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QUINDECENNIAL RECORD of the C-LASS OF EIGHTEEN HUNDRED AND NINETY FOUR

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY June nineteen hundred and nine

COMPIIiED BT

JOHN F. WILKINS 1894-1909

/

Printed at

Princeton University Press

Princeton, N.J.

^L^uXf^^^A',%

FIFTEEN YEARS AFTER

A mingled compilation of Class gossip, gentle twitting of old pals with their various frailties and inside talks "from the heart out."

Designed as a "Who's Who in '94" and to recall old memories and the days when most of us knew little law and abided by less; when ailments were few and our only medicine that which is to this day prescribed for indispositions following Class reunions ; when our Reverends were "Sandy" and "Hop" and "Army" and "Jim," and our Profs, were "Charley" and "Doggy" and "Irish" ; the days when touch-downs, base-hits and exams., in the order named, were as important as the pay-day of the present.

The product of tears, cajolery, threats, many harsh thoughts and much travail, all entailing the loss of a once really sweet disposition.

A labor of affection for '94.

For any sins of omission or of commission, for the Record's lack of system and for the few strained efforts to be jocose, no criticism could be more fitted than that advanced by the compiler's good friend, F. Peter Dunne (Mr. Dooley) : "Jack Wilkins is like a young grasshopper. He's got a helluva lot of agility but a deplorable lack of direction."

That's all. ^ J. F. W.

CLASS OF 1894, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY 15th REUNION COMMITTEE

William F. Meredith, Rev. W. P. Armstrong Jas. E. Bathgate, Jr. Alexander Benson Frederick L. Buckelew H. W. Buxton, Jr. H. H. Condit George D. Edwards William Floyd Karl George James Gibson, Jr. Joseph F. Guffey Rev. C. G. Hopper Theodore F. Humphrey

Class Secretary Alexander D. Jenney George B. Linnard C. S. Mackenzie G. M. McCampbell, Jr. Prof. H. McClenahan Prof. C. H. Mcllwain S. N. McWilliams L. Irving Reichner F. H. Smith, HI. Rev. J. R. Swain M'Cready Sykes George H. Williams J. F. Wilkins, Chairman

CLASS OF 1894, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY ROLL OF MEMBERS

p =z Permanent address, r = Present residence.

b = Business address.

Conner Jones Akin

p rb Columbia, Tenn.

Akin is a civil and mining engineer and at present the Consultmg Engineer for the Federal Chemical Company, the Franco-American Phosphate Company, the Bear Creek Phosphate Mining and Manu- facturing Company, and the Charleston (S. C.) Mining and Manu- facturing Company, among the largest and best phosphate companies in the South.

"Runt" has the true Southern gentleman's passion for good horse flesh. He writes that he turns out a few "ponies" every year and when there is a lull in the phosphates Conner goes on the circuit and puts over some good things at the County fairs.

Akin married Mattie Bell November nth, 1903, and their daughter,

Jean Bell was born July loth, 1907.

Henry Leland Akin, M.D.

p b 403 McCague Building, Omaha, Neb.

At the time of the Class Decennial Akin was abroad finishing his medical studies, spending a year in Vienna, Berlin, Paris and London. He received his M.D. degree from J. A. Creighton Medical, Omaha, in 1 90 1, and is now practicing in his home city, making a specialty of the diseases of the digestive organs.

He writes : "I paid a visit to the East in November and December and saw the Yale game and the Harvard-Yale contest the following week. Spent a month in New York and stopped with Bill Sykes. Hospital work in the daytime and Bill and Broadway at night.

-'S7

Enjoyed my trip very much and particularly seeing some of the old crowd, Patterson, Carter, Jim Blake, Clytie George and others. I hope that you all will have a splendid time in June and am sorry that I cannot be there."

Rev. John Harvey Alexander

p r Council Grove, Kansas.

The lost is found. "Pop" could not be located for either the Triennial or Decennial Records. He is in the Presbyterian ministry in Council Grove, Kansas.

Alexander received the degree of Bachelor of Divinity from Yale University in 1900.

He was married June 27th, 1908, to Elinor M. Wilkins of St. Louis, Missouri.

•"rederick Warner Allen

p South Orange, New Jersey.

r b Galeton, Pennsylvania.

After our Decennial, "Fred" went from the Erie Railroad to the Great Northern to become Roadmaster of the Cascade division, which includes the lines over the Cascade mountains and up the coast from Seattle, Washington, to Vancouver, B. C.

In 1905 he was made Assistant Superintendent of the Minot (N. D.) division of the Great Northern Railway, and in 1907 he became the Operating Superintendent of the Buffalo division of the Buffalo and Susquehanna Railway.

The two operating divisions and maintenance of way department were consolidated in 1908 and Allen's Superintendency now extends over the whole road. He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

Yorke Allen

p r South Orange, N. J. b 135 Broadway, New York.

Yorke is making a name as a trial lawyer in New York City. He received his degree of LL.B. from the New York Law School in 1896 and is associated with W. T. Sabine, Jr., '93, in the firm of Allen and Sabine. Allen is a member of the Princeton Club of New

8

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York and a member of the executive committee of the Princeton Alumni Association of the Oranges, Inc.

October 20th, 1906, Yorke married Mary VanLear Findlay of Towson, Md.

John Findlay was born August ist, 1908.

ildwin Eads Andrews

p Akron, Ohio.

r 115 Byers Ave., Akron, Ohio.

h Care Bruner Goodhue-Cooke Company, Akron, Ohio.

Eads is the Manager of the stock and bond department of the above named company in Akron, Ohio.

He writes : "Am living a quiet life trying to get separated from the little I have left in helping to drill some gas wells. Expect to be all in when we have a few of these drilled. Family all well and looking prosperous even if the old man is not. I sure expect to be with you all in June to see the old fellows of '94. Long live the King of Jamesburg."

June 22nd, 1898, Andrews married Anna F. Finch. Their two boys are:

Charles Bruce, born November i8th, 1905, and

Edwin Eads, Jr., born October 3rd, 1907.

.Franklin Morse Archer

p b 104 Market St., Camden, N. J. r Haddonfield, N. J.

Archer is practicing law in Camden with Norman Grey '89, under the firm name of Grey and Archer. "Mud" received his LL.B. from Harvard in 1897.

He says : "I demolished the record hereabouts three years ago by resigning a public office, that of Assistant Prosecutor of Camden County, at which time I entered into the partnership mentioned above. The recent losses sustained by the Class were a great shock to all of us in this vicinity. We will all have to sing in June the good old song, "Then stand by your glasses, steady."

Archer is a director of the Camden National Bank and a member of the Princeton Club of Philadelphia.

June 14th, 1900, he married Bessie M. Chandlee.

*

Franklin Morse, Jr., was born September 17th, 1902, and Elizabeth Chandlee, December 5th, 1908.

Rev. William Park Armstrong

p r Princeton, N. J.

Armstrong is Professor of New Testament Literature and Exe- gesis in the Princeton Theological Seminary. He received his Princeton A.M. in 1896 and graduated from the Seminary in 1897, later studying in Germany at the Universities of Marburg, Berlin and Erlangen.

Thereafter, from 1899 to 1904, he was Instructor in the Seminary, at which time he attained his present high position. "Army" stands very close to Dr. Patton and is the Editor-in-Chief of the Princeton Theological Review.

Rebekah Purves became Mrs. Armstrong December 8th, 1904. Their three children are :

Rebekah Purves, born April 7th, 1906,

William Park, Jr., born May 31st, 1907, and

George Purves, born October 9th, 1908.

Judson Hooker Bailey

8 Sherman St., Albany, N. Y. 58 North Allen St., Albany, N. Y.

Care Kirchner Brewing Co., Albany, N. Y. ^^ "J..J' is Secretary and Treasurer of the Kirchner Brewing Com- pany of Albany, New York.

He writes : "I will be at the reunion with a full and complete line of spring samples and will expect every '94 man to do his duty. You can enter me right now for the Marathon and all the other long distance events. It is a long time since I last put on one of Charlie Gulick's spring bonnets and bowled up Nassau Street, but you will find me like the days of yore."

April 15th, 1903, Bailey married Mildred Heckman of Cleveland, Ohio.

Thomas Fisher Bailey

p rh Huntingdon, Pa.

"Tom" has been practicing law since June, 1896, and especially

before the Courts of Common Pleas and Appellate Courts of Penn- sylvania.

He writes : "I am doing the same old thing hammering away at the old practice and telling disappointed and defeated clients that their sad plight came about by reason of the prejudice of the jury and the ignorance and incapability of the court. As to other informa- tion asked for, the longer I live the more I am convinced that 'born, lived and died' makes up the great life of man."

Philadelphia is a lonely city for a stranger, so Tom keeps an anchor to windward in the shape of a membership in the Princeton Club, wherein at divers times he maketh merry and forgetteth ye Blackstone.

November 19th, 1902, Wilhelmina Lentz became Mrs. Bailey.

Elizabeth Weldrick was born January 9th, 1904.

Carroll Baldwin

pb 61 Leonard St., New York. r 15 East 48th St., New York.

Carroll is a "Manufacturer and Commission Merchant," but gives the Record no further details as to his particular line of business. He writes: "No wife, no chick, no chance." He is a member of the Princeton and Union Clubs of New York.

Later: Meredith supplies the missing links of Baldwin's story. The firm name is Woodward, Baldwin and Company, dry goods com- mission merchants and manufacturers of cotton duck, etc.

Edward Hill Baldwin, M.D.

p rh 85 Clinton Ave., Newark, N. J.

Baldwin is a specialist in the eye, ear, nose and throat and has been a member of the New Jersey State Board of Medical Exam- iners since 1901.

He received his degree of M.D. in 1895 and in 1896 the degree of Oculi et Auris Chirurgus from the College of the New York Ophthalmic Hospital. After serving on the hospital staff he was elected a member of the faculty and lectured in the post-graduate school until 1902, at which time he went to the University of Vienna for a course in mastoid surgery.

Baldwin and Doggy Dahlgren caused '93 a sufficiency of profanity

and hard work when they succeeded in putting up that '94 banner on the telegraph wire freshman year.

November nth, 1896, Rosahnd Grover Shepard became Mrs. Baldwin.

.David Milton Balliet

p r Myerstown, Pa. b ion Commonwealth Trust Building, Philadelphia, Pa.

"Pete", our old Varsity center, is in the wholesale coal business, connected with the Clark Brothers Coal Mining Company.

He writes : "I am a sort of globe-trotter for a wholesale coal company at this time. There is quite a difference between my job and the life of a gentleman tourist. Will try to be with you in June if possible." Pete flits about all right. It took two months for a letter to catch up with him in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and then he was on his way to the station to take a train for Boston.

He married Sara A. Uhrich July 19th, 1894.

Catharine Uhrich was born July 5th, 1895.

Arthur C. Bartels

h 301 Cooper Building, Denver, Colo.

Bartels is an attorney in Denver and a member of the firm of Bartels and Silverstein. He received the degree of LL.B. from Michigan University and has served two terms in the Colorado Legislature. He writes that he has nothing to add to his life story in the Decennial Record and that he is plugging away at the law in partnership with H. S. Silverstein, a Yale graduate.

Fames Edward Bathgate, Jr.

ph 30 Plane St., Newark, N. J. r 25 Berkeley Ave., Orange, N. J.

"Jimmy" is in the provision and pork packing business in Newark and making it a real "go", notwithstanding the fact that he is outside of the trust. He writes mournfully that the annual outings of the Sea Puss Association have come to be a thing of the past. A few years ago Jimmy bought a farm in Somerset County, which is a portion of New Jersey embracing the well known section of Bernardsville.

Becoming interested in the improvement of roads, he was made a member of the Township Committe and is now its Treasurer.

Bathgate is a member of the Board of Missions in the Diocese of Newark and is interested in the building and development of a number of missions of the Episcopal Church throughout the northern part of the state. He raised the money and superintended the build- ing of a church at Millington, New Jersey.

He is the Recording Secretary of the Princeton Alumni Associa- tion of the Oranges, Inc., and is a member also of the executive committee. Jim is one of the '94 members of the Princeton Club of New York. He is a director of the Federal Trust Company of Newark.

Margaret A. Montgomery became Mrs. Bathgate June 7th, 1897. Their two children are :

Esther Seymour, born June 8th, 1898, and

James E., IK, born January 9th, 1900.

Harold MacKnight Beck

p Electric Storage Battery Co., Chicago, 111.

r 1608 Ashland Ave., Evanston, 111.

h 1400 Association Building, Chicago, 111.

Beck is connected with the Electric Storage Battery Company of Philadelphia, with headquarters in the offices of their Middle-West operating department in Chicago. This is the same company with which Popsy Kellogg is associated in New York.

Beck was formerly in charge of the company laboratories and subsequently advanced to the position of Engineer of Middle-West Operating Department, his duties including the periodical inspection of the various battery installations made by his company.

June 17th, 1903, Beck married Margaret Deane.

James Flournoy Beck, M.D.

p r 2200 Bloomington Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. h 1525 East Franklin Ave., Minneapolis, Minn.

Beck received his M.D. from the University of Minnesota in 1896 and is now a practicing physician and surgeon in Minneapolis. He writes : "Am simply a busy practitioner of general medicine trying to raise enough coin to send the kid to Princeton, Class of '23. That class numeral is hard luck, but he will have to live it down."

13

On February 8th, 1899, Beck married Katharine Cowing. John Flournoy was born August 13th, 1901.

Alexander Benson

pr 2107 Wahiut St., Philadelphia, Pa. ^^'^^ *^a /¥-r b Land Title Building; Philadelphia, Pa. *^<^"*^'E«- ^7> *

"Benny" was admitted to the Philadelphia bar in 1898, having received his LL.B. from the University of Pennsylvania the same year. He is as popular as ever in his home city, where his chief occupation, however, seems to be the answering of invitations to dinners, dances and other miscellaneous functions.

The following is from one of the Record's special correspondents : "Alex, has a very attractive bungalow in New Jersey two or three miles back in the pines from a station called New Egypt, which station you approach from Philadelphia by milk trains and various jerk- water railroads. The trains consist of one combination pas- senger and baggage car and apparently carry more ducks, geese, eggs and other country produce than they do passengers. Benny's place is very prettily situated on the banks of a little lake about three to six hundred yards wide and three miles long. He seems to have become imbued with the bucolic atmosphere, as he has acquired twelve hens, ten roosters, five drakes, six ducks, three ganders and three geese, also a thoroughly quiet and respectable family horse, a wagon which I believe is called a surrey, and a lame dog. He pro- vides comfortable beds and excellent elementary refreshments, also a visitors' book, in which he demands that each guest shall inscribe his name. This guest book has stamped upon the cover the name of the place, which is "The Bride's Trap". One of the girls saw the name when she went to write in the book and suggested that the bait was a little stale. Owing to the fact that Alex, is about the age of most of the class, they will be grieved to hear that he felt himself old enough to really resent the imputation. He will give you a very good time if you go down, and I advise the class to treat it as class property and enjoy it with Alex. I regret that I cannot sign my name to this sketch, but I am afraid that I might not be asked down again."

Benny is a member of the University and Princeton Clubs of New York and of the Princeton Club of Philadelphia.

14

John Livingston Bissell

pb 115 Broadway, New York. r 23 Westchester Ave., White Plains, N. Y.

Bissell is an attorney in New York City.

He writes : "Since October, 1898, I have been practicing law at 50 Broadway with Edward N. Emerson, Amherst '96. On the first of May next we expect to move to 115 Broadway, where we will con- tinue the practice of law. My best regards to '94."

"Bis" received his LL.B. degree from the New York State Board of Regents in 1896.

April 29th, 1903, he married Valetta Hawthorne. Their two boys are :

John Hawthorne, born January 21st, 1904, and

Hawthorne, born August 22nd, 1908.

Claude Villie Black

r 970 Lenox Place, Avondale, Cincinnati, O.

h The John H. Hibben Drygoods Co., Cincinnati, O.

Black failed to reply to any of the Record's letters. Dick Bogart, who saw him in February, supplies his business address and Dr. McLeish his home address.

Black is the Secretary and Treasurer of the John H. Hibben Dry- goods Company of Cincinnati, and has been connected with that concern for the past seven years.

January 12th, 1897, he married Fanny F. Fox. They have no children.

Later: Black's letter came in on the last call. It confirms the above.

^avid Blair

p r Indiana, Pa.

h 556 Philadelphia St., Indiana, Pa. Blair is practicing law and received the degree of A.M. from Washington and Jefferson College.

He married Helen Torrence September i8th, 1901. Their chil- dren are :

David, Jr., born April 2nd, 1903.

Katharine Torrence, born February 6th, 1906.

John P., born December loth, 1907.

15

Fames Robert Blake

p r Plainfield, N. J. b 54 William St., New York.

Our old fullback is interested in developing and promoting western mines. He was at Princeton during the last football season coaching the team. He writes : "I don't feel that I have anything new of interest to add to my record. However, I do want to know what the other fellows are doing, having been out of touch with the Class for so long, owing to my three years underground."

February 7th, 1899, Blake married Florence A. Abbott.

Judson A. Blake was born March 15th, 1900.

Philip Paul Bliss

p The John Church Co., Cincinnati, Ohio.

r 21 16 Auburn Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio.

b 4th and Elm Sts., Cincinnati, Ohio.

Bliss is the musical editor of The John Church Company of Cin- cinnati, publishers of sheet music and music books. He says : 'T am actively engaged in writing music under various noms de plume and meeting with success in every line. My male choruses are sung by all of the big male choruses of the United States; my teaching pieces used in the schools and in recital work ; my songs sung from music halls to classical recitals, and my piano things played by orchestras from beer gardens to Pop. concerts." Bliss also edits all of the manuscripts received by the company.

On June 2nd, 1903, he married Lina Louise Mayor.

Hchard Walker Bogart, Jr. 4-p»/lwt^'^

p 412 North Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. / 9*^.^^^

b National Board Fire Underwriters, 135 William St., New York.

Bogart has been in the employ of the National Board of Fire Underwriters since July ist, 1904, with headquarters in New York City. "Dick" has no particular habitat, his work as an engineer taking him all over the United States. His particular duties are the investigation of the water supply of the various cities from the fire protection standpoint and the submitting of reports upon conflagra- tion hazards and the adequateness of fire fighting facilities.

Dick is with a corps of engineers representing the Committee on

16

>

Fire Prevention of the National Board, traveling from city to city, his last places of duty being Cincinnati, Louisville and Memphis. In his travels he carries with him a copy of the Decennial Record and in this way has been able to locate many of the class who have found it impossible to come regularly to reunions. He writes that he ran across McLeish in Cincinnati and found the Doctor's hair has turned very gray. As Mac. is unmarried, Dick says that he can't account for it.

Reginald E. Bonner

p r West New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y.

h 35 Wall St., New York. Bonner is a stock broker and a member of the Princeton Club of New York. ^^.^

February 23rd, 1903, he married Effie Caesar. '*'

Thomas Hamilton Bowes

p Care Joseph Bowes, Mgr. Equitable Life Assurance Society, Equitable Building, Baltimore, Md.

"Tom" is with the Mono Power Company of Bishop, Cal, engaged in bottling up all of the stray water power in his neighborhood. Prior to his present work he was in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, with Norton, Megraw and Company.

Later : Tom seems to have hit the trail once more. The Record's -\ ^ last letter was returned by the postmaster indorsed "Not with Mono Power Co." The California address was secured by Meredith in Baltimore and Ed. Hammett confirmed it.

Under date of April 26th a member of Tom's family (100 Beech- dale Road, Roland Park, Baltimore, Md.) wrote the Record as fol- lows: "At present we do not know Tom's address. His last letter stated that he was going to another mining station and we have not heard from him for a long time."

Frank Howard Braislin

p P. O. Box 3, Crosswicks, N. J.

BraisHn is in the commission business in Crosswicks, New Jersey. After a number of unsuccessful appeals the Record had about given him up. However, on the day of going to press, word was received from him with the following excuse, which, in his expressed wish

17

to get in personal touch with the Class rather than through another, shows an affection for old '94 that earns the Record's pardon instanter.

"If this letter of mine is not in time, don't bother about it. I couldn't help it. My typewriter was without ink, for anything ap- proaching legibility, for a long time, until within a day or so, as the first that I could get it really, and this is its first job. And this was one letter that, well, incidentally, I'd rather write myself, than com- pile to dictation, to another to write. Why? Well I don't know. But because it is. Writing is one's self. Dictation is through another. If that gives point, there you have it."

He says further in his letter: "All that I can say for myself is that for several years I have been trying, under handicap and diffi- culties, circumstantial and otherwise, to do the only thing that has seemed feasible at all, as situated, and maybe not that, a sort of commission business, poor enough, but hitherto holding together and hoping toward possibilities, other or better. The school in which I was last teaching was discontinued. Operation has thus shifted.

"On many accounts I should Hke to be at the meet in June, but it's doubtful and even more so, I fear. With best wishes to the Class and members, collectively and individually, and for the re- union, and sustained blessings thereafter indissoluble of dint or wear, of worth and time, believe me, in cordiality and reminiscent genuineness ..."

< Edward Arnold Brannon

p r b 122 Court Ave., Weston, W. Va.

Brannon is an attorney at law in Weston, West Virginia.

In 1895 he received the degree of Bachelor of Laws from Wash- ington and Lee University, Lexington, Va. 1/ Brannon is Joe Guffey's attorney in his section of West Virginia

and Joe says that his company gets all that is coming to it.

Brannon married Irma Cowey of Middleport, Ohio, February loth, 1909.

* John Miller Bridges

p 248 South Hanover St., Carlisle, Pa. \ Bridges lives where the Indians come from and is a broker, chiefly

' interested in lumber and the development of timber lands.

/

He writes that he is still a bachelor, but that prospects have im~ proved so much of late that he may have fuller details before the Record goes to press. Ed. Hammett intimates the near approach of orange blossoms.

George Howard Bright

p r Reading, Pa.

h 504 Penn Square, Reading, Pa.

Howard is right hand man in the extensive business of Bright and Company in Reading, wholesale dealers in hardware, sporting goods and mill supplies. With him is his brother, Stanley Bright, Princeton, '01. The firm has been in uninterrupted business for practically one hundred years in Reading and throughout the coal regions of Pennsylvania, and is rated A i with a capital of over three quarters of a million.

Brightie writes that "the Dutch are hard to beat", but the fact that he owns an automobile and always give liberally for Class pur- poses would seem to indicate that, when he strikes his annual bal- ance, the Dutch haven't had any the best of it.

Bright is "an absolutely confirmed bachelor unless something unusually attractive turns up."

He is a member of the Princeton Club of Philadelphia.

^George Madoc Brinkerhoff, Jr.

p Springfield, 111.

r Fifth and Keys Ave., Springfield, 111.

h 313 South 5th St., Springfield, 111.

"Brink" is a broker in bonds, mortgages, insurance and coal. He is the real thing in Springfield, with the brassey and niblick and runs over to Peoria ever now and then to take a fall out of Bob Jack and to "reune" with Walter Clark. "Brink" writes that his latch-string hangs out for any and all of the boys passing that way.

Avery Kirk Brodie, M.D.

p rh 849 Jefferson Ave.; Brooklyn, N. Y.

Brodie received his M.D. from University of Buffalo in 1899 and is a general practitioner in Brooklyn. c--^

19

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January 22nd, 1902, he married Ella Pauline Zacher of Buffalo, New York.

Helen Charlotte was born March 4th, 1903. William Hanna, born July 12th, 1907.

Gabriel Scott Brown

p r Meixell St., Easton, Pa. b Care Alpha Portland Cement Co., Easton, Pa.

Brown is Secretary-Treasurer of the Alpha Portland Cement Company with works in Alpha, New Jersey, and Martins Creek, Pennsylvania, and general office in Easton, Pa.

He writes : "I have prospered in business beyond my deservings I believe. At the same time I hope that the future has something still better in store for me. Living in Easton, the home of Lafay- ette College I feel as if I were far away from the spirit and influence of Princeton, and rejoice exceedingly when one of my classmates comes to town and stops at least long enough to pass the time of day with me."

On October 14, 1896, Brown married Grace Little.

Elizabeth was born September 9th, 1897.

Frances, born April 24th, 1902.

Mary Little, born April i8th, 1905.

Lorimer Hager, born April 9th, 1907.

yWebster E. Browning

p r b Casilla 2037, Santiago de Chile, South America.

Browning was an Instructor in Princeton for one year after graduation and then became the Principal of The Presbyterian Mis- sion^, School for boys, (El Instituto Ingles) in Santiago de Chile, which position he still holds.

In addition to his Princeton A.B., Browning received the degree of A.B. from Park College, Mo., in 1891. His other degrees are: B.D., San Francisco Seminary, 1893, ^"d Ph.D., Emporia, Kansas,

1895-

In December of 1908 Browning represented Princeton University

in the Pan-American Scientific Congress which met in Santiago.

June 6th, 1895, he married Hallie May Riley.

Alice Davidson was born July 15th, 1896, and

Elsie Elisabeth, June 15th, 1900.

James Maclin Brodnax

Died July 22nd, 1904. From The Princeton Alumni Weekly, Oct. 15, 1904.

"In the death of James Maclin Brodnax, which occurred on the 22nd day of July, 1904, the Class of 1894 lost a well beloved member and Princeton a worthy son. His life in college stood for all that was honorable and uplifting. His enthusiastic work as president of his Class in Junior year, in doing so much toward establish- ing the Honor System in conducting examinations is but one illus- tration of the trend of his life. Deeply reHgious in his nature, active in all undergraduate religious work, outspoken and fearless in his dealings with others, generous, genial, sympathetic, and pos- sessed of a broad tolerance which always kept him in close touch with all his classmates, he exerted from the beginning to the end of his college course a powerful influence for good. His plans for his life-work in the ministry were sadly marred by continual ill health, resulting in an early ending to a most promising career. Each member of the Class of 1894 feels deeply a sense of personal loss occasioned by his death. Be it resolved that we give expression to our regard for his memory by publishing these few words of respect in The Alumni Weekly, and by sending a copy of them to his be- reaved widow. James S. Campbell, William P. Armstrong, Thomas F. Bailey, F. Morse Archer, For the Class of 1894."

At the time of his death "Brody" was living in Southern Pines, N. C, having gone down there about eighteen months before on account of a nervous break down, aggravated by overwork in his parish in Kentucky. He was planning to take up his work once more when suddenly stricken with appendicitis. He was not strong enough to stand the shock, and passed away just one week after the operation. His widow and children reside at 52 Maple Street, Summit, N. J.

Brodnax married Elizabeth L. Yeomans of Princeton on June 9th, 1898.

James Maclin, Jr., was born May i8th, 1899. Died March 28th, 1902.

Corilla Green was born May 22nd, 1900.

Margaret Field was born April 9th, 1904.

MiiiwiMM»AmaBumL.^!ai^M 21

V

Murray Peabody Brush

pr 20 East Preston St., Baltimore, Md. f 0 ^1 H * b Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.

Brush received the degree of Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins Univer- sity in 1898 and is now Associate Professor of French in the same institution. From 1898 to 1899 he was Professor of Romance Languages in Ohio State University.

June 14th, 1899, he married Charlotte Kinney, sister of our late classmate, S. W. Kinney.

Eleanor Peabody was born January 3rd, 1901, and

Murray Peabody, Jr., August 27th, 1903.

Frederick Lemuel Buckelew

/

p rh Jamesburg, N. J.

The King of Jamesburg. Behold our "Squire" and note his handi- work. Nothing seems to have escaped this mighty Jersey octopus, not even the kitchen stove. Meredith says: "Buck out-Roosevelts Roosevelt."

President First National Bank of Jamesburg.

President New Jersey Realty and Construction Company.

Vice-President Perrine and Buckelew Company.

Treasurer Drake Lumber Company.

Secretary Fairfield Aluminum Foundry Corporation.

Director Jamesburg Mutual Building and Loan Association.

Director Middlesex Title Guarantee and Trust Company.

President Town Council of Jamesburg.

And not a thing does he say about the cranberry bogs. After unloading all of the above titles and making Marshall Bullitt look like thirty cents. Buck says with becoming modesty, "I do not know of any other information that will be of interest. Might add that I still keep in close touch with those Baltimore twins, but cannot say that their influence is any better for me now than it was fifteen years ago. With a fee in sight, that man George Williams, the lawyer, always has a cordial greeting. Call on him some day. He does his best to tell you what he knows, which has this virtue in it, that it never takes up much of my time. A lawyer ought to get credit for brevity anyway."

The Squire is full of patriotism. Last February he went down to Old Point Comfort to welcome the fleet on its return from its

22

world encircling tour. Subsequently he spent ten days in Washing- ton inaugurating Bill Taft and appearing before the Ways and Means Committee of the House of Representatives in an effort to revise the tariff schedules where they conflicted with Jamesburg industries. At odd hours he spent his tireless energies in offering suggestions to the editor of this book. The Squire is a cute little mischief. Any one of his ideas would either have landed the editor in jail or produced for him a frigid welcome at reunion and a probable thrashing.

Buck has a most hospitable home in Jamesburg, as those of the Class can testify who went over last year under the guidance of Willie Meredith. Plans have been arranged this year to entertain the entire Class at a clam-bake, the trip to be made by special train.

Mary Hunter Elliott, of Washington, D. C, rechristened "The Squireen", became Mrs. Buckelew April 28th, 1906. Buck's ushers were Frank and Harry, George Williams, Meredith, Constable and Gaddy Drake. During the wedding reception Meredith nearly caused a panic among the guests by appearing disguised as a police- man in a uniform he had hired from a cop that he found in the basement and demanding that Buck be turned over to him, that he was wanted at headquarters, etc.

Buckelew is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

William Marshall Bullitt ^

p b Lincoln Bank Building, Louisville, Ky. r 1019 4th Ave., Louisville, Ky.

Bullitt received his LL.B. from the University of Louisville in 190 1 and is now a member of the firm of Bullitt and Bullitt. Marshall was chief counsel for the contestants in the contest in the Kentucky courts to review the election in 1893. The Kentucky Court of Appeals handed down a decision in 1907 reversing the judgment of the lower courts and declaring the election void. The case was one of the most bitterly fought election cases on record, being one of the few instances where a municipal election has been set aside by the courts. This victory pushed Marshall so far out into the lime-light that he was mentioned as the candidate of the RepubHcan and Independent Democratic Fusionists for Mayor of Louisville, and several Kentucky papers urged his nomination for Governor.

23

In 1907 Marshall led a successful campaign for good government in Louisville. The day the new administration went into office the street car employees struck. In the emergency Bullitt was appointed Chairman of the Board of Public Safety with entire control of the police force. He fulfilled the trust so well that during the strike absolute order was kept, full protection was given to the street car company and the cars were run as usual. The strike was accom- panied by a riot which broke out at six o'clock in the evening. Before morning Marshall had twenty-six of the rioters in jail, all of whom were held for the grand jury next day under bond of $5,000 each. This crushed the strike and the city resumed its normal condition. The voters of the 12th Ward of Louisville sub- sequently presented Bullitt with a silver loving cup two feet high "in grateful recognition of his distinguished services to the people in the battle for free and honest elections."

Maybe Marshall isn't a credit to old '94.

Stop, Look and Listen.

Director Louisville, Henderson and St. Louis Railway Co.

Director Union National Bank.

Director Kentucky Title Savings Bank and Trust Co.

Director Kentucky Title Co.

Chairman Board of Public Safety (resigned April i, 1909).

Delegate-at-large from Kentucky to Republican National Con- vention, Chicago, 1908. Member Committee on Resolutions.

Member Metropolitan and Princeton Clubs of New York and of the Pendennis Club, Country Club and Louisville Golf Club, all of Louisville.

Bourbon, that's all.

^James Brown Burnett, Jr.

p r 649 Ridge St., Newark, N. J.

h Engineering Dept., City Hall, Newark, N. J. Burnett is Engineer of Construction in the Department of Sewers and Drains of the city of Newark, New Jersey.

"Jim" married Elizabeth W. Holden December 9th, 1903. Helen Stewart was born January 2nd, 1908.

24

John Ludlow Bushnell

ph 56 Bushnell Building, Springfield, Ohio. r 1203 East High St., Springfield, Ohio.

"Bush" has had a large ofiice building named after himself and still is "just able to push along and make a living." Incidentally he is President of the Springfield, Troy and Piqua Railway Company / and Vice-President of the First National Bank of Springfield, Ohio.

Bushnell married Jessie M. Harwood, October 14th, 1896.

Asa S. was born February 2nd, 1900.

Edward H., born November 19th, 1903.

John L., Jr., born November 19th, 1903 ; died January 27th, 1905.

Suzanne, born February 27th, 1907.

Henry W. Buxton, Jr.

p r Morristown, N. J. >X . >/ > UJ ^- H^ 4^^ .

h State House, Trenton, N. J.

"Harry" is the Secretary of the Board of Equalization of Taxes of New Jersey, with offices in the State House at Trenton.

Until 1902 Buxton was in the employ of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, at which time he went into the real estate and contracting business for himself.

In 1906 he received the nomination for Assemblyman on the Republican ticket and was elected. He was reelected in 1907, and in April, 1908, received his present appointment, the term of which is fi.ve years. Buxton is the Vice-President of the Princeton Alumni Association of the Oranges, Inc., and is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

The Class headquarters and all of the accompanying arrangements for the comfort of the Class and the proper enjoyment of this re- union are due to Harry's generous donation of valuable time and brain matter.

George White Caldwell

p h Care W. P. Plummer, 25 Broad St., New Yprk. t < *- . r Necaxa, Puebla, Mexico. ^^^^ ^*=^ ^^.^. ^^^i #-«^%^ C^

Caldwell is Assistant Chief Engineer and Superintendent of Con- struction for the Mexican Light and Power Company, Ltd., at Necaxa, Mexico. Psma^

25

/

He writes: "After leaving the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, where I was employed at the time of the Class Decennial, I returned to San Antonio, Texas, where I was engaged for a year and a half as engineer in charge of good roads work. From there I went, in March, 1905, to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, as Assistant Chief Engineer and Superintendent of Construction to C. H. Kearny, another '94 man, who was in charge of a $6,000,000.00 Hydro-Electric Plant, located about fifty miles from the City of Rio.

"We stayed there until the completion of the work last July, when we returned to the United States. After a short visit among our friends and a flying visit to dear old Princeton, which unfortunately was just before college opened in September, we were asked to come here to take charge of the second installation for this company, with relatively the same positions, Kearny as Chief Engineer and I as Assistant Chief Engineer and Superintendent of Construction. We have a pretty large job ahead of us, which includes the building of four large dams, five or six miles of tunnels and the employment of five thousand men with the expenditure of six or eight millions of dollars.

"We hear very little from members of the Class, as we have been such rolling stones ourselves. Please keep me posted as to Class plans, as I want to help in any way possible to make the old Class's name stand out in history."

November 17th, 1897, Caldwell married Lucy B. Webster.

William W. was born March 20th, 1900, and

Chester C, December ist, 1902.

Alden Matthews Califf

p r East Smithfield, Pa, h Ulster, Pa., Rural Free Delivery 20.

Califf is farming and unmarried. Owing to a change in post- masters and consequent improper delivery of mail, the Record had given him up. As a last resort a registered letter was sent forward and his letter in reply brings the news that he is well and happy.

(ames S. Campbell

pb 8og Berger Building, Pittsburgh, Pa. 1 "^ ^ J C>W<^-<-v ^4^

r Sewickley,Pa.

26

V

"Jim" is practicing law most successfully in Pittsburgh. He

received his degree of LL.B. from Harvard in 1897 and for a year

before returning to Pittsburgh was with the firm of Myers and Warner in Boston.

Rev. Theodore Melville Carlisle

p rh Geneseo, N. Y.

Carlisle is a clergyman in Geneseo, New York, He says : "What is the matter with your mail? This is only my third response. I was not the clam you thought me." The Record never received the others, "Tommy", but, on the meagre information furnished, you stand convicted of being a clam, all right.

January 22nd, 1902, Carlisle married Harriet Wheeler.

Florence EHsabeth, born April 17th, 1907, is now deceased.

(enjamin Franklin Carter

p r 30 Appleton Place, Glen Ridge, N. J. h Stevens School, Hoboken, N. J.

Carter is teaching French and Latin in Stevens School, Hoboken, N. J. He received his A.M. from Princeton in 1895 and was In- structor in French in Princeton University from 1896 to 1899.

On June 15th, 1899, Anita King became Mrs. Carter.

Margaret Anita was born October 5th, 1900, and

Frances King, March 23rd, 1906.

% Charles Merritt Cartwright

p Waynesville, Ohio. r 2215 Lincoln St., Evanston, 111. h 145 La Salle St., Chicago, 111.

Cartwright is Managing Editor of The Western Underwriter of ^ Chicago and Cincinnati. ^^'^

He married Kathryn B. Abbott August 30th, 1902. Stanley Levering was born September 23rd, 1903, and Helen Louise, January 23rd, 1908.

* Albert Roe Chamberlain

p r 805 First Nat. Bank Building, Chicago, 111. *

r 369 East Chicago Ave., Chicago, 111. (^

27

•/

"Al" holds a responsible position in the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States. His particular line of work is the supervision of agencies, with headquarters in Chicago.

He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

It took thirteen long years to flush our plump little "Quail" matri- monially.

He married Lillian O'Meara of Brooklyn April 4th, 1907.

Rev. Cummings Waldo Cherry

p Second Presbyterian Church, Troy, N. Y.

r I Walnut Grove Place, Troy, N. Y.

Cherry is Pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church of Troy, New York. After graduating in 1897 from Western Theological Seminary, Pittsburgh, he had charges at Natrona, Pa., for three years, and at Parnassus, Pa., for two years.

Sarah Ann Fleming became Mrs. Cherry June 30th, 1898.

John Douglas, HI, was born October 22nd, 1899.

Katherine Fleming was born July 27th, 1901.

Walter Fleming was born November 5th, 1902.

Ralph Waldo was born January 29th, 1905.

. James A. Church

V

pb 62, Wall St., New York. r Plaza Hotel, New York.

Church is a Director of the Church and D wight Company, soda and saleratus, and Vice-President of the Sibley Quarry Company, a corporation operating in Michigan.

Snyder Hoxie Clark

p r 4930 BerHn Ave., St. Louis, Mo. h 329 Missouri Building, St. Louis, Mo.

Clark is an attorney at law, practicing in his old home, St. Louis. In 1896 he received the degree of LL.B. from the St. Louis Law School. Hoxie sends his good wishes to the Class and says : "I hope that all the good fellows in '94 are enjoying all the blessings of life."

November 7th, 1900, Clark married Louise C. Squires.

28

Salter Mack Clark

p r 220 North St., Peoria, IlL b Care Clark Coal and Coke Co., Peoria, 111.

Clark is Advertising Manager of the Clark Coal and Coke Com- pany of Peoria, 111. Either he is too busy or else the good citizens of Peoria are over modest, for, like Bob Jack, his further "goings-in and comings-out" are left to conjecture.

>ainuel Harry Clinedinst

p rh Menasha, Wis.

Clinedinst is President and Manager of the Menasha Printing Company of Menasha, Wisconsin, paper jobbing and printing.

He writes : "I shall never cease regretting that I did not have an opportunity to enter Princeton as a freshman instead of two years later. As my business calls me to different cities I try to look up some of the boys whom I have not been able to join at the reunions. From now on I shall make more strenuous efforts to become a regular at the annual gatherings. Count on me this year without fail or assess me accordingly. Hope we can make the fifteenth the best of all so far. As to matrimony, I am beginning to realize that I am growing more particular every day that I grow less desirable."

Andrew Patterson Linn Cochran, Jr.

p r 16 Wallace Place, Covington, Ky. b Bodmann Building, 621 Main St., Cincinnati, O.

Cochran won't tell us why he pays taxes and votes in Kentucky and practices law across the river in Ohio. It may be that Marshall Bullitt and Pat Lindsey have cornered all of the Kentucky litigation.

In reply to the Record's request for matrimonial data he says : ^'I have given up all idea of any such thing." Never mind, Linn. You've got plenty of company. Examine the statistics in the back of the Record.

Rev. James C. Coleman

p r 364 76th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.

b Office Register Kings Co., Hall of Records, Brooklyn, N. Y. Coleman is Assistant Index Clerk in the office of the Register of

29

Kings County, Hall of Records, Borough of Brooklyn, New York City.

From 1894 to 1897 he studied in the Princeton Theological Semi- nary, taking a post-graduate course in 1898. Thereafter he was Pastor of the church at Deer Lodge, Montana, and later Professor of Latin in the College of Montana. Upon severing his connection with this college, he was Pastor of the Presbyterian Church at Mapleton, N. D. In the winter of 1902-03 he was instrumental in organizing the Presbyterian Church at Slate Hill, N. Y., and in 1904 took up his present work.

He says : "Am still in the Kings County service. Have been promoted once and had several increases of responsibilities without any corresponding remuneration. Have been working to make my- self an efificient public servant, but at times it doesn't seem worth while. Politics seem to be better. However, I'm hopeful."

Roberta B. Bailey, of Brooklyn, became Mrs. Coleman October 17th, 1900, and their son,

James C, IV, was born July 19th, 1901.

[orace French Collins

Thus far no news from "Wilkie", '94. He is a mining engineer and for a number of years has been employed in various parts of Mexico..

His brother, Professor V. L. Collins, '92, writes: "If you can get in touch with my brother you are better than I am. A year ago last December I received a telegram from him in Mexico congratulating^ me on my birthday, but telegrams and letters sent to his last address; have elicited no response, and the last batch was returned to me by someone who didn't even send me his own name or address. I haven't seen Horace for fully ten years. He left Washington for Mexico and was engineering when I last heard from him, about two years ago, barring the telegram. If I find his trail I will let you know."

Henry Hobart Condit

/p r 99 Forest Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. y b 253 Broadway, N. Y.

"Sal" is the Manager of the New York office of the Whitehead and Hoag Company, manufacturers of badges and advertising nov-^ elties-

30

He is the Chairman of the Committee on Class Badges for this reunion, and in fact all of '94's reunion badges since graduation have been planned by Sal and made by his company.

In March last Sal was elected President of the Princeton Alumni Association of Montclair, N. J.

April 2ist, 1897, Condit married Julia Abby Osborne.

Barbara Josephine was born August 14th, 1900, and

Prudence Elizabeth, October 26th, 1903.

David Paul Burleigh Conkling

p 16 Gramercy Park, New York.

r Boothbay, Me.

Conkling is a sculptor. Up to the time of the Decennial "Conk" had spent most of his time abroad, receiving three years of his training in the studio of the celebrated sculptor, Frederick Mac- Monnies, in Paris.

He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York and is living at present in Boothbay, Me.

December 26th, 1901, Conkling married Mabel Harris.

Pauline Burleigh was born October 13th, 1908.

^Albert Constable

prh Elkton, Md.

Four letters were sent to "Crafty" at various times, but both quantity and quality were of no avail. Meredith mailed him a postage stamp and Al merely declared a two-cent dividend.

Frank Riggs says : "Al married Emily Evans of Elkton, a sister of Jimmy Evans, '94, June 6th, 1906. I know he did this because I was there and saw it. He has two kids, Albert, Jr., and Jane. He is State's Attorney for Cecil County and is also a very hard man to get to answer a letter."

Later. Crafty weakened after the Record copy had gone to the printer. The only additional information he gives is that Albert, Jr., was born May 2nd, and Jane Frazer, May i6th, 1908. He also sends the matrimonial data relating to Jimmy Evans.

Arthur Coppell

pb 52 WilHam St . New York. r 22 West 48th St., New York.

31

Coppell is a banker in New York City and a member of the firm of Maitland, Coppell and Company. He is a director of the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad and of the Rio Grande Southern Railroad. He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

Coppell married Mary Stewart Bowers December I2th, 1899, and their children are:

Susan Bowers, born December 31st, 1901, and

Helen Bowers, born December 28th, 1904.

Thomas Creigh

p b Care Cudahy Packing Company, South Omaha, Neb.

Creigh received the degree of LL.B. from the University of Nebraska in 1897 and is now the general attorney for the Cudahy interests in the West.

During the strenuous beef trust days of the first Roosevelt admin- istration "Tommy" burned all of the midnight oil to be found in Omaha. Having survived his one experience with "Teddy's Big Stick" it has been the straight and narrow for Tom ever since.

April 29th, 1905, Creigh married Gertrude O'Neil of St. Louis. She died May 20th, 1906.

Tommy was in Washington in April appearing before the Treas- ury Department. His engagement to Frances Connor, of Burling- ton, Iowa, has been announced and they are to be married the latter part of June.

Samuel Hair Curran

p b Care American Maize Products Co., Roby, Ind.

r 7212 JefiFery Ave., Chicago, 111. "Sam" is the Assistant Superintendent of the American Maize Products Company of Roby, Indiana.

June 22nd, 1898, he married Mary Alice Orr. Marjorie Orr was born April ist, 1900, and Kenneth James, November 29th, 1903.

Jlric Dahlgren

p rb Princeton, N. J.

The father of our Class Boy is the Professor of Biology in Princeton University. From 1899 to 1905 he was Assistant Pro-

32

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fessor of Histology and then respectively Assistant Professor and Professor of Biology. In 1906 he was also made Associate Curator of the Zoological Museum. Ulric received his M.S. degree from Princeton in 1896. He is a member of the Society of the Cincinnati and other patriotic organizations.

Last year, with William A. Kepner, Adjunct Professor of Biology of the University of Virginia, Dahlgren produced "A Text-book of the Principles of Animal Histology", which has received universal praise from the critics and placed by many as first among histologies.

Frank, Harry, Squire and other chicken experts will please note that "Doggy" was a prize winner in the poultry department at the 1904 Trenton Inter-State Fair.

September 3rd, 1896, Dahlgren married Emilie Kuprion. Our Class Boy,

Ulric, Jr., was born September 8th, 1898, and

Joseph D., August nth, 1901.

.^.Francis Walter Daire

p r 477 Main St., The Fairbanks, Orange, N. J. h Newark Evening News, Newark, N. J.

Daire is in the newspaper business and is connected with the Evening News of Newark, N. J. He writes: "At the time of our Decennial I was in New Brunswick, N. J., editing a democratic newspaper, which was a good deal like trying to sell Yale buttons ^^ on Nassau Street. Lived there until May of last year, when I sold ^ out my newspaper interests and went with the Newark Evening News."

Daire married Grace Crowell Niblo, of East Orange, N. J., June 7th, 1905.

Albert T. Davis

pr 12 South Maple Ave., East Orange, N. J. h Newark Academy, Newark, N. J.

Davis has been teaching English in his old school, the Newark Academy, since 1898.

For four years after graduation he conducted a private school for boys at Madison, N. J.

"7^

zz

June 15th, 1896, he married Ida R. Johnson. Their two children are:

Lawrence Johnson, born January 12th, 1900, and Emerson Johnson, born October 6th, 1902.

Rev. Larimore Conover Denise

p b New Kensington, Pa. r 163 Freeport Road, New Kensington, Pa.

Denise is Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of New Ken- sington, Pa., where he has been since 1902. Previous to his present pastorate he was Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Clay Center, Kansas, for five years. Denise prepared for the ministry at Omaha Theological Seminary.

Bernice Evans became Mrs. Denise October 28th, 1902. They have two daughters,

Dorothy Bernice, born November 13th, 1903, and

Marguerite Meredith, born November ist, 1907.

Seth Delmer Dice, M. D.

r b 136 North Orange Ave., Hollywood, Cal.

Dice is a practicing physician, having received the degree of M.D. from the University of New York in 1897. From 1897 to 1899 he was connected with Bellevue Hospital, New York.

On May 25th, 1904, he married Mary Little of Xenia, Ohio.

^ev. George Vernon Dickey

p Newport, R. L

r 15 Summer St., Newport, R. L

Dickey is a clergyman and is the Rector of St. George's Church, Newport, R. L He received the degree of B.D. from the Louisville Theological Seminary in 1898 and the degree of A.M. from Parsons College, Fairfield, la., in 1906. He writes that this will be his first anniversary in fifteen years and that he doesn't want to miss a trick.

Rev. Samuel Dickey

p Oxford, Pa.

r 10 Chalmers Place, Chicago, 111. b 1060 N. Halsted St., Chicago, 111.

34

Dickey is Professor of New Testament Literature and Exegesis in McCormick Theological Seminary, Chicago. He received his A.M. from Princeton in 1896 and from 1897 to 1899 studied at the Universities of Berlin, Marburg and Erlangen.

In October, 1899, he was ordained to the Presbyterian ministry. From 1899 to 1903 Dickey was Professor of Classical and Hellen- istic Greek at Lincoln University, and since that time has been at McCormick Theological Seminary.

On February 26th, 1908, he married Louise Park Atherton of Wilkesbarre, Pa., daughter of Thos. H. Atherton, Princeton '74.

John Moore Dickinson

p r 479 West State St., Trenton, N. J. h Mechanics Bank Building, Trenton, N. J.

John received his LL.B. from the New York Law School in 1897 and is a member of the firm of Vroom, Dickinson and Scammell.

After writing "nothing doing" under the matrimonial headline fl John lapses into silence profound. Life is not all work for "Dicker", however. Ever and anon he joins that other disciple of Blackstone, Benny Benson, and the two either rejoice in each other's compan- ionship in dear old quiet Philadelphia or run over to the big city on business trips. Eh? What?

Dickinson is a member of the Princeton Clubs of New York and Philadelphia.

JWilson Kilgore Doty

p r Hotel Lincoln, Columbus, Ohio. h Northern Fuel Co., 801 Wyandotte Building, Columbus, O.

"Bill" is Treasurer of the Northern Fuel Company, producers of Hocking coal. He says : '^'Let me not cause you anxiety or be the possible cause of the non-issuance of the Record by withholding my response to your last call. For I am all for the Class Record. I 1 firmly believe that one should be published every fifteen years at least, for how else are we to know what has become of our room- mates ? The mails are very slow ; they have been twelve years bringing me letters from Johnny VanVliet and Al Woodruff, and that is shockingly poor service. This state of affairs does not, of course, apply to you favored ones who live near enough to the seat of learning to get back occasionally, but only to those of us who

35

live at a distance and have neither the wings of a dove nor the latest model Wilbur and Orville Wright.

"Please change my address on the records from Chicago to Colum- bus, Ohio, for I had to leave the former to avoid being annoyed by constant association with classmates. Almost every third or fourth year up there I would run into Corning Kenly, George Forsyth, John VanNortwick, Cartright or Jimmie Fentress. So, hating a crowd of never-present classmates, I came down here, where I am the only living 94 man. My only danger is the possibility of Murray Brush's return from Baltimore to this his home town. If he comes back and gets to crowding me too much I will move again."

Bill seems a little cross.

In a subsequent letter Bill says: "If things take on another aspect and I can come, I will, you bet, and will take my chances on accom- modations, eating and sleeping standing up, if needs be."

June loth, 1896, Doty married Carrie Louise Marsh.

Rev. George Dowkontt

p r 1663 69th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. h 255 West i6th St., New York.

"Dowk" is Pastor of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church of New York City.

In 1896 he received the degree of M.D. from New York Medical College. At one time he was manager of Dr. Parkhurst's Settlement House and later Assistant Pastor of the Second Avenue Baptist Church of New York. Prior to his present charge Dowkontt was Pastor of the Baptist Mariners' Temple, founded in 1794. He says: *T am still kicking and tackling as of yore, but not the football and the scrub. The World, the Flesh and the Devil are my opponents now, and being a preacher I am working to beat Hell."

January 28th, 1903, he married Elenora E. Putnam. Their chil- dren are :

Elenora Putnam, born January 31st, 1905, and

George Harry, Jr., born September i8th, 1906.

Rev. Richard Downes

p Mt. Joy, Pa.

Downes was the objective of five communications from the Rec-

36

ord, the last a registered letter. The return receipt was signed by H. S. Newcomer, which would seem to indicate that our classmate is known in that vicinity.

In the Decennial Record his occupation was given as a Presby- terian minister.

He married Annie Margaret Walker October 4th, 1900.

Later : The gentleman above referred to, Mr. Newcomer, writes that Downes left Mt. Joy in 1904 and is now located in Manchester, England. The information came too late to get a letter from Downes.

aston Drake

p b Miami, Fla. r 1014 Boulevard, Miami, Fla.

"Duck" is the real thing in the Drake Lumber Company in Miami and has for his Treasurer, Frederick L. Buckelew. Why, no- body knows. The Baltimore twins are also in on this good thing and appear regularly at company meetings when the dividend sea- sons draw nigh.

Besides cutting yellow pine timber and turning it into lumber. Duck is a manufacturers' agent for fertilizers and crate material. He had sufficient influence to secure the establishment of a post- office at the company's mill and to have it named Princeton.

He writes : "Forgive me for not writing sooner but I have been pretty well rushed with work here and at Princeton. This is our busy season in the produce business and am glad to say that we have all that is coming to us at Princeton. How does this name strike you ? I am going to make every effort to be with you in June but it doesn't look very bright for me at present. The Florida East Coast Railway is straight behind us with their orders for material for the building of their road to Key W^est and we cannot afford to let a trick like that pass us now."

Miami is a long way from New York but Gaddy feels repaid for his membership in the Princeton Club if he gets back with the New York '94 crowd but once a year.

June 6th, 1906, Mary E. Robinson became Mrs. Drake.

Gaston, Jr., was born March 13th, 1907. Died May 21st, 1908.

Mary Polk was born February nth, 1909.

37

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f-

John Patterson Duff

b 5 Beekman St., New York.

r 565 First St., Brooklyn, N. Y.

Duff refused to answer letters and the above addresses were se- cured from the New York City Directory, the business address being the same as that given in the Decennial Record.

He is a lawyer and at one time was associated with Martin J. Keogh, one of the Justices of the Supreme Court of the State of New York.

Frank Munson DuSenberry

p Care Western Electric Co., 463 West St., New York.

r 2283 Kenmore Ave., Chicago, 111.

b 259 South Clinton St., Chicago, 111.

Dusenberry is Assistant Sales Manager, General Supply Depart- ment, of the Western Electric Company.

He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

October 6th, 1906, he married Mary Stymets Rollinson of West Orange, New Jersey.

William Rollinson was born May ist, 1908.

^George D. Edwards

p b Commonwealth Trust Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. r 826 Bidwell St., Pittsburgh, Pa.

George is the typical successful banker with a girth larger than his chest measure. He is the Secretary and Treasurer of the Com- monwealth Trust Company, a Pittsburg corporation with a capital and surplus of two and a half millions.

Under matrimonial data he writes : "Am still an unclaimed bles- sing", and then he asks for a receipt to get thin.

JNValter Gray Elmer, M.D.

p r b 1801 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa.

Elmer is a physician in Philadelphia, having received his M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1897.

Walter served for some time as resident physician at the Penn- sylvania Hospital, and is at present on the visiting staff of the same institution.

38

The Record cannot understand why such a nice looking medico as Walt, has been permitted by the girls to run around loose for so long.

Elmer is a member of the Princeton Club of Philadelphia.

? Rev. Paul Erdman

p Care Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions, 156 Fifth Ave., New York.

r b American Mission, Zahleh, Syria.

Erdman is a missionary of the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions. The three years immediately succeeding graduation he spent in Syria, teaching in the Syrian Protestant College at Beirut. After a year at Union Theological Seminary and two years at the Princeton Seminary he received his degree of B.D. in 1900. He received his A.M. from Princeton University the same year.

Returning to Syria as a missionary he married Amanda C. Jes- sup and the next three years were spent largely in studying the dif- ficult Arabic language. Mrs. Erdman died in 190 1.

Dr. Erdman writes : "In these eight years and more of service in Syria I have lived and worked in each of the three main centres of the Syrian Mission outside of Beirut. The first five years were lived in Sidon on the Mediterranean coast, the following two years or somewhat less in Tripoli, also on the coast, and now for over a year in Zahleh which is a large town at an altitude of 3400 feet on the eastern slope of the Lebanon range. Above us rises a snow crowned peak to an altitude of 8600 feet. My work takes me about a good deal in trips through this region of mountain and plain, usu- ally on horseback. We have under our supervision some thirty-six outstations in towns and villages where we have day schools and preaching centres.

We here in Turkey have seen this year the remarkable bloodless revolution which has set up a constitutional government in place of the old regime of tyranny and oppression and hopelessness. I do not say established, for the difficulties in the way of a true constitu- tional freedom in this empire are exceedingly great, and yet the future is full of hope. In this great change it is not a biased statement to say that the eighty years of missionary labor have had no small influence.

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In the fall of this year we hope to return to the States for our year of furlough and my only regret is that we cannot go this spring so as to attend the 15th Reunion of dear old '94. A long life of usefulness to every member of the Class."

Later. The above letter was written prior to the recent upheaval in Constantinople and the massacres in Asiatic Turkey. Inquiry at the Consular Bureau of the State Department developed the fact that Erdman's mission is in that part of Syria which is thoroughly Christianized and that he has been in no danger. Several Princeton men at other missions lost their lives.

Erdman married Amanda C. Jessup June 20th, 1900. She died December 2nd, 1901.

Frederick Seward was born October 27th, 1901.

Gertrude B. Moore became Mrs. Erdman October 3rd, 1905.

Rev. Edwin Piatt Essick

p r Ypnkers, N. Y.

Essick is Pastor of the Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church of

Yonkers, N. Y.

James Frazer Evans

p Savannah, Ga.

r Corner Harman and Anderson Sts., Savannah, Ga.

Al Constable married a sister of Evans and apparently has given "Jimmy" the idea that the Record is trying to get a Class Decen- nial subscription out of him or to sell him a set of books. Both of these '94 brothers of Elkton stand pat and refuse to satisfy the Record's eager thirst for knowledge of their doings.

The Record's society correspondent, Mr. Frank Riggs, says that Jim married Emily Scott and that they have two children, one girl and one boy. Frank adds that he lives in Elkton and is suspected of being a lawyer.

Later: Constable writes that Evans was married in Februar) 1899, and that the names of his children are Elizabeth S. and Wil- liam S., Jr. Al says that Jimmy is practicing law in Savannah, Ga. Riggs has been fired from the Record's stafif.

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Rev. Benjamin Howard Everitt

p r 724 South St., Peekskili, N. Y.

Everitt has been Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Peekskili, New York, since December, 1903.

After graduating from Princeton Theological Seminary in 1897 he took a charge at Titusville, Pa., which he retained until called to Peekskili.

"Benny" and Emma Warrick Heritage were married July 21st, 1897.

Boyd Ross Ewing

p 1 3 16 Wood St., Wilkinsburg, Pa.

b Frick Building, Pittsburgh, Pa.

Ewing was admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar in 1896. In 1900 he entered the offices of Patterson, Sterrett and Acheson, where he had much experience in railroad cases, the firm being Pittsburgh counsel for the Pennsylvania Railroad Co. In 1901 Ewing became a member of the firm.

April 28th, 1897, Nan C. Guth became Mrs. Ewing. They have three children.

Boyd Ross, Jr., born April 29th, 1898.

Ruth, born December ist, 1900.

Edward Guth, born September 8th, 1902.

George Leiper Farnum

p Rittenhouse Club, Philadelphia, Pa.

r Media, Pa.

George is living the life of a gentleman of leisure in Media, one of the fashionable suburbs of Philadelphia.

His principal recreation has been travelling and shooting big game, his experiences in these pursuits and in explorations having taken him through South Africa, Corea, Mongolia and Manchuria.

Farnum is a Fellow of the Royal Geographic Society of Great Britain. In the Spanish-American war he served with the City Troop of Philadelphia in Porto Rico.

He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

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Fames Fentress

p b Chicago Tubing and Braiding Co., 20 South Jefferson St., Chicago, 111. r Winnetka, 111.

Fentress is President of the Chicago Tubing and Braiding Co., manufacturers of flexible stove tubing, elevator, speaking and medi- cal tubing, etc.

"Jim" says : "I have found hard labor to be the most practical so- lution of all life's problems and the surest road to happiness. It's me for the chain gang, first, last and all the time. To all of the boys my best."

James writes later: "I am building a house. I have no money, no energy, no credit, no faith in mankind left. My stomach won't allow me to dissipate. Blessed are the thirsty for they shall in- herit the reunions. Send me the book of deeds and devilment. Yours weeping ".

James married Grace Louise Addeman January 7th, 1897. Their three children are :

Olivia Primrose, born December 4th, 1899,

James, born April 29th, 1905, and

Louise Addeman, born May 30th, 1908.

Rev. Walter Rockwood Ferris

p Park Central Presbyterian Church, Syracuse, N. Y.

r 202 Walnut Place, Syracuse, N. Y.

Ferris is pastor of Park Central Presbyterian Church of Syracuse, New York, having received his degree of B.D. from Union Theolog- ical Seminary in 1897. From 1897 to December, 1902, he was Pastor of Bay Ridge Presbyterian Church of Brooklyn.

Dr. Ferris was called to his present pastorate from the First Presbyterian Church of Middletown, New York, in May, 1908.

So far as the official records show "Walt" is the only class parson with the automobile bug. He is on the list of three county sheriffs up in New York State for "misinterpretation" of the speed laws, which is "traveling some", and plans a touring trip to the reunion with the '94 men in his neighborhood.

Ferris married Eugenie Viola Hill, of New York, November 24th, 1896. They have had six children, three of whom are deceased.

Violette was born April 15th, 1898.

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Madeline, born July i6th, 1900; deceased. Walter Rockwood, Jr., born March i6th, 1902. Frank Arthur, 3rd, born February 25th, 1905. William Stevenson, born December 13th, 1906, deceased. , infant daughter, born May 21st, 1908, deceased.

.Rev. Herbert Herschel Fisher

p Third Presbyterian Church, Los Angeles, Cal.

r 344 East Jefiferson St., Los Angeles, Cal.

Fisfier is a clergyman and about six months ago accepted a call to the Third Presbyterian Church of Los Angeles, Cal.

Previous to this charge he was the Pastor of the Prospect Heights Church of Brooklyn, N. Y.

"Herb" says : "From the Atlantic to the Pacific, say three thousand miles, all at once. That's going some, isn't it ? I claim the class record for preachers for the broad jump."

October ist, 1901, Fisher married Clara Augusta Young.

Alfred Young was born July 13th, 1902.

Herbert MacQueen, born January 5th, 1904.

Elizabeth MacQueen, born May 25th, 1906.

Howard Shreve Fisher

p r 28 Patterson Ave., Greenwich, Conn. h Care Dictaphone Company of America, 290 Broadway, New York.

Fisher is the Secretary of the Dictaphone Company of America, a corporation formed to take charge of the sales of the graphophones and dictating machines manufactured by the Columbia Phonograph Company. For over ten years after graduation he was connected with the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company of Pittsburgh.

Our "Mike" received the degree of A.M. from his alma mater at the time of the Class Decennial.

He says : "The filling up of the Record can best be left to Lawyer Humphrey and Broker Smith, HI, whose business it is to use a lot of space in saying a little. I left dear old soiled Pittsburgh and Joe Gufifey in 1905 to get experience in road work. I got the experience all right, but the true southern hospitality of that Baltimore pair of twins nearly shattered my health. They wanted to give me fizz and

43

green and yellow cordials for breakfast and that sort of thing. Our Baltimore classmates are all to the good. After touching all the high places in Maryland, West Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee, I found myself on dear old Broadway and have been here ever since."

Mike is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

June 2ist, 1906, he married Jessie Aborn Nichols of Greenwich, Conn. They have two budding candidates for The Daily Princeton- ian,

Howard Shreve, Jr., born April 12th, 1907, and

David Nichols, born January 24th, 1909.

R. Jay Flick

p Wilkesbarre, Pa.

r 48 S. River St., Wilkesbarre, Pa.

b 604 Second Nat. Bank Building, Wilkesbarre, Pa. I

FHck is President of the Peoples Light Company of Pittston, Pa., j and a director in the following corporations : Wyoming Valley Trust Co., Wilkesbarre Lace Manufacturing Co., Bethlehem Cons. Gas Co., Mahanoy City Gas Co.

February loth, 1909, he married Henrietta Ridgely Flick, widow of Liddon Flick.

William Floyd

/> 6 84 William St., New York. r 126 East 27th St., New York.

Floyd is in the real estate business in New York City, and is a I member of the firm of Camman, Voorhees & Floyd. "Billy" is also f one of our best little versifiers. The following Hiawathan meas- ure is his own life's story: y-

" Real estate ray work is, week-days ; Vestryman I am on Sundays, While the holidays are used in Motoring:, or golf, or shooting ; Doing ail with imperfection. Due in part to semi-blindness.

Fortune nearly smiled upon me When my cousin, Mrs. Winthrop, Left about two millions dollars Left it to the Seminary. When I mourned, our class committee Comforted with thoughts as follows: All WE have WE give to Princeton, You should be delighted, Billy.

Fortune really smiled upon me.

For I now am ten years married,

With no birth marks and no death marks.

With no debt marks and no pock marks,

No divorce and one wife only,

Most unfashionable truly."

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Class auto, bugs will please note that Billy is also the inventor of a starter from the seat for motor car engines. No more cranking, pro- fanity or danger from backfiring in the Class of '94. The patent was issued last December. Floyd is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

November 9th, 1898, Floyd married Elizabeth Schuchardt Wells.

George Howard Forsyth

pr 67 Bellevue Place, Chicago, 111. h 44-60 Institute Place, Chicago, 111.

George is President and General Manager of Forsyth Brothers Company, manufacturers of general railway supplies. He writes: "I presume my lot has been the common one plenty of good, hard work with the ever growing conviction that the world is a first class place to live in, that our misfortunes are usually of our own doing, and that it's a whole lot better to laugh than to cry. I regret that our main railway convention will prevent my being present at the Reunion."

Hugh Foster

p rh Union Springs, Alabama.

Mike is the Cashier of the First National Bank of Union Springs, Alabama.

December 12th, 1894, he married Nettie Granberry. The young Fosters are :

Susan Brown, born January 22nd, 1896, and

James Granberry, born August 31st, 1898.

.Grant Colfax Fox

ph 165 Broadway, New York. r 86 Woodside Ave., Ridgewood, N. J.

Fox received his LL.B. from the New York Law School in 1896 and is practicing with H. Gordon Pierce, '96, as a member of the firm of Fox, Pierce and Rowe, City Investment Building, New York.

He writes that he is leading the simple Hfe and has nothing of particular interest to* record. In his practice Fox is devoting especial attention to trial and appellate work.

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May I St, 1899, he married Flora Sheldon and there are two little Foxes :

Sheldon, born February 19th, 1900, and Littleton, born August 28th, 1901.

Rev. Cleveland Frame

p Malvern, Pa.

Frame is Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Malvern, Pa. For ten years previous to May, 1908, he was Pastor of the historic old Pequeo Presbyterian Church in Lancaster County, Pa., built in 1794.

The father of Dr. Samuel Stanhope Smith, a former President of Princeton, was Pastor of this church for forty two years, 1750-1792, and President Smith spent his boyhood there.

During Dr. Frame's pastorate, a new building was erected to sup-, plement the old.

"Grover" received the degree of A.M. from Princeton in 1896.

June 30th, 1897, he married Mary Robinson Hunter.

Herbert Jefferson Fraser

p 226 Quincy St., Brooklyn, N. Y.

r 43 South Walnut St., East Orange, N. J.

b Care Walter J. Jones, 60 Wall St., New York.

Fraser is a structural engineer with particular reference to the designing of various kinds of steel structures. The demands of his profession take him from one place to another on short notice, but at present he is living in East Orange.

He writes that he has been reasonably successful, although handi- capped for some time by ill health.

April nth, 1900, he married Adelaide Brower Hall.

Charles Edward French

p rh Amsterdam, N. Y.

French is the Treasurer and one of the Trustees of the Amsterdam Savings Bank. Thrifty people up Charley's way. His last bank statement showed almost four and a half millions of assets and over four million dollars in deposits.

Fanny Dean became Mrs. French September 21st, 1904.

Eleanor Hurd was born December 7th, 1908.

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Karl George

p b Care A. Bushnell & Co., Watertown, N. Y. r 603 Washington St., Watertown, N. Y.

George is connected with A. Bushnell and Company, the John Wanamaker of Watertown.

Further than this modest statement our "Clytie" refuses to commit himself, except that he has it "all framed up to beat it hot foot for that reunion."

Later : A second communication says : "I rather fear that Squire's picnic would not conduce to a large attendance at the class dinner on Monday evening. My own experience has been that clambakes are not safe preliminaries for banquets." Now, Karl, what do you mean ?

James Gibson, Jr.

prh Salem, N. Y.

"Gib" graduated from the Albany Law School in 1898 and is prac- ticing in his old home. He says : "The data below will show the greatest of my achievements three boys started on the way to Princeton. I have been extremely successful in my practice in the same office that three James Gibsons, my father, grandfather and great-grandfather, ocupied before me and I hope to pass it along. You see, we grow old slowly in this neck of the woods. I will try to stir up Karl George but the last time I saw or heard from him was one day in June, 1894, when we were trying to get him through a car window without removing the side of the car."

Jim is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

April 30th, 1901, Gibson married Caroline H. McCartee., They have four children :

James, born January 21st, 1902.

Julian McCartee, born June 26th 1904.

Caroline Bethune, born June 27th, 1905.

Angus, born June 6th, 1907.

Jimmy advises that the space in the information blank for matri- monial data, children, dates of birth, etc., be enlarged for our twenti- eth reunion Record. This looks like a notice to the rest of the class fathers of Jim's entry for the "Chuck" Wilson cup.

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Charles Dickie Goldthwaite

Galveston, Tex.

Sixteen cents in postage and all for naught. Better had Meredith gobbled it for the Decennial Fund.

SIC

^JN^alcolm Goodridge, M.D.

p rb 260 West 76th St., New York.

Malcolm received the degree of M.D. from Columbia College Phy- sicians and Surgeons in 1898 and has been practicing in New York J^ since that time with noteworthy success.

*" He is a member of the University and Princeton Clubs of New

York.

Goodridge married Henrietta Tyson Perry June 30th, 1898. Malcolm Norris was born April 14th, 1906, and Edwin Laurin, January 30th, 1909.

William James Grandin

A p rb Tidioute, Pa.

Grandin is a lumberman and banker in his old home, Tidioute, Pennsylvania.

August 26th, 1895, he married Harriet Culver. Elliott Culver was born September 23rd, 1896, and Frank Samuel, August nth, 1898

Foseph F. Guffey

p r 5200 Liberty Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. b 435 Sixth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.

"Joe" is the General Manager of the Philadelphia Company of Pittsburgh, a forty two million dollar consolidation of the natural and illuminating gas interests in Allegheny County, Pa., and its environs with the traction and electric light and power interests of Pitts- burgh and the surrounding districts. Besides owning and controlling over five hundred miles of street railways the company leases about 320,000 acres of gas lands in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

His '94 brothers in Pittsburgh say that Joe finds his work in the natural gas department particularly congenial. Outside of office hours Joe confines his energies chiefly to Princeton and charities. He always takes an active interest in the selection of the alumni trus- tee from his section and 'tis within the bounds of possibility that Joe may be a trustee himself one of these fine days.

4

In a charitable way Guffey is prominent in connection with the Fresh Air Home and Industrial Society, working among the very poor classes of Pittsburgh. He is an accomplished flirt, and, thus far, no one has succeeded in putting salt on his tail. Joe is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

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Walter Eugene Gunster, U. S. A.

p Office Adjutant General, War Dep't., Washington, D. C.

Gunster is a First Lieutenant in the i8th U. S. Infantry and is stationed at present at Camp Keithley, Mindanao, P. I. The last news received from him was under date of October 15th, 1908. He expected then to return to the United States about October of this year. He was Lieutenant and Adjutant of the 13th Regiment, Penn- sylvania Volunteer Infantry during the Spanish War and entered the regular service in February, 1901.

"Gunny" married Mary Helen Jamison of Baltimore, September 2 1 St, 1904.

Later: The Record heard directly from Gunster while the book was in the hands of the printer. He confirms the above.

idwin Wilson Hammett

p East Montpelier, Vt.

r 3820 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa.

Hammett writes that he is "attorney for an estate." Apparently "Ed's" office is immediately under his hat as he writes "none" in the space set apart for business address. He is largely interested in Whiskers Smith's Dry Placer Machine Company and has been of great assistance to the Record in locating classmates and supplying facts. He is a member of the Princeton Club of Philadelphia.

Since our Decennial chronicle of his doings Ed has joined the ranks of the benedicts.

December 9th, 1905, he married Gertrude Mahoney.

John Hardie was born April 3rd, 1908.

Richard Hatton, U. S. N.

p h Navy Department, Washington, D. C.

"Dick" is a sailorman in Uncle Sam's Navy, having received his appointment to the Pay Corps in 1895.

Soon after the Class Decennial he was assigned to duty at the Boston Navy Yard, which he says "is a very fair place, only a little

49

too much under the influence of dear old Harvard, dontcher know."

In September, 1906, he joined the battleship Georgia and remained aboard that ship during the cruise of the fleet around the world as far as Manila where he was detached and ordered home.

He writes that in Japan he had many inquiries for "Flank and Hally", which is extraordinary considering that twelve or thirteen years have elapsed since their visit to that country.

Dick has a very substantial waist measure of about forty-two al- though the Record had no opoprtunity to put the tape on him. He stands number one on the list of Paymasters, and expects to take his examinations for promotion to the grade of Pay Inspector at an early day.

April 4th, 1899, he married Elizabeth Stuart Cottman of Balti- more, Md.

Later : Hatton resigned from the service in March. The Record does not know his address, but a letter will reach him if addressed in care of J. Hough Cottmann, 1015 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md.

*harles Sumner Havens

p Toms River, N. J.

r 87 West Sixth St., Bayonne, N. J.

h Bayonne High School, Bayonne, N. J.

Havens is Professor of Latin in the Bayonne High School. After graduation he went to Pennington (N. J.) Seminary as Professor of Latin and German, remaining until 1897.

LTntil June, 1908, he was successively Master of Ancient Lan- guages and Head-master of the New York Military Academy, a large and successful school for boys located at Cornwall-on-Hudson, N. Y., taking up his present work in August of last year.

December 27th, 1899, he married Anna Walters Clock.

Lucretia was born May 27th, 1904.

Rev. Andrew Williamson Hayes

p r Lexington, Ohio.

Hayes is a minister of the Presbyterian Church, in Lexington, Ohio, coming to his present charge from the pastorate of the First Presbyterian Church of Bismarck, N. D.

He received the degree of A.M. from Princeton in 1900 and his Ph.D. from Taylor University in 1902.

so

Hayes spent one year in study at the University of Edinburgh. June loth, 1902, he married Margaret M. Carothers, George Wallace was born December i6th, 1908.

Howard Heath

p b 334 and 336 Perry St., Trenton, N. J.

r 909 Bellevue Ave., Trenton, N. J.

"Cy" writes : "Aly time since graduation has been spent entirely in the lumber and building material business here in Trenton. I was fortunate in being worked into a business which my father started a good many years ago and which has always been in a very healthy condition, due entirely to the careful, honest, business-like and perse- vering efforts of my late father who died in December, 1907.

"The Samuel Heath Company, of which I have the honor of being President and Treasurer, was formed January ist, 1907, by my father and consisted of himself as President and Treasurer, my brother, S. Roy Heath, an ex '07 Princeton man, as Secretary, and myself as Vice-President and Manager.

"While our business relationship is pleasant and attractive my home is the brightest spot of all. My wife is particularly partial to '94 men and I have four youngsters, all strong, healthy and aggres- sive. Naturally, the father, while never an athlete himself, is turn- ing his attention toward making 'Varsity material out of our three boys.

"We have just completed our new home and the latch string is al- ways working."

Heath married Mary Elizabeth Lawton June loth, 1896.

Elizabeth Louise was born May loth, 1897.

Howard Lawton, April 4th, 1899.

Samuel Buchanan, October 9th, 1902.

Leland Stanford, April 14th, 1907.

Frank Strickler Henderson

p Media, Pa.

Henderson is engaged in building and contracting operations in Media, Pa., and is unmarried.

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Alfred H. High

p Oley, Pa.

r 1545 North 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa.

b 724 Heed Building, Philadelphia, Pa.

High is a member of the Philadelphia bar and has been admitted to the Supreme Court of the State of Pennsylvania. In addition to the practice of law he holds a position in the English department of the Central High School of Philadelphia.

After graduation High was Superintendent of Schools for three years at Courtland, Ohio, and later a teacher in the High School of Yonkers, N. Y.

He has held his position in Philadelphia for the past three years.

John D. Hitchman

p r b Mt. Pleasant, Pa.

Hitchman is President of the First National Bank of Mt. Pleasant, Pa., and Controller of Westmoreland County, with offices in Greens- burg, Pa. He is also the President of the Rising Sun Coke Com- '■y^- pany, and Vice President of the Pike Run Country Club.

June i2th, 1907, he married Louise Ogle Scull.

William, 3rd, was born July 3rd, 1908.

Charles Courtenay Hoge

r 760 Prospect Ave., Hartford, Conn.

b Farmers' Loan and Trust Co. Building, 16 William St., New York.

"Charley" is a lawyer and a partner of Teddy Humphrey, the firm name at the above address being Hoge and Humphrey.

He received his LL.B. degree from the New York Law School in 1896.

For the last three years Hoge has not actively engaged in practice and has been living in Hartford, Conn. Further particulars about him are contained in Os. Jeflfery's letter to the Record which will explain to everybody's satisfaction why Charley couldn't answer letters. He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

May 15th, 1901, he married Edna H. Lupton. Of their three chil- dren but one is now living.

Charles C, Jr., born in June, 1907.

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Alfred Edward Holmes

p r Bay Ridge Ave. and First Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. b 132 Nassau St., New York.

Holmes is a lawyer in New York City on good old Nassau Street. He writes that he hopes to be with us in June and, therefore, will defer giving any account of himself until that time.

How about the boys who won't be able to come to this reunion, "Muck"? Every one will receive a copy of this book and no news from the chief song-bird of the old "Close Harmony Quartet". You must do better next time.

June loth, 1902, Holmes married Katharine I. MacKay.

Edward MacKay was born November nth, 1904.

Charles Lorin Holt

ph 3 East 28th St., New York

After receiving his C.E. degree from Princeton in 1894, Holt de- voted himself to the study of architecture, in which profession he is at present engaged. His firm name is Holt and Weidinger.

Clinton Earle Hooven

p rh Hamilton, Ohio.

Hooven is in the manufacturing and street railway business. He is the Vice-President and General Manager of the Cincinnati, Law- renceburg and Aurora Electric Street Railway Company, running out of Cincinnati, and the President of the Cincinnati Horse Shoe and Iron Company.

In addition to the above he is interested in the Dayton Rubber Manufacturing Company, makers of mechanical rubber goods and the Dayton airless clincher tire. He writes that this new tire which his company is exploiting will save the boys all future trouble. This will be good news to Hoge, McCune, Ferris, Streit et al.

April 24th, 1895, Hooven married Frederica Jane Smithson.

Marion Francis was born September nth, 1896.

Rev. Charles Grant Hopper

pr 1706 North 55th St., Philadelphia, Pa.

Hopper received the degree of Bachelor of Divinity from Prince- ton Theological Seminary in 1897 and is now Pastor of West Park

53

Presbyterian Church of Philadelphia with a membership of over eight hundred.

"I am happy and honored in serving a large congregation," he writes, "and thus far have heard no distant rumbling of protest from a long suffering people. Recently Ed. Hammett, Frank Smythe, Jim Whitaker and I had a little reunion in honor of "Whiskers" Smith, who stopped over in Philadelphia on his way home to Denver. Boys, that night old Hop. fed on the green pastures of the world for a few hours and it did him good. One other worldly strenuosity In company with a number of other Philadel- phia ministers I went to Hammerstein's Opera House by invitation to hear (and see) "Samson and Delilah." My matured after thought is that had some modern Delilah fashioned after the Hammerstein brand, cast her eyes in undergrad. days upon the Class of '94, not a man would have escaped a hair cut."

April 28th, 1898, "DeWolf married AHce Olivia Bonine of Phila- delphia.

Fisher Howe

p Princeton, N.J.

Howe is a rose-grower, having large greenhouses in Princeton, from which he supplies the New York and Philadelphia markets. His partner is Dick Stockton, '95.

November loth, 1908, Howe married Mrs. John Rogers Wil- liams, nee Mary Willoughby Brown, of "Wilton", Westmoreland County, Va, "^CN.

Fred Bartlett Howland

p Titusville, Pa.

Fred is in the oil business. For three years after graduation he was in the office of the Enterprise Transit Company of Pa. He was then put in charge of the oil and gas field work as Superintendent and in March, 1905, was made Manager in general charge of all of the company's producing business. Later he was made manager of a similar company doing business in Indiana and in November, 1908, Fiowland became the Manager of the Kewanee Oil and Gas Com- pany of Illinois, retaining the managership of both of the companies first mentioned.

He writes : "I am a little shy on candidates for Princeton. Am

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living for a few months at Robinson, III, although my home and office is still at Titusville. Waiting to get this Kewanee Oil and Gas Company business well started. Hope to see you all in June."

June 2nd, 1897, Rowland married Gertrude Lammers of Titus- ville, Pa.

Lois Bartlett, a daughter, was born December 21st, 1899.

Harry Allen Howland

p 47 Brown St., Titusville, Pa.

h 601-5 Flatiron Building, Akron, Ohio.

Howland is the General Manager of the Mohican Oil and Gas Company, producing and supplying natural gas in Ohio towns for domestic and manufacturing purposes.

He married Minnie Candee Zweygartt of Hartford, Conn., June 6th, 1900, and their daughter,

Margaret Candee, was born March 12th, 1902.

Theodore Friend Humphrey

ph 22 William St., New York. r 'j^yo Lexington Ave., New York.

"Ted" received his LL.B. from the New York Law School in 1896 and has been practicing successfully in the big city ever since.

He says : "For the last thirteen years I have been busily engaged in practicing law with Charlie Hoge in New York City. In the rush of this town it is hard to gauge success or failure. Suffice it to say, I have paid most of my bills and kept some of my sense of humor,"

He was the Record's most willing little assistant in the securing of correct addresses and data of the '94 men in his vicinity.

Humphrey is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

He married Martha Feltus Townsend August i8th, 1906.

Martha Rosalie was born May loth, 1907.

(Harrison Wilson Inslee

b^ Care Tide Water Oil Comjganyjj^lBrqadway, New York.

"Pop" was too busy to answer letters so an appeal was made to Dick Brown '95, who writes : "Pop is working for us and at present is superintendent of the gang erecting a pumping station a few miles from Bellefontaine, Ohio. You can reach him by mail by address-

55

ing him in care of the Tide Water Pipe Company, Ltd., Bellefori- taine, Ohio. He has been doing very good work for us and we are glad that we took him on."

ev. Robert Bonner Jack

p r h 209 West Diamond Ave., Hazleton, Pa.

Jack has been Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Hazle- ton since September of 1897. He received the degree of A.M. from Princeton in 1896.

He was a Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Presby- terian Church at Los Angeles in 1903 and Moderator of Lehigh Pres- bytery in the fall of the same year. He writes : "My life since our Decennial has been a routine one, living among the mountains of northeastern Pennsylvania, full of the privileges of a happy pastor- ate. Last summer I crossed the Atlantic and wheeled live hundred miles in southwestern England."

Jack married Margaret Louise Van Horsen August 20th, 1901.

Louise Van Horsen was born November 23rd, 1902, and

Alice Sayler, October 4th, 1906.

Robert Perkins Jack

Peoria, 111.

r 652 Moss Ave., Peoria, 111.

b Y. M. C. A. Building, Peoria, 111.

"Bob" is a lawyer in Peoria, and that is every blessed bit of infor- mation that the Record could get out of him. Several letters sent subsequent to the receipt of his information blank failed to break his silence. He is still a bachelor.

Qscar W. Jeffery

p h 34 Pine St., New York. r 126 East 19th St., New York.

"Jeff" is a lawyer in the big city, having received his degree of LL.B. from the New York Law School in 1896. He is the right hand man to Edmund Wetmore, one of the best patent lawyers in New York, and most of Jeff's work has been in the United States Courts in patent and trademark cases. He writes that his home is only two blocks from the Princeton Club of New York so con-

S6

venient to that comfortable haven of rest that he hopes to welcome there many of '94.

Jeff is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

Harriet E. Blythe, of Philadelphia, became Mrs. Jeffery, June 4th, 1908.

Suzanne Blythe Jeffery was born April 12, 1909.

The Record appealed to Jeff for gossip about the New York mem- bers of the Class and found him a veritable gold mine of interesting information : "There are lots of '94 men who are making good in and around this big town. Yorke Allen, Chip Mackenzie, Grant Fox and Teddy Humphrey are gaining renown as lawyers. Mac Mitch- ell's fame has spread from Buffalo, where he defends the Standard Oil from the attacks of the enemy, to New York, where I have seen him in action before the U. S. Court of Appeals. Tom Perkins is a high legal official in the Telephone Trust. Ed Patterson is another of those prosperous corporation attorneys.

Billy Floyd is a partner in a big real estate firm. He is also a ves- tryman in the Church of the Ascension and a member of the govern- ing board of the Sons of the Revolution. In one or the other of these capacities he sternly and forcibly rebuked, one recent Sunday, a fellow Son who arose in his pew and called Billy's rector down for eulogizing T. R. from the pulpit. Whether Billy condemned the sinner for disturbing the service or for objecting to T. R. I can't say.

As to our rising young physicians, I can testify at first hand. Last summer I had a sore toe. That eminent specialist, Dr. Kenyon, pro- nounced the trouble blood poisoning, and after some days of Ken- yonian observation, experimentation and treatment, cut a hole right through the affected part and thus cured the trouble so that my foot speedily regained its pristine vigor. It may interest some members of the class to know that "Spivins", as he is familiarly known about town, is also Second Lieutenant in a National Guard Battery. He was promoted to that position a few months after he enUsted because of his soldierly bearing and superior horsemanship.

I can also bear witness to the skill of Montie Sicard. Last No- vember my right arm was broken in a fuss with an automobile (not mine) and Mont looked after it with the best possible results. This is not written to obtain a reduction of his bill.

Summer before last I was personally conducted about London by Charlie Mcllwain, who had for some months been exploring the

57

British Museum. At various historic spots he deHvered monologues on English history from which I learned more of the subject than from two years of Billy Sloane.

This letter is already too long to tell of others around here, of Andy McCullagh, the great golf player; of Jim Bathgate, high churchman and Princeton hustler; of Al Woodruff, Chip McCamp- bell, Bill Sykes, Bill Meredith and more who can make life around the big city better worth living to their friends.

There is one, however, whom I must tell you about. Charlie Hoge has retired from his active New York life and is leading the life of a gentleman of leisure in Hartford, Conn. Business has taken me there considerably during the past year and several times I have seen Charlie. Each time I am filled with envy. With a big automo- bile, a golf club near by, a hoisting club further off and good fishing Charlie leads a wonderful existence, a life of otium cum dignifate What? On my wedding trip I saw Charlie's car at Portland, Me., full of his Hartford neighbors, and dodged. Later on I crossed his trail on the Maine lakes, where the guides tell great tales of his prowess as a fisherman. Also he and Dudley Riggs '97, don't let Hartford forget the existence of Princeton."

J

/

Rev. Paul Burrill Jenkins

p Immanuel Presbyterian Church, Milwaukee, Wis.

r 276 Ogden Ave., Milwaukee, Wis.

Jenkins was Pastor of Linwood Presbyterian Church, of Kansas City, Mo., for ten years and in November, 1907 was called to his present pastorate, Immanuel Presbyterian Church, of Milwaukee.

Paul writes : "I wrote a book for which Princeton handed me an A.M. last June a little late, but to the Princeton spirit her A.M. is worth more than a Ph.D. from any other institution on earth. Am the proud papa of one miniature "Jenks" who is already headed for Princeton."

The title of Dr. Jenkins' book is "The Battle of Westport", a study of one of the Western campaigns of the Civil War. 1906, Franklin Hudson Pub. Co., Kansas City, Mo.

In March last Jenkins preached in Princeton by invitation of the Seminary faculty.

November 23rd, 1897, Jenkins married Gertrude M. Halbert.

Little "Jenks" was born January 15th, 1899, and christened Hal- bert Hermon.

58

Thomas Addison Jenkins

Died October nth, 1905. From The Princeton Alumni Weekly, Oct. 28, 1905.

"Dr. Thomas Addison Jenkins '94 died at his home in Brooklyn, N. Y., on October nth, 1905, after a lingering illness. Upon leav- ing Princeton he entered the Bellevue Medical College, graduating in 1897. He was an interne in the Nursery and Childs Hospital in New York City, and after completing his term there began the practice of his profession. In 1901 he went to Denver, Colo., where he remained about four years, returning to his home in May last. (1905) r%

"The members of the Class of '94 have learned with great sorrow and regret of the death of their classmate, Thomas Addison Jen- kins. Soon after the finish of a hard course of preparation for his chosen profession and at the outset of a career of much promise, he was compelled to leave his work. The cheerfulness with which he faced disease and the vigor of his fight against it was in keeping with the spirit of his life at college and won the admiration of all around him. His devotion to his class and his classrnates was of the strong- est, and was especially manifested "by his relations with them and work for them during his life in Denver.

"We extend to his family our sincere sympathy in their bereave- ment. The Class of '94 A. E. Holmes, Oscar W. Jefifery, J. H. Kenyon, T. J. Perkins, Committee."

lexander Davis Jenney

p P. O. Box 66, Syracuse, N. Y.

r 5 Brattle Road, Syracuse, N. Y.

"Jen" is one of the big lawyers in Syracuse and represents the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad in his section of New York State. With his own eyes has the editor of the Record seen Jen face the Supreme Court of the United States.

Alex., Malcolm Goodridge, Frank Riggs and Harry Thompson represented '94 on the committee for the alumni dinner, given last April under the auspices of the Princeton Club of New York, in honor of Hon. George B. McClellan, Mayor of the City of New York, of the Class of 1886.

59

i

Time has dealt gently with our "handsomest man" and he still has that winning way that was so annoying to the i)eace of mind of the girls whom he met on the Glee Club trijjs in the early nineties.

Caroline King, of Syracuse, became Mrs Jcnncy November 2nd, 1903, and they have three children:

jtilni King, born September Sth, 1904,

Alexander D., Jr., born June 27th, 1906, and

Cornelia Gould, born March 31st, 1908.

Edward Ford Johnson

/> University Club, Chicago, 111.

/■ 135 Lincoln Park Boulevard, Chicago, 111.

b 816 National Life ]5uilding, 159 LaSalle St., Chicago, 111.

"Bennie" is an insurance broker. He writes that his life flows along like a quiet stream. To the Record this hardly seems possible. He was in Princeton last fall at the time of the Yale game and later witnessed the Yale-Harvard game.

He says : "I am neither getting rich nor broke, and that is about all there is to it. I am counting on being with you in June, but, in the meantime and while I am waiting, I am going to Marshall Bullitt's town for the meeting of the Western Princeton Clubs to jump a few high waves. You know they make a most excellent brand of cold tea in Kentucky."

,Ogden Cheney Johnson

p b Room 707 Wheat Building, Fort Worth, Tex. .^^^^^^

}■ 1316 Jarvis St., Fort Worth, Tex.

Johnson is a Special Investigator in the Freight Claim Department of the "Frisco" Railroad.

lie says: "I spent the winter in Canada and have returned to Texas to thaw out. Good luck to all the boys and hope to exchange greetings some fine day with all of you."

Johnson married Katherine Owen April 26th, 1899.

Ogden C, Jr., was born January 8th, 1900.

William James Raphael Johnston Jr.

V C'iucinnali, Ohio««nMHa^H«MaMMiMM

No news from Johnston. Dr. McLeish writes that he saw John- ston about eighteen months ago in Cincinnati. At that time Johns^nn

60

was traveling a great deal and getting up special newspaper artists' exhibits, special editions, special articles, etc. He was then living in Seattle and a bachelor.

Later: Johnston's father is a Deacon in the Church of the Cove- nant in Cincinnati. Inquiry there developed the fact that Johnston is in New York City. The information came too late to get a response from him. The address given was Room 204, 203 Broad- way.

Bulletin : Johnston writes that he is a publisher, and in addition to the New York address gives two permanent addresses : The Lombardy, Cincinnati, Ohio, and The Germania, Springfield, Mass. He says : "Sorry I can't write you a longer letter, but I am about to take the Limited for Chicago in an hour and must hasten. I am now, as I have been for the past fifteen years, constantly on the jump, and you are as liable to run across me on VanNess Ave., San Francisco, as on Broadway, New York."

Joseph William Lester Jones

p 130 Greenfield St., Tiffin, Ohio.

Jones was an instructor in Princeton from 1901 to 1902, and is now Professor of Psychology and Philosophy in Heidelberg Uni- versity, Tififin, Ohio.

In 1895 he received from Princeton the degree of A.M., and in 1901 the degree of Ph.D.

December 29th, 1904, he married Ethel Rohr of Dayton, Ohio.

Clinton Hall Kearny

p 921 Main Ave., San Antonio, Tex.

r Necaxa, Puebla, Mexico.

h Care Mexican Light and Power Co., Ltd., City of Mexico.

Kearny is Chief Engineer and Manager of Construction of the Hydro-Electric Station of the above company. He writes : "We develop fifty thousand horsepower and the work we are now doing will double the capacity of the plant. This work includes the building of five large dams, about five miles of tunnels, two miles of canals, the enlargement of the power house, etc. The power is used in Mexico City and the mining camp of El Oro, the transmis- sion line to the city being eighty miles in length and the line to El Oro one hundred and seventy-five miles.

61

Caldwell, '94, has been with me for the past four years as Superin- tendent of Construction, most of which time was spent in Brazil, a short distance out from Rio de Janeiro, where we put in a six million dollar Hydro-Electric Station for the Rio de Janeiro Tram- way, Light and Power Co., Ltd., which owns and operates most of the public utilities properties of that city.

You may be sure that it would be a great pleasure to get to the reunion, and I shall do so if I possibly can. However, we have some five thousand Mexicans and Indians working on the job here, and so we are kept pretty busy keeping them busy."

November 24th, 1908, Kearny married Mary Chabot Cresson of San Antonio, Texas, sister of Charles C. Cresson, Jr., '95,

F. Leonard Kellogg

p b 100 Broadway, New York. r 863 Park Ave., New York.

"Popsy" has been an electrical engineer in the sales department of the New York offices of the Electric Storage Battery Company of Philadelphia since 1900.

In the Florida-Republic collision it was a battery sold by Popsy that made it possible for "C. Q. D." Binns to send out his wireless messages for assistance after the water had flooded the Republic's boiler room and stopped the dynamos. (Class auto, owners should get their sparking batteries through Kellogg free adv.). He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

Emilie H. Baker became Mrs. Kellogg September 23rd, 1907.

Frances Virginia Stewart was born June 23rd, 1908.

Franklin Corning Kenly

p r 9 Astor St., Chicago, 111. b 85 Ohio St., Chicago, 111.

Kenly is Assistant General Manager of the Curtain Supply Com- pany of Chicago, handling railway supplies.

"Cornie" says : "I have been devoting some ten of my best years to the above business, not from any unselfish motive or desire to. uplift the profession, but merely with the sordid purpose and endeavor to make some money out of it. The small circle of '94 in Chicago, with its several hundred square miles, is widely separated. For this reason it takes an annual dinner of the Princeton Club or-

62

some other important occasion like a wedding to call a few of us together in the good old way. To all of the boys I send best wishes for happiness and success."

Winfield Scott Kennedy

Born June 17th, 1871. Died August 23rd, 1908, at Denver, Col.

From the Princeton Alumni Weekly, October 14th, 1908 :

"The members of the Class of '94 have heard with .deep regret of the untimely death of their classmate, Winfield Scott Kennedy, who passed peacefully away in Denver, Colorado, on Sunday, August 23rd, 1908, after a long and hopeless illness. His many attractive qualities of heart and mind, which his long and painful struggle with disease did not dim, but seemed to enrich, made and kept. him warm friends who will never forget the loss they have sustained in his death, and will always cherish his memory as one of their most precious recollections of college days and friendships.

"As a memorial of our sorrow, we, the Class of '94, Princeton University, desire that this be published in The Alumni Weekly and a copy sent to his bereaved family. For the Class of '94, Henry G. Riggs, Francis G. Riggs, George Weems Williams, James Mac- Naughton Thompson, William F. Meredith."

Kennedy received the degree of LL.B. from the Cincinnati Law School in 1896, and was engaged in the practice of law up to the time that the state of his health made it necessary for him to go West.

ames Henry Kenyon, M.D.

P V. ^ 37/W"est 71st .^t.^-Ne,y Yo^^-

In 1898 Kenyon received his M.D. from the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia College, New York, and is now engaged in practice up in Malcolm Goodridge's neighborhood in New York City.

"Spivins" wrote on a prescription blank: "Will send letter in a few days." That was sixty days ago, and nary a line thus far. The Record concludes, therefore, that Spivins is a busy man. As to how well he does his work reference should be made to Jeffery's testi- monial about Spivins' skill in taking care of Jeff's sore toe.

If anyone of the Class desires a consultation with "Old Dr.

63

Kenyon", note should be made of the fact that his ofifice hours are until 9.30 a. ni. and from 12.30 to 1.30 p. m.

He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

Later: "L. C.'s" letter came at the eleventh hour. It is such a good one that the Record is constrained to print it in full as a model to the lazy and backward members of the Class who refuse to be either jocose or serious, or, in fact, to say anything at all.

"First and above everything else in importance, my existence has been blessed with unusually good health not a day's illness since I finished my childhood diseases with a mild attack of scarlet fever in the spring of '89, which will always be remembered, as it prevented me from trying for the Class of '93, as I had intended while preparing at Lawrenceville, and also because I was taken care of by a lady doctor and during the desquamating period was greased each day with a slice of salt pork warmed on a shovel.

"For all this good health and the happiness that goes with it I am truly thankful, and hasten to give the credit to habits formed at good old Princeton. Mixing in with our Class football and lacrosse teams and various scrub organizations, making trips to Bordentown with Os. Jeffery and Cy Perkins, to Pennington, Bayonne and Hoboken, shovelling under Capt. Irish McClena- han, many hunting and fishing trips with Ulric Dahlgren, Ned Halsey, Bill Meredith, Red Turner and Dick Hatton and perhaps the best of all, the fossil collecting party to the Bad Lands in the summer of '93 all these events, besides furnishing plenty of fun at the time and an inexhaustible source of pleasant reminiscences, exerted a great influence for health and happiness that is being reenacted in varied form by exercises at the New York Athletic Club with Meredith and Sicard, riding horseback with Perkins or sailing with Humphrey and Woodruff in the good ship 'D'Jin'.

"Most of the '94 men who decided to study medicine in New York entered the College of Physicians and Surgeons in the Class of '98. We were the first under the new four-year curriculum and honored with many experiments. All survived and were fortunate enough to secure hospital appointments.

"An account of our many thrilling experiences at 127 West 6ist Street, where Sicard, Jeffery, Perkins, McWhorter and I lived for four years, spending our summers at Bath Beach, of our dissecting babies (Ikey and Jakey) kept in little earthenware jars in the trunk, of our shooting gallery on the top floor with a soap box in the corner for a target, of how Monty Sicard learned to roller skate, of the little reunions when Humphrey and Woodruff came to visit us and I had to sleep on the floor to make room for the guests, of how one innocent member of our happy family was wrongly suspected of being the noisy one and politely but firmly asked by the landlady to look elsewhere for a room, of how another met with an accident in the Park and was brought home on a stretcher, of how another fell over the banister, loosening the tile flooring and dislocating his collar bone, of how Santa Claus filled our shoes on Christmas Morn, all these and many other incidents would more than fill a book and will never be forgotten.

64

"July 1st, 1898, I commenced my service as interne on the staff of the New York Hospital, always appreciating and enjoying this most valuable hospital work and particularly attracted by anything promising a place to sleep and three square meals a day with sometimes a midnight lunch, especially while Jeffery was there as a patient. I managed to hang on for four short happy years, which, next to my four in Princeton, were about the best I ever had.

"After leaving the hospital I started in practice with a Dr. Downes at 47 West 44th Street, opposite the Hippodrome and Patsy Kimball's house and very handy to Jack's and Burns'. In the fall of 1906 we moved to 37 W. 71st Street, where we are now.

"Various clinics and hospitals, assisting at operations, giving dope, in fact doing most any old thing, have kept me fairly busy and very much interested.

"It has been my good fortune to have done considerable work with Dr. Frank Hartley, Princeton '77, assisting him in his Operative Surgery course at the P. and S., and to some extent in his hospital and private work. Together we have devised several little appliances which make surgery easier, perhaps the most important being a small electric motor with a buzz saw attachment, which, although it does not exactly permit one to open the patient's head and look in while he waits, has nevertheless greatly facilitated cerebral surgery.

"While medical ethics do not permit a doctor to advertise or speak too highly of his soothing art, the indulgent reader of these few lines is confi- dently referred to several of our dear classmates and to our god-father. Patsy Kimball, for glowing testimonials that the knife is mighter than the pill.

"Of course, as you know, doctors are always desirous of being appointed as attending or assistant attending physician or surgeon to some hospital. By good luck I managed to land one of these appointments and was just settling down to enjoy an interesting service when the whole institution went broke and went out of business, leaving me only a paper job, which has the advant- age of being an easy one.

"About two years ago I joined the First Battery Field Artillery, State of New York, not in the medical department, but in the line. The varied work, military, equestrian and ballistic, is extremely interesting and quite a profes- sion all by iteslf. I am continually impressed with how much I have forgotten of Baby Rockwood's mathematics. We go to camp for ten days to two weeks every year and enjoy every minute of it, particularly last year, when we were at the maneuvers at Pine Camp in Jefferson County.

"I enlisted as a private, serving as lead driver. Was promoted to corporal, and now have a commission as Second Lieutenant. The only feature of the military business that causes me any regret is' the fact that the time of our encampment prevents my getting back to see you all at Princeton. My kindest remembrances and best wishes for each and every one of you . . ."

James Wellington Kiesling

b Happy Camp, Cal.

Letters sent to "Pop's" old address, Reading, Pa., failed to reach

6s

him. His correct address was secured just before going to press from his brother, Charles H. Kieshng, 204 West Greenwich St., Reading, Pa.

Owing to the remoteness of Pop's abiding place and the insistent calls from the printer, it was not possible to await his reply.

Samuel Wardwell Kinney

Died January 30th, 1909.

Kinney was Head Master of the Country School for Boys at Balti- more at the time of his death, having occupied this position since 1902.

He was a graduate student in English at Johns Hopkins the year following graduation, a student at the University of Paris from 1895 to 1896, a graduate student at Harvard 1896- 1898, receiving the degree of A.M. from the latter in 1897. From 1898 to 1901 Kinney was an instructor in English in Hobart College.

He died at the home of his parents in Rome, New York.

William Burnet Kinney

pr jn^.T RrnpH St , ^^wark, N, T, ^

T 788 Broad St., Newark, N. J.

Kinney is a lawyer in Newark and a director of the National State Bank, Manager of Howard Savings Institution, a director of Fire- men's Insurance Company and a director of the Newark District Telegraph Company, all institutions doing business in Newark. He J is also a hereditary member of the Society of the Cincinnati in | X New Jersey and a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

June 8th, 1901, he married Helen M. Murphy and they have three children :

Janet was born April i8th, 1902.

May, born September loth, 1903, and

Constance, born July 6th, 1905.

Herbert Z. Kip

* p rh Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.

Kip is Associate Professor of German at Vanderbilt University.

In 1897 he received his A.M. from Princeton and, in 1899, the degree of Ph.D. from the University of Leipsic.

In the summer he goes to his farm in Sagadahoc County, Maine, v^here haytossing begins about July ist.

Kip married Nona B. Murrell June 28th, 1905.

Edward Somerville was born February nth, 1907, and

WilHam Van Houten, November nth, 1908.

Henry Seymour Knight

b State Civil Service Commission, Madison, Wis.

Knight is connected with the State Civil Service Commission at Madison, Wisconsin. No reply came to the Record's appeals and the address was supplied by the Secretary of the University of Wisconsin, in which institution Knight was at one time a student and a teacher of New Testament Greek.

In 1896 Knight received the degree of A.B. from WilHams College.

Later: Knight's letter says that he is an examiner in the Civil Service Commission mentioned above.

^ohn F. Koliler

pb 82 Sullivan St., New York. r 303 West 80th St., New York.

Kohler is President of the New York Pie Baking Company, with offices in New York at 82 Sullivan Street and in Philadelphia at Lombard and 25th Sts.

January 24th, 1906, he married Kate P. Macdona.

Andre Barent Le Massena

pb 64 Park Place, Newark, N. J. r 838 Grand St., JerseyCity, N. J.

Le""l^a^senrir'Secreta^^ Automobile and

Motor Club and Agent for the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles for the State of New Jersey. He also edits an automobile department in one of the big Newark dailies, is a Past Master in his Masonic Lodge and a life member of the Essex Troop of cavalry.

August 24th, 1895, he married Janet Belle Nesbit.

67

Rev. Edward Reed Laughlin

Dioil Maiili Jisl. 1909, Atlantic City. N. |.

Lauj^hlin was Associate Pastor of llu- llnpc ricsltytcrian Church of Philailclphia at the time of his death, which resuhcd Iroiu piicu- motiia within less than one week after he was stricken.

After grailuatinj; fioni Trinccton Lauj;hlin spent two years at the Seminary and then went as assistant at the Calvary Preshyterian Church of Philadelphia. About six years ago he received a call to the pastorate of the Lower Marsh Creek Church, at hairlicld. near Gettysburg. Pa., resigning in 1904 and returning to rrinceton for further study. He had a home on Library Place, where his daughter, Kthel Dale, was born January 15th. 1906.

April 30th, 1903. he marrieil May Strong Willson of Lhilailelphia.

Shortly after Laughlin's death the Record received a very cour- teous letter from his father-in law. ]ui\gc Robert N. Willson of Philadelphia, in which he said in part : "My daughter most deeply apjueciated the act of someone, on behalf of your Class, in sending bcautifid flowers at the time of the funeral services at Pittsburgh." The thanks of the Class are ilue \o joe Guffey for his tlunight- fulness.

tobert Wilson Lewis

/^ / (KH) I'Acrctt St.. PiM-tland, Ore. /' 501 C'ouch Building. Portlatul. C)re.

"l?ob" gives his business as "Investments". Appeals for additional information met with no response, .^o the ReciM-d feels called upon to sympathize with such a busy man. The clipping of coupons and the worries attendant upon the safe investment i^f surplus must grow very irksome at times.

I'ob receiveil a cup from the Class on the occasion of the '94 Deceumal for having traveled the longest distance to the Reunion.

Tie is the V. S. cliampioi\ Uuig distance member oi the Princeton Club of New York.

April 30th, 1900, Lewis married l-'rances Graham Uoyt.

C^icero ITunt. U, was born June Ji)th. u)Oi. and

Ri>bert Wilson. Jr.. September joth. 1902.

William Gamble Liggett

p b Diamond I'auk r>uilding, Pittsburgh, Pa. r 724 Marvland Ave.. Pittsburgh, Pa.

68

-f

/

"Willie (jhm])W is j^racticing law in the home of the stogie and the city of his birth. He was recently elected a member of the Pittsburgh Select Council by the residence ward, which is indepen- dent of the "machine", and represents it satisfactorily to Joe Guffey and the other Pittsburghers of '94.

He was formerly a member of the Pittsburgh Common Council.

Liggett is another of the long distance members of the Princeton Club of New York.

Willie married Sarah Stuart Watson October 26th, 1896, and they have three daughters :

Frances B., born June 13th, 1898,

Caroline K., born November 6th, 1899, and

Martha W., born December 14th, 1906.

Daniel Weisiger Lindsey, Jr.

p r b Frankfort, Ky.

"Pat" is practicing law in Frankfort, Kentucky, and is also the Secretary and General Agent of the Frankfort and Cincinnati Railway Company. He received his Bachelor of Laws degree from Cincinnati Law College in 1896.

At the time that the Record was seeking information from Pat he had nine cases in three different counties to take care of, and all /

three courts in term at the same time. Apparently Daniel was jumping around like a grasshopper, which, with his unwillingness to blow his own horn, will account for the meagre information here set forth.

October 28th, 1903, Lindsey married Annie Munford Merrill of Richmond, Va.

Daniel Weisiger, HI, was born July 30th, 1908.

George B. Linnard

pr 772 r St. Martins Lane, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. b 435 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.

Linnard is a banker and a member of the farm of Graham and Company, Philadelphia.

George received the degree of LL.B. from University of Pennsyl- vania in 1897 and hung out his shingle for a year. The life of a financier has more thrills in it. George made the jump and in 1903 was admitted to the jjresent firm.

69

He has never missed a reunion since graduation. Health permit- ting, it is a certainty that George will always be there when "Fergy" first starts up his band.

Linnard married Mary Wallace Audenried October i6th, 1901.

Anna Louise was born January 17th, 1903.

alcolm Lloyd, Jr.

pr 329 South 17th St., Philadelphia, Pa. h 328 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.

Malcolm is a lawyer and a member of the large and influential legal firm of Burr, Brown and Lloyd of Philadelphia, handling cor- poration suits with a great deal of ability. The firm does a general law business and its high standing is due in great measure to Mal- colm's own efforts and ability. He is a member of the Princeton Club of Philadelphia.

In 1897 Lloyd received his LL.B. degree from the University of Pennsylvania, and the degree of A.M. from Princeton in 1903.

_Stephen Timothy Lockwood

ph 311 Downing St., Buffalo, N. Y. h 202 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y.

Lockwood is a lawyer in Buffalo. He writes that the Buffalo bunch of '94 men are very much alive and "going some", and takes a natural city pride in the fact that Skinny McWilliams seems to have the balance of the class "flayed on the Wilson cup."

On June 28th, 1899, Lockwood married Sada F. Daly.

Stephen Daly was born March 31st, 1900, and

William Noble, born July 4th, 1905.

Joseph T. Low, Jr. M.D.

p r Short Hills, N. J. h 18^ East ^ist St.. New York.

Lov^sa physician, having received his degree of M.D. from Co- lumbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, in 1898.

He subsequently served on the house staff of the Hospital for Rup- tured and Crippled ; as assistant physician and surgeon in the Pres- byterian Hospital ; as assistant surgeon in the J. Hood Wright Me- morial Hospital, and in various positions of responsibility in Belle-

70

vue Hospital, Harlem Dispensary and the Woman's Hospital, of New York City.

Dr. Low is a Fellow of the Academy of Medicine of New York.

December 29th, 1898, Edith Kinsley Joyce became Mrs. Low. They have three children:

Joseph T., 3rd, born March 7th, 1900.

Frederick J., born April 20th, 1901.

Edith, born May 7th, 1902.

*aul Hagans Ludington, M.D.

p Omaha, Neb.

r 3419 Dewey Ave., Omaha, Neb.

h 811 Brandeis Building, Omaha, Neb.

"Lud" received his M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1897 and is practicing in Omaha, the home of Tommy Creigh and another '94 medico, Dr. H. L. Atkin.

Donald MacCoU

pr 226 East 15th St., New York. h 147 Avenue B, New York.

MacColl is a field worker for the Christodora Settlement, an edu- cational mission settlement on the East side of New York City.

October 6th, 1903, MacColl married Katharine M. Howell of Montclair, N. J.

Charles Stevens Mackenzie

/ /" /> ^ 32 Nassau St., New York.

Y 99 Park Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Our old Varsity baseball captain is practicing law and getting good plums in New York in the firm of MacKenzie and Burr which has associated with it the Hon. J. VanVechten Olcott, Member of Con- gress, from the Fifteenth District of New York.

Charley is the attorney for the New York Evening Mail. Boys, do you remember those two home run swats against Yale ? Chip went nosing down to Hot Springs, Va., when President Taft was there and got into a ball game with all the big bugs. Twice he cleared the bags with his trusty willow and history repeated itself. After getting so far into the lime-light he nearly ruined the hit he

71

had made by lining a swift one to Mr. Hitchcock, now Postmaster- General, and putting a finger entirely out of business.

Mackenzie is a prominent member of the Canadian Club of New York, an organization composed of Canadians or the children of Canadians residing in the United States, its purpose being to promote and foster the friendly relations now existing between the United States and Canada. Every year the thousand odd members give a dinner in New York, and Chip was deputized this year to secure the speakers. This mission brought him to Washington to see the President and the French and English Ambassadors. At odd hours he gave the Record the benefit of his wisdom and advice. A brief pen picture of Chip : A husky two hundred and twenty-five pounder, sparsely thatched and with an extremely well fed look. He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York. His letter is brief: "There is little in the incessant grind of a lawyer's life that would be of any particular interest to my friends. My innate modesty prevents me from recording feats accomplished, which after all are but incidents in our daily life. I am not and never have been en- gaged in politics or matrimony, and therefore two important branches of social life, which are open for discussion to many men, are closed to me."

Girard L. McAllister

p Kingston, N, Y.

No news from "Ward." The first Class circular was sent to his European address. Care American Express Co., ii Rue Scribe, Paris, and passed him upon the ocean. He wrote Mac. Thompson on De- cember 26th last, the date of Mac's death, from the Princeton Club of New York, of which he is a member. Subsequent letters sent to the above address, to which he has directed that all communications from the club be forwarded, have elicited no response.

Meredith saw him in New York in December last.

Rev. Clifford McBride

p r Elkhart, Ind. (Rural Free Delivery)

McBride is a minister of the Presbyterian Church and received his Master of Arts degree from Princeton in 1896.

George Stuart McCague . M A

p Omaha, Neb.

McCague was at one time Right-of-Way Agent of the Illinois

72

Central Railroad at Memphis, Tenn. Of late years, however, con- tinued ill health has kept him from active work and he is not at present engaged in any pursuit.

iGeorge Meriweather McCampbell, Jr.

p r 406 Hillside Place, South Orange, N. J. h 215 Washington St., New York.

"Chip" is Advertising Manager for Hall and Ruckel, wholesale druggists, proprietors of "Sozodont" and other proprietary articles. He was one of the original incorporators and the first president of the Princeton Alumni Association of the Oranges, incorporated in De- cember, 1907, and is now an advisory trustee and a member of the executive committee.

Harriet Cunningham became Mrs. McCampbell June 4th, 1896.

Josephine Meriwether was born June 9th, 1897, and

Margaret, October 27th, 1904.

William Hoge McCartney

» McCartney received his degree of A.M. from Princeton in 1897 and then disappeared from our ken. Letters sent by the editor of the Decennial Record met with no response and five years later re- newed efforts to locate him have been equally unsuccessful. He was traced from 3903 Locust St., Philadelphia, to 47 West 19th St., New York, and there the sleuths lost the scent.

Howard McCIenahan

p Princeton, N. J.

r 16 Stockton St., Princeton, N. J.

McCIenahan has been Professor of Physics in Princeton Univer- sity since 1906 and upon the retirement of Dr. Brackett in June of 1908 he was made joint head with Professor McLaren of the Department of Electrical Engineering.

"Irish" received the degree of M.S. from Princeton in 1897 and was thereafter Instructor in Physics until 1902, at which time he became Assistant Professor in the same subject.

In the fall of 1899 McCIenahan became Dr. Brackett's assistant in the Department of Electrical Engineering.

In 1907 old "Wotcher-goin-to-do-with-all-your-money" repre- sented Princeton at the 125th anniversary exercises of Washington

n »

^

/

s

College, Maryland, receiving the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. "Up to the present", he says, "a decent sense of the fitness of things and a Hibernian sense of humor have prevented my making any use of this adornment. Aside from the publication for our own use of a book of "Laboratory Directions in Experimental Physics", my work has been confined entirely to teaching and administrative du- ties. At one time I was on the Committees on Attendance, Discip- line and Outdoor Sports where I had to meet the most entertaining members of the various classes, the liars, the sports and the athletes. While the "pollers" are, of course, among the really admirable part of the undergraduates, they are not as amusing from a disciplinary standpoint as our undesirable citizens. For the last five years it has been my sincere pleasure to serve as secretary of the faculty com- mittee on outdoor sports. In this position I have been the faculty representative in all of Princeton's athletic relations. During all of this time my admiration for the manliness and clean living of our athletes and for the marked business ability and straightforward honesty of our athletic managers has been constantly increasing. It is a privilege to pay a tribute to these fine youngsters. Life in Princeton is ever delightful and I am looking forward to the time when the good old class will get together, even if for only five or six days."

" Irish " is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

Nov. I St, 1899, McClenahan married Bessie Lee.

John M. was born August 8th, 1900, and

Richard Lee, August 9th, 1903.

Andrew Torrens McCulIagh

p 210 Prospect St., East Orange, N. J.

h 30 Plane St., Newark, N. J.

"Andy" is in the Cost Department of the Van Wagenen and Schichaus Company of Newark, wholesale pork.

He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

McCullagh wrote a good letter for the Decennial Record but this time all appeals were in vain.

Rev. Russle Hindman MacCullough

p r Smith Center, Kan.

MacCullough is a minister of the Presbyterian Church, having

/

graduated from Princeton Theological Seminary in 1898. He re- ceived the degree of B.S. from Lafayette College in 1895 and has been in Kansas ever since leaving the Seminary.

November 7th, 1898, he married Clara Conaway in New York City.

Frank Armstrong McCune

p b Care Robinson Bros., Wood and Diamond Sts., Pittsburgh, Pa. r 5425 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.

Frank is a stock and bond broker in the firm of Robinson Broth- ers, Pittsburgh. Incidentally he finds time to manipulate very suc- cessfully a large Pierce car, and is well known to the county magis- trates in the vicinity of his home city.

Guffey says that the credit belongs to Frank of having discovered that very important principle in automobile mechanics : "The heav- ier the load the tighter the clutch."

Rev. John McDowell

p r 1420 Broad St., Newark, N. J.

McDowell is in the Presbyterian ministry in Newark, N. J. Pre- vious to his present charge he was Pastor of the Second Presbyter- ian Church, of Detroit, Michigan.

June 2nd, 1897, he married Minnie M. Fowler.

Phoebe was born June 22nd, 1900.

Robert J. McDowell

p r Ingram, Pa.

b 4821 Ellsworth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. McDowell is a vocal teacher and tenor soloist. So far as the records show he was the first '94 Benedict. He married Margaret L. Woods May 31st, 1892, and they have four children.

Flo Jean, born February 28th, 1894, Alice, born June 8th, 1895, Lillian, born October 21st, 1901, and Mary Elizabeth, born October 27th, 1905.

75

Rev. Alexander McGaffin

p r 2035 East 96th St., Cleveland, Ohio.

McGaffin is Pastor of the Euclid Avenue Presbyterian Church of Cleveland. He received the degree of A.M. from Princeton in 1897. Prior to his present charge "Sandy" was Pastor of the Presbyterian Church at Lockport, N. Y.

August 3rd, 1904, "Sandy" married Anna Stronberg DeYoe.

Charles Howard McIIwain

p r Princeton, N. J.

McIIwain has been Preceptor in History, Politics and Economics in Princeton University since 1905. For two years immediately preceding he was Professor of History in Miami University.

"Charley" received the degree of A.M. from Princeton in 1898, and from Harvard in 1902.

August loth, 1899, he married Mary B. Irwin.

George Irwin was born May 23rd, 1900, and

Martha, born April 5th, 1905.

Mrs. McIIwain died August 24th, 1906.

William Smith McKinney

r p b 1 1 1 1 Long Building, Kansas City, Mo. r 3530 Kenwood Ave., Kansas City, Mo. McKinney is General Sales Agent in the lumber branch of the Missouri Lumber and Land Exchange Company, Kansas City, Mo. October 8th, 1902, he married Susan I. Lammers of Titusville, Pa. Susanne Lammers was born November i8th, 1903, and Margaret Ruth, February 28th, 1909.

John Lewin McLeish, M.D.

^ pr 2615 Erie Ave., Hyde Park, Cincinnati, O. b 17 Garfield Place, Cincinnati, O. McLeish is a physician and surgeon. In 1908 he was assistant physician at the Ohio State Hospital for the Insane, Athens, Ohio.

In addition to his professional work he has written a number of novels and short stories : "Iturbide, a Soldier of Mexico", "The Sti- letto of General Santa Anna", "His Majesty's Mistress", "The Wan- ton", "Fakirs All", and two new novels to be pubHshed in 1909. One

76

of these has been dedicated to the Class of '94 of Princeton : "My Lady of Mexico, the Love Story of General Santa Anna." The other new novel is entitled "Zetta of the Asylum, the Story of a Man and His Woman."

In 1897 Dr. McLeish received his A.M. from Princeton, and in the same year the degree of M.D. from Medical College of Ohio, University of Cincinnati.

arlow Comstock McLeod, M.D., U. S. A.

p Care Thos. B. McLeod, Williamstown, Mass.

h Care Office Surgeon Generaj^y._S. A.^ War Dep't., Washing- ton, D. C.

McLeod is a surgeon in the U. S. Army in the Philippines. The Record could not get in touch with him and the following was fur- nished by the Surgeon General's Office of the War Department.

"Dr. Harlow C. McLeod was employed as contract surgeon, U. S. Army from May 22, 1907, to July 2^, 1908. At that time he was ordered to active duty in the Medical Reserve Corps, in which he is now serving. He has been on duty as follows : Camp Jossman, Guimaras, P. L ; Tagabiran, Samar, P. L ; Balamban, Cebu, P. L, and Camp Council, Samar, P. L, where he was stationed on Novem- ber 30th, 1908, the date of the last report."

McLeod's father gives his permanent address as above and adds that his son married Marjorie Wilson, October 14th, 1898.

[enry Lyndon McMillan

p 40 Bayard Lane, Princeton, N. J.

h Real Estate Trust Building, Philadelphia, Pa.

McMillan is a civil engineer, making a specialty of municipal fil- tration construction. At the time of the Class Decennial "Mac" was engaged in South Jersey in connection with the Philadelphia filtration plants. Subsequently, in 1906, he went to Pittsburgh, with the T. A. Gillespie Company, contractors, completing the Pittsburgh filtration plant in November 1908. Mac's particular line of work was the pre- paration of filtering materials.

From 1896 to 1897 he was Assistant in Chemistry and Mineralogy in Princeton.

Henry is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

77

Shirrell Norton McWilliams

pr ii8 Lexington Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. h 303 D. S. Morgan Building, Buffalo, N. Y.

Our "Old Skinny Mac." is in the insurance business in Buffalo representing the Travelers Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn., and claims to have a very new and original line of "hot air."

He is the Treasurer of the Oakfield Club, an organization located near his summer home, and the President of the Princeton Club of Buffalo, which he says "is a corking, lively young baby."

Skinny is the official promoter of all of the alumni functions in Buffalo and is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

Guffey is the Record's authority that our old "Julius Caesar" is something of an actor. Joe got off the train in Buffalo last fall and upon the first bill-board he saw was affixed an enormous twenty- four sheet lithograph of Skinny, depicting a scene from a skit or take off of Elinor Glyn's "Three Weeks". Across the top was printed SHIRRELL NORTON McWILLIAMS in barn-door size lettering. Joe said that the show was a tremendous hit in Buffalo and that Skinny on the tiger-skin rug was a picture no artist could paint.

September 29th, 1896, Mac. married Mabel L. Johnson. Their children are :

Esther Elisabeth, born December 28th, 1897,

M. Leetta, born October 21st, 1899,

Georgiana, born September 7th, 1901, and

John James, born August 2nd, 1904.

Mac. writes: "These dates have been O. K.'d by the Missus." Better install a card index down at the office, Skinny, so you can check up your position in the race for the Wilson cup at any time. The Record went after Skinny for a more detailed story of his young life and this is his brief reply: "What con game are you working?"

James Arthur Mandeville

P b 736-738 Broad St., Newark, N. J. r 940 Broad St., Newark, N. J.

Mandeville is a member of the firm of Gray and Mandeville, Gen- eral Agents of the Equitable Life Assurance Society for the State of New Jersey.

He writes that there is a lull in the insurance business just at this time and that in consequence of this his feelings are not fit to print.

78

The Record suggests that Mandeville and McWilHams be matched during the reunion in a competitive "spiel" to write a poHcy for Squire Buckelew, the winner to receive a medal of merit.

/Arthur Bartlett Maurice

p The Players Club, i6 Gramercy Park, New York.

r Rah way, N. J.

b 372 Fifth Ave., New York.

Maurice is editor of The Bookman and is the author of "The History of the Nineteenth Century in Caricature" and "New York in Fiction." In 1906 he wrote a series of articles in the above mag- azine on "Some Representative American Story Tellers," and in The Forum, of February, 1909, he is the author of "The Reminis- cent Call".

Wi

JlVilliani Farragut Meredith

p 15 Wall St., New York.

r b Niagara Falls, N. Y.

Our rosy-faced Class Secretary is with the Titanium Alloy Manu- facturing Company of Niagara Falls. This is what he says : "You ask me what the Titanium Alloy Mfg. Co. is. To tell you the truth I hardly know. It is a company that manufactures titanium alloy which is used in some way in the hardening of iron and steel and with good results it is said. I am convinced that the scheme will be a big success if we can overcome the law of gravitation. I regret to say that I am not the office-boy, because my stenographer is partial toward brunettes. What business have I to get married? Last month I spent twenty-three nights on a sleeping car. You have heard about that man with the Waterbury watch and the one-armed paper-hanger with the hives, both very busy men. Well, Tit-Wil- lie has them both stung. Anyway, I am a great comfort to Grand- ma."

Mac Thompson's third child, a son, born since his death, has been christened William Meredith as an evidence of the friendship and affection which existed between Mac and Bill during the former's lifetime.

Meredith is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

He will announce at this reunion of the class the gift of $25,000.00 to the University by a member of '94, to be payable at our twenty- fifth reunion and contingent upon the raising of a like amount by the

79

rest of IIk' (lass, llio purpose to wliieli the i;ii"l shall he devoted to be determined by a vote of the Class.

^Alexander Jay Miller

p r I'.ellefoiitaine, (^hio. /' ()-() iMiipire nioek, I*>ellefontaiiie, ( )hi().

Miller is an attorney in his old Ikmuc, Hellefoiitaine, Ohio. At one time lie was Chief Snjicrvisor of h^dections of his comity and there- after City Solicitor.

lie writes: "I saw Pop Inslec who is superintending the construc- tion here of a pmnpiiij; station for the Tidewater Pipe Line Company and he seems to be in good health and good humor, lie and I have been talking about coming down to Princeton this June but I am afraid 1 will not be able to go as a Congressional campaign a year ago nearly broke me fmancially and I iiave been going slow and rather easy since. 1 lowever, I have some depositions in a case which will have to be taken in Baltimore some time in May or June and if I can get the date to corres])ond with Commencement week I am going to run down and see you fellows for a day anyway."

Miller received his LL.IV degree from the Cincinnati Law School in 1895.

November 27th, 1901, Miller married Lucy L. Middleton.

Infant daughter, born August 17th. 1902. Died August i8lh, 1902.

Infant son, born May 7th, 1904. Deceased.

Infant daughter, born September 19th, 1906. Deceased.

George Armstrong Mitchell

/> Drawer "V", North Tonawanda, N. Y.

r 424 Linwocxl Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.

b North Tonawanda. N. Y.

Mitchell is President and Treastn-cr of the firm of White, Gratwick and ]\Iitchell, Inc., wholesale lumber. George is also interested in lumber insurance and for side lines dabbles in Shredded Wheat and Il-O.

February lOth, i()oi, he married Sarah Gates Hamlin. Their chil- dren are :

William Hamlin, born November 15th. 1901.

Thomas Wierman, born April 5th, 1903.

Kate Louise, born Septemi)er 1st, 1908.

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James McCormick Mitchell

p h 558 Ellicott Square, Buffalo, N. Y.

r 331 Summer St., Buffalo, N. Y. "Mac" is a lawyer in Buffalo, and is a member of the firm of Kene- fick, Cooke and Mitchell. He graduated from the Buffalo Law School in 1897 and entered the office of Rogers, Locke and Milburn. In the spring of 1901 he entered the office of Bissell, Carey and Cooke, one of the oldest firms in Buffalo and the direct successor of the firm of Cleveland and Bissell. In 1902 Mitchell was admitted to membership in the firm.

In 1906, after Mr. Bissell's death and Mr. Carey's removal to New York, Judge Kenefick resigned from the Supreme Court bench to join the firm and it was reorganized under the present name. Mac. received his A.M. from Princeton in 1897.

December 5th, 1906, Mitchell married Lavinia Austin Avery.

Margaret was born January 4th, 1908.

Charles F. Morrison

Morrison could not be located. At the time of the Class Decennial he was teaching in the High School at Grand Forks, N. Dak. In- quiry of the Principal there failed to locate Morrison's present whereabouts. In the Alumni Weekly of October 21, 1905, appeared a paragraph to the effect that he was then at Ilagan, Philippine Isl- ands.

Morrison received the following degrees: Princeton, A.M., 1896; Princeton Theological Seminary, B.D., 1898; Columbia College, Chi- cago, D. O., 1902 ; College of Therapeutics, Fargo, D. T., 1903.

August 6th, 1903, he married E. V. C. DeWitt.

, John Murray

p New Amsterdam Theatre Building, New York.

h Care Klaw and Erlanger, 214 West 42nd St., New York.

John writes that he is in the "show business." He is with the so- called theatrical trust and is very prosperous, though his business causes him to become a nomad.

He was formerly engaged in journalism, and was on the staff of the Chicago American. He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

81

John Crosby Neely

^ p r 4929 Greenwood Ave., Chicago, 111.

b Care Board of Supervising Engineers, Chicago Traction Co., 181 La Salle St., Chicago, 111. "Engineer." This is the sum total of John's information for the Record. It took three hard shakes to wake him up and after writ- ing his name, address and occupation upon the data blank in a very snappy lavender colored ink, John rolled over for another nap, leav- ing orders not to be called until our twentieth reunion in 1914.

/

orace Franklin Nixon

p r Woodbury, N. J. h 317 Market St., Camden, N. J.

Horace is a counsellor-at-law and a Master and Examiner in Chan- cery in Camden, N. J.

He says: "Have had a great deal of enjoyment, especially during the last year, in four or five brisk cross-country rides each week. The result is that I am feeling fine, and the fellows in a rough rider class which I attend once a week, think I am about twenty five instead of an old grad. about to go back to his fifteenth reunion. A little swimming and golf during the summer furnishes the balance of the relaxation which I need from an extremely busy practice. Certainly the habit of exercise which we form at Princeton is a great thing to keep us young."

Horace is a member of the Princeton Club of Philadelphia.

October 19th, 1898, Nixon married Caroline Denny and they have three daughters,

Caroline Denny, born October i6th, 1899,

Mary Lowe, born March 24th, 1903, and

Margery, born January 9th, 1906.

« Horace Dutton Noyes

p r Kingston, N. Y b Burgevine Building, Kingston, N. Y.

Noyes is engaged in the manufacture of high explosives in King- ston, N. Y. The name of his company is "The Nitro Powder Com- pany."

82

Charles Forsyth Patterson

p b 602 Frick Building, Pittsburgh, Pa. r iioi Western Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.

Patterson is an attorney in Pittsburgh, and is counsel for the "Big Four" Express Companies. He writes that the activities of the lately departed T. R. resulted in innumerable suits, claims and de- mands of all sorts against these downtrodden public servants to such an extent that he has been up to his eyes in work ever since.

"I live a life of unremitting toil, which does not permit of much /\. excursion into the realms of literature, fancy or politics. As a matter of fact, my daily life is composed of a morning trip to the office, a struggle there for daily bread, a trip home, and as our old friend Pepy says, "and so to bed". Epics have been written with little else as foundation.

"I do not, however, like a majority of Pittsburghers, sigh for the days when the iron business was prosperous and when gfaft was rampant as in days of yore. In fact, I believe that the worse the times the better the law business. An epigram. I am the highest authority at our Bar on the law of suretyship, receiverships and ex- press companies, and am universally recognized as such I may say without conceit.

"I expect to be at the Fifteenth Reunion, and if business continues as good as heretofore will double the money offered by Chuck Wil- son in his late bequest. While I have no intention of entering my- self as a candidate for the loving cup which he has offered I may say that my small boy, now aged some three years, has nailed down the position of center rush on the Varsity when he enters college, as he weighs fifty pounds and already is a tackier of renown."

April 15th, 1903, Patterson married Elizabeth Loomis Lord, of Baltimore, a sister of Walter Lord, '95.

Their daughter, Forsyth, was born December 30th, 1903.

Charles Lord was born December 17th, 1905.

/

Edward James Patterson

pb 40 Wall St., New York.

r 740 West Eighth St., Plainfield, N. J. "Pat" graduated from the New York Law School in 1896 and has been practicing in that city ever since. In 1901 he became a mem- ber of the firm of Harmon and Mathewson at 40 Wall St.

83

\

/

He writes : "Our practice is largely of the corporation order, al- though we have had a good deal of litigation. Some of it has been of considerable importance, one of my partners having been chief counsel for the gas companies in the late lamented eighty-cent gas case. I have also tried a good many cases myself. My home is still in Plainfield, where I have recently built a new house. The statistics of its inhabitants are below. In September, 1904, I had a serious case of appendicitis and there would surely have been an- other name in our long death list had it not been for the skill of the late Andrew J. McCosh 'yj, and Dr. William H. Murray '78. son of the good old Dean.

"Following that Mrs. Patterson and I took a trip abroad and I have made two short trips to Europe since. My profession takes most of my time and energy. I have few interests outside my office and my home, except that I play golf and go fishing whenever I get the chance.

"A year ago we organized a local Princeton Club in Plainfield of which I had the honor to be the first president. Recently we had a dinner at which Professor Irish McClenahan represented the fac- ulty and did it well."

"Pat " is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

Patterson married Gertrude Rushmore June 12th, 1900.

Margaret was born March 24th, 1901, and

Katharine, July 25th, 1907.

Frederick Clark Paulmier

Born May 17th, 1873.

Died March 3rd, 1906, New York.

Archibald McDawell Pepper

p rh Lexington, Miss.

Pepper began the practice of law in June, 1895, and is a member of the firm of Boothe and Pepper. He is engaged in general prac- tice, criminal and civil, in both State and Federal Courts in Mis- sissippi.

In May of last year "Archie" was one of the three delegates from his state attending the Conference of Governors at the White House

84

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in the interest of the preservation of the natural resources of the country. The present Governor of Mississippi, E. F. Noel, was Pep- per's law partner for twelve years and Archie was his campaign manager during his last race.

In addition to his legal work and political activities Pepper devotes much of his time to his extensive land interests in the Yazoo and Mississippi Delta.

April 14th, 1897, he married Lillian Boothe.

James Boothe, born May i6th, 1898, died June loth, 1899.

A second son, born November 17th, 1900, died in infancy.

Thomas Jefferson Perkins

r

ph 15 Dey St., New York. r Nanuet, Rockland Co., New York.

"Tom" is a lawyer and has been connected with the Right of Way Department of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company for a number of years, being now second in command.

He received the degree of LL.B. from the New York Law School in 1896 and is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

October 15th, 1901, Perkins married Isabella McWhorter and their two children are:

Louise M., born November 22nd, 1903, and

Isabella McW., born September i8th, 1907.

Edward Charles Petrie

p r 225 East 53rd St., Chicago, 111. h 169 Adams St., Chicago, 111.

"Pete" is Assistant Manager of the firm of George C. Batcheller and Company, of Chicago, manufacturers of corsets.

He was too busy with the spring output of "straight fronts" and "peekaboos" to go further into the interesting details of his life and his work.

Roy Campbell Pitcairn

Harrisburg, Pa.

No news of Pitcairn's recent doings and location.

Robert Kay Portser

p Greensburg, Pa. \i^

Kay is the real "tight wad" as far as information for the Record

85

goes. The Record made a tearful appeal to Robert for a few de- tails but our rotund classmate refused to unburden himself further than to say: "I am a lawyer in Greensburg."

To distract attention from himself Kay forwarded a marked copy of the Greensburg Daily Tribune, which indicated therein that a cou- ple of fat offices in Westmoreland Co., Pa., are held by '94 men; Hitchman has a $4,000 job and Yont gets $6,000 for his.

Daniel Pratt

pr ^^ Cedar St., Syracuse, N. Y. b Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y.

"Dan" received the degree of A.M. from Syracuse University in 1904 and is now Assistant Professor of Mathematics in that insti- tution.

July 3rd, 1901, Pratt married Clara B. Wheeler.

Carroll Wheeler was born November 7th, 1902.

Bessie was born February 22nd, 1904. Died March i8th, 1904.

/

George Madison Priest

p 10 Nassau St., Princeton, N. J.

Priest has been Preceptor of Modern Languages in Princeton Uni- versity since 1905. For ten years previous he had been Instructor in German. In addition to his Princeton degrees of A.B., 1894, and A.M., 1896, he received the degree of Ph.D. from the University of Jena in 1907. He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

Ernest S. Ramsdell, M.D.

b 521 North Fourth St., Camden, N. J.

"Ernie" has stood off all appeals for information as to his career. He is a practicing physician in Camden, N. J., and the directory of that city gives his address as above.

Ralph R. Ramsdell

Letters sent to Ramsdell's last known address were returned by the Postmaster. Mac. Thompson could not locate him for the De- cennial Record, the only news at that time being that he was last heard of in the Klondike.

86

/B. Kirk Rankin

p Nashville, Tenn.

r 2407 Kensington Place, Nashville, Tenn.

h 150 Fourth Ave., North, Nashville, Tenn.

B. Kirk is the publisher of "The Dixie Miller", "Southern Agricul- turist", and "Southern Building Record".

"If you are a friend," says Kirk, "now is the time to subscribe; everybody else is quitting. We have our own printing plant now and hope to have a bank account some day. My town house is in Kensington Place, opposite the royal gardens, just below that of the Referee in Bankruptcy. If you lose my address ask any policeman in Nashville. If anybody but Meredith offered that Marathon cup, I'd win it, but no pewter mugs for me."

Kirk married Susie Woods Porterfield, April loth, 1901.

B. Kirk, Jr., was born October 27th, 1903.

William Johns Read, Jr.

Cumberland, Md.

At the time of the Decennial Read's whereabouts were unknown. His father wrote that he was then located in Missouri, but, having just at that time changed his business, his address was unknown. Efforts to locate him through his father for the present issue of the Record were unsuccessful.

L. Irving Reichner

pr 317 Bryn Mawr Ave., Cynwyd, Pa. b Fidelity Trust Co., 327 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.

"Lou" is a lawyer holding the responsible position of Assistant Trust Officer of the Fidelity Trust Company, of Philadelphia, one of the two largest corporations of its kind in that city and' one of the strongest in the country, its trust estates aggregating many mil- lions of dollars. He says : "I cannot promise you to deliver any dog- gerel as I gave up that fascinating and instructing work in June, 1904, and have been absolutely dependent for my music upon the beautiful compositions of other masters. Reserve room for one at the Seminary, electric light, hot and cold water, springs on bed, valet, breakfast in bed. I vote no on the banquet, too formal, poor grub, leads to the grill room afterwards. Wine is a mocker. You

87

will never holtl the whole bunch until Monday evening for a class dinner, especially after Squire's clambake. Never mix business and clams. Have a shirt-waist reunion. Down with class dinners at the Inn on hot nights ! Savors of a meeting of the undesirable citizens, Ilarriman et al."

In 1897 Reichner received his A.M. from Princeton and his LL.B. from University of Pennsylvania. He is a member of the Princeton Club of Philadelphia and has been a member of the Graduate Advisory Committee of the Princeton University Athletic Associa- tion, from which he has resigned, his resignation to take elTect this month.

Cephise H. Aiken became Mrs. Reichner June 17th, 1897, and their two sons are :

Aiken Irving, born June 4th, 1900, and

Morgan Stephens, born August 29th, 1905.

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Hugh Richardson

p 400 W. Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.

b 1 100 Century Building, Atlanta, Ga.

Richardson is engaged in private banking and real estate in At- lanta.

He writes : "Last February I attended a dinner here given to Dr. Andrew F. West of Princeton. All of the Princeton men in Atlan- ta were invited and I was very pleased to see that Dr. West has changed so little in the past fifteen years and still has that happy fac- ulty of making friends for Princeton which gave rise to the old song "Here's to Andy-three-million- West." Several days later I had the pleasure of his company as a guest at luncheon at my farm. My eight year old boy joins me in kindest regards to every member of old '94."

Richardson married Josephine V. D. Inman, of Atlanta, June 24th, 1896.

Hugh Inman was born August ist, 1900.

Francis Graham Riggs

p 814 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md. r Robinson, Anne Arundel Co., Md. b 200 Fast German St., Baltimore, Md. "Frank" is a financier and chicken fancier. As a financier he is paying (and story) teller in The Mercantile Trust and Deposit Com-

88

pany of Baltimore. The Record has excellent authority that al- though Frank is in the banking business he is not leading a double life.

He writes : "Sorry can't get cup for longest 'traveling'. Any other LONG prizes?"

"The Bull" owns one-half of ninety-four acres of the best Mary- land chicken land down in "Old Anne Aran'el County". Fifteen years ago we little realized the effects of "Squire" Buckelew's bucolic tastes upon the after lives of some of our classmates.

George Williams says that, although the "Gold Dust Twins" have been farming but three or four years, they can now feed the hens almost as well as the Squire, and he has been in the business since infancy. Frank is a member of the Princeton Club of New York

Henry Griffith Riggs

p b 344 Equitable Building, Baltimore, Md. r Robinson, Anne Arundel Co., Md.

"Harry" is ditto to Frank. He is the senior partner of Riggs and McLane, bond brokers, and owns the other half of the chicken farm. His competitors do say that "Hatchet" is a crafty man in his business of buying and selling high grade securities. "Buck", of Jamesburg, says : "That man certainly does know a hen when he sees one". Such tributes indicate that our classmate has done well in his two chosen lines of calling.

On Saturdays, he and brother Frank pool their weekly profits, buy a new setting of Plymouth Rocks and go down to see the hens.

He says : "In reserving room in Seminary I desire to urge you to see personally that I am not placed near any rough fellows, as I wish to be quiet and undisturbed during my hours of rest."

For the present at least the fowls have driven all matrimonial ideas out of the thoughts of each of our twins.

Verily, Buckelew has much to answer for.

Harry is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

Thomas Riggs, Jr.

pr 2III S St., Washington, D. C. b Coast and Geodetic Survey, Washington, D. C.

"Tom" is a government surveyor, having charge every summer of the running of the 141st meridian, the boundary between Alaska and Canada.

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He writes : "It's a hard graft. Last year included a shortage of supplies which meant a week straight on beans and two days without even beans very trying. We wound up the season with a two hun- dred and fifty mile trip on a raft in unexplored waters. Some of these days I am going to discover a gold mine and come back to put the class properly to the bad. Unmarried and getting more undesir- able every day."

In the winter Tom lives in Washington, where he can get his three square meals per day and beans are tabooed.

Edward R. Robbins

p r 42>^2> Baltimore Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.

b 8 South I2th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Robbins is Senior Master in Mathematics in the William Penn Charter School, Philadelphia.

On June 23rd, 1897, he married Katharine Keyser.

Ernest Percival Roberts

r Key West, Fla.

"Borneo" failed to respond for the Decennial Record and was lost up to 1905 when he popped into prominence as a member of the Flo- rida Legislature. Inquiry of the Secretary of State of the State of Florida develoj^ed the fact that Roberts is living now in Key West. Several appeals failed to rouse him out so the Record is obliged to let it go at that.

./Charles Alexander Robinson c*-*-**-^

p r h Peekskill Military Academy, Peekskill, N. Y.

"Charley" is Principal of the Peekskill Military Academy, an educational institution for boys, founded in 1833.

He was Instructor in Greek in Princeton, 1897-98; and Instructor in Latin, T898-Deccmber, 1903, at which time he resigned to accept the position of Associate Principal at Peekskill.

Robinson received from Princeton the degree of A.M. in 1895 and in 1 90 1 the degree of Ph.D.

He writes : "I am sorry to have caused the Record to spend un- necessary postage. I can truly sympathize with you, for since the fire, January 12th, I have experienced all the agonies of no response to my ceaseless flow of letters asking for funds from our three

90

thousand graduates and ex-members. '94 fathers of boys will please note that I can guarantee thorough preparation for Princeton, or any other college if obliged to."

The Record would suggest to Charley that he keep a copy of this book for reference when he sends out his advertising circulars to members of the Class. Several fathers of girls only have protested that to be overwhelmed with advertising matter about a boys' school three or four times a year is carrying a joke a little too far.

June 1 6th, 1898, Robinson married Sarah Sharpe Westcott. Their three children are:

Charles Alexander, Jr., born March 30th, 1900,

Sarah Westcott, born July 28th, 1902, and

Elizabeth Archibald, born June 9th, 1905.

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John Jenkins Robinson

p r 13 Saunders Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. h 1^20 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.

Robinson is manager of the Oliver H. Bair Company, funeral directors, of Philadelphia. He writes : "I am getting along as well as could be expected of a farmer." He is a member of the Princeton Club of Philadelphia.

December 22nd, 1898, Robinson married Jessie Fremont Mumford and three little "Woodpeckers" are headed toward the lofty elms of dear old Princeton :

John Mumford, born May 22nd, 1901.

Richard Stuart, born May 14th, 1903.

Newton Laird, born February 15th, 1907.

Karl G. Roebling

p b John A. Roebling's Sons Co., Trenton, N. J. r Trenton, N. J.

Karl is still a busy little Trenton wire maker and is connected with the John A. Roebling's Sons Company.

He married Blanche E. Estabrook, of Chicago, November 20th, 1902. He was "unable to supply the dates of the births of his chil- dren without going home to consult the old family Bible," so an appeal was made to Mrs. Roebling, who very kindly furnished the necessary information.

Robert Clowry was born September 22nd, 1904, and

Allison Campbell, December ist, 1907.

91

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illlam Spoor Rogers

p b Care John A. Roebling's Sons Co., Trenton, N. J. r 41 Prospect St., Trenton, N. J.

Billy" is connected with the sales department of the insulated wire branch of the Roebling's Sons Company. Some of those bright Broadway lights are on Will's wire.

Rogers received his degree of E.E. in 1895 along with Beck, Kel- logg, McClenahan, Spruance, George Swain and Wintringer.

October 4th, 1905, he married Elisabeth Caldwell Fisk of Trenton, New Jersey. Popsy Kellogg and Irish were two of his ushers.

Charles Rugh

p rb Greensburg, Pa.

"Charley" is a lawyer in his old home, Greensburg. Further than this brief information he practices the maxim that "Silence is gol- den." From outside sources the Record learns that Charley is also something of a farmer.

Rev. Edward Johnson Russell

p r 165 Bement Ave., West New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. Russell graduated from the Princeton Theological Seminary in 1904 and is now Pastor of Calvary Presbyterian Church, West % New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. Prior to 1904 he was a profes- sor at Lawrenceville for five years.

December 6th, 1906, he married Eileen LaForge Robinson. Eileen Russell was born December loth, 1907.

PhiHp Schieffelin Sabine, M. D.

p rb 960 Madison Ave., New York.

Sabine is a practicing physician in New York City, having received .his M.D. from Columbia University, College of Physicians and Sur- geons in 1898. He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

^dolph Theodore Schmidt

1108 Terry Ave., Seattle, Wash, jchmidt formerly hailed from Louisville, Kentucky. No word ^ was received from him and the above address was supplied by Mar-

f shall Bullitt, his former fellow townsman.

92

James Hastings Scrimgeour

p r 73 Macon St., Brooklyn, N. Y. h 44 Court St., Brooklyn, N. Y.

"Jimmie Scrim" writes : "Attorney unmarried." The Record leaves it to the Class. Is the letter from Jimmie worth the fourteen cents that it cost?

Tim is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

Rev. Frank Clarence Shultis

p r Pomona, N. Y. Shultis is a clergyman having charge at Pomona, New York. In addition to his Princeton degrees of A.B., 1894, and A.M., 1900, he received from Harvard in 1900 the degree of Bachelor of Theol- ogy- September nth, 1894, he married Flora E. Sargent.

Montgomery Hunt Sicard, M. D.

p r 103 East 69th St., New York. h 15 East 48th St., New York.

"Mont" is a practicing physician in New York City. In the sum- mer he practices in Seabright, N. J. He received his degree of M;D. Columbia University in 1898 and was at one time Instructor of Phys- ical Diagnosis at Cornell University.

Sicard is a Steward of the Sons of the Revolution. Time deals gently with our "Saccus" ; he looks fit enough to take the mid- dleweight cane in a spree. He is a member of the N. Y. Princeton Club.

December 22nd, 1903, he married Adelia A. Ireland.

Henry King Siebeneck

p b 1308 Farmers' Bank Building, Pittsburgh, Pa. r 855 Beech Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.

All that Siebeneck deigns to give us is that he is a lawyer. At the bottom of his information blank he writes : "Don't believe any of Guffey's fake tales." Go on, tell us, Joe.

Notwithstanding his apparent indifference to the Record's plain- tive appeals, Siebeneck takes a prominent part in Princeton Alumni affairs in Pittsburgh as a member of the Executive Committee of the Pittsburgh Alumni Association.

93

Herbert Fowler Sill

/> Canictjie Technical Schools, Pittsburgh. Pa. r Sill received llTe ilej^ree of Ph.D. from the lliiiversity in ihc Car- iicj^ie 'rechnical Schools of rittsburgh.

Imoiii i<S(;4 to i(;()o Sill was Assistant in Applied Chemistry in I'riiicelon and Instructor in Analytical Chemistry 1901-1904.

In 1905 he was kesearch Assist.ant, Carnegie Institution, Washing- ton, 1). C. In addition to his U.S. degree Sill received his M.S. from I'rincelon in \^(j().

Edward Salisbury Smith

p r. (). I'.o.\ 847, Denver, Colo.

r 7()2 Lafayette St., Denver, Colo.

b 536 Symes Block, Denver, Colo.

"Whiskers" is a mining engineer with hea(l(|uarters in Denver, lie writes: "My work takes me away from Denver a great deal of the time and 1 make frecpient tri])s to Nevada, Arizona, California^ Old Mexico, etc., with occasional visits to New York, where I am associated with a .syndicate of mining men. Unfortunately I have not been able to time my eastern trips so as to attend any of the Class reunions, though 1 fre(|uently see the base-ball and early foot- ball games. We have a very nice Princeton Association here and, the old spirit is never lacking. Our annual banquet and occasional smokers are always a success. Last year 1 had the honor of holding down the ])residcncy. Am holding my own and possibly a little more and putting in a good word for the old campus whenever I get the chance."

lie is the Secretary and Treasurer of the Curtis Dry Placer Ma- chine Company of Denver, manufacturers of a machine for the working of low grade gold deposits where water is not available.

(anuary 20lh, Tgo2, he married Grace MacFarlane.

Stuart Salisbm-y was born August 29th, 1904.

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5'rederick Hoffman Smith, III

ph 71 liroadway, New York.

r 354 Charlton Ave., South Orange, N. J. Our "Widely" is a stockholder of the firm of Smith, TTcck and Company, members of the New York Stock Exchange.

lie writes that the ability is there all right, but that he is too 1)usy

94

looking after three little Smiths to bother about degrees. Work seems to agree with Fred. He is as round as a ripe pippin and the same old jovial ballad singer as of yore.

He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York and Treas- urer of the Alumni Association of the Oranges, Inc.

April i6th, 1902, Mary Constance Hall became Mrs. Smith.

Helen Frederica was born March 15th, 1903.

Constance Headley, born October loth, 1905.

Frederick Hoffman IV, born June 6th, 1908.

jFrank Clinton Smythe

pr 1228 Soiilh 51SI St., I'hiladelphia, Pa. »"' 3211ll'3t. and I'owclton Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.

Frank is in the engineering department of the Pennsylvania Rail- road. He and "DeWolf" Hopper meet frequently at Ed. Hammett's house for various social and convivial purposes, the particulars of which are omitted out of consideration for Dr. Hopper.

Last fall "Whiskers" Smith gave the three a long dissertation on the unearthed treasures of the Rocky Mountains. Frank, Ed. and Hop fairly shivered at the size of the figures used by "Whiskers". The certificates of stock are elaborately engraved and the color a beautiful green.

All the same, boys, if you do strike it rich, the Class will be the first to congratulate you and collector-of-funds Meredith will be at your respective offices the next morning.

Willet M. Spooner

p Railway Exchange Building, Milwaukee, Wis.

Spooner is a lawyer and received his A.B. from the University of Wisconsin in 1894 and his LL.B. from the same University in 1896. He is a member of the firm of Spooner and Ellis.

He says : "Give my regards to the bunch. I intend to be in Princeton in June."

Spooner married Katherine Noyes November loth, 1898.

illiam Corbit Spruance, Jr.

pr 1616 Broome St., Wilmington, Del. /

h duPont Building, Wilmington, Del.

95

"Billy" is a consulting engineer, having received his degree of E.E. from Princeton in 1895.

He is with the high explosives operating department of the E. I. duPont de Nemours Powder Company of Wilmington, Delaware.

Big Bill belongs to the New York Princeton Club, but it is too far from home to keep him out late o' nights.

He is a "classy" golfer and holds the record of having driven a ball across his native state in one shot.

May 4th, 1907, Spruance married Alice Moore Lea.

Burton Egbert Stevenson

p b Public Library, Chillicothe, Ohio.

Stevenson is an author and Librarian of the Chillicothe Public Library, which position he has held for the past eight years.

He writes: "For lo these many years I have been earning a precarious living with the pen. First as a newspaper hack and then as an ordinary literary omnibus, in the course of time producing about a dozen novels which have excited only the mildest sort of interest, three or four kid books, some anthologies and several library reference books. Some of it has been reproduced in England and Germany and there is even a Dago version of one particularly un- pleasant detective story. As I look over the shelf full of stuff I have produced I am ashamed sometimes of the good money the publishers and public have thrown away on it. Still, if the aforesaid p. and p. don't kick I don't suppose I should."

The latest titles from Stevenson's pen are: "The Quest of the Rose of Sharon", Page, 1909; "The Young Train Master", Page, 1909, and "Tavernay", Lovell, 1909.

June I2th, 1895, he married Elizabeth Shepherd Butler.

Richard A. Streit

p Roosevelt Park, Maplewood, N. J.

b 216 Greenwich St., New York.

"Dick" is a member of the firm of Samuel Streit and Company, New York, importers of wines, etc. We could stand a longer story from this lengthy classmate, but Richard will have none of it.

The automobile bug has infected him, along with Parson Ferris. Efforts will be made to match the two in an endurance run to Jamesburg and return the day of the Class clam bake.

January 27th, 1902, Streit married Lillian Meeker.

96

yGeorge Randall Swain

p b 425 Clinton St., Newark, N. J. r 994 Broad St., Newark, N. J.

George is a member of the firm of Bigelow and Swain of Newark, N. J., limestone for cement and fluxing purposes. His partner is Moses Bigelow '98. Their quarry is in Sussex County, in the north- ern part of the state, and their product is disposed of to cement works and iron furnaces. George is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

May 8th, 1897, Swain married Florence H. Joy. Mrs. Swain died January 23rd, 1901.

Edmund Joy was born July 17th, 1898; died March 31st, 1899.

George Randall, Jr., born January 17th, 1901.

Rev. James Ramsey Swain

pr 4103 Chester Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. b Woodland Presbyterian Church, 42nd and Pine Sts., Phila- delphia, Pa.

"Jim" Swain is Pastor of the Woodland Presbyterian Church of Philadelphia. After graduation he spent a year as the General Secretary of the University Y. M. C. A. Then followed three years in the Syrian Protestant College at Beirut, Syria, and on his return to America, he studied three years at the Princeton Seminary.

After receiving his B.D. degree in 1901, Swain was called to the pastorate of the Dutch Reformed Church of Flushing, Long Island, N. Y., remaining there until 1905, when he took up his present charge.

June nth, 1902, he married Fanny Mulford Jessup.

Robert Otis Swan

b 49 Wall St., New York.

"?5W^'h is a 'memirer"^TtI^T!^ and Princeton Clubs of New

York, his business address being supplied by the latter.

Information blanks, personal notes, a registered letter and appeals through classmates failed to make "Duck" give even one quack.

The Alumni Weekly, under date of March 24th, 1906, stated that Swan was with Stout and Co., 25 Broad St., New York.

Later: "Swan went West recently for a six months' absence.

97

His present address is Greeley, Colo. He has been with Stout and Co., 25 Broad Street, New York, until a short time ago. Duck has been in poor health and has spent a good deal of time in the West of late."

M'Cready Sykes

p 25 Broad St., New York.

r Boise, Idaho.

h Overland lUiilding, Boise, Idaho.

"Bill" is a ranchman in southern Idaho, and here is his letter in full :

"Since graduation I have had such variety of work and scene and have been able to see so much of the Class and to make such frequent pilgrimages to Princeton that I cannot but write with great cheer- fulness and hap])iness. I have been a predatory lawyer most of the time, eking out the meagre subsistence that, outside of novels, muck- raking magazines and the roarings of the Greatest Living Statesman, is really the lot of most of our profession. Incidentally, and owing to the unpleasant necessity of paying bills, I have spoilt some other- wise good pages of our magazines with stories and poems, and the rest of the time I have been more or less mixed up with ranching in southern Idaho.

I have about retired from the practice of the law, and am living in Boise now, and expect to make this my head(iuarters for the next few months, being thereto induced chiefly to be within the sphere of influence of Bob Lewis. My occupation here is raising apples, exter- minating jack-rabbits and sagebrush and sitting with my feet on the desk, dilating on the greatness of the Far West. Out here we are long on Woman Suff^rage, sunshine, alfalfa, high spirits and belief in our fellow-men, and short of grouchiness, tuberculosis, nerves, strap-hanging crowds and bad weather.

"I am afraid you will have to pass on to the next man in your search for achievements, for the infinite detail of fifteen years of professional work and the prosaic clearing of deserts and making the waste i)laces to bloom, are all intensely interesting in the doing but hardly striking or dramatic enough to write about in comparison with the real constructive work of so many of the Class. You should get Mont Sicard and Kenyon to tell you of the real big work they have been doing in their lines, or Ed Patterson of the difficult and important litigation wherein he has been the best of pilots, or Gitney

98

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Williams of his great success as one of the leading lawyers of Balti- more, or the other George Williams of how he broke up the gangs in St. Louis and the people insisted on making him judge, or Arthur Maurice of how he has edited The Bookman and made it a magazine of dignity and authority, or Marshall Bullitt of how he induced the Supreme Court of Kentucky to turn the whole city government of Louisville out of office and to invalidate the election for fraud and what they think of Marshall in Kentucky there is plenty of achieve- ment in our Class only you are right when you say that those boys who have been doing things won't tell you about them.

"When I get back East, which I hope will be very soon, I am going to have a Sabine Farm in the hills back of Princeton, where there will be a permanent '94 headquarters and cots for everybody at Reunions one side of the house under the care of Frank and the other presided over by Harry. One side will have Scotch and the other Apollinaris.

"My only sad thought is that I'm afraid that I may not be able to get back to Quindecennial. When I think of that I feel like the English servant who at a masquerade was dressed up by his employer as an ancient Roman. When someone asked him, face- tiously, 'Are you Appius Claudius?' he replied with a groan, 'No, sir, I ain't. I'm as un'appy as 'ell.' "

Sykes is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

Edward Thaw

p P. O. Box 1086, Pittsburgh, Pa. r Cortina d'Ampezzo, Tyrol, Austria.

"Ed" is living the life of a gentleman of leisure in the Austrian Tyrol.

April 23rd, 1906, he married Jane Olmsted of Detroit, Mich. Edward, Jr., was born June 13th, 1908.

Frank Forrester Thompson

p b Rutgers College, New Brunswick, N. J.

r 91 Bayard St., New Brunswick, N. J. Thompson is Professor of Electrical Engineering in Rutgers College. He was Instructor in Physics in Union College 1897-98;

99

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Instructor Electrical Engineering, Penn. State College, 1898-1901 ; Instructor Physics and Mathematics, Rutgers, 1903-06; Associate Professor Physics, Rutgers, 1906-08.

He received the degree of A.M. from Princeton in 1895 and the degree of E.E. in 1897.

lie writes: "I am still busily engaged in initiating the budding Edisons of the future into the first steps of that greatest of all ])r()l'cssions, electrical engineering . If you don't believe that it is the greatest, ask "Irish". May I add just one word of appreciation of Mac. Thompson, who has "crossed the bar"? How we shall all miss him and his enthusiastic and self-sacrificing interest in Prince- ton and that greatest class she ever graduated, '94."

Henry Sof f e Thompson

p Hotel Marie Antoinette, Broadway and 67th St., New York.

r Greenwich, Conn. ,/> 165 Broadway, New York.

"Marry" is a buildiiii; and railroad contractor in New York and a dealer in real estate. He was Superintendent of Buildings in New York City during Mayor Low's administration and was appointed by Mayor McClellan a member of the City Improvement Com- mission.

In 1907 he was made Commissioner of Public Works, resigning in March, 1908, to resume his private business of contracting and building.

On the Princeton campus the following buildings were erected by him : the two Stafford Little Halls, Dodge Hall and the new Gymnasium. Thompson organized the Thompson-Starrett Com- pany, one of the largest construction companies in the United States, but is not now associated with this concern.

Thompson is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

April 19th, 1900, he married Mabel Potter, and they have three children,

Dorothy, born January 7th, 1901.

A dele, born December 5th, 1903.

Henry SoflFe, Jr., born March 3rd, 1905.

James MacNaughton Thompson

Died December 26th, 1908, Albany, N. Y.

Married Florence Jones November 12th, 1902. Alice Jones, born October 21st, 1904. James MacNaughton, born August 3rd, 1907. William Meredith, born March 15th, 1909.

(From The Princeton Alumni Weekly, Feb. 3, 1909.) "In the death of James MacNaughton Thompson of the Class of 94, Princeton University has indeed lost one of her favorite sons. To have known him was to have realized the privilege it was to those who know and love Princeton that he should have been one of her standard bearers to carry her vigor and spirit and ideals into the outer world.

"It is hard to realize that Mac. Thompson has been taken from us. But we recognize the fact of an all-wise Providence, and though we are stunned by the blow, yet do we also see through the mist before our eyes the Divine Hand which gave us such a strong and loving heart to ever cherish in tender memory.

"The Board of Governors of the University Cottage Club, with whom he was for several years closely associated, direct that this memorial be spread upon the minutes of the Board, and as a slight token of their sorrow direct that a copy be sent to Mrs. Thompson, and be published in The Princeton Alumni Weekly. Board of Gov- ernors of the University Cottage Club. W. F. Meredith, Wm. O. Morse, Committee."

(Extract from Sermon of Rev. Roelif H. Brooks, St. Paul's Church, Albany, N. Y., January 3, 1909.)

"The keynotes of my hopes for the parish were set forth, ex- pressed as best I could, in the preface of the Year Book which has been placed in your hands, as follows : That the parish may stand for earnestness and zeal and the church as a place to which men and women shall come for spiritual help and comfort, a place where they may find new courage to live the highest and best life, as exemplified in the life of Jesus Christ'

"I said this because the greatest need of man is to know how to

live his life in its truest and best sense and that he may do so is the reason, and the only reason, for the church's existence, that she may help, guide and protect.

"How should a man live his life in its truest and best sense? The answer was given to us as a parish, as an entire community, this past week. At first I confess that a spirit of rebellion arose in my heart at what seemed the ruthless striking down of a man young in years, with a future so full of promise before him; a man with such a capacity for doing good and with a desire behind that capacity for doing it.

"With pride I had looked forward to the day when he might become more closely associated with us as a member of the vestry and through this add greater strength to the work which we are trying to do here. For, from the first day that I came to the City of Albany, even before I had accepted the position of rector of St. Paul's, T realized that in James MacNaughton Thompson I had a friend in whom I could repose confidence and trust and from whom I might expect in return, love and sympathy. If ever man lived his life in its truest and best sense, that man was he. One of God's noblemen was he, 'whose strength was as the strength of ten, because his heart was pure'.

"No mean sordid thing could he do, for he was every inch a man, of high aims, lofty ideals, with a heart full of love and a nature bubbling over with all that was good.

"Although his life was short as measured in years, his influence was such that his name and the impress which he left and made upon the lives of the young men with whom he came in contact will never be forgotten as long as life lasts.

"His influence was greater than that which comes to most men, and the result was such that all men, even those who did not know him intimately, felt as though they had lost a personal friend.

"My brethren, such men do not live in vain, nor do they die in v;i.in. Life, it is true, is full of mystery, but I believe with all the faith my heart is capable of containing, that God raises up such men to teach the greatest lesson which life contains, that only the best is worth while. And I beg you, more especially you young men, to remember and hold before your mind's eye the example which James MacNaughton Thompson set you. A man may be good, true and pure, without being what we might call a prude, and such was he."

A TRIBUTE BY M CREADY SYKES

We come together at this fifteenth reunion under a shadow that makes of our gathering a solemn memorial. At this halfway point in our journey, as we look again in each others' faces and hear again each others' voices and listen once more to each others' stories of the good and ill that has come to us along the road, we are all thinking of a kindly voice forever hushed and of one in whose brave and inspiring eyes we may no longer look.

Dear old Mac ! Surely it can be given to few to realize so splen- didly as did he all that a class president may be in leading and inspiring the men of his generation ; in preserving unbroken and unimpaired through all the years the unity, the loyalty and fraternity of the men that had lived in Princeton together. . . . The words are hard to speak, and a mist is before our eyes

"At cur feet our captain lies, Fallen cold and dead."

But the legacy he has left us is not to be expressed in the words of mourning, but of strength and inspiration rather; in something of his own high spirits and great joyousness of heart, of a high and serene faith in each other and renewed devotion to the ideals that brought us together and in which our own kinship must be found. For a heart so overflowing with love and sympathy, for that great soul of his that illumined all about him, surely there must be work to do that ceases not and a force of radiance and inspiration that death is powerless to stay.

His life-work happily lay for many years in Princeton itself. To the office of curator he brought all his great powers of energy and genius for administration, for all his heart was in his work; and to the succeeding generations there has come a changed Princeton, a place far different from that we knew. The prosaic aids of better standards of living, of baths and improved lighting and heating and attractive surroundings, were worked out under his guidance, and have passed into the permanent betterment that has transformed the old campus. More than that, it was he that made of the under- graduate body an enthusiastic and highly efficient cooperative army, inspired with pride in its own part in maintaining better conditions a miracle whose accomplishment it is hard for us to grasp. When

103

he retired from Princeton in 1904 he went into business in Albany, and to the time of his death was a vital and integral part of the community, doing half a dozen men's work, conducting important and varied business interests, building railroads, equipping factories and entering eagerly and efficiently into the life of his time. He put out his ten talents at usury, and his lord made him ruler over ten cities.

In the great activities and responsibilities that came upon his maturity, nothing was ever lost or impaired of his simplicity of spirit, of his love for his fellows nor least of all of his devotion to 'Ninety-Four. His family life was of uninterrupted happiness and serenity. His life was always the life of service, for he never thought of it in any other way of the service that goes joyfully on in purity of heart and unselfishness of aim ; his heart was forever singing and "his strength was as the strength of ten because his heart was pure". He had in such abounding measure the gift of inspiring the love of those with whom he was thrown that probably few happier men have ever lived. The workmen under him at Princeton out of their small store sent his wife a piano upon their wedding-day ; the men whom he had directed in making over the Kenmore hotel at Albany so thought of him as one of themselves that they presented him a gold locket and chain when the work was done. Just as in our time, it was always the same dear old Mac, with the same abounding love and sympathy and helpfulness that brought him, as few men have come, so close to the hearts of so many different kinds of men ; poller, athlete, whatever we were, somehow that irradiating love of his brought him close to us all. Knowing him as we did, knowing how broad and vital were his sympathies and the warmth and manliness of his great heart, we may realize a little how the same thing went on in after life on a stage so vastly wider how many hands went out to his for strength and sympathy, how many lives were illumined by his great love, how light and serenity were everywhere diffused about him.

And so, even out of our sorrow and from the solemn theme that is running through our hearts, there rises glorious and triumphant the inspiring memory of our dear brother and leader; and perhaps we may all come most closely to the memory that to him would have seemed the dearest, if we think rather of the great happiness of his short life and that it is for us to carry on as best we may something

104

JAMES MAC NAUGHTON THOMPSON

BORN NOVEMBER 17, 1872. DIED DECEMBER 26, 1908

he retll'cii iiL^ill I :i!jK.uh.'u 111 J v;u_j. lit \\ L 1 1 1 11 1 u I ijii^iin'i'- ill \iiMllv,

and to the time of his death was a vital and integral part of the community, doing half a dozen men's work, conducting important and varied business- intefc * ' "Ifjing railroads, equipping factories and entering eagerly av<: \ into the life of his time. He put

out his ten talen and his lord made him ruler over ten

cities.

In the great activities and respon.sibilities that came upon his tnaturity, nothing was ever lost or impaired of his simplicity of spirit, of his love for his fellows nor least of all of his devotion to 'Ninety-Four. His family life was of uninterrupted happiness and serenity. His life was always the life of service, for he never thought of it in any other way of the service that goes joyfully on in purity of heart and unselfishness of aim ; his heart was forever singing and "his strength was as the strength of ten because his heart was pure". He had in such abounding measure the gift of inspiring the love of those with whom he was thrown that probably few happier men have ever lived. The workmen imder him at Princeton, out of their small store sent his wife a piano upon their wedding-day ; the men whom he had directed in making over the Kenmore hotel at Albany so thought of him as one of themselves that they presented him a gold locket and chain when the work. was done, just as in our time, it was jsilvvay-i the same dear old Mac, with the same aboimding love and SM7.]»atliy and helpfulness that -brought him. as few men have come, so close to the hearts of so many different kinds of men; poller, athlete, whatever we were, somehow that irradiating love of his brought him close to us all. Knowing him as we did, knowing how broad and vital were his sympathies and the warmth and manliness of his great heart, we may realize a little how the same thing went on in after life on a stage so vastly wider how many hands went out to his for strength and sympathy, how many lives were illumined by his great love, how light and .serenity were everywhere diffused about him

And so. even out of our sorrow and from the .<-olemn theme thai is running through our hearts, there r;~,os crlorir.ns nnd tr'ur!ri)h?iii' the" inspiring memory o,'no8RMOHT i/IOTHDUAM PAM £3 MAI we may all come mosb«#ci);-;<«!5 tl^^^ft^ft^l flf ^?y ftl^t' fcVli"f!f wo'uja fm-i: seemed the dearest, if we think rather of the great happiness of his short life and that it is for us to carry on as best we may something

104

of that noble work of which his life was the fine flower and fruition among men and that it should be with hearts of love and gratitude for his inspiration to 'Ninety-Four that we lay our offering to his memory, rather than that we should speak as those who mourn.

The end came suddenly the day after Christmas, 1908 ; it came without a moment's warning, in the full flush of action and the full sweep of achievement. He was in the high flood of manhood, happy in his work, serenely putting forth his hand to the great tasks that brought to his life such richness and variety

"And then the knock, the summons and the end."

There are three of his children; the youngest born three months after its father's death, and who bears the name of William Meredith Thompson.

Some of us were at Albany to join in the last solemn and impres- sive tribute ; where the community was as one stricken, and where in the busiest part of the day St. Paul's Church was filled with a mighty throng wherein old and young, the workman and his master, men high in council and those of low estate, alike gathered silently to pay the last honours to him whom every man had loved. And at the very end of it all, from the great banks of flowers that lay upon his grave, she who had been the nearest and dearest of all, from the innermost depths of whose sorrow we must reverently stand apart she it was who, well knowing what words would have been written on his heart, silently drew out from the rest of the flowers those that had been sent by 'Ninety-Four, and placed them above his breast, and we left him sleeping there, with our roses upon his heart. "The rest is silence."

Frederick Jagger Tooker, M. D.

r b Siang Tan, Province of Hunan, via Hankow, China.

Tooker is a medical missionary, having received his M.D. from New York University Medical School in 1897.

No word was received from him, and the following was taken .from The Princeton Alumni Weekly of January 19th, 1907:

"The marriage of Dr. Frederick J. Tooker and Dr. Mary E. Fitch of the Tooker Memorial Hospital, Soochow, China, is announced to take place on January 23rd in Shanghai, China. Dr. Fitch is the

los

oldest daughter of Dr. George E. Fitch of the Presbyterian Mission Press, Shanghai, China. She is a graduate of Worcester College and of the Woman's Medical College of Philadelphia. Dr. Tooker is stationed at Siang Tan, China, a city of fifty thousand inhabitants, twelve hundred miles up the Yangste River in the province of Hunan. He has just taken charge of the Tooker Hospital, which is of native brick built on foreign plans, and contains thirty beds. In connection with the hospital two dispensaries are maintained in the city."

Tooker wears the native dress and a queue and spent two years learning the language before beginning his real medical work.

Later : Tooker's permanent address is Care Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions, 156 Fifth Avenue, New York, or Care Presby- terian Mission Press, 18 Peking Road, Shanghai, China. He arrived in the United States in the latter part of March on a year's furlough, and is living with his father, Mr. Nathaniel Tooker, 28 Evergreen Place, East Orange, New Jersey.

Dr. Mary Elliot Fitch became Mrs. Tooker January 23rd, 1907.

Dorothy Danforth was born November 5th, 1908.

/

illiam Hogarth Tower

r 175 Orange Road, Montclair, N. J.

b 105 East 22nd St., New York.

"Bill" is Assistant Superintendent of the Joint Application Bureau of the Charity Organization Society and the Association for Improv- ing the Condition of the Poor. He writes that one of his first duties, when he took up his present line of work, was to learn the name of his position.

He writes further: "It does not seem like fifteen years since we went out from Princeton, partly due, perhaps, to my having shaved off my beard, which one of the ladies said makes me look forty years younger. The years have brought me my share of changes and have left me still busy, still the husband of one wife and the father of one child. The first year after graduation I spent in the Princeton Theological Seminary and the following two years at Union, gradu- ating in 1897. I was ordained to the ministry in May of the same year. After remaining for some months as Assistant at the Central Presbyterian Church of Brooklyn I assumed the pastorate of the

106

First Presbyterian Church of South Framingham, Massachusetts, twenty miles from Boston.

"I stayed in South Framingham for seven years, during which time the church edifice was completed and the mortgage debt which had been standing for some years, was paid off. In the town I was trustee of the town library, an elective office, and did a good deal of work in the No-License League as Secretary, Treasurer, Editor of the campaign paper, etc., at various times.

"Resigning at South Framingham I went to New York state as Pastor of the Presbyterian Church at Milton-on-the-Hudson. A year and a half later I left to enter my father's business hardware and police equipments on account of his broken health. Other interests eventually bought in and I left to engage in the above named charity in New York City. During the year 1907-08 forty-five thousand applications for relief were received at our office, twenty thousand of these being from homeless individuals. Though not of the active pastorate I am still in a very practical ministry, and in addition preach from time to time, having done so ten times in the last three months and a half."

February 24th, 1898, Tower married Annie Carter of Montclair, N. J.

Alice Katharine was born June 7th, 1902.

60yd Van Benthuysen

p Princeton Club, New York.

r University Club, San Francisco, Cal.

Van Benthuysen is an architect. After leaving Princeton he studied at Columbia, receiving his degree of Ph.B. in 1896. There- after he studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris.

No news was received from him, but the Princeton Club of New York, of which Van Benthuysen is a member, has had instructions from him to forward all mail to the San Francisco address given above.

£dwin Courtlandt Van Cise, 11!

p 701 Springfield Ave., Summit, N. J. r 336 Sussex Ave., Roseville, N. J. b 120 Broadway, New York.

107

Van Cise is Assistant Actuary of the Equitable Life Assurance Society of New York.

He writes : "I am happy as a king in my Httle daughter, who arrived not long ago, and am trying to make a little wind-shield thick enough to keep out the wolf. I began the study of medicine in 1896 at the College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York. My health gave out and I went to Florida for some years, where I met Gaddy Drake prospering in the fruit business at Miami, Doty on his honeymoon, and many junior alumni. Am doing well up here now and have ac(|uired the degree of "P.F." (pater familias) and some degree of prosperity."

"Doc" married Theresa Baker November 14th, 1906, and their two children are :

Edwin, IV, born November 17th, 1907, and

Gladys, born January 30th, 1909.

ildward Seguin VanDuyn, M. D.

p rh 318 James St., Syracuse, New York.

Van Duyn is practicing medicine in Syracuse and is Associate Professor in Surgery in the Medical College of Syracuse University. He is also Hospital Surgeon to the Hospital of the Good Shepherd.

He received his M. D. degree from Syracuse University in 1897.

February 4th, 1903, Van Duyn married Lucy Leavenworth Bal- lard.

Mary was born December lOth, 1903.

John n, was born

/

Rev. Nathan Frederick Van Horsen

p r 52 Moreland St., Roxbury Dist., Boston, Mass. b 3 Winthrop Square, Boston, Mass.

Van Horsen graduated from the Princeton Theological Seminary in 1898 and was Pastor of Gilead Presbyterian Church of Carmel, N. Y., from October of that year to October, 1903, when he resigned to accept a position with the publishing house of Hill and Co., New York City.

Since the Class Decennial Van Horsen has severed his connection with the publishing business and is now with R. G. Dun's Mercantile Agency in Boston. He writes that he is engaged in Sunday School and Missionary work on the side.

108

June 22nd, 1899, he married Ella Louise Rhoades. Winifred was born January 7th, 1902, and Eleanor, December 28th, 1905.

Fohn Van Nortwick

p b Batavia, 111. r Geneva, 111.

"Van" is Treasurer of the Appleton Manufacturing Company of Batavia, 111., manufacturers of agricultural implements.

"Tell the boys", he says, "that my wind-mills, feed cutters, corn »

shellers, corn buskers and grinding mills ought to be in every '94 /

home. I can show you more than 57 varieties of diplomas and medals and more prizes than Bill Sykes took at Commencement, all showing that I am the real little white-haired boy with Cyrus and Reuben, by heckie. My out-drop is working fine. You can put me in for the whole game, but I think from Friday to Tuesday ought to hold me."

Helen Elizabeth Buchwalter became Mrs. Van Nortwick Novem- ber 7th, 1907.

Frank P. R. Van Syckel

p r b Irvington-on-Hudson, N. Y.

Van Syckel is teaching at the address given above. He writes that he graduated with the Class of 1896 and should not, therefore, be enrolled with '94. However, before leaving Princeton he passed through the trials and joys of Freshman and Sophomore years with '94, so the Class latch string always hangs out for him.

^John Jewell Van Vliet

prb Goshen, N. Y.

John is in the general furniture business with his father in his old home. He is unmarried and 'tis whispered that he is a fancier of fast horses, like his famous fellow townsman, E. H. Harriman.

Harry Vincent

p Mifflin, Pa.

Bill Meredith met Vincent about a year ago and secured the address given above. Letters so directed remained unanswered. As

109

a last resort a registered letter containing an information blank was sent to Mifflin. The return receipt was signed "Harry Vincent, Per Thad S. Vincent." No reply came to this last appeal.

At the time of the Class Decennial Vincent was in the lumber business in Pennsylvania.

John Leslie Voorhees

p 105 Division St., Amsterdam, N. Y. h Care P. H. Smeallie and Co., Amsterdam, N. Y. "Pop's" business is board manufacturing in Amsterdam, New York. He was Charley French's best man in October, 1904. June 5th, 1907, he married Rebecca M. Morris.

Arthur Holland Wadsworth

pr 168 Lefferts Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.

Wadsworth is in the United States Customs Service in New York City and is Acting Deputy Surveyor. Class globe-trotters make a note of this. "Wad" doesn't tell us to look him up on the dock, but surely it can do no harm to give a '94 cheer and start a "Clio Hall this way", just for the sake of the old days, you know.

September 5th, 1900. Wadsworth married Georgianna Brady.. Their two children are :

James Alfred, born December loth, 1902, and

Helen Elizabeth, born February 28th, 1905.

Rev. George Handy Wailes

Xp Salisbury, Md. r 1922 South 15th St., Philadelphia, Pa. *" Wailes is a minister of the Presbyterian Church. At present he

is Professor of Hebrew at Temple College, Philadelphia, a co- educational institution with over three thousand students.

He is also Professor of Greek at Ursinus College, Collegeville, Pa. In 1896 Wailes received the degree of A.M. from Princeton. October 8th, 1902, he married Lucretia Mott Franklin of Wood- bury, N. J.

/,

•avid Shove Walton

pr 88 Cold Spring St., New Haven, Conn.

h James and Alton Sts., New Haven, Conn. Walton is Treasurer of the National Folding Box and Paper Co.^

of New Haven, Conn. Give us a tip on the Yale team this fall, "Dave".

June 15th, 1904, he married Pearl Coburn of Holyoke, Mass.

Their little daughter, Lucy, was born April nth, 1905.

He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York

Ernest Coniston Waterhouse, M. D.

Honolulu, H. I.

No news from Waterhouse. He received his M.D. from Colum- bia, Physicians and Surgeons, in 1897, and in 1904 was Attending Surgeon to the Queen's Hospital and Chinese Hospital of Honolulu.

February 26th, 1900, he married Helen Amy Harding.

Helen Amy was born January 26th, 1901, and

Ernest Burton Leigh, March 19th, 1902.

Pendleton Gaines Watmough, Jr.

Letters returned by the Postmaster and his name not in the Di- rectory of Philadelphia, from which city he matriculated. He left college in 1891.

Rev Charles Roger Watson

ph Reformed Church Building, 200 N. 15th St., Philadelphia, Pa. r The Avondale, 37th and Locust Sts., Philadelphia, Pa.

Watson was a professor in Ohio State University the year follow- ing graduation. Subsequently he was Pastor of the First United Presbyterian Church of St. Louis, Mo.

Since November, 1902, he has been Corresponding Secretary of the Board of Foreign Missions of the United Presbyterian Church of North America.

From 1895 to 1896 he was Instructor in French in Princeton, re- ceiving the degree of A.M. in 1899.

In 1903, in his official capacity, he visited the mission fields in India, Egypt and the Soudan.

November 20th, 1902, Watson married Maria Elizabeth Powell.

James Avis Wentzell

J p rh Elmer, N. J. Wentzell has been County Superintendent of Schools of Salem County, New Jersey, for the past six years.

/

Prior to 1902 he was a public school teacher. July 17th, 1901, he married Elnora Denelsbeck. Helen Beaver was born April 26th, 1905.

James L. Whitaker |

p r Cedar Grove, Olney, Pa. h 408 M. and M. Building, 3rd and Chestnut Sts, Philadelphia, Pa. "Jim" is a manufacturer of cotton goods.

February 9th, 1897, he married Mary F. Chase. They have had five children, four of whom are living:

James L., Jr., born November 15th, 1897. Died June i8th, 1902. R. Chase, born February 6th, 1900. Howard F., born October 9th, 1901. Anthony Howe, born September nth, 1903. Mary C, born April 15th, 1906.

Joseph Billette White

p 21-24 State St., New York. r Indianapolis, Ind.

h Robinson Lumber Co., 21 State St., New York. "Joe" is the Treasurer of the Robinson Land and Lumber Com- pany of New York.

November 24th, 1898, he married Mabel E. Robinson.

Dorothy M. was born August 26th, 1900.

Maude R., born January 28th, 1903.

"Both handsome like father," writes Joe, "that's all."

eorge Dudley Whitney

p rh Glassboro, N. J.

Whitney is President of the Whitney Glass Works, manufactur- ers of bottles and fruit jars, one of the largest and oldest plants of its kind in the United States, having been established in 1775.

"Whit" received the degree of LL.B. from Columbia (now George Washington) University, Washington, D. C, in 1896. For two years following he engaged in the practice of law in that city, and thereafter in Philadelphia, until a little over a year ago when he was elected to his present position.

He writes that the contrast between practicing law and making

112

bottles is rather startling but that he has found the work very con- genial. It keeps him tied down so closely, however, that he does not see as much of Princeton men as he used to, save an occasional trip to the great city, which, he says, "helps some."

"Dud" is a member of the Princeton Clubs of New York and Philadelphia.

jJohn Franklin Wilkins

p Metropolitan Qub, Washington, D. C.

r 1824 Mass. Ave., Washington, D. C.

h 808 Hibbs Building, Washington, D. C.

In 1905 Wilkins sold a large interest in The Washington Post and a year later retired from the active management of its affairs. He is the President of the Randolph Hotel Company and of the Washington Fertilizer Company, Secretary of the Potomac Realty Company and a director in The Washington Post Company, the National Metropolitan Bank and the American Security and Trust Company. He is also a member of the Washington Stock Ex- change, of the Princeton Club of Philadelphia and of the University and Princeton Clubs of New York.

December 6th, 1904, he married Jula Crittenden Harris of Rich- mond, Va.

Katharine Emily was born July 23rd, 1907.

^David Milne Willard

/ p b 302 Broadway, New York.

r "62 West 68th St., New York. ' "Dave" is in the insurance business in New York, and is connected with the American Credit-Indemnity Company of that city.

He is the father of the only living twins in the Class, Jack Bush- nell having lost one son, John L., Jr., in January of 1905.

June 17th, 1896, Willard married Ethel W. Darby. The twins, Rosalind and David, Jr., were born October 13th, 1898, and Edwin T. D., March 28th, 1902.

Dwight Daniel Willard

^ p r Merion, Pa.

'W- b Crozer Building, Philadelphia, Pa.

/ "Doc" is an attorney in Philadelphia, and is also President of the

113

/

MacPherson Willard Forge and Machine Company of Bordentown, New Jersey.

February 13th, 1895, Willard married Lulu Wine of Washington, D. C.

Mildred McCreary was born October 6th, 1896, and

Venette Milne, January 7th, 1898.

George Howard Williams

p Circuit Court, St. Louis, Mo.

r 7 Windemere Place, St. Louis, Mo.

George H. received his LL.B. from Washington University in 1897 and is now Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Louis.

He writes : "In 1906 I was elected to the Circuit Court, which is our court of general jurisdiction. The term is six years. One fourth of that time is spent in a criminal division for the trial of felonies. There are three divisions for the trial of such cases. One of the judges in the criminal divisions presides also over the Juve- nile division. On entering my work I drew a criminal division plus the juvenile and at once became engrossed in that most interesting field of judicial labors, devoting about half my time to each. The criminal was easy enough but so many sociological considerations enter into the juvenile trial that it took fully six months to become familiar with the neglected and delinquent urchin. Last July I took up a civil division. My best work thus far on the bench has been a revision of all forms used in Juvenile Court procedure and the preparation of a new uniform Juvenile Court law for the state. Since then I have done what I hope every other man in '94 has taken an active interest in municipal politics. That is the unsolved problem, and college-bred men in St. Louis are just awakening to their responsibilities in that direction. My vagary is golf and I am serving my second term as President of St. Louis Field Club, one of our oldest and best golf clubs.

Am a member of Pilgrim Congregational Church and my interest there is especially in the development of the work along social lines. My two boys have a firm belief that no four footed beast compares with the Tiger. When the roll is called in June I'll be there, and when we sing the glad songs there'll be "smiles through our tear dimmed sight" for the old pals who have seen the sunset and evening star and have answered the one clear call."

H4

June I2th, 1900, George married Harriet Chase Stewart and they have two boys :

Stewart, born August 24th, 1902, and Howard, born June 7th, 1904.

George Weems Williams

p r 407 West Lanvale St., Bakimore, Md. h Maryland Trust Building, Baltimore, Md.

"Judge" Williams is a member of the law firm of Marbury and Gosnell of Baltimore and has shoals of clients. One of them is the Washington, Baltimore and Annapolis Electric Railway Company.

George gets his title by virtue of the fact that the powers that be of the Monumental City had him slated for a judgeship at the time of the last elections, but George refused to allow his name to be used. He is also a member of the Park Board of the City of Baltimore.

He has been admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of the United States.

Under matrimonial data the Judge is very uncommunicative. One of his '94 bachelor brothers in Baltimore says : "There is a dinky little rumor circulating here, etc. I am not in "Ha-Boy's" confidence, but when a man breaks ail records by sitting on the water wagon for fifteen or sixteen years it's high time for him to break out in a new place."

Williams received the degree of LL.B. from the University of Maryland in 1896 and his A. M. from Princeton in 1897.

Guy Wilson

r Missoula, Mont.

b Care WesternMontana National Bank, Missoula, Mont.

Wilson has been in the banking business for the past ten years in Laurel, Nebraska.

He has just resigned the cashiership of the Farmers State Bank of Laurel to move to a wider and better field in Montana.

^George Clarence Wintringer

r 1 162 Broad St., Newark, N. J.

h Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Co., Newark, N. J. Wintringer is an electrical engineer connected with the Westing- house Electric and Manufacturing Company at their Newark works. October 8th, 1901, "Dutch" married Mary E. Finlay.

"S

William Griffith Wilson

Died December 31st, 1908, Baltimore, Md.

Wilson was in the real estate business in Baltimore. His health for the past three years had been such that he could not devote his best energies to his work. "Chuck" was a very ardent and enthusi- astic Princeton man and the Class has lost a member whose loyalty was ever constant and to be counted upon.

In his will he provided :

"As a small token of the loyalty I feel to the Class of 1894 of Princeton University, of which I was a member, I give and bequeath the sum of fifty dollars ($50) to J. MacN. Thompson, William F. Meredith and George Weems Williams (all members of said class) and the survivor or survivors of them if I should die before June, 1919, in trust to purchase with the said sum of fifty dollars ($50) and any interest accruing thereon a silver loving cup, suitably in- scribed, and to present the same at the twenty-fifth reunion of said class at Princeton, which will take place in the year 19 19, to that member of the class who shall at that time have the largest number of children then living, the above named persons to have full power to decide by lot or otherwise between members of the class having equal claims for said cup."

George Williams is also executor under the will.

Albert Martin Woodruff

/> r 38 South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. b 100 Broad St., New York.

"Al" is Assistant Secretary of the Bush Terminal Company, the largest and most modern terminal warehouse in Greater New York. He is a member of the Princeton Club of New York and, though unmarried and apparently untouched for the past fifteen years, can still "see his love at the window, look, look."

/harles Beatty Worden, M.D. prb 322 South i6th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Worden received the degree of M.D. from University in 1898 and has a large and remunerative practice in Philadelphia.

116

For a time he was the resident physician attached to John Wana- maker's establishment in Philadelphia. Through hard work and his pleasant personality "Charley" earned for himself the whole of the Wanamaker influence and settled down as a permanent practi- tioner in Philadelphia.

Worden is very prominent in the affairs of the Princeton Qub of Philadelphia and is a member of the House Committee.

December i8th, 1907, he married Ora Otis Williams of San Fran- cisco, California.

Ora Otis Worden was born January 29th, 1909.

Edward Bell Wright

"Ed" was employed at the National Hotel, Washington, D. C, for several years after the Class graduated. His people are not known and the Record could not cross his trail.

Edward Henry Wright, Jr.

p r 24 Park Place, Newark, N. J. h Prudential Building, Newark, N. J.

Wright is back at the law once more, after a term in the lower house of the New Jersey Legislature. He is a Democrat of the old Jeffersonian school. Essex County, usually a Republican strong- hold, became involved in a party quarrel and the whole Democratic ticket was elected for the first time in fifteen years.

Applying Cy Heath's famous expression to "Teddy's" political misfortune "his foot slipped" at the 1907 election and Edward Henry was sent back to the minor leagues.

"I fought the bosses and got mine," writes Ted. "No good Democrat has a chance until Bill Bryan goes to roost. While I am waiting you can say that I'll sign for a legal job with any old trust any day." Wright is a member of the Princeton Club of New York.

June 17th, 1905, he married Caroline Lesher Firth of South Orange, New Jersey.

Edward Henry, 3rd, was born January 20th, 1906.

Rev. Sydney Radwell Yarrow

Mill Valley, Marin Co., Cal.

Yarrow is beyond our ken. For want of a better address the one given in the Decennial Record is repeated. The Princeton Univer-

117

sity Alumni Directory gives his address as the Pacific Theological Seminary, Oakland, Cal.

Letters sent to both addresses failed to be returned by the post- masters, and apparently, therefore, were received.

Yarrow married C. Millacent Palmer August 3rd, 1897.

Sidney Burton, born in November, 1899; died in November, 1901.

Harriet was born June 13th, 1902.

Harvey Wade Young, M.D.

prb Red Bank, N. J.

Harvey received his M.D. from New York University in 1897, and is now a practicing physician and surgeon.

September 22nd, 1902, he married Lucretia Torrence. Their two children are :

Alexander Oliver, born August 21st, 1905, and

Harvey Torrence, born May 4th, 1907.

Harry Null Yont

p Greensburg, Pa.

b Court House, Greensburg, Pa.

Yont is a lawyer and Prothonotary of Westmoreland County, Pa.

January 21st, 1902, he married Emma Sauden Reeves of Altoona, V/ Pa. Joe Guffey and Kay Portser were two of his ushers, and ^ Altoona is talking about them yet.

118

NO REPORT

has been received from the following :

Bowes, Collins, Downes, Duff, Evans, Farnum, Goldthwaite, Inslee, Kiesling, McCague, McCartney, McAllister, McLeod, Morri- son, Pitcairn, E. S. Ramsdell, R. R. Ramsdell, Read, Roberts, Schmidt, Swan, Vincent, Watmough, E. B. Wright and Yarrow.

Note: Italics denote that addresses and information given under the above names in the body of the Record were obtained from other sources. Any information concerning these men in the possession of other members of the Class should be sent to the Class Secretary.

119

NECROLOGY

*James Maclin Brodnax, July 22nd, 1904.

Thomas Douglas Corry, April 3rd, 1902.

Horace Day, July 30th, 1899.

Adolph William Dunbar, July 20th, 1901.

William Hall English, November 14th, 1890.

Charles Dudley Fuller, July i8th, 1892.

William W. Fisk, August 19th, 1902.

William Edward Grant, February ist, 1895.

Wyllys King Grier, February ist, 1902.

Edmund Drake Halsey, December 3rd, 1901. ♦Thomas Addison Jenkins, October nth, 1905.

Ernest Farwell Keikwin, October 8th, 1897.

John Miller Kennedy, Jr., December 5th, 1901. *Winfield Scott Kennedy, August 23rd, 1908. *Samuel Wardwell Kinney, January 30th, 1909. *Edward Reed Laughlin, March 21st, 1909.

Walter Lowrie, August 29th, 1901.

William Lloyd McCauley, March 23rd, 1898.

John Davidson McCord, April 9th, 1903.

Frederick Morton Merrill, March 23rd, 1900.

Harold D. McMillan, June loth, 1902.

John Murdoch, May 3rd, 1894.

Edward Clare Oliver, April 7th, 1901. ♦Frederick Clark Paulmier, March 3rd, 1906.

William Alfred Sexton, October ist, 1903. *James MacNaughton Thompson, December 26th, 1908.

John Harold Turner, March 15th, 1902.

John McGill White, October 22nd, 1899. ♦William Griffith Wilson, December 31st, 1908.

William Ring Woodruff, March i6th, 1895.

* Since Decennial Reunion.

SUMMARY OF VITAL STATISTICS

Surviving Deceased Total

Married 170 3 173

Unmarried 90 27 117

Class membership 260 30 290

Children born:

Boys 115 10 125

Girls Ill 6 117

Sex unknown 2 2

Total 226 18 244

121

GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION

ALABAMA

Hugh Foster Union Springs

CALIFORNIA

J. W. Kiesling Happy Camp

S. D. Dice Hollywood

H. H. Fisher Los Angeles

S. R. Yarrow Mill Valley

B. Van Benthuysen San Francisco

COLORADO

A. C. Bartels Denver

-E. S. Smith Denver

CONNECTICUT

'H. S. Fisher Greenwich

H. S. Thompson Greenwich

XL. Hoge Hartford

y^[x^- S. Walton New Haven

/DELAWARE

W. C. Spruance, Jr Wilmington

y DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

T. Riggs, Jr Washington

J. F. Wilkins Washington

/FLORIDA

E. P. Roberts Key West

G. Drake Miami

"GEORGIA

^H. Richardson Atlanta

J. F. Evans Savannah

122

IDAHO

•M'Cready Sykes Boise

ILLINOIS

J. VanNortwick Batavia

H. M. Beck Chicago

C. M. Cartwright Chicago

A. R. Chamberlain Chicago

■S. H. Curran Chicago

S. Dickey Chicago

F. M. Dusenberry Chicago

•J. Fentress Chicago

G. H. Forsyth Chicago

E. F. Johnson Chicago

F. C. Kenly Chicago

J. C. Neely Chicago

«E. C. Petrie Chicago

C. M. Cartwri2!llfti,''*?f?''?'S*?^'?^*?*r'?^''?^?'?^^^

J. Van Nortwick Geneva

W. M. Clark Peoria

^^- P. Jack Peoria

/''\,G. M. Brinkerhoff, Jr Springfield

'^ ^]. Fentress Winnetka

INDIANA

C. McBride Elkhart

^^]. B. White Indianapolis

'S. H. Curran Roby

KANSAS

J. H. Alexander Council Grove

R. H. McCullough Smith Center

KENTUCKY

A. P. L. Cochran Covington

D. W. Lindsey Frankfort

M. Bullitt Louisville

123

MA1NI<:

D. 1'. U. Conkling Boothbay

MARYLAND

T. 1 1. Howes Baltimore

M. r. Iknsh lialtimore

G. Riggs Baltimore

G. Riggs Baltimore

W. Williams Baltimore

W. J. Read, Jr Cumberland

,A. Constable Elkton

MASSACHUSETTS ^^N. F. Vanllorsen Boston

MINNESOTA

J. F. Beck Minneapolis

MISSISSIPPI

A. McD. Pepper Lexington

MISSOURI

W. S. McKinney Kansas City

S. IT. Clark St. Louis

t. IT. Williams St. Louis

^

MONTANA

G. Wilson Missoula

NEBRASKA

G. S. McCague Omaha

^^l. L. Akin Omaha

•""''^/P. IT. Ludington Omaha

^JS:. Creigh Omaha

'NEW JERSEY

. S. Havens Bayonne

. M. Archer Camden

T. F. Nixon Camden

124

^-^

E. S. Ramsdell Camden

F. H. BraisHn Crosswicks

A. T. Davis East Orange

H. J. Eraser East Orange

A. T. McCullagh East Orange

F. J. Tooker East Orange

J. A. Wentzell Elmer

G. D. Whitney Glassboro

B. F. Carter Glen Ridge

H. H. Condit Glen Ridge

F. Carter Hoboken

•F. L. Buckelew Jamesburg

A. B. Le Massena Jersey City

R. A. Streit Maplewood

H. Tower Montclair

•H. W. Buxton, Jr Morristown

E. H. Baldwin Newark

■J. E. Bathgate, Jr Newark

J. B. Burnett, Jr Newark

F. W. Daire Newark

A. T. Davis Newark

W. B. Kinney Newark

A. B. LeMassena Newark

A. T. Cullagh Newark

^, McDowell Newark

J. A. Mandeville Newark

-G. R. Swain Newark

C. Wintringer Newark

H. Wright, Jr Newark

F. Thompson New Brunswick

E! Bathgate, Jr Orange

F. W. Daire Orange

J. R. Blake Plainfield

J. Patterson Plainfield

W. P. Armstrong Princeton

Dahlgren Princeton

F. Howe Princeton

McClenahan Princeton

H. Mcllwain Princeton

125

y^..

:X

:>i

L. McMillan Princeton

G. M. Priest Princeton

B. Maurice Rahway-

H. W. Young Red Bank

/G. C. Fox Ridgwood

E. C. Van Cise Roseville

J. T. Low, Jr Short Hills

Y. Allen South Orange

M. McCampbell, Jr South Oranges

F. H. Smith, III South Orange

W. Buxton, Jr Trenton

J. M. Dickinson Trenton

Heath Trenton

K. G. Roebling Trenton

NEW YORK

^^J. H. Bailey Albany

^'''^jC. E. French Amsterdam

^"^ J. L. Voorhees Amsterdam

A. K. Brodie Brooklyn

1^. C. Coleman Brooklyn

G. Dowkontt Brooklyn

J. P. Duff Brooklyn

^c

^^. E. Holmes Brooklyn

A S. G. A. Mitchell Buffalo

S. Mackenzie Brooklyn

]^ T N. McWilliams Buffalo

^^J^- H. Scrimgeour Brooklyn

1^

H. Wadsworth Brooklyn

M, Woodruff Brooklyn

T. Lockwood Buffalo

J. McC. Mitchell Buffalo

T. M. Carlisle Geneseo

^*»J. J. VanVliet Goshen

<^^ F. P. R. VanSyckel Irvington-on-Hudson

G. L. McAllister Kingston

H. D. Noyes Kingston

Y. Allen New York

Baldwin New York

^

126

J. L. Bissell New York

J. R. Blake New York

W. Bogart, Jr New York

R. E. Bonner New York

J. A. Church New York

H. Condit New York

P. B. Conkling New York

Coppell New York

G. Dowkontt New York

J. P. Duff New York

S. Fisher New York

W. Floyd New York

C. Fox New York

H. J. Fraser Nev/ York

M. Goodridge New York

\^^. E. Holmes New York

y^ C. L. Holt New York

:^^T. F. Humphrey New York

y^ H. W. Inslee New York

]^^0. W. Jeffery New York

^""^ W. J. R. Johnston New York

j^.^-'-F. L. Kellogg New York

^ J. H. Kenyon New York

J. F. Kohler New York

J. T. Low, Jr New York

^. M. McCampbell, Jr New York

^' "'"' D. MacColl New York

S. Mackenzie New York

B. Maurice New York

y^yj. F. Meredith New York

..^^-'-^ohn Murray New York

J. Patterson New York

J. Perkins New York

P. S. Sabine New York

M. H. Sicard New York

.-F. H. Smith, HI New York

R. A. Streit New York

R. O. Swan New York

H. S. Thompson New York

127

H. Tower New York

E. C. VanCise New York

<f. B. White New York

D. M. Willard New York

. F. Meredith Niagara Falls

G. A. Mitchell North Tonawanda

B. H. Everitt Peekskill

C. A. Robinson Peekskill

^. C. Shultis Pomona

J. Gibson, Jr Salem

■W. R. Ferris Syracuse

A. D. Jenney Syracuse

E. S. VanDuyn Syracuse

W. Cherry Troy

George Watertown

R. E. Bonner West New Brighton, S. I.

E. J. Russell West New Brighton. S. I.

W. Bogart, Jr Yonkers

E. P. Essick Yonkers

OHIO

^. -"E. A. Andrews Akron

H. W. Inslee Belief ontaine

A. J. Miller Belief ontaine

B. E. Stevenson Chillicothe

C. V. Black Cincinnati

P. P. Bliss Cincinnati

A. P. L. Cochran Cincinnati

W. J. R. Johnston Cincinnati

J. L. McLeish Cincinnati

A. McGaffin Cleveland

»W. K. Doty Columbus

E. Hooven Hamilton

A. W. Hayes Lexington

L. Bushnell Springfield

J. W. L. Jones Tiffin

OREGON

W. Lewis Portland

^1

y

128

PENNSYLVANIA

J. M. Bridges Carlisle

»L. I. Reichner Cynwyd

„,.G. S. Brown Easton

A. M. Califf East Smithfield

W. Allen Galeton

R. K. Portser Greensburg

C. Rugh Greensburg

H. N. Yont Greensburg

R. C. Pitcairn Harrisburg

R. B. Jack Hazleton

T. F. Bailey Huntingdon

'D. Blair Indiana

J. McDowell Ingram

C. Frame Malvern

G. L. Farnum Media

F. S. Henderson Media

D. Willard Merion

H. Vincent Mifflin

^J. D. Hitchman Mt. Pleasant

JD. M. Balliet Myerstown

L. C. Denise New Kensington

J. L. Whitaker Olney

M. Balliet -. Philadelphia

Benson Philadelphia

^y^JN. G. Elmer Philadelphia

^.^..'''''V^:. W. Hammett Philadelphia

^>,>»'''\^- H. High Philadelphia

j^"'^^- G. Hopper Philadelphia

^>?**^^£r. B. Linnard Philadelphia

"* ' , Lloyd, Jr Philadelphia

I. Reichner Philadelphia

R. Robbins Philadelphia

J. Robinson Philadelphia

F. C. Smythe Philadelphia

R. Swain Philadelphia

H. Wailes Philadelphia

C. R. Watson Philadelphia

J. L. Whitaker Philadelphia

129

D. Willard Philadelphia

. B. Worden Philadelphia

J. S. Campbell Pittsburg

D. Edwards Pittsburg

B. Ewing Pittsburg

J. F. Gufifey Pittsburg

W. G. Liggett Pittsburg

F. A. McCune Pittsburg

C. F. Patterson Pittsburg

H. K. Siebeneck Pittsburg

H. F. Sill Pittsburg

,/^. H. Bright Reading

S. Campbell Sewickley

W. J. Grandin Tidioute

.-F. B. Rowland Titusville

R. J. Flick Wilkesbarre

B. Ewing Wilkinsburg

RHODE ISLAND

G. V. Dickey Newport

TENNESSEE

^^C. J. Akin Columbia

X*^ H. Z. Kip Nashville

TEXAS

O. C. Johnson Ft. Worth

C. D. Goldthwaite Galveston

>C. H. Kearny San Antonio

WASHINGTON

A. T. Schmidt Seattle

WEST VIRGINIA

E. A. Brannon Weston

WISCONSIN

H. S. Knight Madison

H. Clinedinst Menasha

B. Jenkins Milwaukee

W. M. Spooner Milwaukee

130

H

1^^

AUSTRIA

E. Thaw Tyrol

CHINA

F. J. Tooker Siang Tan

ENGLAND

R. Downes Manchester

HAWAIIAN ISLANDS

E. C. Waterhouse Honolulu

MEXICO

H. Kearny Necaxa

W. Caldwell Necaxa

PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

W. E. Gunster Mindanao

'*" H. C. McLeod Samar

SOUTH AMERICA

W. E. Browning Santiago de Chile

SYRIA

P. Erdman Zahleh

131

OUR BETTER HALVES

(And when they became such.)

1892

May 31st, Margaret Woods McDowell. (Mrs. R. J.)

1894

July 19th, Sarah Uhrich Balliet. September nth, Flora Sargent Shultis. December 12th, Nettie Cranberry Foster.

1895

February 13th, Lulu Wine Willard. (Mrs. D.D.) April 24th, Frederica Smithson Hooven. June 6th, Hallie Riley Browning. June 1 2th, Elizabeth Butler Stevenson. August 24th, Janet Nesbit Le Massena. August 26th, Harriet Culver Crandin.

1896

June 4th, Harriet Cunningham McCampbell.

June loth, Carrie Marsh Doty.

June loth, Mary Lawton Heath.

June 15th, Ida Johnson Davis.

June 17th, Ethel Darby Willard. (Mrs. D. M.)

June 24th, Josephine Inman Richardson.

September 3rd, Emilie Kuprion Dahlgren.

September 29th, Mabel Johnson McWilliams.

October 14th, Grace Little Brown.

October 14th, Jessie Harwood Bushnell.

October 26th, Sarah Watson Liggett.

November nth, Rosalind Shepard Baldwin. (Mrs. E. H.)

November 24th, Eugenie Hill Ferris.

1897

January 7th, Grace Addeman Fentress. January 12th, Fanny Fox Black.

132

February 9th, Mary Chase Whitaker.

April 14th, Lillian Boothe Pepper.

April 2 1st, Julia Osborne Condit.

April 28th, Nan Guth Ewing.

May 8th, Florence Joy Swain. Died January 23rd, 1901.

June 2nd, Gertrude Lammers Rowland. (Mrs. F. B.)

June 2nd, Minnie Fowler McDowell. (Mrs. J.)

June 7th, Margaret Montgomery Bathgate.

June 17th, Cephise Aiken Reichner.

June 23rd, Katharine Keyser Robbins.

June 30th, Mary Hunter Frame.

July 2ist, Emma Heritage Everitt.

August 3rd, Millacent Palmer Yarrow.

November 17th, Lucy Webster Caldwell.

November 23rd, Gertrude Halbert Jenkins. (Mrs. P. B.)

1898

February 24th, Annie Carter Tower.

April 28th, Alice Bonine Hopper.

June 9th, Elizabeth Yeomans Brodnax.

June 1 6th, Sarah Westcott Robinson. (Mrs. C. A.)

June 22nd, Anna Finch Andrews.

June 22nd, Mary Orr Curran.

June 30th, Sarah Fleming Cherry.

June 30th, Henrietta Perry Goodridge.

October 14th, Marjorie Wilson McLeod.

October 19th, Caroline Denny Nixon.

November 7th, Clara Conaway MacCuUough. (Mrs. R. H.)

November 9th, Elizabeth Wells Floyd.

November loth, Katharine Noyes Spooner.

November 24th, Mabel Robinson White. (Mrs. J. B.)

December 22nd, Jessie Mumford Robinson. (Mrs. J. J.)

December 29th, Edith Joyce Low.

1899

February 7th, Florence Abbott Blake.

February 8th, Katharine Cowing Beck. (Mrs. J. F.)

February , Elizabeth Scott Evans.

April 4th, Elizabeth Cottman Hatton.

133

April 26th, Katharine Owen Johnson. (Mrs. O. C.)

May I St, Flora Sheldon Fox.

June 14th, Charlotte Kinney Brush.

June 15th, Anita King Carter.

June 22nd, Ella Rhoades Van Horsen.

June 28th, Sada Daly Lockwood.

August loth, Mary Irwin Mcllwain. Died August 24th, 1906.

November ist, Bessie Lee McClenahan.

December 12th, Mary Bowers Coppell.

December 27th, Anna Clock Havens.

1900

February 26th, Helen Harding Waterhouse.

April nth, Adelaide Hall Fraser.

April 19th, Mabel Potter Thompson. (Mrs. H. S.)

April 30th, Frances Hoyt Lewis.

June 6th, Minnie Zweygartt Howland. (Mrs. H. A.)

June 1 2th, Gertrude Rushmore Patterson. (Mrs. E. J.)

June I2th, Harriet Stewart Williams. (Mrs. G. H.)

June 14th, Bessie Chandlee Archer.

June 20th, Amanda Jessup Erdman. Died December 2nd, 1901

September 5th, Georgianna Brady Wadsworth.

October 4th, Annie Walker Downes.

October 17th, Roberta Bailey Coleman.

November 7th, Louise Squires Clark. (Mrs. S. H.)

1901

February 19th, Sarah Hamlin Mitchell. (Mrs. G. A.)

April loth, Susie Porterfield Rankin.

April 30th, Caroline McCartee Gibson.

May 15th, Edna Lupton Hoge.

June 8th, Helen Murphy Kinney. (Mrs. W. B.)

July 3rd, Clara Wheeler Pratt.

July 17th, Elnora Denelsbeck Wentzell.

August 20th, Margaret VanHorsen Jack. (Mrs. R. B.)

September i8th, Helen Torrence Blair.

October ist, Clara Young Fisher. (Mrs. H. H.)

October 8th, Mary Finlay Wintringer.

October 15th, Isabella McWhorter Perkins,

134

October i6th, Mary Audenried Linnard. November 27th, Lucy Middleton Miller. December 26th, Mabel Harris Conkling.

1902

January 21st, Emma Reeves Yont.

January 22nd, Ella Zacher Brodie.

January 22nd, Harriett Wheeler Carlisle.

January 27th, Lillian Meeker Streit.

January 29th, Grace MacFarlane Smith. (Mrs. E. S.)

April 1 6th, Mary Hall Smith. (Mrs. F. H.)

June loth, Margaret Carothers Hayes.

June loth, Katharine MacKay Holmes.

June nth, Fanny Jessup Swain. (Mrs. J. R.)

August 30th, Kathryn Abbott Cartwright.

September 22nd, Lucretia Torrence Young.

October 8th, Susan Lammers McKinnney.

October 8th, Lucretia Franklin Wailes.

October 28th, Bernice Evans Denise.

November 12th, Florence Jones Thompson. (Mrs. J. MacN.)

November 19th, Wilhelmina Lentz Bailey. (Mrs. T. F.)

November 20th, Blanche Estabrook Roebling.

November 20th, Maria Powell Watson.

190S

January 28th, Elenora Putnam Dowkontt.

February 4th, Lucy Ballard Van Duyn.

February 23rd, Effie Caesar Bonner.

April 15th, Mildred Heckman Bailey. (Mrs. J. H.)

April 15th, EHsabeth Lord Patterson. (Mrs. C. F.)

April 29th, Valetta Hawthorne Bissell.

June 2nd, Lina Mayor Bliss.

June 17th, Margaret Deane Beck. (Mrs. H. McK.)

August 6th, E. DeWitt Morrison.

October 6th, Katharine Howell MacColl.

October 28th, Annie Merrill Lindsey.

November 2nd, Caroline King Jenney.

November nth, Mattie Bell Akin. (Mrs. C. J.)

December 9th, Elizabeth Holden Burnett.

December 22nd, Adelia Ireland Sicard.

135

1904

May 25th, Mary Little Dice. June 15th, Pearl Coburn Walton. August 3rd, Anna DeYoe McGaffin. September 21st, Fanny Dean French. September 21st, Mary Jamison Gunster. December 6th, Jula Harris Wilkins. December 8th, Rebekah Purves Armstrong. December 29th, Ethel Rohr Jones.

1905

April 29th, Gertrude O'Neil Creigh. Died May 20th, 1906.

June 7th, Grace Niblo Daire.

June 17th, Caroline Firth Wright. (Mrs. E. H.)

June 28th, Nona Murrell Kip.

October 3rd, Gertrude Moore Erdman.

October 4th, Elisabeth Fisk Rogers.

December 9th, Gertrude Mahoney Hammett.

1906

January 15th, May Willson Laughlin.

January 24th, Kate Macdona Kohler.

April 23rd, Jane Olmsted Thaw.

April 28th, Mary Elliott Buckelew.

June 6th, Emily Evans Constable.

June 6th, Mary Robinson Drake.

June 2 1 St, Jessie Nicols Fisher. (Mrs. H. S.)

August 1 8th, Martha Townsend Humphrey.

October 6th, Mary Rollinson Dusenberry.

October 20th, Mary Findlay Allen. (Mrs. Y.)

November 14th, Theresa Baker VanCise.

December 5th, Lavinia Avery Mitchell. (Mrs. J. McC.)

December 6th, Eileen Robinson Russell,

1907

January 23rd, Mary Fitch Tooker. April 4th, Lillian O'Meara Chamberlain. May 4th, Alice Lea Spruance. June 5th, Rebecca Morris Voorhees.

136

June 1 2th, Louise Scull Hitchman. September 23rd, Emilie Baker Kellogg. November 7th, Helen Buchwalter VanNortwick. December i8th, Ora Williams Worden.

1908

February 26th, Louise Atherton Dickey. (Mrs. S.) June 4th, Harriet Blythe Jeffery. June 27th, Elinor Wilkins Alexander. November loth, Mary Brown Williams Howe. November 24th, Mary Cresson Kearny.

1909

February 10th, Irma Cowey Brannon. February loth, Henrietta Ridgeley Flick.

137

OUR HOSTAGES TO FORTUNE

(And date of their arrival.) Jean Bell Akin, July loth, 1907. John Findlay Allen, August ist, 1908. Charles Bruce Andrews, November i8th, 1905. Edwin Eads Andrews, Jr., October 3rd, 1907. Franklin Morse Archer, Jr., September 17th, 1902. Elizabeth Chandlee Archer, December 5th, 1908. Rebekah Purves Armstrong, April 7th, 1906. William Park Armstrong, Jr., May 31st, 1907. George Purves Armstrong, October 9th, 1908. Elizabeth Weldrick Bailey, January 9th, 1904. Catharine Uhrich Balliet, July 5th, 1895. Esther Seymour Bathgate, June 8th, 1898. James E. Bathgate, 3rd, January 9th, 1900. John Flournoy Beck, August 13th, 1901. John Hawthorne Bissell, January 21st, 1904. Hawthorne Bissell, August 22nd, 1908. David Blair, Jr., April 2nd, 1903. Katharine Torrence Blair, February 6th, 1906. John P. Blair, December loth, 1907. Judson A. Blake, March 15th, 1900. Helen Charlotte Brodie, March 4th, 1903. William Hanna Brodie, July 12th, 1907. *James Maclin Brodnax, Jr., May i8th, 1899. Corilla Green Brodnax, May 22nd, 1900. Margaret Field Brodnax, April 9th, 1904. Elizabeth Brown, September 9th, 1897. Frances Brown, April 24th, 1902. Mary Little Brown, April i8th, 1905. Lorimer Hager Brown, April 9th, 1907. Alice Davidson Browning, July 15th, 1896.

* Deceased.

138

Elsie Elisabeth Browning, June 15th, 1900.

Eleanor Peabody Brush, January 3rd, 1901.

Murray Peabody Brush, Jr., August 27th, 1903.

Helen Stewart Burnett, January 2nd, 1908.

Asa S. Bushnell, February 2nd, 1900.

Edward H. Bushnell, November 19th, 1903. *John L. Bushnell, Jr., November 19th, 1903.

Suzanne Bushnell, February 27th, 1907.

William W. Caldwell, March 20th, 1900.

Chester C. Caldwell, December ist, 1902. ♦Florence Elisabeth Carlisle, April 17th, 1907.

Margaret Anita Carter, October 5th, 1900.

Frances King Carter, March 23rd, 1906.

Stanley Levering Cartwright, September 23rd, 1903.

Helen Louise Cartwright, January 23rd, 1908.

John Douglas Cherry, HI, October 22nd, 1899.

Katherine Fleming Cherry, July 27th, 1901.

Walter Fleming Cherry, November 5th, 1902.

Ralph Waldo Cherry, January 29th, 1905.

James C. Coleman, 4th, July 19th, 1901.

Barbara Josephine Condit, August 14th, 1900.

Prudence Elizabeth Condit, October 26th, 1903.

Pauline Burleigh Conkling, October 13th, 1908.

Albert Constable, Jr., May 2nd, 1907.

Jane Frazer Constable, May i6th, 1908.

Susan Bowers Coppell, December 31st, 1901.

Helen Bowers Coppell, December 28th, 1904.

Marjorie Orr Curran, April ist, 1900.

Kenneth James Curran, November 29th, 1903.

Ulric Dahlgren, Jr., September 8th, 1898.

Joseph D. Dahlgren, August nth, 1901.

Lawrence Johnson Davis, January 12th, 1900.

Emerson Johnson Davis, October 6th, 1902.

Dorothy Bernice Denise, November 13th, 1903.

Marguerite Meredith Denise, November ist, 1907.

Elenora Putnam Dowkontt, January 31st, 1905.

George Harry Dowkonnt, Jr., September i8th, 1906. *Gaston Drake, Jr., March 13th, 1907. * Deceased.

139

Mary Polk Drake, February nth, 1909.

Frederick Seward Erdman, October 27th, 190 1.

William Rollinson Dusenberry, May ist, 1908.

Elizabeth Scott Evans, .

William S. Evans, Jr., .

Boyd Ross Ewing, Jr., April 29th, 1898.

Ruth Ewing, December ist, 1900.

Edward Guth Ewing, September 8th, 1902.

Olivia Primrose Fentress, December 4th, 1899.

James Fentress, Jr., April 29th, 1905.

Louise Addeman Fentress, May 30th, 1908.

Violette Ferris, April 15th, 1898. *Madeline Ferris, July i6th, 1900.

Walter Rockwood Ferris, Jr., March i6th, 1902.

Frank Arthur Ferris, III, February 25th, 1905. * William Stevenson Ferris, December 13th, 1906. * Ferris, infant daughter. May 21st, 1908.

Alfred Young Fisher, July 13th, 1902.

Herbert MacQueen Fisher, January 5th, 1904.

Elizabeth MacQueen Fisher, May 25th, 1906.

Howard Shreve Fisher, Jr., April 12th, 1907.

David Nichols Fisher, January 24th, 1909.

Susan Brown Foster, January 22nd, 1896.

James Cranberry Foster, August 31st, 1898.

Sheldon Fox, February 19th, 1900.

Littleton Fox, August 28th, 1901.

Eleanor Hurd French, December 7th, 1908.

James Gibson, 3rd, January 21st, 1902.

Julian McC. Gibson, June 26th, 1904.

Caroline Bethune Gibson, June 27th, 1905.

Angus Gibson, June 6th, 1907.

Malcolm Norris Goodridge, April 14th, 1906.

Edwin Laurin Goodridge, January 30th, 1909.

Elliot Culver Grandin, September 23rd, 1896.

Frank Samuel Grandin, August nth, 1898.

John Hardie Hammett, April 3rd, 1908.

Lucretia Havens, May 27th, 1904.

George Wallace Hayes, December i6th, 1908.

* Deceased.

140

Elizabeth Louise Heath, May loth, 1897.

Howard Lawton Heath, April 4th, 1899.

Samuel Buchanan Heath, October 9th, 1902.

Leland Stanford Heath, April 14th, 1907.

William Hitchman, HI, July 3rd, 1908.

* Hoge, .

* Hoge, .

Charles C. Hoge, Jr., June, 1907.

Edward MacKay Holmes, November nth, 1904.

Marion Francis Hooven, September nth, 1896.

Lois Bartlett Howland, December 21st, 1899.

Margaret Candee Howland, March 12th, 1902.

Martha Rosalie Humphrey, May loth, 1907.

Louise Van Horsen Jack, November 23rd, 1902.

Alice Sayler Jack, October 4th, 1906.

Suzanne Blythe Jeffery, April 12, 1909.

Halbert Hermon Jenkins, January 15th, 1899.

John King Jenney, September 8th, 1904.

Alexander D. Jenney, Jr., June 27th, 1906.

Cornelia Gould Jenney, March 31st, 1908.

Ogden C. Johnson, Jr., January 8th, 1900.

Frances Virginia Stewart Kellogg, June 23rd, 1908.

Janet Kinney, April i8th, 1902.

May Kinney, September loth, 1903.

Constance Kinney, July 6th, 1905.

Edward Somerville Kip, February nth, 1907.

William VanHouten Kip, November nth, 1908.

Ethel Dale Laughlin, January 15th, 1906.

Cicero Hunt Lewis, H, June 29th, 1901.

Robert Wilson Lewis, Jr., September 20th, 1902.

Frances B. Liggett, June 13th, 1898.

Caroline K. Liggett, November 6th, 1899.

Martha W. Liggett, December 14th, 1906.

Daniel Weisiger Lindsey, HI, July 30th, 1908.

Anna Louise Linnard, January 17th, 1903.

Stephen Daly Lock wood, March 31st, 1900.

William Noble Lockwood, July 4th, 1905.

Joseph T. Low, 3rd, March 7th, 1900.

* Deceased.

141

Frederick J. Low, April 20th, 190T.

Edith Low, May 7th. 1902.

Josephine Meriwether McCampbell, June 9th, 1897.

Margaret McCampbell, October 27th, 1904.

John M. McClenahan. August 8th. 1900.

Richard Lee McClenahan, August 9th, 1903.

Phoebe McDowell. June 22nd. 1900.

Flo Jean McDowell, February 28th. 1894.

Alice McDowell. June 8th, 1895.

Lillian McDowell, October 21st, 190 1.

Mary Elizabeth McDowell, October 27th. 1905.

George Irwin Mcllwain. May 23rd. 1900.

Martha Mcllwain, April 5th. 1905.

Susanne Lanimers McKinney, November i8th, 1903.

Margaret Ruth McKinney, February 28th, 1909.

Esther Elisabeth McWilliams, December 28th, 1897.

M. Leeta McWilliams. October 21st. 1899.

Georgiana McWilliams, September 7th. 1901.

John James McWilliams, August 2nd, 1904.

* Miller, infant daughter, August 17th, 1902.

* Miller, infant son. May 7th. 1904.

* Miller, infant daughter. September 19th, 1908.

William Hamlin Mitchell. November 15th. 1901.

Thomas Wierman Mitchell, April 5th, 1903.

Kate Louise Mitchell, September ist, 1908.

Margaret Mitchell. January 4th, 1908.

Caroline Denny Nixon, October i6th, 1899.

Mary Lowe Nixon, March 24th, 1903.

Margery Nixon, January 9th, 1906.

Forsyth Patterson, December 30th, 1903.

Charles Lord Patterson, December 17th, 1905.

Margaret Patterson, March 24th, 1901.

Katharine Patterson, July 25th, 1907. * James Boothe Pepper, May i6th, 1898. * Pepper, infant son, November 17th, 1900.

Louise M. Perkins. November 22nd, 1903.

Isabella McWhorter Perkins. September i8th, 1907.

Carroll Wheeler Pratt, November 7th. 1902.

* Deceased.

142

*Bessie Pratt, February 22nd, 1904. B. Kirk Rankin, Jr., October 27th, 1903. Aiken Irving Reichner, June 4th, 1900. Morgan Stephens Reichner, August 29th, 1905. Hugh Inman Richardson, August ist, 1900. Charles Alexander Robinson, Jr., March 30th, 1900. Sarah Westcott Robinson, July 28th, 1902. Elizabeth Archibald Robinson, June 9th, 1905. John Mumford Robinson, May 22nd, 1901. Richard Stuart Robinson, May 14th, 1903. Newton Laird Robinson, February 15th, 1907. Robert Clowry Roebling, September 22nd, 1904. Allison Campbell Roebling, December ist, 1907. Eileen Russell, December loth, 1907. Stuart Salisbury Smith, August 29th, 1904. Helen Frederica Smith, March 15th, 1903. Constance Headley Smith, October loth, 1905.

Frederick Hoffman Smith, IV, June 6th, 1908. *Edmund Joy Swain, Jr., January 17th, 1901.

George Randall Swain, Jr., January 17th, 1901.

Edward Thaw, Jr., June 13th, 1908.

Dorothy Thompson, January 7th, 1901.

Adele Thompson, December 5th, 1903.

Henry Soffe Thompson, Jr., March 3rd, 1905.

Alice Jones Thompson, October 21st, 1904.

James McNaughton Thompson, August 3rd, 1907.

William Meredith Thompson, March 15th, 1909.

Dorothy Danforth Tooker, November 5th, 1908.

Alice Katharine Tower, June 7th, 1902.

Edwin VanCise, IV, November 17th, 1907

Gladys VanCise, January 30th, 1909.

Mary Van Duyn, December loth, 1903.

John VanDuyn, II, , I905-

Winifred VanHorsen, January 7th, 1902. Eleanor VanHorsen, December 28th, 1905. James Alfred Wadsworth, December loth, 1902. Helen Elizabeth Wadsworth, February 28th, 1905. Lucy Walton, April nth, 1905.

* Deceased.

143

Helen Amy Waterhouse, January 26th, 1901.

Ernest Burton Leigh Waterhouse, March 19th, 1902.

Helen Beaver Wentzell, April 26th, 1905. *James L. Whitaker, Jr., November 15th, 1897.

R. Chase Whitaker, February 6th, 1900.

Howard F. W^hitaker, October 9th, 1901.

Anthony Howe Whitaker, September nth, 1903.

Mary C. Whitaker, April 15th, 1906.

Dorothy M. White, August 26th, 1900.

Maude R. White, January 28th, 1903.

Katharine Emily Wilkins, July 23rd, 1907.

Rosalind Willard, October 13th, 1898.

David Willard, Jr., October 13th, 1898.

Edwin T. D. Willard, October 6th, 1896.

Mildred McCreary Willard, October 6th, 1896.

Venette Milne Willard, January 7th, 1898.

Stewart Williams, August 24th, 1902.

Howard Williams, June 7th, 1904.

Ora Otis Worden, January 29th, 1909.

Edward Henry Wright, 3rd, January 20th, 1906. ♦Sidney Burton Yarrow, November , 1899.

Harriett Yarrow, June 13th, 1902.

Alexander Oliver Young, August 21st, 1905.

Harvey Torrence Young, May 4th, 1907. * Deceased.

144

w^^

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