Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904, Part 35

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 35


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Civil War; General Porter was charged by General Pope with disobedience of orders during the second battle of Bull Run, in failing to bring his troops into the engagement, although his corps was "within sight and sound of the battle," thus imperiling the army and being the principal cause of the defeat of the Union forces; the court-martial, convened at General Pope's instance, sustained these charges, and General Porter was cash- iered and dismissed from the service in Jan., 1863; he continued under the ban of this decision for many years; in 1870 he appealed without effect to President Grant for a reversal of the decision of the court- martial; the struggle to obtain this re- versal continued for years, and brought into play all Mr. Choate's legal powers; it was finally successful, its success being largely due to the ability of the plaintiff's counsel, and in 1886 General Porter was finally restored to the army with all dis- abilities removed. Another almost equally celebrated case in which Mr. Choate act- ed as premier counsel was the notable Cesnola case, in which also he was suc- cessful; these are but the most famous of the many important legal struggles in which he has been engaged; politically Mr. Choate is a member of the Republican party, and a very active one, taking a prominent part alike in national, State, and municipal politics, and exerting his powers particularly in the work of re- form; Mr. Choate took the leading part in the formation of the recently formed Constitution of New York. In social circles Mr. Choate is highly esteemed; he is ready as an after dinner speaker, in which art he is noted for his pungent wit, and, if necessary, can be caustic and sarcastic; he is a member of the Union League, Harvard and other clubs, and the New England Society. Address, 1 Carl- ton Terrace, London, S. W., England.


CHOATE, William Gardner:


Lawyer; born Massachusetts, 1830; was graduated from Harvard, 1852, and Dane Law School, 1854; United States Judge of southern district of New York; resigned and continued law practice, N. Y. City. Residence, 40 Central Park, South; office, 40 Wall St., N. Y. City.


CHRISTENSEN, C. T .:


Banker; born 1831; was for many years president of the Brooklyn Trust Com- pany; entered the National Guard of Brooklyn in 1879 as Major of the Thir- teenth, and soon became lieutenant-colo-


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


nel; in 1889 he was placed in command of plans have been carried out in the com- the Third Brigade; from 1809 to 1876 he was the Danish Consul in New York, and the King of Denmark made him a knight of the Order of Dannebrog; Gen. Christ- ensen took a prominent part in the Civil war. Address, Brooklyn, N. Y.


CHRISTY, Howard Chandler:


Artist; born Morgan County, Ohio, Jan. 10, 1873; illustrator for leading books and periodicals; has traveled much abroad; accompanied the "Rough Riders" during the campaign in Cuba; instructor of il- lustrating at Cooper Institute. Residence, The Warwick Arms, 101 West 80th St. Address, The Players Club, 16 Gramercy Park, N. Y. City.


CHUBB, Percival:


Educator; born Devonport, England, 1860. Has been lecturer on literature in the Brooklyn Institute of Art and Sci- ences. Became head of the English De- partment, Brooklyn Manual Training High School and instructor in pedagogy at the Pratt Institute; later became connected with the New York Society for Ethical Culture, and is now associate lecturer for the society, and teacher and supervisor of the English in the Ethical Culture School; is also editor of and contributor to the Ethical Record. Has been recently ap- pointed as lecturer on Methods of Teach- ing English at the New York University School of Pedagogy and does a great deal of general lecturing on ethical. education- al and literary subjects in New York and elsewhere. Has edited several English classics and is author of The Teaching of Literature. Resides at Summit, N. J .; office, 33 Central Park West, N. Y. City.


CHURCH, Benjamin Silliman:


Civil engineer; born April 17, 1836, at Belvidere, N. Y .; was graduated from Dartmouth College, C. E., 1856. He has been prominently connected with some of the most important public works in N. Y. City; engaged on surveys of Central Park, Croton River, and reservoir Central Park, in 1860 became principal assistant on Croton Acqueduct, but be- came captain of Engineers, 12th N. Y. Regiment Volunteers, and was


pletion of the work; he has since been occupied principally in hydraulic and min- ing operations. Member of Union Lea- gue and other clubs and societies. Res- idence, 36 West 12th St .; office, 11 Wall St., N. Y. City.


CHURCH, Francis Pharcellus:


Editor; born Rochester, N. Y., Feb. 22. 1839; son of the Rev. Dr. Pharcellus and Clara Emily (Conant) Church; educated at Charles Anthon's Grammar School. N. Y .: was graduated from Columbia Col- lege. 1859; member of the Phi Beta Kappa; associated with his brother, Wil- liam C .. in the foundation of the Army and Navy Journal and of the Galaxy Magazine, of which latter he was the ed- itor; for the last twenty-five years a lead- ing editorial writer on the N. Y. Sun; member of the Century Club, N. Y., since 1\68; of the Sons of the Revolution; married, 1871, at Philadelphia, Elizabeth Wickham. Residence, 46 E. 30th St., N. Y. City.


CHURCH, Frederick Stuart:


Painter and illustrator; born Grand Rapids, Mich., 1842; art education in Na- tional Academy and Chicago Academy; illustrates books and periodicals; painter of figures and animals; member American Water Color Society and Society of Amer- ican Artists; works: Sea Princess; Back from the Beach (1879); Muskrat's Nest (18\0); Foggy Day (1881) ; A Willing Cap- tive (1883); Retaliation (1864) ; Peacocks in the Snow (1885) ; The Sorceress; Pegasus Captured (1886).


Address, 1512 Broadway, N. Y. City.


CHURCH, Irving Porter:


Educator, writer; born Ansonia, Conn., July 22, 1851; son of Dr. Samuel P. Church; was graduated from Cornell, 1873 (C. E.); assistant and associate pro- fessor of civil engineering, 1876-92. and since professor of applied mechanics and hydraulics at Cornell University; married Elizabeth P. Holley, Niagara Falls, N. Y. Author: Statics and Dynamics for Engi- neering Students; Mechanics of Materials; Hydraulics and Pneumatics, (these three afterward published as Mechanics of En- gneering); Notes and Examples in Me- chanics; Diagram of Mean Velocity of Water in Open Channels. Address, 9 South Ave., Ithaca, N. Y.


later engineer on Gen. Yate's staff, in Civil War; colonel of engineers, N. G. N. Y., after the war; he pre- pared in 1875 plans for utilizing the entire Croton watershed, and in 1883 be- CHURCH, James Congdon : came chief engineer under the commis- Lawyer; born May 24, 1861, Wickford, R. I .; was educated in the public schools of Brooklyn; admitted to the Bar. 1883; sion having in hand the construction of the new acqueduct; he retired in 1889 from directing its construction but his director, Nassau Electric R. R. Co. and


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


Kings County Electric R. R. Co. Ad- dress, Hall of Records, Brooklyn, N. Y. CHURCH, John Adams:


Mining engineer; born Rochester, N. Y., April 5, 1843; was graduated from Co- lumbia School of Mines, 1867; studied abroad, 1868-70, becoming, on return, sub- stitute professor of mineralogy and metal- lurgy; 18(2-74, edited Engineering and Mining Journal; 1878, on U. S. Geographi- cal and Geological Survey, west of 100th meridian; his private report of Comstock lode caused his election to chair of min- ing and metallurgy in Ohio State Univer- sity; received Ph. D., Columbia Univer- sity, 1879; superintendent of Tombstone Mill and Mining Co., Ariz., 1881. Author: The Mining Schools of the U. S., (is71); Report upon the Striking of Artesian Water, Sulphur Spring Valley, Arizona, (1883); and various other reports. Ad- dress, 15 William St., N. Y. City.


CHURCH, Ransom Moore:


Clergyman of the Episcopal Church; born N. Y. City; educated at Hobart Col- lege, Geneva, N. Y., and General Theo- logical Seminary, N. Y. City; was or- dained deacon by Bishop Potter in 1900, and was advanced to the Priesthood the same year, being ordained by Bishop Johnson of Los Angeles. Address, 24 South St., Auburn, N. Y .; rector of St. John's Church.


CHURCH, William C .:


Editor and writer; born Rochester, N. Y., Aug. 11, 1836; has been for the past forty-nine years a resident of the city of N. Y., where he has large interests; dur- ing the Civil War, served as an officer on the staff of Major-General Silas Casey, bearing with him on his return to civil life the brevet of lieutenant-colonel; edi- tor of the Army and Navy Journal, which he established in 1863; established the Galaxy Magazine, and, during the ten years from 1868 to 1878, when it was merged in the Atlantic Monthly, main- tained for it a chief place among our literary periodicals. Author: Life of John Ericson, (Scribner's, 1890), Life of Ulysses S. Grant, (Putnam's Sons, 1899), He has taken an active part in public affairs in N. Y. City; member and trustee of the Century Club and the Authors Club; member of the Players and Army and Navy Clubs; member of. the Grand Army, George Washington Post, and was one of the earliest members of the Loyal Legion; charter member of the New York Commandery; now member of the com- mandery-in-chief of the Legion; took an


active part in the establishment of the National Rifle Association, and was its president; he was, previous to the es- tablishment of the Army and Navy Jour- nal, publisher of the New York Sun, leaving it to enter the military service; in 1882 was appointed by President Ar- thur government inspector for the North- ern Pacific R. R .; he was one of the founders of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in N. Y. City, and is a Fellow in Per- petuity of that organization; director of the Zoological Society. Address, 51 Irv- ing Place, N. Y. City.


CHURCHILL, Alfred Vance:


Artist; student in Oberlin College, 1881- 87; A. M., Oberlin College, 1898; student in the Königliche Hochschule, Berlin, the University of Leipzig, and the Academie Julien, Paris, 1887-90; director of the art department, Iowa College, 1891-93; in- structor in St. Louis secondary and nor- mal schools, 1893-97; professor of fine arts, Teachers College, 1897; president of the Eastern Art Teachers' Association, 1901; lecturer on art interpretation and criticism, Johns Hopkins University, 1902; consulting editor of University Lessons on the Fine Arts. Author of Represen- tative Judgments on the Principles of Art. Address, Columbia University, N. Y. City.


CHURCHILL, John Charles:


Lawyer; born Mooers, N. Y., Jan. 17, 1821; son of Samuel and Martha Bos- worth Churchill; was graduated from Middlebury College (Vt. ), 1843., A. M., LL.D., Harvard Law School; LL. D.,


Hamilton College; admitted to New York Bar, 1847; married 1849, Cath- arine Thomas, daughter of Lawrence Sprague, surgeon U. S. Army, now de- ceased; member Congress, 1867-71; jus- tice Supreme Court, N. Y., 1881-1902; Re- publican, president Oswego Bar Associa- tion; Oswego State Normal and Training School Board. Address, Oswego, N. Y. CHURCHILL, Lida A .:


Author and journalist; born Harrison, Me .; daughter of Josiah Churchill and Catherine Hilton; descendent of the Eng- lish branch of the Churchill family (House of Marlborough) on paternal side, and of John Alden on the maternal side; orphaned in childhood and self-educated; learned stenography and telegraphy as stepping-stones to a literary career; wrote first story when nine years old; first book, My Girls, written at North- bridge, Mass., while acting as telegraph operator; began journalistic work in Bos-


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


ton in 1890; wrote for the Boston Globe, [ Mary P. Hubbard, Philadelphia; served Boston Herald, Boston Transcript, Inde- pendent, New York Observer, Collier's and various monthly and weekly maga- zines; second book, entitled Interweaving, became assistant editor of Success, 1897, when the magazine was founded; retired from Success in 1902 to devote her- self to general literary work; wrote The Magic Seven in 1901, and The Magnet in 1903, books now circulating in all civil- ized countries. Address, 23 West 12th St., N. Y. City.


CHURCHILL, Lady Randolph (Mrs.


George Cornwallis-West) :


Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Jan. 9, 1854; daughter of Leonard Jerome, N. Y. City; education obtained chiefly in Paris; 1874, married in Paris Lord Randolph 1900, Churchill; later died 1895; married, July 28, George Cornwallis-West; is


prominent in London Society; vice- president of Primrose League; 1899, established the Anglo-Saxon Review, a handsome but expensive quarterly. Or- ders, Crown of India, Royal Red Cross, Lady of Grace, and others. Address, 35A Great Cumberland Pl., London, W., Eng- land.


CHURCHILL, Winston:


Author; born St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 10, 1871; prepared at Smith Academy, St. Louis; graduate of U. S. Naval Acad- emy, 1894; published The Celebrity (1898) ; Richard Carvel (1899); The Crisis (1901); The Crossing (1904). Summer Home, Windsor, Vt., address, Care Macmillan Co., N. Y. City.


CHYNOWETH, Edward C .:


Major U. S. Army; born Dec. 27, 1853, in N. Y. City; appointed U. S. Military Academy from Wisconsin, Sept. 1, 1873; appointed second lieutenant, Seventeenth infantry, June 15, 1877; first lieutenant Nov. 26, 1884; captain, April 26, 1898; major, Feb., 1903; conducted expedition to Cuba, being engaged at San Juan and El Caney, July 2, 3, 10, 11, 1898; in Phil- ippines, in engagements San Luis, May 17, 1899; San Fernando, June 16, 22, 30, July 4, 9, Aug. 9, 1899; Angeles, Aug. 10, San Pedro, Sept. 9, 1899; Angeles, Oct. 11; Angeles and Magalang, Nov. 5; Masapint, Nov. 10; Conception, Nov. 11, 1899. Ad- dress, Manila, P. I.


CILLEY, Jonathan Longfellow:


Physician, educator; born Cincinnati, Jan. 25, 1838; son of Jonathan and Sarah Lee Cilley; was graduated from Harvard, 1858, Miami Medical College, 1866, Medi- cal College of Ohio, 1879; married, 1869,


during Civil War as hospital steward 137th Ohio volunteer infantry and as act- ing master's mate in Mississippi squadron, U. S. N .; began practice in Cincinnati, 1866; professor of anatomy, Miami Medi- cal College, 1871-78, Medical College of Ohio, 1878-99; professor physiology, Ohio College; lecturer on art anatomy at Cin- rinnati Museum Art Academy, now New York. Member medical societies of Cin- cinnati, G. A. R., Naval Veterans Asso- ciation; Republican. Club: Harvard (Cin- cinnati). Address, 1190 44th St., Brook- lyn, N. Y.


CLAFLIN, John:


Merchant; head of the great mercantile corporation, The H. B. Claflin Co., and son of Horace Brigham Claflin, founder of the house; born


Brooklyn, July 24, 1850; his father, a native of Milford, Mass., came to N. Y. City in 1843, and began the wholesale dry goods business which has since grown to such extensive proportions; received a preparatory edu- cation in the schools of Brooklyn and N. Y. City, and afterwards entered the Col- lege of the City of N. Y., where he was graduated in 1869; he entered the Claflin establishment in 1870, and three years later was admitted into the firm as junior partner; in the later years of the elder Claflin much of the care and responsi- bility of the business fell upon the shoul- ders of his son; his management proved all that could be desired, and for the ex- tension and continued prosperity of the house the credit is very largely due to him. On his father's death, in 1885, he became the responsible head of the con- cern; director of many financial and charitable institutions; traveled much abroad; member of Metropolitan, Tuxedo, Sons of American Revolution, and other clubs. Address, 15 Washington Square North; office, 224 Church St., N. Y. City. CLAGHORN, Kate Holladay:


Author; born Aurora. Ill., Dec. 12, 1863; daughter of Charles and Martha Holladay Claghorn; resided in N. Y. City since childhood; was graduated from Bryn Mawr College, 1892; Ph. D., Yale, 1896; engaged in research work for U. S. Industrial Commission, 1900-01; U. S. Cen- sus Office, 1902; assistant registrar of records. Tenement House Department, N. Y. City, since July 1, 1902; at present Acting Registrar; member Advisory Coun- cil of Society for Protection of Italian Immigrants, and of Manhattan Trade School for Girls; member of Association of


. 190


WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


New York School of Philanthropy; clubs: winsville, N. Y., Jessie H. Suydem; since Women's University (N. Y. City). au- thor: College Training for Women; con- tributor to many magazines. Residence, 81 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn; office, 61 Irving Place, N. Y. City.


CLAIBORNE, John Herbert, M. D .:


Ophthalmologist and otologist; born Louisberg, N. C., June 29, 1861; academic course and M. D., University of Virginia, 1883; clinic assistant, New York Polytech- nic, 1883-84, in ophthalmology; adjunct professor, same, till 1896; for six years attending surgeon Northwest Dispensary for Eye, Ear and Throat; clinic assistant to Manhattan Eye and Ear Hospital; instructor ophthalmology, College of Phy- sicians and Surgeons of Columbia, ten years; assistant surgeon, New Amsterdam Eye and Ear Hospital; member Academy Medicine, County Medical Society, Vir- ginia Medical Society, New York Oph- thalmology Society, American Ophthal- mology Society, and American Medical Association; student in Berlin, Halle, Paris and London; enlisted as second lieutenant U. S. Volunteers in Spanish- American War; mustered out at end as captain, Oct. 15, 1899. Author Theory and Practice of the Ophthalmoscopic, Functional Examination of the Eye. Ad- dress, 39 West 36th St., N. Y. City.


CLARK, Emmons:


Secretary; born Huron, N. Y., Oct. 14, 1827; was graduated from Hamilton Col- lege; studied medicine, but, coming to N. Y. City, became clerk in railroad office; later manager; Jan., 1857, private in Sev- enth Regiment, N. Y. Militia; Sept., 1859; second lieutenant; Jan., 1860, first lieu- tenant; Dec. 1860, captain; served in three campaigns in Civil War and draft riots, 1863; colonel, 1864; brevetted brigadier general for services; commanded Seventh Regiment in Orange riots, 1871; labor riots, 1877; by his exertions sufficient funds were raised to complete building of Seventh Regiment armory, 1880; secre- tary to board of health, 1866-1901, pub- lished History of the Second Company of the Seventh Regiment, N. Y. State Milita, (1864); History of the Seventh Regiment, (1889). Address, 406 West End Ave., N. Y. City.


.CLARK, Gaylord Parsons:


Educator, physician; born Syracuse, N. Y., Nov. 12, 1856; son of Charles Parsons and Aurelia Lyons Nolton Clark; was graduated from Williams College, 1877 A. M .; College of Medicine, Syracuse Uni- versity M. D., 1880; married 1881, Bald-


1891 professor of physiology, Syracuse University, College of Medicine; member American Physiological Society, Ameri- can Society of Naturalists, American Microscopical Society. Address, 619 W. Genesee St., Syracuse, N. Y.


CLARK, George Crawford:


Banker; born St. Louis, Aug. 3, 1845; educated College City of N. Y .; married Harriet S. Averill; member firm of Clark, Dodge & Co .; interested as director in many large corporations as well as the Brearley School (Ltd.), and New York Cancer Hospital; member N. Y. Stock Exchange, National Academy of Design, Museum of Art, New England Society, American Museum of Natural History. Clubs: Union, Century, Racquet and Ten- nis, University, Down Town, Riding, N. Y. Yacht. Residence, 7 West 37th St .; office, 51 Wall St., N. Y. City. CLARK, Henry Austin:


Born Sidney, N. Y., August 3, 1815; after a preliminary education at Cazeno- via Seminary, he entered Hamilton Col- lege, from which he was graduated in 1836 ; after studying law in Buffalo, lic located in the Village of Bainbridge, N. Y., in 1841. He was State Senator in 1861-1862, and while in the Legislature was appointed by Governor Morgan, chair- man of a committee to raise the 114th Regiment, N. Y. Volunteers, which was done in Chenango and adjoining counties. Mr. Clark has erected a handsome soldiers' monument of Barre granite, twenty-five feet high on a base seven feet square, and presented it to the village in which park it now stands; he married. February 12, 1865, Ellen A. Curtiss, of Bainbridge. Ad- dress, Bainbridge, N. Y.


CLARK, Hollis C .:


Captain, U. S. Army; born Illinois; ap- pointed from Military Acad., N. Y .; cadet at the Military Academy July 1, 1886; second lieutenant , Twenty-third Infantry, June 12, 1891; first lieutenant, Tenth In- fantry, March 8, 1898; transferred to Twenty-fifth Infantry, April 18, 1898; captain, Twenty-fourth Infantry, Sept. 23, 1900; retired, May 13, 1901. Address, Baltimore Country Club, Roland Park, Baltimore, Md.


CLARK, Imogen:


Author; born N. Y. City; educated at French and English schools; author: God's Puppets; Will Shakespeare's Little Lad; The Victory of Egey Gardner. Ad- dress, 302 West SSth St., or care Chas. Scribner's Sons.


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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.


CLARK, John Bates:


Educator; born Providence, R. I., Jan. 26, 1847; educated at Providence High School, Brown University (two years), Amherst College (two years), Universi- ties of Heidelberg and Zurich; degrees, A. B., Amherst, 1872; Ph. D., Amherst, 1894; LL. D., Princeton, 1896; LL. D., Amherst 1897; professor of political econ- omy and history, Carleton College, Minn., 1877-81; professor of history and politi- cal science, Smith College, 1882-92 in- clusive; professor of political economy,


of


Amherst College, 1892-95; professor political economy in Columbia University since 1895; lecturer at the Johns Hopkins University, 1892-93-94; honorary offices, president of the American Economic As- sociation, 1893-95, and of a number of philanthropic organizations; works: The Philosophy of Wealth (Ginn & Co.); The Distribution of Wealth (Macmillan Co.); The Control of Trusts (Macmillan Co.); The Modern Distributive Process-jointly with F. H. Giddings-(Ginn & Co.); and the Problems of Monopoly (Columbia University Press, Macmillan Co.); per- haps fourscore articles and monographs on economic subjects; special contribution to science; a new system of economic theory which proceeds on the plan of establishing the natural standards to which wages, interest and profits tend to conform, and then analyzes the forces which cause actual incomes to deviate from these normal rates; it makes a special study of industrial progress and of the consolidations of capital and of labor by which that progress is attended. Address, 616 W. 113th St., N. Y. City.


CLARK, John C .:


Member of the firm of Olin, Clark & Phelps; born Plattsburg, N. Y .; educated at Wesleyan University and Columbia Law School; was assistant corporation counsel assigned to the office of Mayor Low, was the first secretary of the Citizens Union, and is a director of the Y. M. C. A. Address, 32 Nassau St., N. Y. City.


CLARK, John Mitchell:


Iron and steel merchant; born, Boston, July 23, 1847; son of Bishop Thomas M. Clark and Caroline Howard Clark; was graduated from Brown University, 1865; entered the iron business with Naylor & Co., Boston, and has long been senior member and at the head of their business in N. Y. City; member Union Club and Down Town Association. Residence, 524 Fifth Ave .; office, 45 Wall St., N. Y. City.


CLARK, Joseph Bourne:


Congregational clergyman; born, Stur- bridge, Mass., Oct. 7, 1836; son of Rev. Dr. Joseph S. and Harriet Bates Bourne Clark; educated at Munson Academy, Mass., Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass .; was graduated from Amherst College, 1858; Andover Theological Seminary, 1861; D. D., Amherst, 1884; ordained Congrega- tional minister, 1861; married, Falmouth, Mass., 1878, Clara N. Herendeen; held pastorates successively 1861-79 at Yar- mouth, Newtonville and Jamaica Plains, Boston; when he became secretary of Mass. Home Missionary Society, until 1882, when he became secretary of Na- tional Congregational Home Missionary Society; author: Leavening the Nation. Residence, 271 McDonough St., Brooklyn; office, United Charities Bldg., N. Y. City.


CLARK, Mrs. Kate Upson:


Author and lecturer; born Camden, Ala., Feb. 22, 1851; was graduated from Wheaton Seminary, Norton, Mass., 1869; and from Westfield (Mass.) Normal School, 1872; taught in Cleveland (O.) Central High School, 1872-73; has lec- tured widely upon literary, educational, social and domestic topics; member of Meridian Club of N. Y. City; president Wheaton Club of N. Y. City since its founding in 18S6; has edited Good Cheer, 1882-87; Helping Hand department Phila- delphia Press, 1883-86; Romance, 1892-95; contributor to most of leading magazines, especially for the young; has published: That Mary Ann (1892); Bringing Up Boys (1900); White Butterflies (1900); How Dexter Paid His Way (1901); Move Upward (1902); Up the Witch Brook Road (1902); A Soldier of Conscience (1903); The Adventures of Spotty (1904) ; Donald's Good Hen (1904); The Wreck of the Valiant (1904). Address, 545A Quincy St., Brooklyn, N. Y.


CLARK, Walter Appleton:


Artist, illustrator; born Worcester, Mass., 1876; pupil of H. Siddons Mowbray and William M. Chase; married Anne Hoyt, Greenwich, Conn., 1902; for some years connected with Scribner's Maga- zine; his latest work is the illustration of the Canterbury Tales (modern version) by Percy Mackaye; instructor Art Stu- dents League, N. Y. City; silver medal, Paris Exposition, 1900; silver medal, Pan- American Exposition, 1901; member Play- ers Club, Down Town Association. Ad- dress, care Scribner's Magazine, N. Y. City.




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