

NON GRADUATES CLASS OF 1908 207 

Park High School, Buffalo. He received the degree of Ph.B. at Yale 
in 1907 and attended the Yale Forest School in ey and 1907-08. 
He was unmarried. 
After leaving the Yale Forest School Dickinson became an 
engineer for the Edison Company in New York City. Recently 
he had decided to devote himself to the study of music, for 
_which he had unusual gifts. 
He had been in ill health for some time, and died suddenly 
in New York City, January 28, 1913. He was a member of the 
North Presbyterian Church in Buffalo. 
George E. Gage 
Business address, Amherst, Mass. 
Home address, Springfield, Mass. 
George Edward Gage was born December 31, 1883, in Springfield, 
Mass., the son of William N. Gage, who was born in Haverhill, Mass., 
and Mary Elizabeth (Lashorn) Gage. He has two sisters: Mary Eliza- 
beth and Ethel Gertrude Gage, and a brother, Charles Alexander Gage. 
He was prepared at the Springfield (Mass.) High School and before 
entering Yale attended Clark University, Worcester, Mass., studying in 
the collegiate department. In 1906, having completed the summer work 
in the Forest School at Milford, Pa., he did some work in the Yale 
Forest School. In 1907 he received the degree of M.A. and in 1909 
the degree of Ph.D. from Yale, his specialty being bacteriology and 
physiological chemistry. 
He is unmarried. 
Since September 1, 1911, Gage has been assistant professor of 
animal pathology at the Massachusetts Agricultural College, 
Amherst, Mass. 
He has published articles on bacteriology, comparative pathol- 
ogy and sanitation in scientific and popular scientific journals. 
Walter W. Gleason 
Business and residence address, Munising, Mich. 
Johnsonburg, Pa. 
Walter William Gleason was born June 18, 1886, in Ridgway, Pa., the 
son of William Stone Gleason, postmaster at Johnsonburg, Pa., for six- 
teen years, and Minnie Warner (Service) Gleason. He is the grandson 
on his father’s side of William Brown Gleason and Caroline (Stone) 
