GILBERT N. McMILLAN 



Gilbert N. McMillan died on October 17, 1914, after a short illness. 



He was born in Detroit July 25, 1868, the son of Hugh McMillan and 

 Ellen Dyar McMillan. 



He was educated in the Detroit schools, also at Cornwall on the Hudson, 

 the Princeton Preparatory School, and at Princeton University, from which 

 he graduated in 1890. 



Returning to Detroit he became connected with the Detroit Shipbuilding 

 Company and was associated with it as secretary and treasurer until its con- 

 solidation with the other lake shipyards. Later he held the same position for a 

 year with the Eastern Shipbuilding Company in New London, Connecticut. 

 On his resignation from that position he retired from active business. 



He was deeply interested in Good Roads and was the first to interest 

 people in that movement in Pinehurst, North Carolina, where he lived a 

 number of winters, moving from there to Cambridge, Massachusetts. 



He was a member of the Yondotega Club in Detroit, the Detroit Boat 

 Club, the Princeton Clubs of New York and Boston, the Ivy Club of Prince- 

 ton, and of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers. 

 He is survived by a wife and three children. 



NAOJI TOMIKAWA 



Mr. N. Tomikawa was born on the 21st of April, 1874, in the town of 

 Tochio, province of Yechigo, Prefecture of Nilgata. After the usual course 

 of preparatory study he entered the Imperial University of Tokyo, Japan, 

 and was graduated from the shipbuilding department of that University in 

 July, 1898. Immediately thereafter he took service in the Mitsu Bishi Dock- 

 yard & Engine Works, Nagasaki. In January, 1901, he went abroad for fur- 

 ther study, principally in England and Scotland, and remained there about five 

 years. He returned to Japan in September, 1906, and again entered the serv- 

 ice of the MitsTi Bishi Dockyard & Engine W'orks, Kobe, where he was chief 

 draughtsman until June, 1910, when he resigned his position on account of 

 ill-health. Although every efifort was made he appears never to have recov- 

 ered his health entirely and died on August 1, 1914, at the very time of life 

 when his professional learning and abilities would have indicated a most suc- 

 cessful future career. 



