India rubber world . Commerce, the New England Society, the Society of the Sons ofthe American Revolution, the Long Island Historical Society,the Society of the Cincinnati, the Founders and Patriots ofAmerica, the Mayflower Descendants, and the Hamilton Clubof Brooklyn. He was a director of the German-American In-surance Co., and vice president of the St. Vincents Home (orBoys. He resided in Brooklyn at No. 15 Pierpont street, andis survived by one son, Albert Sherman Hoyt, m. D., who livesat Pasadena. The accompanying portrait is from a photographof Mr. Hoyt taken in November last. JOHN M. ST


India rubber world . Commerce, the New England Society, the Society of the Sons ofthe American Revolution, the Long Island Historical Society,the Society of the Cincinnati, the Founders and Patriots ofAmerica, the Mayflower Descendants, and the Hamilton Clubof Brooklyn. He was a director of the German-American In-surance Co., and vice president of the St. Vincents Home (orBoys. He resided in Brooklyn at No. 15 Pierpont street, andis survived by one son, Albert Sherman Hoyt, m. D., who livesat Pasadena. The accompanying portrait is from a photographof Mr. Hoyt taken in November last. JOHN M. STUDLEY. Colonel John M. Studley, a well known citizen of Piovi-dence, Rhode Island, died at his home in that city, onApril 10, after a brief illness. He was born January 9, 1829,at Worcester, Massachusetts, where he lived until the begin-ning of the civil war. He had been connected with the statemilitia since his seventeenth year, and enlisted in the Unionarmy, in which he saw much active service in the Fifteenth and. CHARLES ALBERT HOYT. Fifty-first regiments, Massachusetts volunteers. He was takenprisoner in the battle of Balls Bluff, and later was in the battleof Antietam. He made a good record as a soldier and an of-ficer and attended the reunions of the two regiments nameduntil the end of his life. After the war Colonel Studley took a position with H. & Co., rubber goods dealers in New Yoik city, hisyounger brother. Thomas E. Studley, being at that time a mem-ber of the firm. In 1866 the two brothers purchased the inter-est of the senior partner in Garfield & Eddy, a long establishedrubber goods house at Providence, the firm becoming A. & Studleys. In 1883 Mr. Eddy sold his interest to theStudleys, who continued the business as Studley Brothersuntil the death of Thomas E., in 1896, since which time thestyle of the business has been Studley & Co. Before i860 the firmof Garfield & Eddy hadbegun the manufactureof rubbersvringes. bulbs,and tubing, renting forthe


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