED, October 23, 1907, Miss Mary Amelia Rankin, daughter of the late Judge William W. Rankin, of Lock Haven, Penna. Children: Elizabeth Hill, born December 10, 1908; Mary Amelia, born November 25, 1910. HERBERT IRVING SACKETT, with Buffalo and Niagara Falls Electric Power Company, Niagara Falls, N. Y., 1893-94. Since 1894 has been contractor for electrical construction and equipments and dealer in electrical supplies, Buffalo, N. Y. In 1911 he incoporated his business as the H. I. Sackett Elec- trical Company, of which he is president. Since 1899 he has been president of the Electrical Contractors' Association of Buffalo. Since 1903 he has been captain in the Seventy- fourth Regiment, N. G. S. N. Y. MARRIED, September 30, 1895, Miss Lillian Gertrude Huck, daughter of Charles B. Huck, Esq., of Buffalo, N. Y. lop Child: Russell Pierce, born November 4, 1896. MARRIED, July 2, 1902, Miss Lillian Stevens, daughter of William Stevens, Esq., of Buffalo, N. Y. WILLIAM CLEMENT SCOTT, was not engaged in any regular employment during the years 1893-99. Since May i, 1899, has been a director, secretary and treasurer of Newburgh Planing Mill Company, Newburgh, N. Y., and, since 1908, has been a director of the National Bank of Newburgh. MARRIED, October 20, 1897, Miss Margaret Le Fevre Schoonmaker, daughter of John Schoonmaker, Esq., of New- burgh, N. Y. Children: Elizabeth Schoonmaker, born July 23, 1898; William Clement, Jr., born July 2, 1907. SAMUEL SCOVILLE, JR. During the years 1893-95 engaged in magazine work; was associate editor of the University Magazine. Graduated from the New York Law School in 1895, obtained a degree of LL.B. from the University of the State of New York, and was admitted to the New York bar in that year. In 1899 became the junior member of the firm of Beecher & Scoville. In 1903 was admitted to the Philadelphia bar, and since that time resided and practiced law in Philadel- phia, retaining his New York office in the Woolworth Build- ing. At present resides at Rosemont, a suburb of Philadelphia. Organized and has been solicitor, director and president of the Legal Aid Society of Philadelphia for bettering the condition of the poor ; vice-president, director and solicitor for the Penn- sylvania Society for the Prevention of Tuberculosis; director and solicitor for the Armstrong Association for bettering the industrial condition of the negro ; director of the Indian Rights Association; secretary of the Country Club Tennis League and captain of the tennis team of the Belmont Cricket Club, which won the League Championship in 1908 ; associate editor and director of Fresh Air Magazine; president and director of Bainbridge Brothers Shoe Company, and has contributed short no stories, articles and poems to a number of magazines and peri- odicals. In 1909 published through Harper & Brothers a number of boys' stories in book form. In that year also pub- lished in The Outlook, a monograph on the condition of jury trials in the larger American cities entitled, ''The Denial of Justice," and was appointed a member of the Committee of the American Bar Association to suggest remedies and formu- late proposed laws to prevent delay and unnecessary cost in litigation. In January, 1910, was appointed as a sub-committee of this association in connection with the delays in admiralty and one of a sub-committee of three to investigate the English practice and procedure in connection with a proposed Uniform Federal Procedure Act, and admitted to practice in the United States Supreme Court. In connection with proposed reforms in the present Federal procedure he appeared before the Judi- ciary Committee of the House and Senate and the Attorney- General and President, and prepared a proposed admiralty rule, afterwards adopted by the United States Supreme Court. Published articles against the present system of criminal and civil procedure in the Saturday Evening Post entitled, "Safe- guarding the Criminal." In 1911 was appointed member of executive and campaign committees of Progressive Party in Philadelphia ; elected member of executive committee of Na- tional Alliance of Legal Aid Societies, and appointed member of sub-committee of three to draft constitution and by-laws; Secretary and Treasurer, Yale Alumni Association of Phila- delphia, 1912-13; appointed on executive committee of City Convention on Municipal Court, and appointed on sub-commit- tee of three to draft or approve bill for Municipal Court of Philadelphia ; elected president of Men's Union of Bryn Mawr ; elected director of Browning Society of Philadelphia; elected member of Executive Scout Council of Boy Scouts of Amer- ica; elected member of Executive Committee of Yale Alumni Association of Philadelphia; appointed member of a commit- tee of the National Economic League of Boston to prepare a report on efficiency in the administration of justice. MARRIED, October 17, 1899, Miss Katharine Gallaudet Ill Trumbull, daughter of Rev. H. Clay Trumbnll, of Philadel- phia, and sister of Trumbull, '93. Children : Samuel, 3d, born February 19, 1902 ; died March 8, 1904; Gurdon Trumbull, born November I, 1904; William Beecher, born January 13, 1906; Henry Ward Beecher, born July 13, 1909; Alice Trumbull, born July 3, 1911. HUBERT MERRILL SEDGWICK, engaged in journalism at New Haven, Conn., since 1893. From 1906 to 1908 and from 1910 to 1912 was also secretary to the Mayor of New Haven. MARRIED, August 4, 1897, Miss Edith Todd, daughter of Major Theron A. Todd, of New Haven, Conn. Children: Ruth, born May 28, 1898; Butler Todd, born July 6, 1900; died August 5, 1900. ALBERT JUDSON SHAW, law student in New York City, 1893-96. Admitted to New York bar, February, 1896. Prac- ticing in New York City since 1896. In 1902 wrote, with his sister, a novel, "The Coast of Freedom," published by Double- day, Page & Co. Since 1904 has been president of the Colonial Mortgage Company, and general counsel of the State Realty and Mortgage Company. Since 1909 has been secretary of the Holland Holding Company. In 1912 was elected presi- dent of the West Side Tennis Club of New York. GEORGE THERON SLADE, held various positions with the Great Northern Railway Company at. St. Paul and St. Cloud, Minn., 1893-95. Chief clerk in superintendent's office, East- ern Railway of Minnesota, one of the lines of Great Northern System, 1895-96. Assistant superintendent, 1896-97. Super- intendent, September, 1897-99. General manager of Erie & Wyoming Valley Railroad Company, Scranton, Pa., 1899-1901. General superintendent Erie Railroad, Jersey 112 City, N. J., from 1901 to 1903. From early in 1903 until 1908 was general superintendent of the Great Northern Railway System, and from 1908-1909, general manager, and since No- vember i, 1909, third vice-president of the Northern Pacific Railway System, residing in St. Paul, Minn. MARRIED, October 9, 1901, Miss Charlotte E. Hill, daughter of J. J. Hill, Esq., of St. Paul, Minn. Children: George Norman, born July 25, 1902; Mary Elizabeth, born August 16, 1903. WILLIAM WARREN SMITH, in crockery business at Buffalo, N. Y., 1893-94. With M. H. Birge & Son, makers of wall papers, 1894-95. With A. B. Smith Chemical Company, Bradford, Penna., since 1895. Is now president of the com- pany. President of the Alumina Shale Brick Company, mak- ers of dry pressed bricks, 1895-97. Secretary and treasurer of Yale Alumni Association of Buffalo, N. Y., 1895-1900. President Hazelhurst Chemical Company, and also president Warren Chemical Company, since 1902. Secretary and chair- man executive committee American Charcoal Company, 1901- 1902. President Country Club of Bradford, 1900-1904. MARRIED, October 4, 1898, Miss Mary Newhall, daughter of Daniel E. Newhall, Esq., of Buffalo, N. Y. Children : Adrian Warren, born June 3, 1900 ; Hayden Newhall, born June 22, 1902 ; Margaret, born February 5, 1904. GEORGE BROWN SPALDING, JR., taught English and Lan- guages, Hartford, Conn., 1893-94. Student at Auburn Theo- logical Seminary, 1894-95. Traveling for health in Europe, the South and West, around Cape Horn, S. A., on return from Eclipse Expedition to Japan, 1895-97. Student Andover Theological Seminary, 1897-99. Student Auburn Theological Seminary, 1899-1900. In 1899 wrote report of the voyage of yacht "Coronet" around Cape Horn, on return from Eclipse H3 Expedition to Northern Japan, entitled, "Coronet Memories" (Neely, N. Y., 1899). Approved in examination and licensed to preach by Syracuse Presbytery, May 7, 1900. Assistant pastor Madison Square Presbyterian Church, New York City, December, 1900. Temporary pastor of Church at Fryeburg, Me., in 1902-1903. Member of New York Society of the Colonial Wars. In 1903 pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, Victor, Mont., and member of the Ravelli County Anti-Saloon League, victorious in a local option election. In 1905 became pastor of the First Congregational Church, Red Lodge, Mont., and while there was chaplain of the New York and Pennsylvania Society of Montana. In February, 1906, he was called to the New England Congregational Church, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. In 1907 he was elected president of the Saratoga County Christian Endeavor Union, and of the Ministerial Association of Saratoga. On September 17, 1908, he accepted a call to the pastorate of the First Congregational Church, Stonington, Conn., whose first pastor was one of those who gave books for the founding of Yale College. In Octo- ber, 1912, he was called to the Congregational Church, Rocky Hill, Hartford, Conn. MARRIED, September 2, 1909, Miss Emeline Palmer, daugh- ter of the late Noyes Stanton Palmer, of Stonington, Conn. SAMUEL REID SPENCER, with the Montgomery Company, cotton yarns, Windsor Locks, Conn., 1893-1900. Since 1900 member Spencer Brothers, dealers in coal, lumber, grain and fertilizers, Suffield, Conn. Since 1900 has also been treasurer of the town of Suffield. Has been a director of the Kent Mem- orial Library, since 1903 ; a trustee of the Connecticut Literary Institution, since 1906 ; and trustee and vice-president of the Suffield Savings Bank, since 1910. MARRIED, December 12, 1899, Miss Helena Ellsworth Bailey, daughter of Ezra Brewster Bailey, Esq., of Windsor Locks, Conn. H4 *HENRY CROSBY STETSON, died suddenly at his home, 128 Brattle Street, Cambridge, Mass., on April 17, 1907. He was the son of Isaiah Stetson and was born in Bangor, Me., February i, 1869, and prepared for college at Phillips- Andover Academy, Andover, Mass. After graduation he studied at the Harvard Law School, from which he received the degree of LL.B. in 1896. Three years later he received the degree of M.A. from Yale. He had been engaged in the practice of law in Boston since 1898, and had taken an active interest in the public affairs of that city. He was chosen a member of the original Com- mittee of One Hundred which formed the Non-Partisan muni- cipal party in Boston. He was elected to the Common Council of Boston on the Non-Partisan ticket in 1905, 1906 and 1907, and was chosen president of that body for 1907. In 1906 he was chosen treasurer of the Non-Partisan City Committee. At the close of his first year's service the Cambridge (Mass.) Tribune said of him : "Few members of the Common Council have made as good a record, during their first year of service, as Henry C. Stetson, one of the two who represent Ward 9 in the lower branch of the city council. His committee work has been of a high order. Serving on the committees on finance, new city charter, ordinances, legis- lative matters and new Cambridge bridge, he has given his time and ability freely for the good of the city. Mr. Stetson is an admirable representative of his ward." He was elected secretary of the Boston Yale Alumni Asso- ciation and Yale Club in 1902. He was a member of the Oakley Club, the University Club and the Economy Club, all of Boston ; a director of the city Y. M. C. A., and a director of the executive committee of St. John's Chapel, Boston. He was an incorporator of the Cambridge Savings Bank. MARRIED, July 8, 1899, Miss Eleanor Morland Gray, daugh- ter of Rev. Frederick Morland Gray, of Albany, N. Y. Children: Henry Crosby, Jr., born December 10, 1900; Eleanor Livingston, born August 15, 1905.' *Deceased. H5 ROBBINS BATTELL STOECKEL, student at New York Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B., June, 1895. Admitted to Connecticut bar, 1896. Practicing in Norfolk, Conn., 1896- 98. Elected Judge of Probate, Litchfield County, Conn., De- cember, 1898. Practicing law in Hartford in addition to his judicial duties, with a branch law office in Norfolk. Re-elected Judge of Probate for two years from January, 1901. Nomi- nated both by Republican and Democratic parties. Re-elected 1903. Secretary and general manager Norfolk Ice Company, 1901. Town Attorney for Norfolk, 1903. MARRIED, November 9, 1905, Miss Katherine Mildred Fales, daughter of Lowell E. Fales, Esq., of Turner's Falls, Mass. WENDELL MELVILLE STRONG, studying higher mathematics at Cornell, 1893-94; received the degree of M.A. there in 1894; studying mathematics at Yale, 1894-95; at Gottingen, Germany, 1895. Instructor in mathematics at Yale, 1895- 1900. In 1896 was Yale's delegate to the national convention of Graduate Clubs held at Baltimore, Md. Received degree of Ph.D. at Yale, June, 1898. Was elected president of the Federation of Graduate Clubs, 1899. Published an article on "Linkages for Tracing the Conic Sections" in the "Annals of Mathematics," 1894; on "Is Continuity of Space Necessary to Euclid's Geometry?" in the Bulletin of American Mathe- matical Society, 1898; also a "Chapter on Modern Geometry" in "Phillips and Fisher's Geometry." Has published "A Key to Phillips and Fisher's Geometry," and, in collaboration with Professor A. W. Phillips, "Elements of Trigonometry" and "Logarithmic and Trigonometric Tables." Secretary mathematical section of American Association for Advance- ment of Sciences, 1900. October, 1900, with actuaries depart- ment, Mutual Life Insurance Company, New York City. Ar- ticle on "Non-quaternion Number Systems," published in the Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 1902; n6 also an article on "Annuities for Joint Lives," in Transac- tions of the Actuarial Society of America, 1902. Was ad- mitted to Actuarial Society in 1902, on passing the prescribed examination. Received the degree of LL.B. from New York University in 1903. Was Assistant Actuary, Mutual Life In- surance Company, in Chicago, 1904-1905, and occupied a simi- lar position in New York City 1905-1911 when he was advanced to Associate Actuary. He has been the editor, since May, 1909, of the "Transactions of the Actuarial Society of Amer- ica. MARRIED, June 9, 1909, Miss Susan Hoyt Evans, daughter of the Rev. Philip S. Evans, D.D., of Brooklyn, N. Y. CARLYLE EDGAR SUTPHEN, JR., student at College of Phy- sicians and Surgeons, New York City, 1893-96. Graduated M.D. and licensed to practice in New York, June, 1896. Ap- pointed to staff of Roosevelt Hospital, New York City, for two years' service, beginning January i, 1897. Has been prac- ticing in Newark, N. J., since January I, 1899. Assistant sur- geon Newark City Hospital, Newark, N. J., November, 1901 ; visiting surgeon since 1904. MARRIED, September 21, 1897, Miss Edna Ethel Blanchard, daughter of Leon F. Blanchard, Esq., of Newark, N. J. Child : Kenneth Carlyle, born June 12, 1900. NOAH HAYNES SWAYNE, 20, student at New York Law School, 1893-95. Editor-in-chief of The Counsellor, New York Law School Law Journal, 1894-95. Graduated LL.B. and admitted to New York bar, June, 1895. Practicing in New York City as member of firm of Swayne & Swayne, 1895- 1900. Has been class agent of Yale alumni fund since 1895. and was a director of fund association, 1898-1900. Was one of the incorporators of Yale Club of New York, and a mem- ber of its council, 1897-1900. President of University Glee Club of New York City, 1898-1900. February, 1900, retired ii; from law firm of Swayne & Swayne, and accepted vice- presidency of the Alabama and Georgia Iron Company, head- quarters at Cedartown, Ga. Elected president, 1902, and also vice-president and general manager of Frog Mountain Ore Company. Elected, November i, 1902, Alderman First Ward of Cedartown, and by the Aldermen elected to the office of Mayor, pro tern. Member of executive committee, Yale Alumni Association of Alabama, 1903-1904. President Nittany Iron Company, Bellefonte, Penna., 1904-1906, and residing at Bellefonte. Vice-president Yale Alumni Asso- ciation of Central Pennsylvania, 1905-1906. Since April i, 1906, resident manager in Philadelphia, Penna., for Rogers, Brown & Co., pig iron, coke and iron ore, and has also been director or officer of various iron and mining companies. Member of the executive committee Yale Alumni Associa- tion of Philadelphia, 1907-1910. Representative of this as- sociation on the Yale Alumni Advisory Board, since 1908, and a member of the Executive Committee of the Board, since 1913. Governor of the Yale Alumni Weekly since 1911; chairman of the Wright Memorial Committee, 1910-1912; member of the Yale Committee of Twenty-one, Inc., in charge of the work of acquiring the new Yale field and erecting structures thereon. President of the Peoples' Choral Union of Phila- delphia since 1909. Has in the past few years appeared as vocal soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra and numerous other similar organizations. MARRIED, September 28, 1898, Miss Christine Siebeneck, daughter of Joseph G. Siebeneck, Esq., of Pittsburgh, Penna. Child: Noah Haynes, 3d, born December 9, 1909. MOSES TAYLOR, traveling around the world, 1893-94. With the Lackawanna Iron and Steel Company, New York City, since 1894. Is now vice-president of the company. Also president Moses Taylor Hospital, Scranton, Penna., 1900; vice-president Franklin Iron Company ; director National City Bank, New York; director Sloss-Sheffield Steel and Iron Company ; director Tilly Foster Iron Mines ; chairman house committee, Knollwood Country Club; director also of nume- rous gas, iron and railroad companies, and a member of the banking house of Keen, Taylor & Co. MARRIED, August 19, 1896, Miss Edith Bishop, daughter of Heber R. Bishop, Esq., of New York City. Children: Moses, Jr., born June 8, 1897; Reginald B., born September 23, 1898; Francis, born June 14, 1900; Marion, born February 7, 1902; Edith, born June 8, 1903. WILLIAM STOUTENBOROUGH TERRIBERRY, student at the Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City, 1893-96. Graduated M.D., June, 1896. Appointed to the house staff of the Fourth Division, Bellevue Hospital, surgical service, March, 1896. In 1898, upon the outbreak of the Spanish War, he was commissioned first lieutenant and assistant surgeon Second Regiment, N. J. Volunteer Infantry, and proceeded with that regiment to Jacksonville, Fla. Resigned, September 30, 1898, and was appointed acting assistant surgeon United States Army, October i, 1898. Served at corps headquarters, Seventh Army Corps, Savannah Ga., and at Quemados de Mariano, Havana, Cuba ; also at headquarters of the Department of the Province of Havana, General Fitz- hugh Lee, and at headquarters of the Division of Cuba, Gen- eral Brooke. Discharged April 21, 1899, and returned to the practice of medicine in New York City. Attending surgeon, out-patient department, Bellevue Hospital, 1900. Captain and assistant surgeon Twelfth Regiment N. G. S. N. Y., 1902. Adjunct assistant visiting surgeon, Fourth Division, Bellevue Hospital, January I, 1904. Secretary of the Society of Al- umni of Bellevue Hospital, 1901 to 1907. Assistant visiting surgeon, Fourth Surgical Division, Bellevue Hospital, New York City, 1906. Major and surgeon, commanding, field hospital, headquarters N. G. S. N. Y., 1906. MARRIED, October 17, 1907, Miss Emilie Reinhart, daugh- ter of the late Charles Stanley Reinhart, of New York City. JOHN BOOTH THOMAS, teaching, 1893-94. With Spalding, druggist, New Haven, Conn., 1894-95. With Calhoun & Co., wholesale druggists, New Haven, Conn., 1895-98. With J. Hutchinson & Co., Branford, Conn., 1898. Manager drug department, 1900-1908. Passed the Connecticut Bar Exam- inations in December, 1908, and was admitted to practice, opening an office in Branford, Conn. In the fall of 1909 he was elected member of the Board of School Visitors of Bran- ford, and was subsequently elected secretary of the board. In 1912 he was elected collector of personal taxes. In 1913 he moved his law office to Rockville, Conn. MARRIED, June 2, 1896, Miss Harriet Gertrude Barber, daughter of George E. Barber, Esq., of Colchester, Conn. Child: Dorothy Kenyon, born March 6, 1901. HERBERT GORDON THOMSON, president Anchor Post Iron Works, New York City, since 1895. MARRIED, October 7, 1902, Miss Anna Theodora Mead, daughter of Theodore Hoe Mead, Esq., of New York City. Child: DEXTER EDGAR TILLEY, student at Yale Law School, 1893- 94. Student of law, Springfield, Mass., 1894-95. Admitted to Massachusetts bar, June, 1895. Practicing from 1895 to 1905 in Springfield, Mass. ; from 1898 to 1904 a member of firm of Webster, Taft & Tilley. Selectman West Spring- field four terms. Left Springfield in 1905, and has not been heard from since that time. MARRIED, February 9, 1901, Miss Grace M. Willard, daugh- ter of Charles S. Willard, Esq., of West Springfield, Mass. HORACE GATES TORBERT, real estate and insurance, Dubr- que, Iowa, 1893-1904. From 1893 member of firm of G. L. Torbert & Son. Was receiver of Dubuque Street Railway, 1897-98. In 1904 he moved to Washington, D. C., to accept a position with the Washington Railway and Electric Com- pany, with whom he still is. 120 MARRIED, November 9, 1910, Miss Alice Kearney Coyle, daughter of the late Randolph Coyle, of Bethseda, Md. Child: Horace Gates, Jr., born October 7, 1911. EDWARD HOLM AN TRACY, student at Yale Law School, 1 893-95- Graduated LL.B. 1895. Also teaching in Even- ing High School, 1893-94, and at Highwood School, 1894-95. Admitted to Ohio bar, 1895. Tutoring at Dayton, O., 1895- 96. Practicing since 1896 at Cleveland, O. MARRIED, September 4, 1902, Miss Anna Lee Allen, daugh- ter of John B. Allen, Esq., of Canton, 111. Children : Charlotte, born October 6, 1903 ; Barbara, born January 23, 1906. *ROBERT STORER TRACY, son of J. Evarts Tracy, a lawyer, was born in New York City, October 6, 1871. After gradua- tion he attended the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City, 1893-96. Graduated M.D. and licensed to practice in New York, June, 1896. At the same time, as the result of a competitive examination, he was appointed to the house staff of the New York Hospital. He entered upon his service there on January i, 1897. At the close of his service, July i, 1898, he received an appointment for a six months' term to the house staff of Sloane Maternity Hospital, New York City. Shortly after January i, 1899, at the close of his service at the Sloane Maternity Hospital, he was taken ill with consumption and went to a sanitarium at Saranac Lake, N. Y., in the hope of regaining his health. He had been making progress toward recovery and was looking forward hopefully to resuming the practice of his profession. He was engaged in certain path- ological work at the sanitarium, under Dr. Trudeau, the physician in charge. On the evening of April 12, 1899, after dining at the hotel at Saranac Lake, he started to walk a dis- tance of about a mile to the sanitarium. The ground was cov- ered with snow and the bay in the vicinity of the hotel with ice. Shortly after leaving the hotel the road takes a sharp *Deceased. 121 turn. At that point the ice and snow on the bay were exactly on a level with the road, the ice being about six inches thick, but honeycombed and rotten. Tracy failed to notice the turn of the road, owing to the darkness, and walked straight ahead on to the ice and over the bay. After progressing a short dis- tance the ice gave way under his weight and he fell into the water and was drowned. His absence was not noticed until the following morning, when investigations, immediately set on foot, developed the fact that his death must have occured in the manner above described. The correctness of this reasoning was confirmed when his body was recovered from Saranac Lake, a short distance from the point of the accident, on May 12, 1899. THOMAS CANN QUINCY TRASK, instructor in Brooklyn Latin School, 1893-95. Teaching in Newburgh, N. Y., Acad- emy, 1895-99. Teaching at Morris High School, New York City, 1899-1900. Teaching at Peter Cooper High School, New York City, 1900-1901. At Morris High School, 1902- 10. Member American Historical Association since 1902. Received the degree of M.A. from Yale in 1903. Treasurer Young Men's Democratic Club of the Bronx, 1902-1903. Has been for several years secretary of the West Side Tennis Club, and in 1907 was made a member of the ranking com- mittee, United States Lawn Tennis Association. In 1907 was fourth on the eligible list of New York City Civil Ser- vice Examiners for the position of first assistant principal. In February, 1910, he was appointed head of the Department of. History in the Commercial High School, Brooklyn, New York City. He is a member of the St. Nicholas Club, of New York, and the Hamilton Club, Brooklyn. MARRIED, June 28, 1900, Miss Mary Cornell, daughter of John Cornell, Esq., of New Windsor, Conn. CHARLES GALLAUDET TRUMBULL, with J. D. Watles & Co., publishers of the Sunday-school Times, Philadelphia, Penna.. since 1893. Was a member of the firm and associate editor 122 of the paper, 1897-1900. Elected secretary Sunday-school Times Company, April, 1900. Editor-in-chief of the Sunday- school Times since 1903. Secretary and vice-president of the Sunday-school Times Company. Author of "A Pilgrimage to Jerusalem," "Taking Men Alive," "Men Who Dared" (1908), "Messages for the Morning Watch" (1912). A member of the first class, by succession, of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion, and honorary secretary for America of the Palestine Exploration Fund, Great Britain; advisory man- ager of the Archaeological Department, University of Penn- sylvania; associate member of the Victoria Institute of Great Britain ; member of the International Y. M. C. A. Bible Study Advisory Committee, National Committee of Daily Vacation Bible Schools, National Committee Congo Reform Association, National Geographic Society, and General Com- mittee of the Laymen's Missionary Movement. In 1912 he was elected president for the United States of the Pocket Testament League, and member of the United States Coun- cil of the Inland-South America Missionary Union. MARRIED, November 18, 1897, Miss Aline Marguerite Van Orden, daughter of Edward Van Orden, Esq., of New York City. HARRY SELDEN VAILE, teaching in Chicago High Schools, 1893-1910; in Hyde Park High School, Chicago, 1894-1910. In September, 1910, he was appointed principal of the John Crerar School, Chicago, and in September, 1912, was ad- vanced to principal of the Froebel Day and Evening School, Chicago. MARRIED, June 29, 1896, Miss Carrie A. Merrill, daughter of F. H. Merrill, Esq., of Maywood, 111. Children: Adeline Elizabeth, born November 29, 1903; Edwin Merrill, born April 10, 1906. ISIDORE WACHSMAN, student at Albany, N. Y., Law School, 1893-94. Graduated LL.B. June, 1894. In office of Corpora- tion Counsel of Albany, N. Y., 1894-95. Admitted to New I2 3 York bar, June, 1895. Practicing in Albany since 1895. Member of firm of Reick & Wachsman since January I, 1896. Clerk of Board of Contract and Supply of Albany, N. Y., 1900. On May 27, 1909, he was shot and seriously wounded by an Italian who held him responsible for his failure to secure a contract from the Board of Contract and Supply. He was fully restored to health after a long illness. ROBERT BUCHANAN WADE, student at Harvard Law School, 1893-95. With Masten & Nichols, New York City, 1895-96. Mining, Butte, Mont., 1898. January, 1900, with Bennett Wasserman & Co., stock and bond brokers, St. Louis, Mo. Since 1906 engaged in brokerage business in New York City. MARRIED, July 25, 1907, Miss Clara Louise Clark, daughter of Hinman H. Clark, Esq., of St. Louis, Mo. *RICHARD CHARLES WELLS WADSWORTH, died at the Roose- velt Hospital, in New York City, of typhoid fever, August 2, 1905. Mr. Wadsworth was the son of the late Strong Wads- worth, Yale '51, formerly a banker in New York City. He was born at Beloit, Wis., September 25, 1870. His father shortly afterward moved to New York City, and he entered college from that place. He was awarded a first dispute ap- pointment in junior and senior years, was an editor and busi- ness manager of the Yale Literary Magazine, and a member of the Class Ivy Committee. After graduation he entered the service of the New York Evening Post as a reporter. He was subsequently made assistant financial editor and in 1900 assistant city editor of that paper. In 1902 he resigned to become secretary to Dr. Lederle, president of the New York City Board of Health. Upon Dr. Lederle's retirement from office, January i, 1904, Mr. Wadsworth was made manager of the Lederle Laboratories in New York City, which post he held at the time of his death. In an interview with Dr. Lederle in the Evening Post on Mr. Wadsworth's work, Dr. Lederle is qoted as saying: ^Deceased. 124 "Mr. Wadsworth was the most enthusiastic reformer I have ever known. His enthusiasm in regard to sanitation and all matters pertaining to the Health Department was remarkable. He was my secretary there for two years, and there was not a minute of the day in which he was not busy improving something. For this quality of enthusiasm he was noted among his colleagues through- out the department.' MARRIED, November 21, 1903, Miss Alice Gertrude Bene- dict, daughter of James Benedict, Esq., of New York City. ALEXANDER HAMILTON WALLIS, student at New York Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B., 1895. Admitted to New York bar, June, 1895. Practicing in New York City, 1895- 1900. With Kech & Son, cut soles and leather, Boston, Mass., as salesman, 1900. No occupation, 1901. From 1902 to 1903 with New Jersey Street Railway, East Orange, N. J. Has of late years resided at Colchester, Conn. JOHN DORRANCE WARNOCK, Douglas Fellow, Yale Univer- sity, 1893-96, studying for the ministry. Teaching at Episco- pal Academy, Cheshire, ^Conn., 1896-99. Teaching at Hill School, Pottstown, Penna., since 1899. He received the de- gree of Ph.D. at Yale, June, 1899. MARRIED, September i, 1897, Miss Gertrude Peck, daugh- ter of Cassius C. Peck, Esq., of Rochester, N. Y. Children: Constance, born October 30, 1899; Dorrance, born November 4, 1900; Charles Malcolm, born September 28, 1903. LEMUEL AIKEN WELLES, Macy Fellow, Yale University, 1893-94, studying history and philosophy. Received M.A. at Yale, June, 1895. Student at New York Law School, 1894- 96. Graduated LL.B., June, 1896, and admitted to the New York bar, July, 1896. Practicing since 1896 in New York City. Since 1901 has been attorney for American Can Com- pany. On April 2, 1912, he was elected Republican County Committeeman-at-Large from the town of Eastchester, county of Westchester, N. Y. 125 MARRIED, July 12, 1906, Mrs. Mary Cotton Tufts, daughter of William W. Cotton, Esq., of Portsmouth, N. H. Children: Dorothy, born February i, 1908; Roger, born May 9, 1912. ERNEST HUBBARD WELLS, engaged in newspaper work, Mid- dletown, Conn., 1893-94. Teaching at the Gunnery School, Washington, Conn., 1894-96. Teaching at Hopkinson's School, Boston, Mass., 1896-98. Student at Yale Law School, 1898-1900. Graduated LL.B., 1900. November, 1900, trav- eled in Cuba. Clerk in law office of Norton, Penney & Sears, Buffalo, N. Y., 1902. With American Law Book Company, New York City, 1903. He contributed a number of articles to the Encyclopedia of Law and Procedure in 1904. Was senior member of the law firm of Wells & Nash, practicing in New York City, from 1905 to 1910, since when he has been practicing alone. In May, 1912, he was elected a director and treasurer of the Jefferson Hotel and Land Company (Hotel Waumbek), Jefferson, N. H. CARL WESTERFELD, student at Hastings Law School, San Francisco, 1893-96. Admitted to California bar, May, 1896. Practicing since 1896 in San Francisco, Cal. In 1912 he was appointed member of the Fish and Game Commission of Cali- fornia by Governor Johnson. MARRIED, June 27, 1906, Miss Clara Bell Douglas, daugh- ter of A. H. Douglas, Esq., of San Francisco, Cal. ARTHUR LESLIE WHEELER, graduate student in Latin at Yale, 1893-94. . Instructor in Latin at Yale, 1894-1900. Re- ceived the degree of Ph.D. from Yale in 1896. Has pub- lished a "Latin Prose Composition" in collaboration with Dr. M. W. Mather, of Harvard. June, 1900, elected assistant pro- fessor and head of Latin Department, Bryn Mawr College, to commence October i, 1900. Member managing committee American School of Classical Studies in Rome, Italy., 1901- 1903. Delegate of Bryn Mawr to Yale Bicentennial. Presi- dent Philadelphia Classical Club, 1902-1903. Had an article 126 on "The Imperfect Indicative in Early Latin" in the Ameri- can Journal of Philology, Vol. XXXIV, No. 2. Was ad- vanced to full professorship at Bryn Mawr in 1905. Had an article in the American Journal of Philology for July, 1908, on "Hieremias de Montagnone and Catullus." Published three articles on Roman elegy and its Greek sources, entitled, "Propertius as Praeceptor Amoris" and "Erotic Teaching in Roman Elegy and the Greek Sources" (two parts) ; in Classi- cal Philology, Vol. V (1910), pp. 28-40, 440-450, and Vol. VI (1911), pp. 56-77. These articles have been very favorably received by scholars in this country and in Germany. In June, 1912, was appointed editorial contributor to the Ameri- can Journal of Archaeology, and in December, 1912, was elected member of the executive committee of the American Philological Association. MARRIED, June 20, 1894, Miss May L. Waters, daughter of the late Horace Waters, of Hartford, Conn. Child: Ruth, born April 21, 1897. WEBSTER WHEELOCK, reporter St. Paul, Minn., Pioneer Press, 1893-96. W r as secretary of the Mayor of St. Paul, 1896-97. Associate editor Pioneer Press, 1897-1906. Had an article in Municipal Affairs for September, 1899, on "Recent Municipal Progress in St. Paul." In December, 1906, was made editor-in-chief of the Pioneer Press. In 1909 he sold his interest in the Pioneer Press and entered the real estate and insurance business as a member of the firm of Wheelock & Gilfillan. From 1910 to 1913 was also a member of the firm of Lynch & Wheelock, dealing in farm' mortgages. In 1913 these firms turned over their business to the Farm Mort- gage Bond Company, of which W'heelock is assistant secre- tary. MARRIED, October 13, 1900, Miss Martha McMasters Gil- fillan, daughter of James Gilfillan, Esq., of St. Paul, Minn. Children: Webster, Jr., born November 2, 1902; Joseph A., born April 3, 1905. 127 ALBERT BEEBE WHITE, teaching at Siglar's School, New- burgh, N. Y., 1893-95. Post-graduate student and assistant in history at Yale, 1895-98. Received Ph.D. at Yale, June, 1898. Lecturer at Yale and teacher of history at New Haven High School, 1898-99. Accepted an appointment as instructor in mediaeval and English constitutional history at University of Minnesota, to begin September, 1899. Assistant professor of history, University of Minnesota, 1900. In 1908 was ad- vanced to full professorship. Published, October, 1908, a book for use in college classes in English Constitutional His- tory, entitled, "The Making of the English Constitution." Published in the American Historical Review, October, 1911, an article entitled, "The First Concentration of Juries." MARRIED, October i, 1893, Miss Mabel White Jones, daugh- ter of Joseph Jones, Esq., of Holbrook, Mass. Child: Richard Beebe, born January 7, 1901. *JOHN HARVEY WIGGINTON, died on May 21, 1909. He was born in Maryland, near the town of Bladensburg, on De- cember 8, 1864. He prepared for college at the Worcester Academy, Worcester, Mass., and entered with the class in the fall of 1889. After graduation, he studied at the Yale Law School, and received the degree of Bachelor of Laws in June, 1895. He was admitted to the bar in Maryland, and entered upon the practice of his profession at Bladensburg, where he remained until 1897. He then moved to Chicago, and prac- ticed there until 1898. He was then called to the teaching staff of Selma University, an institution devoted to the edu- cation of his race, at Selma, Ala. He was elected dean of that institution in May, 1905, and continued in that capacity until the early part of 1909, when failing health compelled him to abandon his work. In 1906 he bought a house in Brent- wood, Md., thus realizing a long cherished hope of establishing a home for his mother, to whom he was devoted. He made his home in Brentwood when his duties at Selma did not require his presence there. He returned to this home when his health *Deceased. 128 began to fail in April, 1909, and died there on May 21 of that year, of locomotor ataxia. His associates at Selma University and elsewhere esteem the work he performed at that institu- tion as of great value, and regard his untimely death as a serious loss to the university and to his race. MARRIED, September 26, 1906, Miss Mahalath Frances Jackson, daughter of the late Thomas Jackson, of Washing- ton, D. C. WALTER DWIGHT WILCOX, studying science at Washington, D. C., 1893-98. In summers of 1894 and 1895 made two trips of exploration to Canadian Rocky Mountains. In 1896 pub- lished (G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York) a volume entitled, "Camping in the Canadian Rockies." Spent the summer of 1897 in the Hawaiian Islands taking photographs and writing for the magazines. In 1899 was elected a member of the Royal Geographical Society. In April, 1899, contributed to the Geographical Journal an article on "The Source of the Saskatchewan," and to the Journal of Geology an arti- cle on "A Type of Lake Formation in the Canadian Rocky Mountains." January, 1900, published by G. P. Putnam's Sons, a portfolio of "Picturesque Landscapes in the Canadian Rocky Mountains." October, 1900, published by Putnam's, "The Rockies of Canada," a revised and enlarged edition of "Camping on the Canadian Rockies," containing the results of several seasons of explorations in that region since the earlier book was published. Spent the year 1902-1903 in a trip around the world. Since 1905 he has been engaged in developing timber lands near Cienfuegos, Cuba. Since 1909 has lived mainly in Washington, D. C. In 1909 a new edition of his "Rockies of Canada" was published, and in the same year he brought out "A Guide to the Lake Louise Region," with map and eighteen illustrations. In May, 1909, he was elected an honorary member of the Alpine Club of Canada. MARRIED, November 27, 1901, Miss Annie White Lawson, daughter of Franklin Hey Lawson, Esq., of Cincinnati, O. Child: Walter Dwight, Jr., born November 14, 1909; died July 27, 1910. 129 EDWARD MASON WILLIAMS, with the Sherwin-Williams Paint Company, in Cleveland, O., 1893-95 \ m Montreal, Canada, 1895-97; m Cleveland, O., since 1897. Is president also of the Children's Fresh Air Camp, a member of the Na- tional Geographical Society, a director of the Ozark Alining and Smelting Company, the Cleveland Box Company,, the Su- perior Savings and Trust Company, and various other com- panies. Was, for several years, a member of the executive committee of the American Street Railway Manufacturers' Association. He is a director of the Cleveland Chamber of Commerce, and was elected in February, 1913, a member of a committee of fifteen to prepare a new charter for the city. He is also vice-president of the Federation of Charities and Philanthropy; a member of the American Society for the Prevention of Infant Mortality, and the National Child Labor Society. MARRIED, October n, 1899, Miss Mary Raymond, daugh- ter of Samuel A. Raymond, Esq., Yale, '70, of Cleveland, O. Children : Hilda, born July 24, 1900 ; Madeline, born December 26, 1902 ; Edward Porter, born January 2, 1907 ; Mary Raymond, born April 30, 1909. *MORRIS WOODRUFF, elder son of Morris Woodruff, Yale, '60, was born in New York City on May 23, 1870. Imme- diately after graduation he became connected with the firm of Lane & Co., tea importers, of which his father was then the head, and after his father's death in 1894 he was junior mem- ber of firm of Lane & Woodruff, New York City, from 1893 to 1897. He died suddenly December 31, 1897, of heart failure. ALFRED CHARLES WOOLNER, student at Yale Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B., June, 1895. Admitted to New York bar, February, 1896. Practicing in New York City from 1896 to 1904. Member of firm of Clark & lv '^olner, *Deceased. 130 January i, 1898-1904. With Woolner Distilling Company, of Peoria, 111., and the Colonial Distributing Company, New York City, since 1904. MARRIED, November 28, 1906, Miss Rose S. Woolner, daughter of Morris H. Woolner, Esq., of New York City. Children: Maurice A., born May 10, 1908; Theresa Antonia, born March 24, 1910; Louise Rose, born December 22, 1912. WILBUR SEAMAN WRIGHT, studying law, New York Law School, 1893-94; at Greenwich, 1894-97; with Judge R. J. Walsh, since 1897; upon admission to Connecticut bar, became junior partner in law firm of Walsh & Wright. In December, 1908, was appointed member of a committee of twenty-eight to investigate town affairs and recommend improvements in governmental conditions of the town of Greenwich. Twenty- six members recommended a radical change in the form of government. W T right and one other opposed this change, and it was defeated in town meeting. Immediately afterward a pro- gram of more moderate change was advanced by Wright and his associates, was amended to include some of the features of the report of the majority, was supported by this majority and adopted by town meeting. Wright was thereupon chosen one of a legislative committee of five to secure the enactment of the required legislation and was by legislative resolution ap- pointed one of a board of estimate and taxation of twelve members to serve until November i, 1911; he was chosen by this board its chairman. He was re-elected as a member of this board at town election, October, 1911, to serve two years more and was again chosen by the board as its chairman. He has been on various committees concerned with the affairs of the town; is now chairman of a committee for the funding of the school debt and of a committee for bonding the town for two hundred and fifty thousand dollars for school improve- ments ; is a member of a committee for the issuance of bonds of six hundred thousand dollars for permanent road construc- tion, and of a committee on town sanitation. He was for a number of years assistant prosecuting attorney for the town of Greenwich, and is now a trustee of the Greenwich Savings Bank ; secretary and treasurer of the Belle Haven Land Com- pany, and a director of The Boswell Drug Company. FREDERICK WASHBURN YATES, student at New York Law School, 1893-95. Graduated LL.B., and admitted to New York bar, June, 1895. Practicing in New York since 1895. From 1898 to 1904 was consul in New York for the Republic of Liberia. MARRIED, June 28, 1894, Miss Bertha Kedzie Cornwell, daughter of Charles H. Cornwell, Esq., of Danielsonville, Conn. Child : Katharyn Cornwell, born April 2, 1895. 132 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD, NON-GRADUATE MEMBERS. L. H. BURRELL, left the class at the end of Junior year. Was with Burrell Brothers' Vinegar Works, Freeport, 111., 1892- 95. Studied law with Judge O. E. Heard, State's Attorney, and was admitted to the Illinois bar, November 4, 1897. Has been practicing since that time in Freeport. In 1900 was elected State's Attorney for Stephenson County; re-elected, 1904 and 1908. MARRIED, April 28, 1903, Mrs. Jessie Mayer D'Armitt, daughter of Uriah Mayer, Esq., of Burlington, Vt. Child: Daniel Mayer, born December 21, 1906. J. EDWARD DRAKE, left the class at the end of Freshman year. Has been at Bath, Me., engaged in the yellow pine lum- ber business, and in fire and marine insurance and ship broker- age since 1891. Was treasurer of the Eastern Steamboat Company and the Kennebec Steamboat Company until 1901, when these companies were absorbed by the Eastern Steam- ship Company. Was a member of the City Government of Bath in 1893-94-95. In 1906 was elected vice-president of the Sagadahoc County Board of Fire Underwriters. Is also a director of the Lincoln National Bank of Bath and of the First National Bank. MONTGOMERY GIBSON, left the class at the end of Freshman yeai No information or address at hand. ROBERT ROCKWELL HALL, left the class at the end of Fresh- man year. In 1890-91 was with the Philadelphia, Penna., Machinery and Supply Company. In the fall of 1891 entered the Sophomore class of the University of Pennsylvania and graduated in mechanical engineering in 1894. From that time until 1903 was engaged in stock raising in Colorado. He then moved to Denver to accept his present position as secretary and manager of the Colorado Automobile Company, an auto- mobile agency. 133 MARRIED, August 6, 1910, Miss Rebekah Archer McManus, daughter of William S. McManus, Esq., of Philadelphia, Penna. MILES T. HAND, left the class at the end of Freshman year. Entered Williams College the following year and graduated A.B. there, 1894. Was instructor in mathematics at Robert College, Constantinople, Turkey, 1894-95. At the close of his service in Turkey he returned to this country and entered Cor- nell University, and graduated from there with the degree of M.E. in 1897. From 1897 until November, 1902, was vari- ously employed in engineering work in Carbondale, Philadel- phia and at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, 1901. Was for several years located at Honesdale, Penna., as super- intendent of the National Elevator and Machine Company. Is at present living in Brooklyn, N. Y. MARRIED, June 13, 1899, Miss Helen Fuller Cook, daughter of William Luther Cook, Esq., of Sag Harbor, N. Y. S. B. HARTWELL, left the class at end of Junior year. From that time until 1896 was associated with his father in coal mining at Oil City, Penna. Was then four years with the Columbia Fireproofing Company at Pittsburgh. From 1900- 1901 was in charge of the Philadelphia branch office of that company. Was elected secretary and transferred to New York City, as manager of the company's office there, 1901. In 1902 was elected treasurer and general manager and returned to Pittsburgh, where he resided until 1906, since when he has not been heard from. MARRIED, December 27, 1900, Miss Margaret Dougherty, daughter of Benjamin F. Dougherty, Esq., of Philadelphia. EDWARD C. JOHNSON, left class at the end of Senior year. He was for several years manager of the New Haven House, New Haven, Conn. In 1908 he was made superintendent of the Yale Dining Club, in charge of the Yale Commons. MARRIED, November 25, 1897, Miss Louella C. Peabody, daughter of James A. Peabody, Esq., of Westerly, R. I. 134 Children: Walter Peabody, born September 3, i! Hariette Augusta, born August 15, 1900; Louise, born December 7, 1903 ; Christine, born November 13, 1905; Edward C., Jr., born November 16, 1909. TERRY PARKER, left the class at the end of Sophomore year to prepare himself immediately for the practice of law. He entered Columbia Law School- in the following year, gradu- ated there, receiving the degree of LL.B. in June, 1894. He was admitted to practice in the State of New York in Decem- ber, 1894. During his course at Columbia he served a clerk- ship in the office of Messrs. Man & Man. He remained in that office for two years after his graduation from the Law School, and in November, 1896, opened his own office in New York City, where he is still engaged in active practice. In No- vember, 1908, he was a delegate to the Eighth New Jersey District Republican convention and to the State Republican convention, and was elected Justice of the Peace in East Orange, N. J. In June, 1909, he was made Master in Chancery in New Jersey, and in January, 1913, he was appointed Su- preme Court Examiner by the Justices of the Supreme Court of New Jersey. He is Adjutant of the First Battalion, First Regiment, N. G. S. N. J. A. G. DERIESTHAL, left the class at the end of Sophomore year. He is a member of the New York bar, associated with Wyckoff & Frost, lawyers, with offices in Brooklyn and Ja- maica, N. Y. He resides in Jamaica. LUCIEN SHARPE, left the class at the end of Freshman year. He subsequently entered Brown University and graduated A.B. in 1893. He was with the Brown & Sharpe Manufac- turing Company for several years and was made treasurer of the company in 1903. Owing to ill health he has not been in active business since 1905. 135 FREDERIC VON BEHM TAINTOR, left the class early in Sopho- more year, and has been engaged in newspaper work in New York City since that time. He has been managing editor of The Globe since 1904. MARRIED, April 19, 1902, Grace A. Pike, Condeso de Al- magro, daughter of Charles A. Pike, of Portland, Me. CHARLES H. THRALL, left the class early in Sophomore year. Shortly after he went to Cuba in the employ of the Thomson- Houston Electric Company, and remained there until the Spanish War. During the war, while acting as a spy for the United States, he was captured and condemned to be shot, but was exchanged for a Spanish colonel. He returned to the United States at that time, and after the war returned to Cuba, where he is now a member of the firm of Charles H. Thrall & Co., general electrical contractors, in Havana. Warnock wrote of him as follows : "His work in Cuba was to install electric lighting plants. In the course of that work he distinguished himself at Matanzas. There the system had been completed just as a tropical tornado came up, flooding the place and wrecking everything. Under greatest diffi- culty he kept all the lights he could burning, for it was night, and was complimented for his daring, which is said to have saved many lives. To keep the dynamos going, they passed coal through water waist deep to the furnaces with water nearly to the grate." MARRIED, October 9, 1895, Miss Ida McPherson, daughter of John McPherson, Esq., of Rockville, Conn. Child: Corinne, born July 15, 1896. CORYDON C. TYLER, left the class early in Junior year. Spent the years 1892-94 in the Yale Divinity School. The year of 1894-95 he spent in Auburn Theological Seminary, from which he graduated in 1895. Upon graduation he became pas- tor of the Trinity Presbyterian Church, Chestnut Hill, Phila- delphia, Penna., which charge he still holds. In 1910 he trav- elled abroad. He lectures on the following subjects : "Eng- land, Historic and Picturesque" ; "Bavarian Cities," and "The Bernese Oberland." 136 MARRIED, September n, 1895, Miss Charlotte Ellen Lum, daughter of Benjamin C. Lum, Esq., of New Haven, Conn. Children: Mary Ethelyn, born April 5, 1897; Margaret, born July 17, 1900; Charlotte, born January 28, 1911. PERE G. WALLMO, left the class early in Sophomore year. Shortly afterwards entered the War Department at Washing- ton, D. C., and remained in that department until 1894, when he returned to his home at Middletown, Conn., and was with the Middletown Herald until the fall of 1895. From that time until 1911 he was secretary to Congressman N. D. Sperry, of New Haven, Conn., and engaged in newspaper work. In con- nection with his duties in Washington he studied law in the Columbian Law School, and received the degree of LL.B. from that institution. On May 15, 1911, he opened a law office in New Haven, but in 1912 he moved to Stony Creek, Conn., to engage in raising poultry. MARRIED, December 26, 1903, Miss Bess Jewell Case, daugh- ter of Edwin C. Case, Esq., of New Haven, Conn. M. C. WELLS, left the class at the end of Freshman year. F. C. WILDER, left the class early in Junior year. No in- formation or address is at hand. NOTE. The others who did not graduate were members of the class so short a time as hardly to become identified with the class, or else subsequently graduated with other Yale classes. The records of such men are kept by the secretary of the class with which they graduated, and also by the secre- tary of the University under that class, and it is, therefore, not considered advisable to attempt to keep their records as a part of ours. 137 Name. 1 Elliot Stone Curtis, 2 Richard Edward Dunham, 3 William James McKenna, 4 Robert Edwin Rowley, 5 Morris Woodruff, 6 Robert Storer Tracy, 7 Albert Wells Pettibone, Jr., 8 Frank James Brown, 9 Jonathan Boynton Dill, 10 Alfred Henry Jones, 11 Henry Llewellyn Bixby, 12 Frank Howard Button, 13 Frederick Merwin Lloyd, 14 Richard Charles Wells Wadsworth, 15 Theodore Woolsley Heer- mance, 16 William Henry Murphy, 17 George Greene Martin, 18 Sherwood Bissell Ives, 19 Henry Crosby Stetson, 20 Frederick Asbury Hill, 21 Robert Kerr Dickerman, 22 John Harvey Wigginton, 23 George Justus Briggs, 24 Burton Emerson Leavitt, Date. July i, 1894; March 22, 1896; Dec. 1 8, 1896; March 14, 1897; Dec. 31, 1897; April 12, 1899; Sept. 29, 1899 ; Feb. 14, 1900; Apr. 29, 1900; Jan. 15, 1901; October 20, 1902: Nov. i, 1902; May 13, 1905; Cause of Death. Struck by lightning. Blood poisoning. Tuberculosis. Pneumonia. Heart failure. Drowned. Pneumonia. Tuberculosis. Acute Spinal menin- gitis. Tuberculosis. Appendicitis. Tuberculosis. Cancer. August 2, 1905 ; Typhoid fever. Sept. 29, 1905; Feb. 14, 1906; Feb. 16, 1907; Feb. 24, 1907; April 16, 1907; August 31, 1907 Sept. 4, 1907; May 21, 1909; June 15, 1911; Nov. 19, 1912; Typhoid fever. Tuberculosis. Tuberculosis. Accidental shooting. Apoplexy. Typhoid fever. Suicide. Locomotor ataxia. Locomotor ataxia. Sarcoma. MISSING, PROBABLY DECEASED. Howard Dana Bradley, disappeared December 23, 1902. 138 SUMMARY, GRADUATES ONLY. Total graduates 184 Deceased 24 Died since Quindecennial 3 Missing 2 Married, including those who have died 137 Fathers of one child each 32 Fathers of two children each ... 3; Fathers of three children each 22 Fathers of four children each 7 Fathers of five children each 7 Father of six children, J. B. Johnson ) Father of nine children, Morse I Boys, 122. Girls, 128. OCCUPATIONS. Art, i. Law and Judiciary, 53. Education and Science, 17. Manufacturing, 19. Engineering, 2. Medicine, 13. Farming and Planting, 3. Mercantile Business, 13. Finance, 19. Ministry, 4. Government Service, 2. Transportation, 5. Journalism and Letters, 4. No occupation, 2. Dead, 24. Missing, 2. The following table shows, amongst other things, a trend away from teaching and law into other pursuits. At At At At At Tri- Sex- Decen- Quin- Vicen- ennial. en.nial. nial. decennial. nial. No. % No. % No. % No. % No. % Art and Architecture .. I .51 -5 i -5 i -5 I o Education and Science, 36 19.5 30 16.3 25 13.6 20 10.9 17 9-2 Engineering 2 i.i 2 i.i o .o 4 2.2 2 i.i Farming and Planting o.o o o.o o o.o 3 1.6 3 1.6 Finance 10 5.4 13 7.0 14 7.6 12 6.6 19 10.3 Government Service . . 2 i.i i .5 2 i.i i .5 2 i.i Journalism and Letters 7 3-2 5 2.7 5 2.7 5 2.7 4 2.2 Law and Judiciary .. 62 33.6 63 34.0 57 3O-9 54 29.3 53 28.8 Manufacturing 20 10.9 21 11.4 22 11.9 20 10.9 19 10.3 Medicine 15 8.0 15 8.0 15 8.0 13 7.0 13 7-Q Mercantile Business .. 18 9.18 17 9.2 18 9.8 16 8.6 13 7-0 Ministry 4 2.2 4 2.2 4 2.2 4 2.2 4 2.2 Transportation 4 2.2 4 2.2 4 2.2 4 2.2 5 2.7 No occupation o o.o i .5 5 2.7 3 1.6 2 i.i Deceased 3 i-6 7 3-2 12 6.6 21 11.4 24 13.0 Missing o o.o o o.o o o.o 3 i-O 2 i.i 139 LOCALITY INDEX ARIZONA i, JEROME. Clark, C. W. CALIFORNIA 5. PASADENA. Cravens. REDLANDS. Hodge. SAN FRANCISCO. Breeze, Rathbone, Westerfeld. COLORADO 2. DENVER. Graham, Hall. CONNECTICUT 30. ANSONIA. Bristol. BRIDGEPORT. Boardman. COLCHESTER. Wallis. DANIELSON. Hutchins. GREENWICH. Wright. HARTFORD. Parsons, Robinson, Spalding. MlDDLETOWN. Fox. NEW CANAAN. Rogers. NEW HAVEN. Avery, J. W., Hackett, Jepson, Johnson, E. C, Judspn, Merritt, Nadler, Peck, Sedgwick. NEW LONDON. Avery, C. L. NORFOLK. Stoeckel. NORTHFIELD. Goodenough. NORWICH. Gallaudet. ROCKVILLE. Thomas. SOUTH NORWALK. Candee. STAMFORD. Quintard. STONY CREEK. Wallmo. SUFFIELD. Spencer. 140 WATERBURY. MARYLAND i. Bull, BALTIMORE. Grafton. Gibbs. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 2. MASSACHUSETTS 8. WASHINGTON. BOSTON. Torbert, Allen, J. W. Wilcox. Bliss, Faxon. ILLINOIS 7. BROCKTON. CHICAGO. Abbe. Ewing, SPRINGFIELD. Folk, Bosworth, Putney. Brownson. FREEPORT. Clarke, J. D. Burrell. WORCESTER. JACKSONVILLE. Peirce. Capps. MAYWOOD. MICHIGAN i. Vaile. DETROIT. SPRINGFIELD. Moore, F. A. Hay. MINNESOTA 7. INDIANA i. FAIRBAULT. INDIANAPOLIS. Mathison. Dorsey. MINNEAPOLIS. KENTUCKY 3. Jordan, LOUISVILLE. White. Allen, L. ST. PAUL. Gatchel, McKnight. Edmison, Hill, J. N., LOUISIANA i. Slade, HOPE VILLA. Wheelock. Foos. MISSOURI i. MAINE i. BATH. ST. Louis. Drake. Maffitt. NEW JERSEY 6. JERSEY CITY. Hastings. LITTLE FALLS. Allen, H. C. NEWARK. Sutphen. PATERSON. Cooke. SUMMIT. Lamson, W. J. . Lamson, E. R. NEW YORK 66, ALBANY. Wachsman. AUBURN. Eccles. BUFFALO. Field, Lyon, Sackett, Smith. CAYUGA. Kyle. COOPERSTOWN. Birdsall. DUNKIRK. Hurlbert. NEWBURGH. Scott. NEW YORK CITY Barnes, Bates, Beadleston, Beebe, Begg, Borden, Bottome, Bowns, Breckenridge, Brown, Burchard, Cartwright, Chatfield, Creevey, Dwight, H. R. Dwight, W. E. Eddy, Fay, Ferguson, Gardiner, Greer, Hand, Hare, Harmstacl, Hickox, Higgins, Hill, Hobbie, Joy, Lambert, Martin, Marvin, Morgan, Newell, Newton, Parker, T. Pope, Rice, Shaw, Strong-, 142 Taintor, Taylor, Terriberry, Thomson, Trask, Wade, Welles, L. A,, Wells, E. H. Woolner, Yates. PELHAM. Ferguson. ROCHESTER. Bacon, Morse. Roby. SYRACUSE. Moore, J. S. UTICA. C rouse. OHIO 7. CINCINNATI. Jones, Mills, G. E. CLEVELAND. Chisholm, Harvey, Osborn, Tracy, Williams. PENNSYLVANIA 15. BREINIGSVILLE. Butz. BRYN MAWR. Holbrook, Wheeler. HARRISBURG. Haldeman. PHILADELPHIA. Babbitt, Mills, C. W. Runk, Scoville, Swayne, Trumbull, Tyler. PITTSBURGH. Laughlin, Parker, W. W. W. POTTSTOWN. Warnock. SCRANTON. Donnelly. PORTO RICO i. SAN JUAN. Anderson. RHODE ISLAND 2. PROVIDENCE. Day, Sharp. SOUTH CAROLINA i CHARLESTON. Ficken. TEXAS i. WACO. Johnson, J. B. FRANCE i. PARIS. Lord. CUBA i. HAVANA. Thrall. 143 ADDRESSES. Franklin J. Abbe, 106 Main St., Brockton, Mass. Henry C. Allen, Little Falls, N. J. J. Weston Allen, Tremont. Building, Boston, Mass. Lafon Allen, Lincoln Bank Building, Louisville, Ky. Joseph Anderson, San Juan, Porto Rico. C. L. Avery, Jr., 61 State St., New London, Conn. J. W. Avery, 299 Norton St., New Haven, Conn. Dr. J. A. Babbitt, Haverford College, Haverford, Pa. Henry S. Bacon, 130 Gibbs St., Rochester, N. Y. Henry B. Barnes, 52 William St., New York City. Ellery A. Bates, 150 Vermilye Ave., New York City. Henry C. Beadleston, 34 Wall St., New York City. George P. Beebe, 34 Nassau St., New York City. William R. Begg, 24 Broad St., New York City. Rev. Ralph Birdsall, Cooperstown, N. Y. Clifford D. Bliss, care Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 669 Boylston St., Boston, Mass. William B. Boardman, Security Building, Bridgeport, Conn. Gerald M. Borden, 35 East sist St., New York City. Charles W. Bosworth, No. 6 Court Square Theater Building, Spring- field, Mass. Harry H. Bottome, 346 Broadway, New York City. H. S. Bowns, i Broadway, New York City. Henry D. Bradley. William E. Breckenridge, 345 East I5th St., New York City. Thomas H. Breeze, Mills Building, San Francisco, Cal. Theodore L. Bristol, Ansonia, Conn. Lawrence E. Brown, 9 St. Charles Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Wendell G. Brownson, 31 Elm St., Springfield, Mass. Cornelius S. Bull, 151 Hillside Ave., Waterbury, Conn. Ross Burchard, 30 West Ave., Norwalk, Conn. Harvey P. Butz, Breinigsville, Pa. Nehemiah Candee, United Bank Building, South Norwalk, Conn. William T. Capps, 1018 West State St., Jacksonville, 111. Otho G. Cartwright, 126 Claremont Ave., New York City. Hon. Thomas I. Chatfield, Federal Building, Brooklyn, New York City. Alvah S. Chisholm, Western Reserve Building, Cleveland, O. Charles Walker Clark, Jerome, Arizona. John D. Clarke, 332 Main St., Springfield, Mass. J. Barclay Cooke, 635 Park Ave., Paterson, N. J. John S. Cravens, Trust & Savings Building, Los Angeles, Cal. Dr. George M. Creevey, 40 East 63rd St., New York City. 144 Beecher M. Grouse, 371 Genesee St., Utica, N. Y. Howard D. Day, 216 Medway St., Providence, R. I. Frank E. Donnelly, Mears Building, Scranton, Pa. Dr. Frank O. Dorsey, Hume-Manser Building, Indianapolis, Ind. Henry R. Dwight, 1133 Broadway, New York City. Winthrop E. Dwight, 62 Cedar St., New York City. William W. Eccles, Auburn, N. Y. Charles B. Eddy, 62 Cedar St., New York City. John P. Edmison, care Pioneer Press, St. Paul, Minn. Charles H. Ewing, 1642 West Lake St., Chicago, 111. Archer L. Faxon, 31 Rosewood St., Boston, Mass. Charles J. Fay, 14 Wall St., New York City. Irving B. Ferguson, Pelham, N. Y. Henry H. Ficken, Charleston, S. C. John H. Field, 66 Hodge Ave, Buffalo, N. Y. George E. Folk, 1445 Monadnock Building, Chicago, 111. George M. Foos, Audubon Plantation, Hope Villa, La. James C. Fox, 275 Washington St., Middletown, Conn. Edson F. Gallaudet, Norwich, Conn. Thomas A. Gardiner, 27 William St., New York City. Frank E. Gatchel, 406 West Jefferson St., Louisville, Ky. Rufus M. Gibbs, 1214 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Rev. Giles F. Goodenough, Northfield, Conn. James E. Grafton, care Crosby High School, Waterbury, Conn. Dr. Charles A. Graham, 1554 California St., Denver, Col. Lawrence Greer, 37 Wall St., New York City. William H. Hackett, 38 Lynwood Place, New Haven, Conn. Donald C. Haldeman, Harrisburg, Pa. Montgomery Hare, 20 Exchange Place, New York City. Clarence C. Harmstad, 176 Broadway, New York City. Allyn F. Harvey, care Pittsburgh Steamship Co., Cleveland, O. Frank W. Hastings, Jr., 15 Exchange Place, Jersey City, N. J. Logan Hay, 514 East Monroe St., Springfield, 111. Charles R. Hickox, 27 William St., New York City. Dr. William McK. Higgins, 616 Madison Ave., New York City. James N. Hill, 34 Nassau St., New York City. John P. Hobbie, 5 East 42nd St., New York City. Benjamin Hodge, P. O. Box 383, Redlands, Calif. Prof. Richard T. Holbrook, Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pa. John L. Hurlbert, 736 Washington Ave., Dunkirk, N. Y. Shubael C. Hutchins, P. O. Box 435, Danielson, Conn. Prof. Harry B. Jepson, 245 East Rock Rd., New Haven, Conn. Prof. Jesse B. Johnson, Baylor University, Waco, Tex. Charles D. Jones, Fosdick Building, Cincinnati, O. 145 R. H. Jordan, 1420 West 26th St., Minneapolis, Minn. Dr. Homer T. Joy, 49 West 57th St., New York City. Walter P. Judson, 179 Church St., New Haven, Conn. Dr. A. V. S. Lambert, 168 East 71 st St., New York City. E. R. Lamson, Summit, N. J. Dr. W. J. Lamson, 120 Summit Ave., Summit, N. J. I. B. Laughlin, care Jones & Laughlin Steel Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. Arthur P. Lord, 62 Cedar St., New York City. Dr. Irving P. Lyon, 531 Franklin St., Buffalo, N. Y. Stuart McKnight, 1018 South 4th Ave., Louisville, Ky. William Maffitt, care Mercantile Trust Co., St. Louis, Mo. Arthur J. Martin, 229 West 74th St., New York City. Walter R. Marvin, 409 West I5th St., New York City. Rev. Edward T. Mathison, Faribault, Minn. Alfred K. Merritt, care Yale University, New Haven, Conn. George E. Mills, Mercantile Library Building, Cincinnati, O. Charles W. Mills, Real Estate Trust Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Franklin A. Moore, 55 Edmund Place, Detroit, Mich. J. Stanley Moore, 500 O. C. S. Bank Building, Syracuse, N. Y. John Hill Morgan, 20 Exchange Place, New York City. Alfred H. Morse, 6 Upton Park, Rochester, N. Y. Dr. Alfred G. Nadler, 377 Orange St., New Haven, Conn. Emerson R. Newell, 2 Rector St., New York City. William L. Newton, 275 Henry St., Brooklyn, N. Y. William A. Osborn, 2317 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, O. William W. W. Parker, Berger Building, Pittsburgh, Pa. Francis Parsons, 27 Forest St., Hartford, Conn. George L. Peck, 129 Church St., New Haven, Conn. Alton W. Peirce, 2 Haviland St., Worcester, Mass. Charles M. Pope, 325 West s6th St., New York City. Albert H. Putney. 518 Ashland Block, Chicago, 111. Harry C. Quintard, 70 Grove St., Stamford, Conn. Gerald L. Rathbone, 149 California St., San Francisco, Calif. George H. Rice, 3219 Third Ave., New York City. John T. Robinson, Hartford, Conn. Dr. Joseph Roby, 234 Culver Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Derby Rogers, New Canaan, Conn. Louis B. Runk, Land Title Building, Philadelphia, Pa. William C. Scott, 403 Grand St., Newburgh, N. Y. Herbert I. Sackett, 256 Pearl St., Buffalo, N. Y. Samuel Scoville, Jr., Pennsylvania Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Hubert M. Sedgwick, 683 Prospect St., New Haven, Conn. Albert J. Shaw, n Pine St., New York City. 146 George T. Slade, care Northern Pacific Railway, St. Paul, Minn. William W. Smith, White Building, Buffalo, N. Y. Rev. George B. Spalding, Rocky Hill, Hartford, Conn. Samuel R. Spencer, Suffield, Conn. Robbins B. Stoeckel, Norfolk, Conn. Wendell M. Strong, .32 Nassau St., care Mutual Life Insurance Co New York City. Dr. Carl E. Sutphen, 181 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J. N-oah H. Swayne, 2nd, Pennsylvania Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Moses Taylor, 30 Pine St., New York City. Dr. William S. Terriberry, 57 West 75th St., New York City. John B. Thomas, Rockville, Conn. Herbert G. Thomson, 165 Broadway, New York City. Dexter E. Tilley, address unknown. Horace G. Torbert, 2411 P St., Washington, D. C. Edward H. Tracy, American Trust Building, Cleveland, O. T. C. Trask, 155 West 6sth St., New York City. Charles G. Trumbull, 1031 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Harry S. Vaile, 713 North gth St., Maywood, 111. Isidore Wachsman, 19 South Pine Ave., Albany, N. Y. Robert B. Wade, 1261 Madison Ave., New York City. Alexander H. Wallis, Colchester, Conn. John D. Warnock, Hill School, Pottstown, Pa. L. A. Welles, 447 West i4th St., New York City. Ernest H. Wells, 150 Nassau St., New York City. Carl Westerfeld, Mills Building, San Francisco, Calif. Prof. Arthur L. Wheeler, Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Webster Wheelock, 145 Endicott Building, St. Paul, Minn. Prof. Albert B. White, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. Walter D. Wilcox, Metropolitan Club, Washington, D. C. Edward M. Williams, The Sherwin-Williams Co., Cleveland, O. Alfred C. Woolner, 15 Water St., New York City. Wilbur S. Wright, Greenwich, Conn. Frederick W. Yates, 34 Nassau St., New York City. ADDRESSES OF NON-GRADUATE MEMBERS. L. H. Burrell, Freeport, 111. J. E. Drake, Bath, Me. Montgomery Gibson, address unknown. R. R. Hall, 1268 Broadway, Denver, Colo. M. T. Hand, 541 Sixth St., Brooklyn, N. Y. S. B. Hartwell, address unknown. E. C. Johnson, care Yale Dining Club, New Haven, Conn. L. F. Johnson, address unknown. 147 C. D. Kyle, Cayuga, N. Y. Terry Parker, 32 Nassau St., New York City. A. G. DeRiesthal, address unknown. Lucien Sharpe, Providence, R. I. Frederick von Behm Taintor, 5 Dey St., New York City. Charles H. Thrall, Apartado 734, Havana, Cuba. Rev. Corydon C. Tyler, 207 East Graver's La., Chestnut Hill, Phila- delphia, Pa. Pere G. Wallmo, Stony Creek, Conn. F. C. Wilder, address unknown. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Due two weeks after date. 268079 '? UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY