THE JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY. 13^ 



'96 NOTES. 



Paul Thielke has severed his connection with the Kessler Pharmacy, on 

 Second avenue, and is now with Sargent, in Jersey City. 



Adrian Homniell has been appointed hospital steward of the Fourth Regi- 



meut, N. G., S. N. J. 



C. L. Stephens, for some time with Quencer, on Ninth avenue and 57th 

 street, has purchased with Mr. J. Rodgers the store on Seventh avenue and 

 128th street. 



William Branner, who since graduation has been with Herman Krussman, 

 in the oldest established store in Hoboken, recently purchased the full interest. 



Charles H. Lowe has resigned his clerkship at Frank H. Gundlach's phar- 

 macy, Columbus avenue and 106th street, and enlisted in the United States 

 Army as a hospital steward. He left with the Eleventh Regiment for Chicka- 

 mauga on Monday evening, May 23. His position at Mr. Gundlach's is tem- 

 porarily filled by his brother, Francis A. Lowe, who has returned to this city 

 after a sojourn of about a year at Liberty, Sullivan County, N. Y., where he 

 had gone for his health, which at the present writing is very much improved. 



'97 NOTES. 



J. J. McCaffery, who for some time had been in the Hegeman Ninth street 

 store, is now at his former stand in their 30th street branch. He has promised 

 to be on hand to greet his friends at the Alumni Outing, on Wednesday, the 8th. 



S. Sumner Shears was unanimously elected second vice-president of the 

 Alumni Association last month; about the same time he became a partner in 

 the Lowe Pharmacy, on the Boulevard. 



Arthur J. Palmer, writing from Athens, Ga., where he is in business with his 

 ■father and brother, says that the '97 reporter's work is deplorable, and Mein- 

 ecke, "he says nothing." 



'98 NOTES. 



It is really remarkable how '98 has scattered since the Commencement. Of 

 course, some of the boys have gone home, but I imagine a host must have en- 

 tered Uncle Sam's service in different capacities. I met Gellert at the Alumni 

 dance, on May 11th, when I elicited the following information regarding '98 

 men in the Navy, of whom there are twenty-six: 



Fraser, Norfolk (Va.) Navy Yard; Jorgenson, do.; Eickwort, do; Richards, 

 do.; Patton, do.; Sigel, on cruiser New Orleans; Gellert, on cruiser Thespian; 

 Alpers, on cruiser Maple; Miles, Brooklyn Navy Y'ard; Wild, do.; Beckary, do.; 

 Hildebrandt, do.; Teufer, do.; Yoriseck, do. 



Lewis H. D. Fraser has been elected third vice-president of the Alumni 

 Association, a much-coveted position, which has been held by such notables 

 as Ehrgott '94, Hensel '95, Yineent '96 and Glassford '97. We trust that upon 

 the conclusion of the war he will spare no pains to demonstrate the material 

 '98 was made of. 



