Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904, Part 105

Author:
Publication date: 1904-
Publisher: New York : Lewis Historical Pub. Co., etc.
Number of Pages: 1100


USA > New York > Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904 > Part 105


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LUDLOW, James Bettner:


Lawyer; born May 30, 1859, Yonkers, N. Y .; prepared at Harrington's School and St. John's School, Sing Sing, and was graduated from Harvard University, A. B., 1881, and LL. B., 1883; member of firm of


Ludlow, Townsend, Sedgwick & Thomp- son; member University, City. Paramach- enee and Caughnawauga Club's ; Ardsley, Casino, and Down Town Associations, St. Nicholas, and Musical Art Societies, City Bar Association, Archæological Associa- tion, and American Museum of Natural History. Residence, 27 W. 26th St .; of- fice, 45 Cedar St., N. Y. City.


LUDLOW, Nicoll:


Rear admiral, U. S. Navy ; born Islip, Long Island, N. Y., Sept. 11, 1842 ; entered Naval Academy, Oct. 28, 1859, from First Congressional District of N. Y .; attached to steam sloop Wachusett, 1863-64 ; Wau- chusett captured Confederate cruiser Flor- ida, Oct. 7, 1864, in the harbor of Bahia. Brazil ; attached to ironclad monitor Dic- tator, 1864-65 ; attached to iron-clad mon- itor Monadnock, 1865-66, on her passage from Philadelphia to Mare Island, Cal., re- turned home overland in 1866, and was or- dered to the Iroquois, steam sloop, in No- vember, 1866, made the cruise on the Chi- na Station and returned home in April, 1870; Naval Academy as instructor in gunnery, 1870-73 ; ordered to steam sloop Monongahela, Oct., 1873 ; on South Atlan- tic station; returning home as executive of flagship Brooklyn, in 1876; torpedo school, Newport, R. I., 1876-77; flagship Trenton, European Station, 1877-80, returning home in 1880 in the Constellation; ordnance in- spector, West Point Foundry, South Bos- ton Iron Works and Midvale Steel Works, 1880-83; in command of steam sloop Quin- nibaug. European Station, 1883-86; light- house inspector, Twelfth District, 1887-90; inspector of ordnance, Mare Island, Navy Yard. 1890-1901; lighthouse inspector,


Ninth District. 1891-92; commanding


steam


sloop


Mohican, 1893;


as


flag-


ship Pacific Squadron; January to


May, and May


to November as sen-


ior officer in command of Behring


Sea Squadron; on leave, 1894; War College, 1895; in command of Monterey. February to November, 1896. Member of Examining and Retiring Boards until July 8, 1897. when ordered to command of Terror, North Atlante Squadron. Took part in the War of 1898-blockade of Cardenas, Cuba; engagement of May 12, San Juan, Porto Rico; blockade of Hav- ana and expedition to Porto Rico, result- ing in capture of that island; assumed command of battleship Massachusetts, Sept. 22. 1898; relinquished command, June 1. 1899. Ensign, Oct. 1, 1863; master, May 10, 1866; lieutenant, Feb. 21, 1867; Lieutenant-Commander, March 12, 1868;


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


Commander, Oct. 1, 1881; Captain, May | politan, Lawyers, N. Y. Riding and N. Y. 21, 1895; commanding Massachusetts, July Athletic Clubs. Residence, 1 W. 92d St .; office, 25 Broad St., N. Y. City. 8, 1897. Retired as Rear Admiral, Nov. 1, 1899. In 1904 ordered to command Naval LUKEMAN, Henry Augustus: Home, Philadelphia, which is present ad- dress.


LUKE, Arthur Fuller:


Banker; born Cambridge, Mass., Jan. 28, 1853, in which locality his father was a coal merchant of prominence. On both the paternal and maternal sides the fam- ily ancestry is English, although on the maternal side it has been for many gen- erations a Massachusetts family ; his father was born in Boston, Mass. His mother's family was widely known for its inventive genius-Elias Howe, Jr., the in- ventor of the sewing machine, being a cousin, and William Howe, the inventor of the Truss bridge, an uncle. was edu- cated in the public schools of Cambridge, Mass .; at the age of seventeen he went to work in a wholesale clothing house in Bos- ton, but, after six months, became mes- senger and general clerk in First National Bank of Cambridge, Mass., where he re- mained one year; then, accepting a higher position in the National Bank of the Commonwealth of Boston, he remained with that institution until 1878. In May of that year he accepted the office of as- sistant National Bank Examiner for the Boston district, filling that position until February, 1880, when he was elected cashier of the National Bank of North America of Boston, a wealthy and very successful banking institution. Remained with the National Bank of North America until April, 1900, when he was offered and accepted the assistant treasuryship of the National Tube Works Company, the larg- est manufacturers in the world of wrought iron and steel tubular goods, employing about seven thousand men at its works in Mckeesport, Pa. Two years later he was promoted to the treasuryship of the com- pany, the office of which was located in Boston, and there he remained until the formation, in 1899, by the principal wrought iron and steel pipe and tube manufacturers in the U. S., of the Na- tional Tube Co., with a capital of $80,000, - 000; he was made treasurer of this new company, and established his office in N. Y. City. In April, 1901, upon the incor- poration of the U. S. Steel Corporation, Mr. Luke became its treasurer and re- mained in that position until January 1, 1902. when he became a partner in the well known Pittsburg banking house of Darr, Luke & Moore. Member of Metro-


Sculptor; born Richmond, Va., Jan. 28, 1870; was educated at the National Acad- emy of Design, N. Y .; Ecole des Beaux Arts, Paris. His works include, besides numerous busts and bas-reliefs, "Maun," for Appellate Court House, N. Y. City, and other cities; also statue of Robert Livingston for St. Louis, Mo., statue of Mckinley for Adams, Mass., statue Co- lumbus for Custom House, N. Y .; group of "music," St. Louis Exposition. Mem- ber of National Arts Club and Archi- tectural League. Award: medal, St. Louis Exposition. Member N. Y. Acad- emy Design, Society American Artists, National Sculpture Society. Residence, Stockbridge, Mass .; studio, 145 W. 55th St., N. Y. City.


LUMMIS, William:


Banker and stock broker; vice-president Utica and Black River R. R. Co. and South Carolina and Georgia R. R. Co .; director Bond and Mortgage Guarantee Co., Oswego & Rome R. R. Co., and and Rome Watertown, and Ogdensburg R. R. Co .; also Newburgh, Dutchess & Conn. R. R. Co. Member Board of Educa- tion, N. Y. City. Residence, 320 W. 107th St .; office, 35 Wall St., N. Y. City.


LUNG, George Augustus:


Surgeon U. S. Navy; born Canandaigua, N. Y .; was graduated from University of Rochester with degree of A. B., 1883; from University of Pennsylvania, M. D., 1886; A. M., University of Rochester, 1901. Commisisoned assistant surgeon, Aug. 18, 1888, passed assistant surgeon, Aug. 18, 1892, surgeon, Nov. 1, 1900; U. S. receiv- ing ship Vermont to March 20, 1889; U. S. steamer Mohican, to April 10, 1891; U. S. Naval Station, New London, Conn., and Navy Yard,, N. Y., 1891; U. S. Naval Hospital, N. Y., 1892; receiving-ship Min- nesota to June, 1893; U. S. steamer Thetis, to July, 1896; Naval Hospital, Boston, Mass., to Oct., 1897; Naval Station, Port Royal, S. C., to May, 1898; with Samp- son's squadron in U. S. steamer Supply, to June 29, 1898, West Indies; U. S. steamer Philadelphia, June 9, 1898, to May 30, 1900, annexation of Hawaii and Samoan difficulty; China Relief expedi-


tion, July 29, to Oct. 9, 1900; senior medi- cal officer with First Regiment, U. S. Marines, to Peking, China, and return; U. S. Naval Station, Cavite, P. I., with First Brigade, U. S. Marines, Oct., 1900,


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


District surgeon for Province of Penin- | Biologist for the North Shore Improve- sula of Cavite, April, 1900; with expedi- ment Association. Address, Cold Spring Harbor, L. I., N. Y. tion of U. S. Marines to Samar, 1901-02. Special duty, Washington. D. C., 1902 and LUTZ, Stephen H .: 1903; Naval Hospital, Philadelphia, and receiving ship Hancock, 1903. Member of the Metropolitan Club, N. Y .; Chevy Chase, Washington, D. C .; Society Foreign Wars, Society Military Surgeons, Military Order of the Dragon. Address, care Navy Department, Washington, D. C.


LUQUER, Lea McIlvaine :


Adjunct professor at Columbia Univer- sity, N. Y .; born Brooklyn, 1864, of an old Long Island family, settled there from 1658; descended from Jan l'Escuyer, son of Rev. Lea Luquer and Eloise Elizabeth Payne Luquer; was graduated from Col- umbia with C. E. degree in 1887; Ph.D., 1894. Married, in 1896, Anne Low Pierre- pont, daughter of Henry Evelyn Pierre- pont and Ellen A. Low Pierrepont. Mem- ber of the Huguenot Society of America (secretary of said society for five years) and Society of Colonial Wars; Fellow of the N. Y. Academy of Science and of the American Association for the Advance- ment of Science; also a member of the Century Club of N. Y. and the City Club of N. Y. Author: Minerals in Rock Sec- tions (D. Van Nostrand). Address, 321 W. 80th St .. N. Y. City.


LUSK, Graham:


Educator; born Bridgeport. Conn., Feb. 15, 1866; son of Dr. William T. Lusk; was graduated in the course of chemistry from Columbia University, 1887; studied physi- ology in Munich till 1891; taught physiol- ogy from 1891 to 1898 at Yale University; since 1898 professor of physiology at the University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College, N. Y .; received the degrees of Ph.B., Columbia; Ph.D., Munich; M. A., Yale. Member of the American Physio- logical Society; Fellow of the Royal So- ciety of Edinburgh; member the Univer- sity and Century Clubs; librarian of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Address, 11 E. 74th St., N. Y. City.


LUTZ, Frank E .:


Biologist, on resident staff of the Sta- tion for Experimental Evolution of the Carnegie Institution; born Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania. September 15. 1879; was educated at Bloomsburg State Normal School, 1896; Haverford College, 1900; University of Chicago; studied in Europe, 1902-03; assistant in zoology at University of Chicago; instructor at the Biological Laboratory of the Brooklyn Institute.


Physician (otologist and laryngologist) ; born May 16, 1872, Elizabeth, N. J .; son of Stephen M. and Margaret Cook Lutz. Married Winifred A. Steppe, 1899; was graduated from the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, 1833; City Hospital and Chamber Street Hospi- tal. 1894-95; surgeon in ear department, Brooklyn Eye & Ear Hospital; ear sur- geon, Eastern District Hospital, Brooklyn, and Bushwick Dispensary, Brooklyn; as- sistant ear surgeon, Manhattan Eye & Ear Hospital, N. Y .; consulting otologist, Jamaica Hospital and Bedford Hospital, Brooklyn. Member American Medical As- sociation, N. Y. State Medical Society, N. Y. State Medical Association. Kings County Medical Society, Long Island Med- ical Society, Brooklyn Medical Society, American Laryngological, Rhinological and Otological Society, Associated Physi- cians of Long Island; also Crescent Club, and Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity. Address, 551 Madison St., Brooklyn, N. Y. LYDECKER, Charles Edward:


Lawyer; born N. Y., May 26, 1851; son John A. and Julia Kent Lydecker; was graduated from College City of N. Y., 1871; Columbia College law department, 1873; public administrator of N. Y., 1889- 93; Democrat. Residence, 120 E. 45th St .; office, 120 Broad St., N. Y. City.


LYDECKER, Garrett J .:


Colonel U. S. Army; born New Jersey and appointed from New York; appointed first lieutenant, Corps of Engineers, June 13, 1864; Captain, Aug. 8. 1866; Major, March 31, 1880; served at Vancouver Bar- racks, Washington, D. C., Aug. 14, 1899, to May 13, 1891; promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, Corps of Engineers, Dec. 14, 1831; in charge of engineer works at Louisville, Ky., May 23, 1891, to Nov. 14, 1893; in charge of survey of St. Clair Flats Canal and of St. Mary's Falls Canal; had charge of the removal of the wrecked schooners Fontana and Martin in the St. Clair River, Mich .; in charge of the re- construction of bridge across Pine River at St. Clair, Mich., Nov. 14, 1893; promoted Colonel, April 30, 1901. Address, Jones Building, Detroit, Mich.


LYFORD, Frederic E .:


President of First National Bank of Waverly; born Jan. 26, 1853, at Waterville, Me .; was educated at the Waverly (N. Y.) Academy. Married (first) Miss Lowman,


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


of Waverly, who died; (second) Miss Lemon, of Waverly; cashier many years of First National Bank; president of vil- lage; president of Board of Education; di- rector Sayre (Pa.) National Bank and 1st National Bank, Whitneys Point, N. Y., Land and Water Cos .; Othens Furni- ture Co., Newark Gas Light Co., A. H. Thomas Paint Co., and F. E. Lyford & Co. Vice-president Chiming Valley Trac- tion Co., Elmira. Residence, 446 Penn- sylvania Ave., Waverly, N. Y.


LYMAN, Chester Wolcott:


Paper manufacturer; born New Haven, Conn., May 25, 1861; son of Chester S. Lyman, who was long professor in the Sheffield Scientific School of Yale Uni- versity. The Lyman family is one of the oldest in the country, being descended from Richard Lyman, who came to Amer- ica in 1631, from England. His mother was the granddaughter of Chief Justice Oliver Ellsworth (the second Chief Justice of the U. S.) appointed by Washington. On his mother's side he is also descended from the old Wolcott family, which was so prominent in Colonial times and in- cluded several governors of Connecticut and Roger Wolcott, who signed the Dec- laration of Independence. Chester Wol- cott Lyman was prepared for college at the Hopkins Grammar School, New Ha- ven, and graduated from Yale in 1882, with the usual degree of B. A., subse- quently taking the degree of M. A. After graduation he was employed for a short time in the U. S. Coast Survey, and trav- eled abroad for one year; then studied for twelve months in the Sheffield Scien- tific School at New Haven. In the sum- mer of 1895. entered the employ of W. H. Parsons & Co., paper manufacturers and merchants, of N. Y. City, and toward the end of the following year went to Chicago as the Western representative of the firm. In the spring of 1889, went to West Newton, Pa., and became con- nected with the Westmoreland Paper Co .; in the winter of 1890 he went to Herkimer, N. Y., and eventually became a director in and manager of the Herki- mer Paper Co. On the absorption of that company by the International Paper Co. he became connected with the latter company; was for two years (1898-1900) secretary and treasurer of the American Paper & Pulp Association, the national organization of the paper industry; is now connected with the International Paper Co., having been assistant to the president, Mr. Hugh J. Chisholm, since


the organization of that company in 1898, through the combination of the principal mills in the U. S., which manufactured newspaper. He is now also manager of one of the departments of the company. Member of American Paper and Pulp As- sociation; The Forestry, Water Stor- age and Manufacturing Association of New York State, the Association for the Protection of


the Adirondacks. and the American Forestry Association; also a member of the American Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Science and the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. He belongs to a number of social organizations, among which may be mentioned the University Club and the Yale Club of N. Y., the Ardsley Club and the Sons of the American Revolu- tion and the Pilgrims. Address, 30 Broad St., N. Y. City.


LYMAN, Frank:


Iron manufacturer; was graduated from Harvard, 1874; director Nassau Na- tional Bank, Brooklyn City R. R. Co .; trustee U. S. Trust Co., Brooklyn Trust Co., Long Island Loan and Trust Co., and Brooklyn Savings Bank. Member University, Players and Hamilton Clubs; Ardsley, Casino, Down Town Association and American Institute of Mining En- gineers. Residence, 34 Remsen St., Brooklyn; office, 82 Wall St., N. Y. City.


LYMAN, Hart:


Editor; born Plymouth, Conn., Dec. 8, 1851; was graduated from Yale, 1873; special courses at University of Berlin and Heidelberg; editorial writer on N. Y. Tribune since 1876. Member of Uni- versity, Yale, Garden City Golf Clubs. Married in 1881, Marion Torrey. Ad- dress, 74 E. 54th St., N. Y. City.


LYMAN, Henry D .:


Born Parkman, O., April 12, 1852; son of Darius and Betsey Converse Lyman; descended from Richard Lyman. who emigrated to Hartford, Conn., 1631; has been special agent N. Y. Postoffice De- partment; chief clerk contract office, Postoffice Department, during President Garfield's administration; second assist- ant postmaster general, President Ar- thur's administration; secretary Ameri- can Surety Co. of N. Y., 1885; vice-presi- dent, 1886, and president, 1899 to date; is trustee North River Savings Bank, and director Electrical Review Publish- ing Co .. and a member of Union League Club. Residence, 41 West 73d St .; office, 100 Broadway, N. Y. City.


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


LYMAN, Joseph:


Artist; born Ravenna, O., July 27, 1843; studied art in this country and in Europe; devoted his time principally to coast scenery. Member Century Asso- ciation, and an associate member of the National Academy of Design. Residence, 641 5th Ave .; studio, 11 E. 59th St., N. Y. City.


LYNDE, Rollin Harper:


Lawyer; was graduated from Princeton University, 1877, and Columbia Law School, 18SO. Member of University, Princeton, Baltusrol Golf and University Glee, South Orange Field, and Nassau Clubs and Down Town Association. Residence, South Orange, N. J .; office, 82 Beaver St., N. Y. City.


LYON, Ernest Neal:


Author; born Greenfield, Mass., Oct. 26, 1873; son of Rev. A. Judson Lyon and Mary Wheaton Lyon, author; was grad- uated from Colgate Academy in 1893, and from Colgate University, 1897, B. A. Professor of English in Marion Military Institute, Alabama, 1897-1900; Mt. Her- mon School, Massachusetts, 1900-01. Manual Training High School, Brooklyn. Republican; member Phi Gamma Leita, University Club (Brooklyn); contributor to leading magazines and has given read- ings from his writings. Address, 188 Prospect Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.


LYON, George F .:


Jurist; born Barker, N. Y., July 13, 1849; son of Harry and Pamelia A. (Livermore) Lyon; was graduated from Binghamton Academy, 1868; Ham- ilton College, 1872; He married Eliza- beth R. Mather, Binghamton, N. Y., 1884. Admitted to the Bar of New York State, 1875. Member of law firm Chap- man & Martin (Hon. Orlow W. Chap- man, late solicitor general of the United States, and Hon. Celora E. Martin, judge of the New York Court of Appeals), 1876-77; also member of law firm Chap- man & Lyon, 1877-90. Member of New York State Constitutional Convention, 1894. Elected justice of the Supreme Court on nomination of both Republican and Democratic parties, 1905, for the term ending Dec. 31, 1909. Recipient of de- gree of LL. D. from Hamilton College, 1904. Address, Binghamton, N. Y.


LYON, Henry G .:


Captain, U. S. Army; born April 17, 1865; was appointed from Buffalo, N. Y .; Cadet U. S. M. M., West Point, July 1, 1886; promoted Second Lieutenant, Seventeenth Infantry, June 12, 1890. He


served at Fort D. A. Russell, Wyoming, on garrison duty, October, 1890 to Sept. 1894, during which time he participated in the Pine Ridge Indian Campaign, Nov., 1890 to Feb., 1891; also in the "Coxyite" troubles in Wyoming and Ida- ho, and the American Railway Union Strike, 1894. Member of Department, Platte Rifle Team, 1892 and 1894, and of Army Rifle Team, 1894. Distinguished marksman. Garrison duty Columbus, O., Nov., 1894 to Sept., 1897; promoted first lieutenant, Twenty-fourth Infantry (Col- ored,) April, 1897; garrison duty Fort Douglas, Utah, Nov., 1897 to April 1898; at Tampa, Fla. with regiment, May and June, 1898; at Santiago de Cuba and in assault on San Juan Hill, where he was severely wounded through right hip July, 1898, recommended for brevet; post quartermaster and commissary and commanding Eighth Infantry detach- ment at Fort D. A. Russell, Wyoming, Nov., 1898, to May, 1899; participated in Coeur d'Alene Mining troubles, Idaho, May to July, 1899, commended; com- manding Fort Harrison, Montana, July. 1899, to January, 1900; constructing quartermaster Fort Harrison, Montana, July to December, 1899; promoted Cap- tain Twenty-second Infantry, Dec., 1899. On duty with National Guard of N. Y., summer of 1900; regimental quarter- master Twenty-second Infantry, in Phil- ippines, May, 1901, to May, 1902; on duty with National Guard of N. Y., summer of 1902; transferred to Seventeenth Infan- try, August, 1902; commanding Fort Law- ton, Wash., Oct., 1902, to Feb., 1903. In Philippines since July, 1903.


LYON, James B .:


State printer; born March 25, 1858, Middle Granville, N. Y .; was educated in common schools; clerk in a book-store in Gloversville, 1872-76; manufacturer of blank-books and stationery in Albany, beginning in 1876; public printer State of N. Y., 1888-95; married, Feb. 18, 1890. Anita Thompson, of Albany; printer and book-binder since 1876. He is now pub- lisher for the State of N. Y. Court of Appeals Reports, Miscellaneous Reports, Session Laws and Appellate Division Reports and Combined Official Series of N. Y. State Reports and Session Laws. Residence, Albany, N. Y.


LYON, Newell:


Lawyer; born Ithaca, N. Y .; son of Judge Marcus Lyon; was graduated from Ithaca High School, 1892; Cornell University, A. B., 1897, and N. Y. Law


574


WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


School, 1898. Admitted to the Bar, 1898; journalist, with Troy Times, 1892-93; married, in 1901, Della Ward Ferous. Is a member of Alpha Delta Phi Fra- ternity and Cornell University Club. Residence, 632 W. 147th St .; office, 220 Broadway, N. Y. City.


LYONS, Julius Judah:


Lawyer; amateur musician; born N. Y., Oct. 7, 1843; son Rev. Jacques J. (Jewish clergyman) and Grace Lyons; was educated in the public schools and University Grammar School, N. Y .; then studied law and was admitted to the Bar in 1866; married, 1872, Constance Hendricks; officer of many Jewish char- itable institutions, including Montefiori Home for Chronic Invalids, Mt. Sinai Hospital, Hebrew Technical Institute; judge advocate, 2d brigade, on Gen. Vil- mer's staff (rank of Major), 1875-76; opera, "The Lady and the Tiger," founder, president and conductor of Met- ropolitan Amateur Orchestra. Member Bar Association and Manhattan Club. For many years on staff of musical and literary department New York Herald. Residence, Hotel Wellington; office, 7 William St., N. Y. City.


M


MABIE, Hamilton Wright:


Associate editor The Outlook; born Cold Springs, N. Y., Dec. 13, 1846; was graduated from Williams College, A. B., (A. M., and LH. D.); Columbia, LL. B., and received LL.D. from Union Universi- ty; trustee Williams College; trustee Barn- ard College; president N. Y. Kindergarten Association. Author: Norse Stories Re- told from the Eddas (1882); Nature in New England, (1890); My Study Fire, first series (1890); Short Studies in Litera- ture (1891); Under the Trees and Else- where (1891); Essays in Literary Inter- pretation (1892); My Study Fire, second series, (1894); Nature and Culture (1897); Books and Culture (1897) ; Work and Culture (1898); The Life of the Spirit (1899) ; William Shakespeare, Poet, Dramatist and Man (1900); Works and Days (1902);


Parables of Life (1902); In Arcady (1903); Backgrounds of Literature (1903). Address, 287 4th Ave., N. Y. City.


MABBOTT, John Milton:


Born Waterbury, Conn., July 14, 1862; was graduated from Waterbury High School, 1879; College of Physicians and Surgeons, N. Y. (Columbia), 1884; St. Luke's Hospital, N. Y., 1885; attending


[ obstetrician New York Infant Asylum; gynecologist Out-patient Department of the New York Hospital; trustee of the Hospital Graduates Club and of The Phy- sicians Mutual Aid Association; member Comitia Minora County Medical Society, and Commissioner on Admissions New York Academy of Medicine; married Oct. 30, 1895, Kate Adele, daughter of Thomas S. Ollive, of New York. Address, 19 Fifth Ave., N. Y. City.


MacARTHUR, James:


Author: literary adviser for Harper & Bros. since 1901; born Glasgow, Scotland, Feb. 18,


1866, where he was educated, coming to the U. S. in 1888; was editor of the Bookman five years; literary advistr of Dodd, Mead & Co. Author of the following plays: The Bonnie Brier Bush (with Max Pember- ton) The Masque of the White Rose and (with W. F. Payson) Debonnaire. Ad- dress, care Harper Bros., N. Y. City.


MacARTHUR, Robert Stuart:


Baptist clergyman; born Dalesville, Quebec, Canada, July 31, 1841 was grad- uated from University of Rochester, 1867 (D. D., 1880); was graduated from Rochester Theological Seminary, 1870 (LL.D., Columbian, Washington, 1896). Since May 15, 1870, pastor Calvary Bap- tist Church, N. Y. Married, in 1870, Mary Elizabeth Fox; was correspondent for years of Chicago Standard; long edi- torially connected with Christian In- quirer, and Baptist Review; writer for various other newspapers and maga- zines. Author: Calvary Pulpit, Divine Balustrades, Quick Truths in Quaint Texts; Current Questions for Thinking Men; Bible Difficulties and Their Allevi- ative Interpretation; From the Invasion of Canaan to the Last of the Judges; The Attractive Christ; The Celestial Lamp; The Old Book and the Old Faith; The Land and the Book; Around the World; in collaboration: The People's Worship and Psalter; hymn books: Cal- vary Selection, Calvary Hymnal, Landes Domini; In Excelsis. Lecturer; among his subjects the following: The Empire of the Czar, the Great Bear of the North; Elements of Success in Life; India, the Mysterious and Magnificent; The Pres- ent Heroic Era in American History; Shine and Shade from Spanish Hilltops; America's Great Place Among the Na- tions; Anglo-Saxon Dominion of the Pa- cific; American Principles in European Policies; Japan- Picturesque, Patriotic and Triumphant; The New Era in Old




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