22 THE ALUMNI JOURNAL 



J. C. ARTHUR ST. JAMES, '03. 



DIED JANUARY 12th, 1913. 



Arthur St. James, '03. died at Telluride, Colorado, on the 12th of January 

 1913. He had been in ill health for some time, but improved considerably in 

 the last year. While at College, Mr. St. Tames was an excellent student and 

 upon his graduation, in 1903. he was 7th on the Roll of Honor and received 

 the $100 Trustees prize in Materia Medica. He went to Colorado for his 

 health and improved. On the 25th of December,1912, he was married. Mrs. 

 St. James died of pneumonia in the beginning of January, and Arthur was so 

 depressed and shocked by her sudden death that he followed into the grave 

 within one week. 



EWEN McINTYRE. 



By H. H. Rusr.Y, Dean. 



In the death of Ewen Mclntyre, which occurred on Wednesday, 

 January 8th, at his residence, 303 West 74th Street, the College of 

 Pharmacy suffers one of the most severe and painful losses in its 

 history. 



Mr. Mclntyre was the oldest living graduate of this College, this 

 event having occurred in 1847. ^^ became a trustee of the College 

 in 1873, Vice-President in 1874, and President in 1876, in which 

 office he continued until 1889. He then again entered the Board of 

 Trustees, in which position he continued until 1892. In 1904 he was 

 elected Honorary President and continued to fill this office until the 

 day of his death. 



Mr. Mclntyre was one of the oldest living pharmacists in this city. 

 When he established his pharmacy at i8th Street and Broadway his 

 friends asked him if he was not crazy to move so far out of the city 

 where there were no inhabitants. At that time little could be seen 

 from his front door except pasture fields enclosed in rail fences. 

 From that time until the day of his death he had continued to take 

 an active as well as a deep interest in all pharmaceutical affairs, 

 in which he had been highly successful both commercially and pro- 

 fessionally. His interest in pharmaceutical education was fully equal 

 to that in any other direction. During this entire period of pro- 

 fessional service Mr. Mclntyre never had occasion to be crticized for 

 any unprofessional or dishonorable act. Both his honor and his hon- 

 esty were of the old sterling and severe type. Rigid economy and 

 sound commercial procedure carried him successfully through the 



