CoLLEGE REVIEW. VOL. I. DELAWARE COLLEGE , F BRUARY, 1883 . Incorporated '79~ . ' hartcr P crpctu. I. Capital IC HARTER $ ) ,000 ,000. PERPETUAL. · THE AMERICAN Insurance Companyor North America,!fire /ns/J vance Oom'nan' r J11 ' f I N . 232 VI/ AL,·t T TR ,. ~ 'T' , ( F P HlLA PH/LA DELPHIA. Ca ,h Capital, • • . Reserved for R ·-in ~;uran c ·, Re ervcd for U npnid Lo "e' an d other cl. im ~. Ne t Surplu q, Marin , I nlan , and Fire Insuranc e ! Assets, JanuA-ry 1, 1882, $8,818,805.38. TH s. H . MONT f{t ELP lllA . J anua ry $-. o,ooo.oo 516,246.66 1. t, 188• . NEW TEXT BOOKS! Ber a r d's N ew History o f the Unlted States. E~pccial . tte ntiou ha been give n to the .'"' t'S a'!d results .or reat poli tic. I movements, and to !he rel a ta !'of rnm or de t •. •ls to the rn . in c urren t f eve:1ts. L he bllok ts Jllus tr.n d wuh m. ny fin l~ngraving nd cont. in numcr 115 M p~. Roy•e'• M a nua l of A m rto n Literature. Whil thPrc a r · num c r u 'om pcndium s anc.l y lopa:tlia'l of America n Lit •r:uure , this i th e onlyt11,l!um/ / a book of practi blc si~ , . nd of i n IJ:rj)i!Jl.f tfbir m. tt .. r. Roy•e'• M a nual of Ensll•h Litera ture. The re tricti n of th · Rtud nt to th e tudy of only th e best a ut her · and a pursuance of that tudy in " n. tural order-n, rncly, from the work '> of living and recent writ rs to tholle of hygon ancl earlier years-1s 1/u j llc u !rr•r./ctlln ..e of tlze /Jr~s.:nl m rr.nual. 1 6_~~·!.2~:~~ 3 . _ - $ 1 620 Prore. .or Appleton'• Text Boo"• · :J0 7 .3'1 ' , Prc!.'t . - A . '. L. CRAWFORD, • c y . HARD MAI<t s , A ~~istant 'e retary. .OMKRV, T h e Young Cite miRt, < aantit. tive Analy-.i~. F or pric "· add re COPPE R T H WAIT & CO . , Edu c l io n I Pub lish or ' I 628 RT I ST PHOTOG RAPHER , PFILADELPHlA. R FEBAUARY, I 8 8 3· W tirSpc ial R;\ t ·s to S tu d nts. 0l'ER .\ -·-- & CO. treet. • PoETRY. · TilE En·: (;L ,\ S~ J·. s, '' Th · Brig ht Side. " STu~>v o,.. NAT RAr. s · r EN ·E ... G>T 1 YAT ES & C O., w. REI.I CS ••••••••. ••• • . •••.•••••••••• . 1 MENOF PENT NE B O K ..... ........ Cacal. • ! ED rT< RIALs . H avin g renaov·d t tJ <Jur Jo: W STEAM ,\ TARBLJ<: AND • PE ' IAL W ORK .... -.- . . . . . . . . . . . . G·,~ AN I 1 1•.· W O I{ K S · · you tn a II . nrl sc · t 11c 1 rgc ~ t I L CA I.S. • , w 111vlle and fan '!.t cullcwon or P E RS N A L S MONUME NTS, TQMBS, &C., I ·· W . vVebb. ·· EXCHANGES. 1 ·ver uffcrctl in ll ·!aware, and at th e LOWHST I INTER ·C CJLI.E j !ATE. 1 PR I 'ES. I i Davids 0 n & B r 0. ' FIFT H & KrN_c ST~{-EETS_ , W _ILMJN GT N, DEL. __ Earle's G-alle ries AHIJ L O OKING GLA SS I WAREROOM S, ~ II Cow~ilt's Walnut S tat'fl I Palntlnge I Engravings, Mirrors, Roger's Groupe,&o. & Son, g' 1 lNG, HJ8 S H T NTH S TREET. Pltiladelj>lun, Pa. M orning, A fternoon and F.venlng Senl o oa. S tudent can cuter at any time. With the most thorough ours of in truc tid'n a large corps of willing tc. chers, the moc;t comp l te "A'c tunl Uusine Depart m nt," nnc.l the largest nd fine~ t ~c hl'lol Ro m in the country, thi o; oil '' fr. ·rs un qu. II d fa cili tie., to young me n and worn n for acquiring a so und bu~in ·11 edu :.tion . 'J he incre ·d pat rona& during the pas t y ·ar necf! it ted the lit ne w rooms, nd the re moval of the ollice '" r8sg Cowgill's L eatlur Oil! Cowgill's P ew Varnish 1 816 CHESTNUT ST., i o-a:r.t'l.es Oo""VV i l l __ ausiNE .s s COLLECE, A SS EMDLY BUlL Ouring OtJice H ours,(g to 5 and vening11 from 7 to 9) .;llitors wi ll b ·.welcom d, !nformatton giveu, and tudenta regiat red. Ll.lrgc allu'ltrated c arc ul. rs free, M anu fac tur d only by PHILAD EL PHIA . Tl ATT N, ~~~~l~ti~~ndf ~;al I I BRYA T & Joe l :.. lbero1l. 1 I I 6th & C h Mnut S a11., PrllLAI>EL HIA. I Catalogues M~iled o n App lication. ] make a sp cialty of the CLO TH ING! r: D. c. TELE S · >PE.·, , WH AT A ST rr I· NT KN ws Auo T K1 ss 1Nc, 1\IJ CIU S : PES MACJCLA TEI'!':S, Jlarry 1¥hile. S J•\' ; LA SS ES , FJ ELD LASSES, T A G /l · 1. Tllt-. I ' MUI'vii ·:T EI'~. BAt ' JMETI ~ J{S, A ND ll E (;}<; ( I•' ( Lt> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (J10lt.'. DRA\ ( , (; I NS TR MENTS. ' CUR IO S ITY ••• • . .. •••••••••• •• •• •• )' . Jlf. I IH.L I'H I A. FINEST FLO \VER Gt.A ss ~-: s , SPECTA<'LJo:s, P AN I Ch e•tnu t St., Phlla el'a . 12th & Chestnut Sts 7th & Chesnut Sts.' PH I L F 924 C h es nut 630 104 s 12th. 109 s. 7th. 1210 Chestnut Street. IQu ;.: : EN a nd C. H. GRIGG & CO., A. K. P. TRASK) 1- No. 6. Philadelp hia Badge Depot. • •• JACOB SOMERSET, Engraver and Jeweler, No. 722 Chestnut St ., Philadelphia. r JRST rl.OOR II A(;K, DOVER, DELAWARE, and for aale in every town on the Penio ula . ~Each of these three articles are atisfaction, u. r nteed to give perlect Ma,onic Mark , Military· Me<l.ls, College Badcea, Police B. dge • Socaetr, Hac.l g ~'• School RCwarda, M ono ram , l'.n ravm ~. The old E s tabli s h e d ltand . 1 LI_j :.l E, 1 l. I. The Bright Side. Ther~ is many a rest in th r ad of life If we only would top to take it, And many a lone fr m tht: better land, If the qucruh,u . heart woull wake it . T the sunny sou l that i full of h pe, And whose l~t•n ulifu! /rued lh' · a j iH'Ifll1, The grass is green and th e flowers arc bright Though the \\ intry st rm prevail eth. Better to hope though th e lou Is hang low, And keep the ye till lifted, For the ·weet blue sky will ~oo n peep th rough \Vh en the ominous cl ud s ar rifted. There was never a night without a day, r an even in g with out a morning, And the dark st hour, as th e proverb goe , Is the h ur before the dawning. There is many a gem in the path f life Which we pass in ur idl e pleasnre , That is richer far than the jeweled cro wn, Or the mi -er' s h · arded trea ure. It may l>e the love f a little child, Or a mother's prayers to hea ven, Or only a beggar's gra tefn l thanks, For a cup of water given. Better to weave in the web f life, A bright and golden filling, And to do · d's will with a rea ly hear\, And hand that are wift and willing, Than to snap th e d licatc tend r threads, f our curious life asuncl r; And then blame heaven for the tangled ends And sit and grieve and wonder. Tbe Study oC Natural Science. It might we ll be asked , why it is that the study of natural science has been looked upon as of such minor importance in many of our schools and colleges. Th e answer se ms to b e this- when many of the present advocates of pure classical training received their educati0n, our colleges and universities knew but little of what true scientific education meant. In the first place but little time was spent upon the study of natural scit!nce; in the second place what instruction was received was derived from some easy elementary text-book. Such are not th e methods of typical scientific education of to-day, which reache5 its highest useful ness, not so much in the class-room as it does in the laboratory and the field. Certain elementary principles must be mastered in th e study of any natural science afte r thi is accomplished the student begins to a c 1ui1 that mental di sc ipline p eculia r to cientifi c ~tudy. If the stud nt would d rive the mental dl!lCiplin e which he d e ires in hi pursuit of a cientifi c course, if h woul keep pace with hi classical colleague, he must e xpect to do it in only one . (). facts he h s observed, he mu interpret way,that is byent ring into tho e more advance them hy hi own unaided reason. fields of scientific study which com <1fter th princij.>les of a sci nee are ma tered. H e must Natural Science has its chief charact ri.tic rise above his usu 1 method of cramming on in its r quirements for the minute t ob erv, Lio n, science after another, which oft n, instead of in the ::!Ccu racy of its definition, and in th being a source of mental eli ciplin ·, onl injuri ca ution which must be taken in th ' interpr ·tathe memory and blunts the rea oning facultie . tion of f..t ts. What better habit of mind could Admitting that all which h as been aid i ny one <lequire. true, how can such valuable result s be accom· Let the 5~tudcnt once enter these more adplished wit-h the present arrangement of our vanced fields of labor and he will find him ·c lf sc ientific courses? The answer is, that, as a cq uirin Tan unl imitable bree1dth of t hought,all rule, they cannot be. Such cour es crowd in hi · ense5 will b gin to b e aw 1kened, and h one subject after another until the mind is con- will learn th tt e du c tion me n-, not onl th e fused, and no be n efic ia l r suits are obt;tined. power of thinking, but of se ing, h earing and In a classical cours three thin gs are gcnt:rall) feeling, nlso. He will rise above hi mer lea rnt well : Latin, re k and mathematics, wallowin g of book -theories and will become while ot her studies are added to make up a his own observer and thinker. liberal culture. There is two much study of books in our colThis should b eq ually tnt of our pr sent leges and not enough observation and origin al cientific courses; a t least thre scie nc s sho uld thought. It should be the duty of an in tru e be thorou ghly m astered, th ey shoul d b e con tor, not merely tu hear one recite the book, but tinued three or four years while other s tudi es to keep the studen t's mind in a state of credushould be added to furni s h ge neral culture. J n lity . It sho uld be, further, the greatest theory this way alone c. n our scientific co urses be of education never to learn anything by mean made equal to th classical, for in the hi ght.:r of a book, whenever it can be learnt by obstudy of the three ~cie nc cs chose n, the student servation and original thought. This is peculiis pursuing a rn thod qually thorough with - 1ly the method which is u ed in th ri g ht that of hi s classical co- workt!r. study of natural sci nee. When the student has one reac hed thi It w:-~s the custom of the el er Agassiz to pJsition of higher scientific study his work in place b e fore his student» a box full of zoo lo gical mental development b egi ns . Having lea rnt pecimens, and then requ ire th m to t ll him the lessons of his text-book he puts it asid and .dl they could about them. At the very outset at once be ins to deal with nature, thing and they began to think for themselves; in this facts. These he must lea rn for him s If through s<l. me method they continued tudying nature, his own observation alone. The e facts once observed he must interpre t th em with hi own not books. thinking, tht:ts ris ing from th e low leve l of a Th e r ..: sult of this superior method w s that mere book-student to an ob. e rvin g and thinking his special students became distinguished men. man. The aim of .d ue tion should be not to thoughtIn his hi gher study h not only 1 arns that lessly 1 arn books, but to think, observe, h ear he must observe for himse lf, but th at hi s ob- and feel for one's se lf ; n t to know what some servati.ons r quire th e s tricte t ac m cy, and one lse s ys or thinks, but to know what you that the re ults of these obse rvationc; must be think yourself; and it should be th aim o f the formul.tted with perfect exac tness, and th n instructors to carry out this principle, and it h t~ ving his ob erv. tions once r corded, h mu t should b th e plan of all c;tudents to pu1 ue the deal with his fa cts not rashly and hurriedly, but cour~e which ohall lead to the same nd. thou g htfully and deliberately. ~uch is th e ' hould this plan be pursue l the student be scientific habit of mind and suc h will become comes not a "walking encyclopedia'' but an the habit of mind of the one who sh 11 pursue observing and th inking man. th e study of science in its advanced stage . After all that has been said, let not some one No study will cause so much mental self- come in and say that he has derived more mend penden.ce as will th e study of n tur. l sci nee. t 1 dis.c iplme from cl ssical study than from his The tudent . reaching hi higher stc g of study of sc ience. (T r wth,1roes out into natur ; th e re he 111 et ,up- \ o on will doubt the f. ct if hi rneth d has on e ery hand, new and unhear l of ph e non l!n . b en t spend four or fiv e y ~( rs upon Latin and every day bring it problem · with the i r pe cial ne te rm up n ' c h f the scienc , but let him ft:atur s, each f wh .ic h l~c must olve. He c. n- pend five y ars upon z olo"y or ' ot. ny , ntl not look up the ubj ect. 1n som t -! xt~bo k, die- then he will be capab le of dr. wing com pari n. uonary, or encyclo!Jedl , ~r sol ve h1 s ~ucstion Th points are just there. No one could e pect by ome formula, but havtng before htm only to derive the su perior mental discipline from the I I VIEW . study of rc k by m cn.:l y le;11nin j.j its alphalJ l't, udtous the intpudent indi viclu,d is, ~ he can but The ag of go ld is gradu lly creep in g over neither mus t on e 'x p ·c t to Jeriv · the su pu iur su bmit, with b st grace pos ible, und r the us, and, followin g up on th e age of c hivalry, it mental ulturc of s ientifu.: study I y simply trying cir un tancc.. bids fai r to enc hain th e world in a bondage as dabblin g in its prin cipl s. ,, \\'h) dc 1 " . , 1uarrc.: l, sh. ancl r, ' tyrannica l, and no lc sin opposition to the tru e The study f natural cre n · clev ·lo p th e \ '(}u ask; 't\l<.:rv <.:.t . . ) a n sw~.:ri n g thi s, ' end of human existence. high est powers of the mint.l and dr. \\'..,out our \\' <.: ' lu ::ur I sc1 tltat h) :lltd I') The yonth, wit h his a imless aspirations, is 1 most origi nal faculti , th ere for · tit '.: tr ue ... tudy \\ 'L rra) rtr.tl c.: up, l orgi' ·, ancl J-i-...,.·· tau g ht that th e goal to which all his effor t~ of science is clev< ting. F. JJ . C. Thi s is receiv ·d fr o m the hands f a n in should be dir cted is wea lth. T he middle aged, spir d bar 1, f r no on, who has not b n th ere ambitio u of posi ti on an d influence, striving for What a tud e nt. KilO"\'\' About I oul l explain it so fully. The ki ss of r ·con - the approbatin u of th~ world,look beyond all to Ki ssing. cili tion is ind~ed a wec t one, but is very dan- wealth, a if that co uld purchase forgetfulness Kissing, with all it~ advantag ·sand lisaclvan - gerous, if ca n iecl too fJ.r, for one is a pt to lose 1 or drive one pang fto m th e heart made desotages, its pl asur . and pain s, is forming so I ll kiss and gi rl too. But ther is ri sk in every· l.tte by its narrow con tr:1diction . allurin g a subject fur . <.:lu cid . ttto~l b y <1l l · las~e~ ! thing and tht pl eas in g prospect is worth th e For gold, th~ g rt!~ tes t hardsh ips will be en and condition s f wnt ' rs, th a t tt ~e ·rn::. to be 1 ri::.l<. Ne tin order we om_ to the last, by 110 clured,the most llntmnent dangers encountered, in no wi se out of pia ·c for . a !:>lucl<:nt to t'X p :ll~ - ~ means the least, of thl's pleasant swe tm at , I a_nd the mo~t h aza ~dou s e ~terprises ~ tt ernp ted. ate upon th ben fits of th1 <Ill , ar1d any add1- that is the "1 couldn't help it" kiss : f· or gold, fnends wtll be a lienated, ktndred for tion a} inform ation on th ' sui jec t ~ hould I . gotte n and hum a nity outraged. Soc iety is . . . . " I I<.:r lrps w ·r · ~c> n<.:ar . . . . hatl ed w1th delig ht. Po ·ts <~nd .~1g s uf a ne t<.: . . !.It \\' 1:\t · ;.e Cllll ( clc> "). organtzed upon a basis wh1ch acknowledges 11 1 1 11 1 and mod rn tim s, fr m th gr a ter to th e I ·a5 t, gold as the ultimatum. Int ellect may pine in \ "uu'IIIJ · :u1g1")', 1 f ·ar, have, with ~ w xception s, dwelt upo n th e my sits seclusio n and ge nius starve in its ga rret, and ll ut l1 <.: r lips ,,, ·rv su n :u, teries of thi s art, but f ' w have !:> p ' tit nru ch \\' L'I I , 1 can't tnak(; it c1 ':tr, yet the masses will ha ve no ri g ht to sympathy ; time on th at kis which li ght 11!> a stud nt'::. life. ()r exp lai n iLtu you, that must be reserved for the rich . A d ead- in -earn t lov r's ki ss is ~e l lorn tl c\·er l: ut ht:r l ip~ wc.:rc !>rJ nrar Wealth is the "open sesa m e" to the public indul ged in by a se n. ibl · !:.tudent, and ·ve n if That," hat <.:l .c ccHrld r do ?" heart, and without this, the hi ghest intellect, Cupid does occasi nally se nd a dart tnto the the most polish eJ education, a nd the r..oblest So warble. a entimcntal songster. It seem tende r porti on of a . tudc1 t's anatomy, tl i a pt ge ni us, wi ll fa il to ca use a single pulsation. to have gu s hed forth from the lips of an im to eve ntu a ll y t ·rm in ate in air castle a nd aAll worship gold ! The farmer toils on, denypassioned s tud e nt. He could not stand the sion hi reci tation to b e ·om c dull :1ncl 1nonoting himself th e com forts of a pl e~s ant home, thought of being in th e imm diate vicinity of onous. This th en is th c t'C.t on of so many for the purpose of adding more to his coveted such pi asure, ::1nd not indulging in its bliss ful college grass wid ows in th e vt ·inity of a ollctie. acres. The mech a nic deprives himself of rest s weetn ess. lt was the proximity that causeJ Th e followin g i liJ pcd from a r cent numb er and recrea tions, labori n g day after day that he th e rash act, but what e lse could h e do? what of th e Dei .. war 1 edg er ; may ac Jlli re th e coveteJ treasure. The merchant else c uld you do, r ader? Ju st picture your·• What is a ki ;,~? I nsk ngai n: co unts over his ga ins, pores over his ledger, se lf in th e same predicament. You could not Wh y, stud ·n t, ) U ti an tc.: ll, adds his "cent. per cen t." a nd makes his days · 1 · be human to let such a treat pass by unappro r 11 ll w o t you 'v · tn ·cl •H I a rn va in and nig hts a harrassed mi sery , that he may T o kiss a i>rcll)' l,dt .. 1• priated. 1t was perfectly exc usab le. Those h' d d . 1 san s an millions. The lawyer, count ~;:, t1ou saucy darin g li1,s sta r ing you in the face until It is impossib l for me to kt thi s slr!J by lynx-eyeJ , studies his musty tomes, scans his y ur eyes almost pop out, sho uld be attend d without ca llin g th e aut hor of tt to .tccoullt fur blief, and seeks wisdom in the writings of many to , t once, a there i no tim t: to w ste. Such the poor opinion whi ch he enkrtains f r th e.: a sage, not that fa m e m ay bind th e laurel op!J rtuniti · ar rare, ami an 01.e find in g him student. W e admit th at w · have oft n trid wr ath aro nnd his brow, but that h e may fill se lf o n ar a kiss should excla im as did our an act so rude, (if it may be ~ ·all c(l,) but 1\'e his coffers with go ld. Th e doctor braves the friend "\< h·H else couid I do?" shut his e·. es deny th at we always, or \·e n •< e n~.:ra 11 )' meet sto ms of ight d d h d t h t' · t' · t> . ' 1 and dive, head to bli s . He mav be awakened r n an ay, ee s no t e pestwith ill SUCC<;: • 0111C IIIH.:. ll l' l' <jlllrt.: 111U 1I • I t d b t} h 0 f th d ' · d · · · d .1 • by a sudden ~lap on th~.: fac , probably will, and ence, s an s Y le couc e ymg, not toll, an somettm es tt r· t n 'reu us wt t 11 good 1 that his name may stand forth as a benefactor . . . 1 probauly ouoht to but h g ot his kiss and grace, but we obt, tn 1t however, 1 y fatr mea ns . c. '. . . ' of his race, but that his own m a y be a gilded r r , , ll · f · · . , .1. 1 arm:s th re oil ct10n aro und w1th lum. Th :.1 t or 10U 1, 10r a 1 atr tn 1ovc :mu war. H.: pill, and th at he may, to th e natural dignity of he always ha. The gt rl be wtll probably never . d 1 · tl k ' b 1 · d tl we 11 propor t 1onc <tS , 1e · rs 1rn 1' c1oor , his professio n, ad d th e more conceded dignity h k' f th 11 11 d t l tl , . ki II have. o he had better nMke the best of th. t t e ISS o <1 ' 1 mo 1 1 ~ which h has. of wealth. Eve n professed ministers of the 1 I I 1 I I . . these and m any more, hav · be n cn t husi a_go pel, fo rgettin g th e te ac hin gs of their meek liARRY WHITE. tically and graph ically tr at 'd of by their man y and lowly M..1ster, pamper the vitiated desire for ardent spouses; but th e ! i s indu: ged in be display, by seeki ng to outvie one another in · 1:· 'Che Ao·c of Gold. 8 twee n co 11 eg ~out1I an 1 111. J·( 1en, (~'10r t 111~ th e gilded deco ratiOns of their .house of wor' th e era Of 0 - d u a l .t n, ) I1:.1 I)c'' n It l"t .tn tl 1 I A wis mr n will draw lc OilS of usefulness s h tp, as 1'f imagining tha t th e teachings of the shade. However even tl c ki · of th Jtud c nt or :1dmonition fr m cir um tan es which at gospe l wo ul d fa ll with more convincing power could b e divided and s ub-divid · I to infin r t~, tirst, nppcar f th e mot trivial nature. Thi is from ctim on decked pu lpits, rea d from golden and it is nee s ,uy fJr n; • t t k ' up those tru ~, not only wh en a.ppli ed t.o pe rson, l t~,rns- clasp d bible, to heare rs lounging in velvetwhich arc mo t ommon. } it t among th ese .t ·tr n:. but :1lso to nff.ur st n~ti_Y of a natrona! Cu!:>hi ned ·!Jews; or that the hi gh est steeples, is th e stol n ki ss, whi ·h ·ve n aLer the man y chara ·t·r. fhct 'a~c me dtsttnct fea tures of I \ ith onorou chi m ·s, would aid to develop a remonstran c that it ha met, · till r 'ntains in the pr ·:cn t ,t•'c wl11 ch to even a . are less b · j 1ovc for that religion , hose founder was the vogue. It is generally obtain ' d 1 y a ru e or s ' rv t: r must ,Il l f rth tl ughts of the futur o manger-born babe of Be thl e hem. by for ce. Th e m.\k . belie - b t r-ki s ;H the and whi c lr m.1y c.w ' the more rcfl ·ctive to a k 'fhu the teachings of th e time. ask the quesdepot, sh uld r ceive !:>} ecia l comm •nd .ltion for th e qHL'!>tJon '·\\'ha t , r the tea hing of th ' l tion on ery a nd all subjects, "will it pay?" its brillian cy. For what is a young lady to d tim ·~?" O ne pronrine nt les n, and one to <·, Looking into the dim future, will it pay to blunt . . ,til the nob ler facultiLs, dt b .se ma nhood perat a large d epot, 'h n a pair strong arm wht ch ts g 'llt..r.tl ly w.· ll tmpn· · .·d up n th e 1\it: , •rt 111 t c.: ll"ct d c~ t roy t lle r..nn er sens1.b 1.'l·111es, . • . -: 1 are thrown around h er, and a cL 'Cr y "gooll- mttH.ls f tin..: p opk, b thl! n CLSSll of po sess·j aliena te it let d ·, and outrage humanity, merely bye sister," echo s in her c r ? o m ttcr how ing ' e.dth. for the acquisitwn of wt:alth ? • .. LAWARE C 43 Bu t as h a b ee n r ma rke I befor , curio i y th e people to see, not to show to forei g ners the in som ind ivid ua ls d eve lop into m rc inqui - lives of our g r a t men , but to show to the people: , rights of others, acquire territory and prop rt y tti l' n e ~s . Th v r ide, of encountering thi 1 th Am eri can s how t h y lived and honored without consulting th e dictate of j u tice, t rfl m ma ke on . avo id t ho e to whom it is a ct ib d · th ei r countr . ple th e oppressed und r th e ir feet and tri\' fo r tlt e nam e! -. tot tu n of having " ry action eli cs show to us th e customs of the p ople, ein g th e dress, etc., we are more to bind more g ri evo us burd ns upon th e ra e, loo k d into. v er d ig n rema rk I upo n, an rl a nd b y merely because it may add to th e pr ent ~ ve r y int ntion ltcited ju tlv overbalance a ll imp re s I wi t h th ir ways ~han if we should desire of m ; ll~ i n ).! t h acqu 1int:1n c · of th in- obta in our knowl c lt> e from ht s tory . Also hisaggrandizeme nt of those who have th e J;Ow ·r qu itive pnson . An· nu one :tlthough h 1 t ria n s ca n ga in knowled e fr om relics which to enforce th ei r unwise and inhum ;1 n d sir(' ? may tr i" h r I, l':l n ·sc;1 pc him a it ;..:c th r : 1 th ey r o ul 1 n o t fr o m any oth r source. It is Heedin g the teachin gs o ' th e p·tst,wc mu~ t co tn c one i. u1 !:>oonc.: r or la t •r c,f running aero ·s n w 'll fo r v ry o n to know somethi ng about his to the conclusion that these th ing will ll fl l pay l'au l Pr y It c<1 n b dcrrec<lte -!,but not av idecl. 1fam ily · not to b e ia norant of the birth place or \ h il e ad m itt ing th at a t th highe r and 1 his na ti onality , whi ch h e wou ld b ignorant of That, in the end, destru ction :t nd d e olati on nobln xtr<. m ', 111 iosit , m;tkL' · its ' If a po\ e r- J if h did not h a ve the du ty garret to burrow must follow in th e path of th e op p rr ·or , <tnd A L. that th e worshi ppe r of gold a nd hi s idol •nu t lui incentive to pr gn..:· , we mu::.t co (cs th at for th e ... mysteri . at the o pJJ osite . it JJro,·es t he mo t despicab le perish to gether. H. ;R) K . () (all in lin :1tion . S. W. J. Men o.fOne Book. curiosity. Th e re have b een, and beyond doubt there Curiosity may be defin ed as th e 111 stinc t o f till a r e, m e n who confin e t h eir course of r addiscovery, impl anted by N Cl turl' in c v · r v bei n g . n . elics. ing to a sin g le author. These m n are called Every livin g th ing sho ws decid r d sign . of t ll ' \\'h o can t ll h ow ol d i t he cu tom of trc:-ts- " m c> n o f one bo<Jk." fn ou r own times when desire of investi gation , and it r.:ac h s it cui · a f . . ne w books a re continually being pl aced before 111 i11g :1.way th e e11 CC t o >lll C 1 '.\r rc 1a tt c \\ 110 h 11 · h 1 · · bl d · f minatin g point in m an. N 0 on e, n nt e en 1h , t c pu J tc, w e n an a mo t 1ns tt a estre o lla~ cl cp<lrted fo r hi last in!.! I r~tnc. No m ore rcad t . t1 g l1 "s se t ' zed tl1 e tnasses \vhen h ... r ly any most ignorant, cou ld conte nt him se lf \\' ith pas" u • , r• sively lookin g around him, and at th e ,-a rinu s wi ll w h ':lr h i· chc ring wJ rd · in titne o f o ne, with th s mall st pre ten sion s to I a rning, sights refra in from asking" why is th is . ?" t•o uld ·· ; nor \\'til w hear h i ltc .. rty l;~ugh ech o- ca n be fo und without h avin g hi · library. lt may or "how is that ?" Man mut prog re , t~ ncl t n ~ th roug l 1ourltome. 1\othin g .an tak r their sec m s tra n ge th a tm a n y ofearth'sn~ at rminds curiosity is one of th e mean s of hi s prog res- pl.t But ck<1r tokens or t •lie- so ftr n th e a a a in cd e min e nce through th ir intimacy with sion. ~rit· f a nd 1t'C nci lc u to thctr lo . T h e cl ear o n ' fa vorit<:: uthor. But this instinct, as it may be ca ll ed v<1ries r ·li · . t<lr t o u r wc<ll'\' head to thin k o f the ir Th pla n is, to a ce rta in d egre , praiseworthy. greatly wit\1 its different possessors. ;\m o n g gno d work. :1nd k ir;dn ss, till \\'e fc 1 more l'...ac h on o wes it to h imself to pr :crve hi taste the refin ed and educated, it d ev lops into an ·h 1ful th . t lift.: is no t ·o ha t r n, an d that life u nviti :1 ted, but it woulu b ' a curiou s anomaly earnest desire for invest igati on ; b ut a m nn g t he i~ \\'O rth our keep ing . In their pr if, a mid st th e e ndl ess vari ct of t ra nsi ent literalower it h as th e appell ation of inq ui iti vc11es . fl't l th a t w arc ne.H th m ; th ,tt ca n or hai r ture, a person cou ld k eep him If fr ee from th e Of the latter we sha ll have but littl e to s:1 , a h, . with it ktn d re me m branc' th .lt break aw·1 · ge n r all y p e rvadin g spirit of ca re less ness and the former is the only one worth y o f n o t i c~.· . th gra p of d es pai r ti ll w ·can :l imo ·t th e mediocrit y. I is rae li writes that "Ta te embalms There is an old maxim whi ch a \ " !'\ depa rt ed ,.nc in all th glor · of lif,•. So u p in th , th e knowl ed ge th a t otherwi ' can not preserve sity is the m oth er of inve ntion, " bu t it ·an b d u<;t\ ~:1 rr e t f ·m ily :1fte r fa m ily stow :1 wny with it · ·If." And if, in our selection o f a favorite as read ily a sum ed that c uri os it y ha gtv n 1 i c fi li1.l c:1 re th e relic- of gt'ner.ttinn 11 pon ge nera- a uth or, we b e g uided by corr ·ct taste a nd sound to as m a ny invention s a s n ces ity. N cc:- ity tion in nn , grrat piiC', sacr d from th y s f ju d g m ent, ou r po ition wi ll a lways e Dne.:nost for ces man to do a thing. curio ity im pel hi "' th e sc. IY~.·r. \\ h t~t a gr:1 nd n cl r· u tom it i ; cure from th e a ttack s of erratic pedants. further. The form er produ ces th ings of im - cl i s pl.t ~ ing bette r t h.1n l)()ol-s, t h , ac ti on , th e <- ave ab hom ine un i u libri is a maxim that m ediate use, th e latt r, tho e \\'hi ·h r~ r ' of th e.: od d ities, th e l i ~ · <tf fi 11 e olct anc stor. . Th e ir h <1 c m down to us from th e da s of Horace. most advantage. d cds !:> t.,nd o ut f,, r lcs of t he mind o f oth rs, Th e re is a g reat d a l of truth in these few To prove the truth of th e a Love a .. umpti on , th eir ac ts cor n cxamin;~tion, aile! th ·y re m a in word · Pliny advi se that much be read, but we ma y glance at a fe w fa cts whi ch !:>lll'~c i e nt h " a c<Jnstan t n:bu k to ou r frivolou n:-t turc ; not m a ny b ok. All great write rs seem to showth at curiosity was a mo ving inn u ·ncc to a ndwh a th ar m ca nth e r b if th ir d sce n dnnts havc . mod cl d th ir s tyl e a ft er so m e special man in his inventi on . do point ou t' ith a boast ful !:>pirtt, to a , t ra n g r, favonte . c m o th encs made Th ucvdides a M.-~thametics probably or:ginat d thr o ugh the v ~tig ·o f o ntc furgo tt n hero. \ Ve cann t par ti c ul a r stud y, F e n !on was a cl e 'observer curiosity rather th:-~n n e c es~ i ty; a nd it is ce r- l but ad mire t h fir m o ld pi ll ar.- of th ir fami ly, of Hom eric b a uti s, Bourdaloue, the famous tain that there was no n ces it y w lu~ ev r for ' e<tn <1c ount for t h va t r ource , th Fre n ch rator, yearly p rus d Saint Paul, Saint music, pai ntin g, and sc ulpture, th oug h th I rcspc ·tab iltt y th e ho n ·sty and thrift of th C hr y osto m, and "i ce ro. Irvin g, th e classic of greatest void would now b e produ c d we r th ey I p res ·nt o r1e , for th~..: v I ave n d lc exam pi ·s t Am e ri ca, n vc r ti r d of Addison, a nd between taken from us. [ twas th e id l pro trtptingo;; J "tn:n gthc..: n thei r dt.:termination, ne er to do an the two a uthors w..! find ma n y stri kin g points of curiosity that led . to th cl as. iflca ti o1. of unwor th y t~ct in th e !:tight of th •ir f.tth rs. It of s imilar ity . Th ese a re on ly a few examples, plants by Linn ::c us. Th curiu ity of Galvini I is t r ue t h<1t so me f, mi li s wh p, - th c b ut th ey g to sh o w that the man who carefull y produced the bat tery, and that of Volta r sui ted I. ig ns o f ci t tin t;on a re apt to hold thems lves notes th e I eauti ' of a favontc autho r who in the pile. The curiosity of Dr. Fra nklin I cl al of, to n. a k kn own to t he people by the ir mou .l~s hi ~inc! that it m a y partake ~f the to the identification ofli ghtnin g with e lec tri cit y. assu m u l haug hti nes that they ar · wort h y of qualttt s of 1ts prototype, who :1dds to his own The monk Swart z, a also Roger B co n, movld m ving in a h ig her ph ·rr t han t heir neighbors. knowl edge th a t of anoth e r to whom th e world by this instinct, discovered th pr pert ie- of But ,..., he re we fi 11d th is faul t in a co mm un ity, has g ive n th e p a lm of e xcel ! nc in so m e pargunpowder. According to Dutch author., 1 w " il l m et with hun c.lr d f good , am pies ti cular art o r !lei nee, i one whose temple of Laurentiu s Koster's curiosity led to th e di cov- wh o would blu h a t t he charge oft.yin~ to laue lea rnin g is not ea ily s h a ken. Built on a solid ery of the art of printing. Th • e rman c hron- the ir doi g a r. l th ir father's b l fon: them. fo und ati o ~, it pill a r a r pro f again t a ll t he iclers deny his priority in th e fie ld, wh il th ey . The e old famil1es wh ich have be 'n the main ef~ rts of lttc rary o r sc ie ntifi c Sam ons. as vehemently assert that Guttemb ur g arr ived up j ort to th eir com m un ity, lnve orne forth But wh ilst we a rc a ll , in a c~..: rtain sen e , men at still greater results by a simi lia r path . to offi:! r t he ir live in ua_nge r, and in peace have of o ne boo k , .th at i , . w l~ i ls t we cultivate a spec ial Morse, \Vh ea tstone and Cooke were in sa ne ly reprc.5 nt d th e people tn th I !a ll f Congre s; a nd m o re fn c nctl y t11t 1m acy with a write r who curious to kn ow if wor ds could b e se nt b tw ~ n th ese un:l5Stlm ing people, simple in their habits, presents to ou r m in d hi g hest xce ll en ce wtdistant places in a moment of tim , by th e cou ld unfol d n.1anu sc rip.ts, curious implement I h ould ~ot d ep ri ve o u rs ·lves of the opport~nity means of electricity. The prese nt d<1y shows of wa r, a nd un tq u ~ ~ur nt.ture t hat would st, rtle o f reacltn g a man y sol id works as we can. No the fruit of their curiosity. Th "<1111 1 to b · t il~ trange r. L a\'lng tn" daze of v ond ·r, he J m a n h as within him e lf a ll knowledge, and said of Cyrus Field in rega rd to th e Atlantic th tnk.s how tra nge t h ' SC p opk t~rc for . no t alt h ou g h som m .ty , t h r ug h g niu or natural cable. h~wtng to. eac h and cv r . ne the cu n us tale n.t~ ma ke gr ·at c r p rog r in the field of Nearly every inven tion not str ic tl y necessa ry rcltc- o f th e t~ household . Lt tk docs he .k now 1 c r ud~t10 n y t_the ·ff,> t f oth e r . ar not .to be yet eminently useful can b e asc rib ed to the th a ~ th e fam tl y, <~.n x:t mple CJf many, e ttmat I desp t~c d . l '... 1C 1 Ol1f' th ~ n, should have his curiosity of determin ed mi nds' ho ca rried th e ir t he tr wort!~, n o.t tn r gar I to h?w mu h. atkn- f~v nte a utho r, upon wh om h . hould model design s to th eir u most ex tent . Lo ng and pa- t10n th y wtll gatn from tlt publt c,b ut cs t11nated hts st y! , not I ~cr ile imitation b ut b tie~t investiga tio n in followin g th bj ·cts of hy t he lov t h ~ y h;1v_ f r the clep.trtcd wn ·r. I car fu l di criminatio n b et\ e •n things meriJn a thetr research , h.1 not perhaps (ound wh at w s f m t of our tl lus tnou men we fi n ds~ !ds, prais and th o m e ritin g ensure. In thi~ sou~ht, but has b r u ght to light thin gs of a , ba ttl fl ags, and furnttu .of very d.'sc npt10n, se n. c it w uld b.~ w U for all to be "men of one p-eater value . well taken care of, set up m the publtc halls for book." J E. ELBER.ON. Will it pay fo r a nation to di s rega r I t he J 44 REVIEW. Puhli \hed monthly tluriu g till~ roJJ,.~i Ill' }'· . r IJy Lh. \llld nl~ () [ ~LA WA 10: w 1uld llav a I sting monum e nt THE Delaware College Press Association if it<, oil ·~e was as fine and acco mmodating :J.S proposes to give several entertainments during th . Poor H ou~ of N ·w Ca tl county. I the prese nt y ar. The first entertainment was > DELAWARE COLLEGE , j gi ven on the 13th inst. by Prof. H. H. Ragan, th matter wtth th e stud nts? ' who is one of th e finest lecturers of the day. c:rnc-c:rL.A.T:tOl:'J", :l.,ooo coJ?:t::E:::::J . Wh y don't th ·y h lp us? Th e R vr ~ w is not p f R t ' th t . · d es 1tmonta 1s an . . ro . agan ca me o u wt H . H.EEU.Y K NOWLE'->, ' ?. 4 Er ·n·owr w< JtrP.P . our!:!, and h av in g th rna nag ment f It, w are newspaper comments, of th e most favorable A.,~, ... T A , ,,>,Ifill" : not r·x p ctcd to be th only contributors, w do k ' d d th . d t t · ] . P . Vv An r•, •8 3, l'rnonn L. 1. 1. <•1 •n ,.,, .84 , '"'"' · , 11,.",."''' · h 1) . h m , an even se were ma equa e o g1ve ,., not wan t thi s p wcr. T e "EVIF.W 1s t e h ' h · h d I · ld h J . B ·o!.H,'83,;.l, ;,,,,J:r.l w 11 ll f'Air >,' kl , / "u' 'j tm t e pra1se e eserves. t 1s se om tat s tud (• nt ' pa p r,;\nd . s soon s th e y f.til t take a lecturer can be procured, who is a scholar, Sub cript ion . 1.00 Jl r •t•:tr. ~ I n gl e Cl •pit•!o ''J t• · nt~ . · · t · · t 'II ' t an active In rest In It, JU S so soo n WI I s a traveler, n."nd an orator. Such we 11round Prof. For rat co of adv •rfi'>IIIS:, and .til ,.,,llllllll lli<.1tion .,, acldt .,~ prim e obj ' l c as · W e try to m a nage th Ragan, a nd Newark is ju st the place where flEI.A WARE CO I.J.Io:G J·. R EVII•. W, RI·.V I EW so as to b as little burcl n to the I~ IV A RK. I lt(I.HV A 1! 1! . . such a per on is appreciated. The only regret s tud nt as poss1bl , ye t, we expec t an occah k · th t d 'd t Bu in s . Mana ger, H . GREELEY KNOWLES . . . • f , " h we ave 1o ma e rs a we 1 no procure 1)U llon rom th m. :-. !Onal o ntn !Joys t row h ' t d . h' · f · 1 t A 11 is tant , . WlLLIAfv.t ou HAMEL . . ,. . . tm o e 11ver IS se n es o stx ec ures, b u t )OUr qu11l , and the RF.VJEW wtll surely 1m - 1 h h d t t th ?th fA ·1 prov , by )OUr aid. 1 as e a engagcme n s up o e I o pn , OFFI CERS Cll' A ~ S f>C'I TI O , : it was impossibl e for him to remain here longer II. \V , F•:w rNc:, p, • 11lcn t J.:. I l' tlJtN I/1 .1, Vi · r; Pn· ~ i dc ut. C . \V , C.... ll tl . l('l ~ tlrer . w. 1> " '' " ''' '· "i•:tr·• ary. Till': EW . P AJ>E I-<~. s:a te that th e B ltimore & · than one night. ]udgi11g from the d sires of hio will bc:g in work at Ki \111 nsi som time ' the people, In this vicinity, we should think it WE AC I ~ r a s pc ·.ia~ i11vitation and rc · lurin g. th · I st we k, .in Fel~r~ a ry or th e fir:t I wi e for our business manag~r to do a_ll in his qu . t tr) th young lacl1 'S of th oil g , to w •t•k 1n March. ktamcn st 1 only about 1x power to have Prof. Ragan wtth us agam. r:ontrib11t c to th R~o: v n: w. Th · boys hav no mil• from N<' wark, and in a very s hort t im e I right to cbim all authority of th e pap r, a s is th workmen wirh th ir icks and shov els will W E were told a few days ago, that a member it is th s/uden/.r' ,and yo u, yo un~ laJi ' s. <> hould JJby havoc with our back ca mpu s, th students' of the faculty took offense at an article cont,,k ~ an int r · ·t in it. 1 l:1y · g round. Spring will soon be upon us, tain ed in the last number of the REVIEW, and th ' n wh •re are we to hav our usua l sports? he said that h e would have "nothing more to SIIOl T.T> Till': pr nl L gis latur · tak a trip I Shall \\'C be omp ·li ed to relinquis h th e 'xer- do with the paper." W e do not know whether to N w a tl · o unl y, w· ask th m to v1 it r ·isc th a t is. o frui tful to body :1nd 111ind ? L et we w re correctly in.orm ed or not, but, if we Ncw ~11+, ta k ·a vi •w of J) ·lawa• oil •g-c, . ncl d 1 · d th e f.1cultr not put it off until it is too bte, an were, we are ccrtam y surpn e at our respected th ·n go a nd ob. f' r th N ·w astle ~~ ount y w h h h d h d · b then inform th e student that they h ave used 1 professor. e t ought e a t e ign1ty ePo or I I HIS , now in ours of co n tru lion, and cv ry n lea,·or to proc ure a suitab le play - / co min g of hi s position, too much to get angry tiiLll k t th ·m :-~sk th ms lv s if th y ;'Ire in gr und, I ut !. :we b en un ucccssful W think at any little news item that might stray into f, vor of n ma ging poverty mor · tl <tn ducad thi m ~ tt r deserves more attention an1l rc pect our local ep~rtment. We are a lmost sure ti n. from th fa culty than they have been wont to that there wa no article published at which any "A SK ;\Nll y ~ hall r ·cive," is an ·xpr ·s ion give other r qu ·sts and advices the REVIEW ha person, after just r flection , co uld take offense, 'o ll egc, n1ad . Lets m e conve ni ent plot be now se- but, if th ere h been, we arc willing to make w a ll know. Tru st s f lkl.twar if you want 11ny h lp from th · Stnt for th • ur d, and a littl e attenti n be paid to proper ~m e nd s, if th e person offended is kine! enough Our g r:1din ~, and to g tting soil into a fit CO Jtdition, to inform us as to the article; and we think oil gc, why don't you a k for it ? le gis latur i too bu y to clrnw up a bill f r you , and n xt sprin g our gam may I played on a this method far better, a nd especially, more chris tian -like than the on e taken by our proand th n pas it. h, n , 1hat i t o mu ch of a gro und that urpc ss s th e one we now h ave. good thing. fessor, to settle any difficulty that may arise by th e publication of an article, which was intution , a Young M •n'"' hri tian As o iation, 'WE WILL be gr atly und r obligation to tended for anythin g else rather than to mar About r f th a lumni , if th y will inform u as Jnd Young Ladi e • Prayer Meetings. the feelings of any one. to an h. n e that th ·y mak e in th ·ir bu sin ess two y ar ago , the ·tud nts fell a neeri for som eW ASH lNGTON 'SD IRTHDAY, the first national life. W d si re t run our person.d d partm nt thin g f the kind, so th y organized a Young M n's Chri tian Association, and since their ' holiday of the year, has come, and gone; and in uch a way as t inform th old tud nt as rgani ta tion they have h ld regular m ee tings. the celebration of this memorable event was, in t th e' h ereabout and. doing of th ·ir fri n Is and ~ ' !low -s tud nts, and in thi s wa to ke p A m aj ority of th stud nts belong to theY. M. most pl aces, scarcely different from the every. A., and it is now doing good work. The meet- 1 day display which we m eet in life. The fact that up a fri endly r lation betw en one anoth r. Any it ms in r gard to our alumni will 1 e ings ar larg ly attend d,a nd those pre ent find the school-boy was given a holid ay was the them ntertaining and in stru ctive. Th young means of bringing to mind to many parents gr a lly appreciated. ladic r alizi ng their want f a Christ ian Asso- that Washington's birthday w:1s upon tl:em. lt ~----~~ THE RE V IEW ha si nce iation, organi z ·tl, a few week ago, th Young is a noticeable fact, that all the holidays are numl er, to th and Ladie ' Pra r M P.tin g , and have b ee n having observed with far less animation than they Y.'ere, pap rs, marked "Ileac xchan re," but we weeki meeting. The in titutions are a l1 eventenyear ago. Wheth erthi circumstanceis have the fir t pap r from any of th e ab ve g reat goo I to the tud nt ina mu ch a the attributabl to th fact th::tt our nation is assum menti n d oil g to r ive. Whether this criptur s arc tudi d, a chris tian like fee ling ing a more trict bu ir. ss-like air, or that our is from I ck of m:tnag ment or n t, wear r.ot ultivatcd toward one another, and it proves love of untry and fre edom, with a due apt pr pc r d to say, but, if it is that th pap rs of that ven in the path s of a oll e life, th e pre iation of the price it co tour forefathers, is our big oil g s r gc rd a ll oth r li ege papers tud nt acknowl d hi od, and implor ~his on th decrease. We hope the latter is not the e n th th ·ir notic we would b pl a d to bl . ing~ upon hi ~ llow- tud e nts . TheY. ~f. r;a e, and we fear that the former is 110t a suffi· ut~:c ription, if they will t ke the C. A. i a r at ftt ct r in elevating the m rals cient rrason for blotting out the custom which forward th trouble to in~ rm us the amount in order that of all coli ge student , and an association of thi our for fath r handed down to us. Is it that we rna~· be abl tor ad th produ ction · of the kind should not only be or an ize d in v y col- our country can ever be so filled with industry Yale, Har ard and Corn 11 tud nts' fertile lege, but ery ff, rt hould b made to have and labor as to justify ignoring the idea of brl'l.in . it to fulfill it mi . ion. commemorating our country's birth? Who will - - - - - - -.- IJnd~r th :uto; pice' of th · J) ·lawar•• C:oll"g · l'r ·~' A '~nci :..tton 1 VVHAT 1'; ' ) ' , ,., I I I I · '1 w. ELAWARE not acknowledg that -. <:, ;tS a nati n, h , vc our State as h am d of D e lawar rights and pri ikges that w re never b for e ac - ing fr om th liege building, h · h :-l r corded to any rae ? Can it b , then, th at w are to be ashamed, but if the list of g r. duat , an unwillin g to et a id a few days out o f thr e form r stud nt b r a I, h c, n n ,. r ~ el hundred and sixty-five in order that ' may aught than fill d with prid . Throu 'h th 'Se refr s h our m maries of an vent that shout fifty yf'a rs D lawar "olleg ha had a h ard be a s memorable a s it is great. The n ame of fight, not r ec iving a c nt fr m th tat ; Wtlshin gton i closely r l::tted to our co untry's through good and bed fortun ~he h a It\' d, independence, and when we try to banish from and to-day sh ask , for th fir t tim e, finr~ncial our minds the nam and importance of .corg aid from th "tate. Shall !t I refu r d? No, Was hin gton, th n just so soo n ar we begin· let our L egi be I yal t Dt:lawarc 'o ling t lose ur app r cintion of that freedom I lege ; I t th m co nsider b r want · with which only Am ric. . n giv ' to h r s ns. merit , and giv her ac or ling to h r nl Is; not more, C r s h e a k it not. L t them 1ra ke OUR STATE LE. ,I S LATURE, now in s ssion, the first app ropri ation to th o il g , and th e h as "buck] d down" to real ea rn es t work, a nd act will be prai I throug h out th e St<ltc, bo th th e proceedings of both hou s nr wat b ed forth support and r comrn •ndatiou f hi gher with more than u ual int r t. Not s ince ma n y education and th e in alcul.tblc ad .111tag · it yf:ars ago h:-~s I •)aware's L gislatur conv n d will afford th e young m ·n and women d Dda to consid r su h important qu ' Stions as \ ill b ware. brought b fore th m luring the pr s nt se ion. During the la s t ampaign the p ('op lc of this S p ec i a l Work . Sta t e wer promi sed by r pres nt;1tiv m n of Th · fi ld ofsci 11. . i!:i so vrt!)t that no man both parties, improv m nts and laws which ca 11 hop e to travers mar than a mall portion would be o f interest to our State .111d ou r p" o- of 1t ; and h e who would do a go d work in any ple; and to t t th e faithfuln ess of tho ·e wl : o part must not pend his lim ' roaming cr th · protn i ed, is probably one source of th e int · r t su rft.: ce of the whole. In order to a 0111 pl is h taken in the I ·gi~l . ttivc pro ce uin gs. Among any good re ult , effort mu s t b onccntratcd th e many thin g that are yet to o me b · fo1 e upon a fe w points which n ·ed in Lsllgat ion. the Legis] , ture, is a bill for th e aid of Dela_ The yo ng man who has de<.idd upon hi ware Colleg . We arc very mu c h inter sted career, and is I nding his wh le ener).{y to as to the action th 11 t will be tak n by the L g i accomp lish some d finit~ and s pe c ia l work, will lature in regard t thi s, and it i~ no more than most like ly ucce ·d · w h ile h e wh think s to ri g ht, that we houl l be. It i a fact a lso master all s icnces will end by fritt ·ring away th a t those who arc not dir ctly onnec t d wi th hi best year , and I ave no I ·ga y to t111JSC who th e Co li ge, h ave for it a kind f c ling and sinfollow. Jn thi view of the ubj ' t it would ce re hop for its welf.trc. i\ few ye:-~ rs age, seem worse th a n fol ly to attempt a wid range D , !aware Col lege was, in mo t p:trts of this f study in th e hort tim d vot d to co li •g tate, comparatively unknown, and those who life. Each stud nt h ould pursue that lin ·, and did have a knowl edge that s uch an in s titution only that, of science, whi c h will h e lp hrm most existed, had far it a fee ling scare ly above a in his specia l work. 1 cs th ts s ·em a narrow meagre resp ec t. The merits of th insti tuti o n, view? It will bro. den as you , dvan · , and and a few int lli gcn t and clucated men, h :we when you ha ve rcac heJ the ummit of your lifeovercome thi obstruction, and to · dc.J th re is work , you will b h ld before you un ·x plorcd not a family that r, t e above illiteracy in thi valleys and h ·ights, li mitless in opportuniti •s State, who knows not of 0 !aware College, and for research. W. W 1~ 1w. in fac t, it is the high t ambition of mo t cho lar. Bi cycling at in the publi c schools to be able one day to be wan · all this y ar, hut now th " t\d w> ate" a pp ·::u·., a student a t Delaware College, a c ut of which in favor of a l>icycl· m •rin ~ in the " lllin~ . is to b e found in the I ack p art of their geogralui gave a dinn er in B o!>l () n to furtlt ·r 1h · id ·a, phies. Thi Coli ge is Delaware's fir t a n d and cliscu ~s· d th e adv a nt a~c s of suC' h a "111 • •L. '' It best institution. lts graduates, though not in will proba bly be he ld t U ·actJil II ill , a nrl , good pr : ramme is xpccl ·d, as !h er · i.., a n al >u rHianc · of numbers, compare f vorably with t he gradual go d materi al th ·r •. of our )aJ g r coli ges, a nd are respected by every person wherever they are known. This College is the propel t y of the Sta te, and CO IIscquently each individual of the State is a part owner: is it th en th at the p eo ple of thi State RES ULTS •R M . r can, with cant m t, treat their prop rty and those who manife t an inter st in its welf.tre? This College has born the name o f our tate for nearly half a ce ntury, and th e name he s been born e with honor and pride, and not an • act h as ever b e n committed by th e all eg e that would brm g "ny other than rredit o o u r State's fair n me. 1 hen shall ur Stc1te refuse, ASK F OR SAMPLE CARDS. when aid is ask ed or s u ch an institution ? Is 45 STU::OE~TS wh o - A l NO JOHN ICK LUCA to m. ke J).a: 0 ~ during v.1 , : i on~. c . n do ~o by' lliu g BRAINERD E ur e "Y- ·lo::brateJ p ARM TR NG L. ILK '1\ > ,tnrckcepcr ~ wh ·rc the}' li\'(:. \Ve p 1y ·nnllui,,inu,. Eve r bdy k n w~ and 11 . s th · llr:tiu ·rd ,·. r\ r111 s tro ng .'pool S ilk . dclr .,., I I wish L ::C T T L E 238 MARKET STREE T, Phlladelph i 1882. 1844. BO Y S' A N D M El\;' ·;· CLOTH I NG. )ur at~.,ortntent of R ca ty m .1 d · :111 I l'i · · ( ~ ~~o 1, :tre nf th rine~ t nnd I ~''t mad · nf :• ny h n tl"' 111 th · co untry . 1" :l ( :ivc nil . & F. A . H01l ' l co. , Tenth and Cht s tnut ~ t reet •, PH[. A DEL RI A. I l:u·k\\'(' 11s Cl ;A R I ~ TTE") J) t t l'l l:Lin ~ t noking, c rT B C . LC ):'\(; T he Sta.n.d.o..rd. of th.'"l \ATorld., ni · 1.; ·r :o nd j, ., lie u ·r S.1ti•ft ti rlfl th an :111 ~mok i n~ T o iJ:t ' I ' ll ·v ... ofli·r d on th . I\ lark ·t : and it drw ~ ' 0, b ·c.. liS. II ~ ~ the Bl' 't. S ·lh. M. 1( ) ·~ 1·: LA JH'EST ' LUSIVE DR ESS TRIMM I GS Hr USE, 1 ./. ' ~. ~1 ~' BEE IIIVF. STORE , PART IHDGE & RICHA RDSON , 17, 19 , & 21 N . t: i g h t h St PHIL A D LPHIA. _ James Campbell, CLOTHIE-R, Nos 307 & 309 South 2d Street • Under Gould 's Hotel. PHIL A DELP HIA . THE STANDARD REMI GTON TYPE-WRITER & CO'. LIQUI D PAINTS. Corre p nd lis t a nd th r WYCKOFF, SEAMANS & BENEDICT, OLE A 7I ENTS, 5 Ch tnut treet , P hiladelphia . ELAWAR w. I Th cr sc ms to be a general emigratio n from Turk y, judging from th number of such visiThat bouqu t! tors th at w h av received late ly. They all " · nlistcd ~ r th War," March 29th. se m to be goi n g Sou th . Th ey are a ccom"M ee t m in th e rec pti n room at 8." p e:mic d by their fa m ili s, and li ve anr.! slee p in Put a way your s k a t s, as th s a son see m s to a pproved ..ripsy sty ! . b abou t ov r. W e kn o w th at th~" life of a n editor is a hard l..ocal Matters. In our last iss ue we made some remarks conce rning the Legis lature and Delaware College. W e have s in ce h ea rd that the membe rs of the Assembly are fully prepa red for any move in It would be a judi1 favor of the State college . 1 cious tim e for the Board of Trust ees to make 1 1 1 kno wn their wants n nd not wa it any longe r. ad mira- on , or a t 1 as t w . have ;{}way heard it was; 1 Most certai nly if aid is not worth a sking for, it but when w h ear ourselve charac terize d as a would not be policy to give it. '' Now is the The min stre l tro up e i progr ss in g fine ly. " fiend," we ~ hu ld e r at th e pro pect of a futur e ace pted time " Th e Ath e nea n Society produced the play An nt rtainm nt is propose d by th m for next ex i t nc , if ind eed we d ese rved it. In fa c t, t rm. we a lmos t feel as th o ugh our "mission on thi s "Chimn e y C orn e r," to a g ood sized hou se in th e College Oratory on the eve ning of the 21st. St. Val nt inr' day ha s b ee n around agn in , earth was e n d e 1." Th e play was in every sense a success. The A c hange i ontemplated in som e of the and th e unb eara ble " c mic" h as done hi characters were, judging from the production, studies now purs u e d by t he scientif1c co urse . f a t a l work . assigned a nd carried out with a care which must We hop such great chan ges, as rumor makes A L rc e, c nt itl d, "All's Fair in Love and have ta k e n time in their preparation . We have Wu," will b o n of th · fcatur s of the Delta th m, will not b e to low r th grade of th e ofte n noti ced th a t in all th e dramatic entersc ie ntific CO!JrS which is ple nty low enough Phi ·nt rtainm en t. tainments wh ic h are present ed in the college, now, if not too low. Th youn g lady wh o was promi ed a s lei g h that awkwardne s and h esitation which we It would p rh a p s b e of int res t to so m other ri I , at th n xt s now fa ll, w • fea r will b e co m wo uld naturall y expect to see, to some extent, co li g s to kn ow that we are not b ehind in th e pell d to w;"tit until n e xt s a nn. in all amateur production s is e ntirely unnoticable way o f nov e lti s, a nd th a t at pres nt we h ave Prof. A. A. H nt n 's family a rriv d h re a and in fa c t we must say, that it does seldom exfew w k s ;-~go and ar n w om for ta!Jly quar - in trainin g two m n whom, we hop e, will soon iSt. T h e for c ibl e and n a tural d e lineations of terc el at Mr . Joyn boarding h o us ' . be abl to e nt e r th e prize rin g and compete fo r th e m a le c haracters were most fully s ustained its honors. by the g race ful and impressive acting of the pie;-~ urc -s'c king folk until W nit, .11 It is now time that som e s t ps sho uld be young ladi es. Thi s is th e kind of en tertain Mc:u · h 2 , when a gra n 1 ·nt ·rtainme nt will b ta ken toward giv in g athletics a livel y s ta rt thic; m nt whic h is no Jess popular with th e citizens giv<'n by th e 1 c lta l'hi Lit · r~ry Society. spring. Th e re is g ood material to work o n if of the town th a n they are to th e stude nts them A sen ior cla ss m ·ti ng w~s h lei on th e 2 th. it is only used in th e mos t judicious way. We lves. Pre p. ra ti o n s ~ r commen cem e nt w •r set on foot ought to be abl to ge t two or three clubs Th e R gan lt>cture, which was given by the and other I u 5incss of c ia s import, n ee was s tarted thi t e rm, so as to b e ready for work th e Rgv1 EW , was one of th e most e njoyabl e lect. a. 1sa t d. first of n ext. tures that we have b en a bl e to listen to for a The m mbe r f the Fr s hm n a nd Sopho '' I have b e n to borrow a book, 11 said a lon g tim e . His ubj ect, " Paris, the Magnifi more lass s w r :unu sed l y a train f Turks, Sopho more to a quizzing Junior as he un ce rwith b ars, m o nk') , &c., p a s in g through moniously "bolted 11 through th e door of t h e ce nt," was on e whi ch in it elf would be capable of attracting m u h a tt e ntion, but when handled town on th 23rd in s t. young ladies w<titing room a ft: w mornin gs by an orator, a m a n ot keen p rcep tion s, and Th e Profes or o f A s tron omy has b ee n tnking sin ce. He was s urpri sed by th e entrance of one who h as s p e nt mu c h of hi s tim e in studying ob rv, ti n f t.h · moon Gn th fron t campu s an th e r fair o · c up;:~nt. W e should judge that the b auties of Paris, it it a treat which w e are fo r th e p as t fe w ni g hts . Th at i , th Pr o fc so r the , oph . wa s ra. th er abs nt-mind I a h e wa s not ab le to njoy and appr c ia te very day. a whol e half hour borro win g th a t boo k a nd was on th c, mpu and not th e m oon . His d es c ription s of Pari s e n e ry and P a risian th e n cam away without it. life, illustrated from sc n e by a calcium light, A s c i ty of youn g Ia li es h a s Ja t ly I ee n W ar ex tr mely so rr y to h ea r that w a re not organi z d in the oil ge. Th n umb er of go in g to h<tv any •,a t r vacation. Altho ugh were fr e quently interrupted by the applause of th e audience, but when h e tou ch e d upon the mern ers is fiv ·, and th y ca ll th m c1 vcs th e if you ca n all a holi la y o f two or thre days, V . A' . W h p th so ic t y is organized fo r revolutionary li~ of France, a nd the life Of which d not occur until about two w ekS Napo leon Bonap;ute h did it with a vividness soh1 good. a ft e r East r, "- v:~ c ation, th e n we will hn ve to and an e:unest n e. s that foun d sy mpat hy and Th Ald elphi c So ·i ty < f th N w:l rk A.cade <1ckn wl d g the injusti e of our r e mark s; oth e rwi s w thi n k th prin g v<J c a tion s hould honor fo r that am bitiou an I unfortun a te solmy gav an · nt r~ain JTl nt at 1· x h:-~n gc Hal( co mm n ee b for En . ter a nd las t t~t least lon g dier, whi ch was ex pre s d b y prolonged apon the t 6t h. Pr f. F rd f \ Vi lmi n g t " d ·Jiv: e n o ugh for a littl rc c up ration. plau s . If it s hould happen th:n Mr. Regan cr ·d many an 1 vari ed ck tion whi h were W e h av annomously rccriv d a hort article could h e e n gaged a t any future time to d e liver well r c i d. on ' ' C ll eg o ip." W e h s ita te b fore pul - a noth e r o f hi s s ries of I ct u. ·~ c; for the REVIEW L a tin :lnd ;rr k hw h a d no li . hin g u c h a n arti ·I , although we mo t we are s ure h e would be g reeted by a large and heartily approv of its c ont e nts. Y e t it is so appreciative :wdie nc e. point d a nd pertin nt, th a t we know so me of Per onals. the inhabitant would We nt to bring us to acou nt ~ r it. W e have not a y t ta k e n out a ' l.o ,\K 7 ' - E . i\ J. Cl oak, :'\1. I>. , i ~ pra ti ein g at Li~ In s uran e P o li cy, ·o it is onsigncd wi th ~myma I ) Ia war ·. pity to th e wa te ba k ·t. As ' oJ.\'l ;-.1 ' 74- l I ·nry 'ol\'in, A. M ., i. cx ten Th e Ath ne;:~n s ncq uitt d them s lv bly on the 21 st. in s t. !>iv ·ly instrum ngagecl in th nt ~ . m a nu fa tur · and sal uf plical in .:\ c w York ity . \\' 11 .1:Y 8- - Andr •.\' J. \\'il cy , Ph . H, was in 1 llh, and paitl th e 1' E V IEw a visit. t wn on th · EMER SO N ' 74- (~ . . Emerson, M. J . , is prncti c . .ng at Milford, P nnysl ania. w. ELAWARE 47 ~~c; . 1 · cr1 • ll'' '1'11e 1rr(1 11/lltltl<•' ' 1.:·, 11.J11 th e \\'a)' i· not a ' H . n •ard' . in l' · t ·d. funds amo ,ooo, } • • f unt .to · . cn ll ege J. urn a l. hn s fo und it : 11':1)' to th e ~:l l ' tum of , y ' l she hns t 11 e,nt y-c 1g 1.lt pro c. sors 111ps t 11. t :l.\1', 1t flyiug vi sit on th 22ncl. 1 · me o ft e n ••C u-..'' . 1 \\ 1 II I1 t ough 1 [! 11 11 th · R t-:\' 11·. \\', throu g h th e kindnes of it ~ pu~> li s h ers. e111 o11:ment. . l~.:n WI ge .' ·~1 \RTI :-.; 7 >- J o hn R. \1. rtin, :\ . ~1 . , as 1"tant It h a il ~ from \ a.-hingtun, a 1u l d 'l'fl l ·~ tt.· If to (aytllt _'l. JIIJII/111 paymaster l ' nited St. l ·s \':wy, i ~latiun ccl a t th •(;od, 'u untry a nd . th e. Ri g ht s . of .\II .\let!. '' 11. ·\ ne w 'u urnal h.t!> b 'Cll started itl l\ c 11 Y ork, lc. ls cll nsid eral>l)' 11 tth IJtoo rapl ,tca l ske t ·hcs 11f ou t J f 'f . . L ' 'I ' 1 11 f ll J.:rook lyn ~avy pnl. 1 n·1m · 11 1.1 · -- 111 1•.. ·'· ·' 1Lc IC o "' · UIH 1c r llL' arpttbli tn t:: n, a nd tlt t.: .1 · nu a ry numl lc r t' ulltatll' :l fin. I ' ·ud ' -- til ~.:' fuu nde r of th e' l .:tmp >otl. Ju NEs ' 79 - l l ._l . !> . Jones, A . B . ,i~ Procs!>oro f l porlrnit o f ' h·st•r .\ . Anhur, a nd li on Juhn II . , • II• d ucu ti on nt ll arl':1nl ' nivcrsity . .\<I.t ·h ·II uf<>r·gon \'o oncliti o n •d stud ·nt' is h ·r ·a ft ·r to pby at ' 1' 11".. ./Jntl,tr, :'.l E tu·~ J>I TII ' HI - P. ~l c r ·dith. l'h. 13, ·~ ~ t ·ac h'111g ' . ·;· c•>' tll 'S' tc1 11 , ,,..,l."'l.lt,•.! ,.., ., ·~ttl un c:uthly I'rin ·eton i11 a ll •\' u ul o tow n bal-.· hall or ftlll t !Ja il war with th f'rt'll t'c'.'t•ll t'an, l ~t· ·a us · th · l:ttter clot:!-. g-:trne . Tlwst.: lH·Ionging tn th e o il 'g · ~ e,\ m \\ill in K nt co unty, I> ·Ia wart·. not con e d · th at th e l. 11 i, c r..,it 1· tlf \\' i ~t·on~ ill, i ~ h · rcquir ·d to Iii· 11 itlt tit · 11 eg i ~ tra r th ' II p.m 111 FERRI!> 'X 1 - ~uc \\' . l,.t:: rri !>, 11 L , 1. l ':tt.: hin g at •q na l in ma 11 · r spl'<'h to l'rin n· t; 1n. ~lt. II we quie t ·cHI!-. •11 lu th •i1 co 1111 ' ·ti o n th e re·v1lh . th ·m both bl' th • a. scrtion th . t I >e la \\' ar · ( 'q ll g 1 · Salt:m D e lawar . I. I•Ln·a rd s ne \\' laiJorator · ts to 1Jt' 1starll't lt!ll'ers a I,, 1,. ·· 1H1 l 11 fr(llll 11 ·r .tnlr1· 11~ ·1 c 11w tl I. \\'. ' 1 11 . 111 t 111: ll EtsLJo.K ·-1 u- \ m . ll t.:i ler, l'h . li ., is tr:11e lin "t! (1llll . I \\' ;lilt tn ttl 1,e a 11a 1111 Ill · l 1l L: 1·1g 1II :1111 1 II.L, ",.. 1.,C spnng ' and t l <"OS! a hunclrt·cl th ·nt. anc < tJ a1s . :\1E. ·rc K ' I -S . 11 . ~le sick, Ph It , mac I c us a 1 I ·· I in Fl orid a. wlllt h ope~ of r ga ining lti : h ·a lth . \ . .\LLA . ' IJII;tJ \:11 . 75 - 'I·l:tS. \ ' :t II :tiH l'tg I1:111, :\ . M ., is pra!'li ' in g law at Dayton C>lti o, a nd :1 m·mh r c . · I () f t IH ! . ~ t a t e 1.~.:gt~ a 1lll'l.!. . Ht. A:"\ ll\' ' 711 - Cha!>. (~ . Bland), . \ . .\1 ., h ·ngag ·d in th e banking bu sin e:-.!-. i1 1 ~ew \'llr k c it y . , · ~o rry to l1~.: ·1·e n l1y ~la nders whll 11 itn e!-.~ ~ ~~ ·h a Prin ct n h:ts scc ur ·d th e traditional feath er in ~ util e . pnllnpt ·d tnill'· IJ)' ' Pile ·it. ll ", r ca rl, in o ne of hn · ~- Ill ·n, wlto look tit . fir~t ' l_' hL· / 'olal//, · i,., l1 ·fc!r · u ~ a:·a in •ra t! ~ ·r illlprn.' ·d . p1i1' in puttin g It · . hot and t hroll'ing th cri cke t lt ts a qun una s~tt llllll g p:qwr, th at ,.., ell'! ·r n1tn <I IJ:t ll .11 tit • () ., fo rd 1 l<ng. ) a thl ·ti cs. I I 11 r· If I l l 1:1t tl ~ 1a att :11n a rt.:pu t:lllon o r 1t sc J_l' pt' r!-.l'l crTh e !las• l:a ll .\ ... ;.,m• ia ti on wil l co 11 ~ id r th e ad an c ·. 1·isahil it y of ll'itltrlrall'ill R fro n1 ga nt cs with :\mh er<.,l \\' c .ti'L' ha ppy ,,, .td lHJII' I ·cl g · th · rc · ipt <Jr tiH.: and I >arllll oll t h . \' :tk L' l:t ill lS tit . I l,y r '!-.tri r tin g tit · :-iTU:-IE '77 -· lfa rry <;, ~to n ·, li . 1.. , hal-. ret ' ·ntl y J a nu ary a ncl I; ·l,ru :H) lllllldlL'I' of th e ( 'oll•y l:dttl. I. ·agu ' to I fan·ard, l:ro\\' lt , l'rinc ·t n a 11cl \ "a l ·, a 1 Th. · 1·: · lttJ O!lened a dmg ~ t ore •ttt \ est ( • h ·~ t ·r, l 1t.: nn y!-. h a nt. a. . t·u me!-. f1 u111 tit · l 11l e 'l'rl:L: ~I :t tl', . a nd co n- sc ri '!-.o r 11111 \' lt 111 11 1' ' int ·r '!>lin g ga m '!-. will he pl:~yed . , [ :\ Ill S !lll ll ' a llllll1 1l 'I ll 1 l'l':tC 1:1 1l 1l' 'll [ll 1Hl ll !J II :oi. Th e ·:-. pl! ll !-.l'. lllll "t ht• urt a il ·d, :tnd thi s withd ra wal . MusTi\IUJ HJ - L . \V . .\1u !>la rd, fo rm ·rl y of th · '\ . . . . . f , , 11l ' 1 t ' llll_l'.l't7'tllll ll 11 d /t l /1 IS ta 1.: 111g ll' 1 1L'<H 1 CJ Se ' Ill !-. to Ill 'e l th a t ' tHI. ·lass of '8 , i ~ to read law at l'rin cc~s :\ nn, l ary 1 th · ,·;ntuu ~ '<JII·g · jo unt a ls IJf I' ·nny ~ l1· ani:t. It ~ •t.: ms I f:tr l'ard i ~ a~ 't'l 1t nd cc it kd in n.: lati ll n to ac · ·ptland . 1 tu know th · •] ' III L' Ilh th a t go l1 1 make up a n c nl ·r- in g \' a l ·'s ·ha ll · ng · to r 11· 11 ·;.. t stlllllll •r. _1.\ \ ' l EI\ ·~L - .\1ay :\I. J a il\ i ·r 1: . 1.., wn~ i t ~ I pri sin g jo urn al. l ' ntiln oll' th er · h :~v · h eL·n forcllc cliltgs of clifTi cul town nn th . 2 th . I Th · I id.:t'll.lli ll t'rtlt i ~ hL'I'l' nga in , l1lll L'\ ick 11tl y did nut a ppro'v • ul c,ur sugg ·stion to impro\'' tl !-. appear- ti es !Jel\1' • ·n ll :tn·:1rd :111d < 'o lunt! Jia as rega rd s th · ( : ,)uml>i :l. has pra ti ally BALl. ~L - L. I f. Ball, Ph . B., was in lo ll'n a nd an ·e with th · S h:llnro k. I I()\\' .,. ·r, th · Jo'clJr ua ry cr ' II' S of last sumlll l' l' . paid us a vi!-.i l on th · 2 th . tllllni Jer e\hil1 it-. cl ·arly th e IJL! It ·lct ~ he ha s ckr iv ·cl :tclju st ·d th . d it'tl ' lill y IJ)' th e ac ·p t. II .• o r th e Jnive rsit y ( ' luh s ha ll <" ng · lo row a t cw Lond n, l1y e l ·ctin g a new co rps of ·clitors. IIE ARNE ' 8o- l':clwarcl llc am ·, l'h, B., has grat ltt · hefo r ' Jun ·25 th . Til · only ohstac l ' in th e way is Th e R fl ll t!olf'lt !lfrt ~'cllt ,J/onllt(l' is th • moo;t ·x t ·nalec\ in the la.11 depa rtment, of th · L' niv · rsit y of th · want o ( fund s i11 < 'olu11 l>i:t., :1tHI, as th e underMichigan, and has b ·en admit led Ill th e ha r, in th a t sive co ll ege journa l w • have y 'l r 'Cl' il·ccl . It is, in g radu al ·s l1 :t1' · 11 ot r · pond ·cl 1 ·ry lil1 ·ra ll y to the o ur estim ation , lh · I •ading jt>ttrn :t l uf th · ~~ uth , and a pp ·a ls of th · Assn ·ialio n f,,r 111 0 11 (' , th e race i . ' tate . ll'ill co mp:t r ' very fa1·ora hl y with tlt e jrnm1 a ls f onl y a possiiHl ity . WtLJ.I.\~J S():-1 '7 ~ -. \1 • .· . 1". \ illi:tlll !-.011, :\ . .\1 ., north ·rn co li ·gcs. " 'a tnhriclgt.: ha s clropp ·d ( ;r · ·k fro m th e l i~t o f is a mer hant al ;-\cwark, Dcl awa r ·. Th / ), ·li t' till Collt;~ria 11 co n1e s n ·x l, a nd devot ·s a I'Cf lllired SltHii e!-. .' ~illi n g here in o ur sanc tu111 11 t.: c(l upl • of ill-. columns •mphasi.d ng th • no n im purt Oc u : 79- \\' m . ~1. <>glc-, \1.1> ., is practicin g al a n ·e of th · !-.tuLl y of <;re c k, a nd tc rlll !-. th · a ·ti o n o f an im ag itt · th e smil · of JOY on the face of ou r l'r fi' !-.SOr of' g ·olllg)', at so l'a lu al ,l· a point in favor of ~ell' 'astl ·, I >c lawarc. ~ a llll >r i dge in d ro ppin g (;reck (roll! th e li !>t of r ·hi s f'd th ·o 1y. quirl:d studi es a~ "anoth ·r !>le p forward in co l J> Avt s ·7s - Th () tn :~s Dal' is, :\ . .\!., wa~ intoll'n I •g iale edu a ti on.'' W e don' t wa11t to ·nt ·r in to a n v . Tit · I l a rva t.·cl 1 ni o 11 rec •n tl y di s usse I th e qu sOil th' 17th . co ntrove rs ·y with til ~.: au th or o( ~ u c h a ri d ic ul uu's tlo n of athl<'lt '!-. a t ll arv:t rcl , wh etlt ·r or not it was IJOR S E\' '75 - ,1 . \Y ·1•!-.tl'l' I )m ~ey , l'h . ll., i~ prac· proclu clitln , th a t will 1 ·nt11re to a-;~ ·rt th a t he n ·vcr IJ ' II ·fi ia l to ti H· lnil' ·r it y. ( )r. ( 'roshy 's r ce nt rt'ad a lin e of Creek in hi !-. life. li e is ignumnt o f its a lt a k on thi s sul1j · l wi ll !1 · th en a ns we r •d. ti c1ng law a t Elko . :\c1::.HI:t. beauty, a nd th e 1';1.St :.t1n oun t of' k 11 ow l ·dg ·that li es (;RAY • J - J oh u Gray , o f Hrid gevi ll ' 1 11 ho has hid l ·n in tl1 · ( ;r · k lang uag ·,on ly to l1c a ll]>!' T ia t •cl \1 r. < ;olcli ·· l1 a<., secur ·cl th e n · ' ·ssa ry a pparatus been abse nt front ClJ II ·g · sin e.;· 1 :-~!-. l I ·rn1 , w1: Ullcl ·r. l1y tl1 c ( ;r · ·k ~ tud·..:n t. for 1n ·a!-.ttring app li ' an ts for :u lmi ~!> i o n IIJ J>rin ccl n · stand will nul return to -o ll e r '. 'I h · l!orlt'rll N ,'f'or/,·r !t ao., fou 11cl it !-. way lo our :t n xa ' l 111 'as ur ' llH~ IIl will b · mad· both n ·nt c rin g a nd lc:t.l' in g t h ·co l] ·g-c. li ~ t of e:-.c ha ng1.:S. Til · pap ·r i!-. pu l> li s h ~.: cl i11 En g land a nd \mcrir a, anrl is d 'I'O t ·d to tl1 e intpo rt a n · · Exchangc8 . Th · . l mlu: r sl Sllfrlt'ltl is :u nu s ·cl ov •r the suspi · of th · phonograph ic a rt i11 t he nin etc ·nth · ·ntur . cio ns of th. , \ ~·;,. j ell'/..• 1-1-'t•rld in r ·gard to th It propos ·s to bring al>uut a comp l ·te r '1o lutw11 in suppos ·d pul it i ·a l pow ·r that pn pcr ha s found i11 There seem s to ha ve bee n so me reg-ard had for ,\111 ·ri ·a n 11 ' ll·spaper ·. co li ·g · frater11itic s. It ap p ·ars that th e sp ·nk •r f our desire to ·x cltange wi th lltt.: co li g • joumals th~.: I.Iou!-.e o f th e . '\\' \'ork L<'g i.; latu r · ha pp •n d to Th · l'ltt'/ofoplt t'11 11 fl',·;,/,•;,• 11 ·read wit h ' ,\ CC ·din" throughou t th • c untry , for 11· • ha c quit · a n a ppr •. It poss ·ss·!-. m:lny l' irtu ·s. l tmay11ith nppo tnl to so m · 1m pqrta 11t on11nilt · !>O me frien Is ciabl c it c r •ase in th e.; number of our ·;..c hang ·s, fondn · ~!-. who c ha n ·d to l> c l(.' ll g to th e sn me frat •rnity. • This some o f t hem hal'e Cl'en cro sed th e tro uhl ·cl waters, propticty !J· c.;, lkd a llHH I ·I jlllllll, l in 'l't' IY l'l'Sp · ·t f. cl th · W or lcl co ns1det !> cl · •ply ~ uspicions and mu c h 1 Its and found a co rdial gr ·lin g to o ur ta l,! . :\m u ng It: ccl itori .1ls arc brief, ·on i. e a nd to the point spa : i.., d '\' o i L'( ~ If~ an ·xpl)!-.llr • c1f tho se v ·ry harm · t hes · latt ·r is th · O.t}ml N t'7't't.•<tt, a nd th e 0 .1ji•rrl cnn triln1li on!-. ar · a ll · f a rcaclaiJ I · hara t r a nd less, tnd eccl c hdd1 shly harmful soc i ·ti- s, kn wn as \\' e C 1wtiJJ ·t't(~·· ( 'll t!n:~rruln a/,·. '. Jti ll~'lllf l, r ~u.hl.is~ll'd !Jy cli ~p lay g r ·a t t';ll · a nd soiJer, ·arn '!>t thiJught. the Lt cck I tt •t, " th ~tucl ·nts of ( ;..ford a nd ( amhnclgc . I ht. JOurn a l WI)Uld nut loo!-.e a numiJ cr. has l1cen in ·xistenc for eigh teen y ·a rs It se •ms Dr . I . II . Atwat ·r Ita just di ·cl. 111 hi s de a th alm ost . use k !>s to ·o mm e nl upon a jou rn a l whi c h, Prin ·ton ( 'o ll l'g' and the aus· o f •d ucati n in In t er - C oll cgiate. unquc stionaiJ!y st ~ t H l s a ~ th : head of a ll co !l c;.:c. p·t ge n ·ra l h a~ lo ~l m u ·h: lie ll'as se ni()!· Pro f sso r, 'l'h · vit>l·nt ruptur · IJ·IIIe'll tit · two fnc ti o u ~o f and JCc upt ed tit · h:~1r of mt'l:tph ys ics and m ral pcrs. wh •th cr pul >lt sh •d 11_1 l·. uropc c~r Am ·n a . he journal has not Cll.1l y attrun ·d a na\ tona l rcpulallun , A•~1h ·rsl'!-. · ~.3 h a~ l,c ·tt h ·al·d a nd tit· d :ts~ ·fee - scicn ·. J1 · i.., l>ett ·r knoll'n as th e au th >r ofa little but it hash · ·n um versally a ce pl cl as a pure ty pe n, li o ns h. ,. · jll ;: ·~ · ded ami • l>ly. work o n lo!-fi ·, mu c h U!>ed as .a te:-.t boo k. Two college journalism . l'rin c ·ton cl -ri cled at a r · ·nt rn · ·ti11 g to r. i!-.t a J>rof·s~ors. w tll h c l : led to h1 s pl. , n • taking m ~ tn p l)' s1cs an I log tc, and o ne taking p liti al The J anuary numb r o f th e frat!t'n Al!tmcau m crew, a nd will n> w, proiJ::1.h ly,a t l'hil adel plti a or l .ak !-.C t ·nc •. 'eo rgc thi !-. coming sumtJH;r. is rath e r po r co mpared with th · l\ovcmber ancl De ember numb r!->. v\' akc up hr ·liHcn and I ·t it It is n 1l know n gcn rally th at th • Libr:try o f be your aim to it~prove rath r th an fa ll from your II arvarcl ( '> ll 'g · is th o ld ·st ,\m ·ri an Li brary in lofty eminence . · ·i!-.l nc . It was found d in 1 'J~. Th a t of \ 'c Je The January and F bru a ry numb rs of th e (.'(1/. was omm nc din 1700. /~ge T ra n striJI arc upo n ur ~ ab l e -:- Th · 7i·awcnJ:t 'orn ·II l1as no chape l s ·rvic !-. rm ,,. · ·k days. i published hi -m mthl). aud ts a h l'c and e.n ·rg ·t1 journal. lt is ju t nm\ c. cited over the electiOn o f a Jlresid nt Elwt and 1Jr. ~l c C'nsh :ce m to differ new corps of editors. concern in g the indulgence o f athl eti s by s udcnt s. w ! I I I I 0 0 • 0 0 DE 4 DUBELL. KEEP'S SHIRTS. ! T E H TTER! 933 Ch estnut Street. PHIJ.AOELPIIIA . GLOVES , UMBREL LAS, UNDERWEAR , Etc. K~.:..EP' S u tom Shir ts made to Mea ur e from W amsu tt a l\1u lin and B ·~t Iri . h Lin en. Bosoms 3 -ply, all linen. Perfect fit guaranteed . SIX FOR S9.00. Agricultural Implement · and " O UE APEST Fine Assortment of Gent 's Furn i~ h ; ng G oods . KEEP MA LM 0 JJ OTJ~ L, \ 5 T. 'I'he largest stock and Lowest Prices in the City. Phil ade lphia PENNA. SCHOOL SUPPLY CO., lobe , Map , C h art , Ul <tc kboards, or School and Co li g · T ex t Books a p ialt y. en d for illu tratcd catalugu a nd pri eli t- . Address 723 Jayne Street, ,PA . I e tw This legant and commodi us hot I is lo ated in the c ntrc of th ci ty , and busin s men and others, will find it •r a tly to th ir advantag to pat roniz thi hotel. Rate v y r aso nabl ..:. n Market Ch stm1t S t . , Phila. Penna. School Supply Co., 518 Arch St • Phila. Finest Oysters in all Styles a Specialty. Florence Oil Sto-v-e. F:IEE :IN NEVT.A..R.X:. 'TUDi Watr.lus, Clocks, Jt!wdry & '£1-verware. NEWARK , Ever before k p t in a town of its ~ i 1e. The imm ·n~c stuck "f PTlCAL ' 0 D: would be d ·~troy ·d also, :.nd, for fe ar of this cnl:unity, am 11 0 W ~ellin g on this irnmen !.C stock '0 heap that 1 ~·ar it is nttra ·ting a tt ntion . E ~ dding, Birthday and Holiday Pr se nts NEWARK, AND EXCHANGE STABLES, ELA WAR E, No dir+.. tn LUMBER , LIM , C AL, W No smell. Absolutely non- \ explosive. ARCH T., PHILAD'A. T RAL IM LEME: 0 RG AN . L. E. M . BRUCE "" ~ WARK , General Agents, F ASlllONABL . 1[0 <'MAKER. . OUN 'MEN PREPARED for ·c t.LE E s. {oung In lie in tructed in the bran he of n pra lica l and \ A c ,f l 1 I 1 ALE, P R TEl , A BRO ;vN STOUT: co., ~ B1~~Tb~<~;~~~:~~::,~eE~~,~~~d ~.~:~ L•. whi h h otTe rs t . ' nd fr , p t pa11l t all ! appli can t · . It conta in alu_ inf _r ·natio_n for \ all wh uppo · th m elv • ffltc · d w1th,or lla ble I t , an · disea f the throat r lun g . dress . chool will re-open Mond y, September 8, t88:a, e direction ol ftve expenenced teachers. pila will b received into the f mily n bo rdtr . REV . THO~ . II . CANN, A . II. , Priacipal . ?lc I D•. J. H. SCH NCK & SON, 538 Arch Street. Phila., Pa. hneral waters in au the stantl y on hand, in keg or bottled. di ffer Ill n vor~. LUNGS and HOW THEY CAN BE CURED, ' 1 BUlL lN 1 Dr. J . 1{, Schenck, of Philaclelphia, ha ju t ubli h ·d a bo k on " DISEASES of the T · ~ orB Sl And ~ol~ Age nt of Will iam l\lnsscy ' C ntpany' s Philadelphia WoRTH SENOING FoR. l i E LA CKA WAN NA, F L THE Sc H Jefferson Avenue , (Oppo si te E lm Park,) N. p Persons conveyed to any part of the County or Peninsula . 517 & 5t9 Orange Street, 18 N. 7th STREET, PHILA., PA. P . s.- ~epa.1r1n.g don.o n.oo.t o.n.d. c h ea.p. 'H. J?rop:d-etor. IJ f BOOTS OR GAITERS, TH :lv.t:O~E:tSO~. I T ·. a tr If y u want a g N NEWARK , D E LAWARE . -:r. c;_ G ood team s to hire at a ll hour s at reasonable rates. Nn A .Rl . N'S LIVERY, SALE, N cnl e r~ McPII E, Pr prietor. M 0 R R I 1 ODR W. HT WR I WAI EL WARE. 1--- l n ptofusion at my ~ t ore where 1 have be ·n for fourteen years. R· W T' :Shaving & Hair Dressing Parlors, lf there . h uld be n fir e hr ·nk out a t th · Odd J:o'cll o w ~· buil d · ing it wowld d ·stroy the lnrgel>l Mo ·k uf W. ATM Stationers, Booksellers, Jas McGoldrick's En a-li h Chop Hou e, GENERAL ~~H~~~·~E;CHANDISE, ARCH STREI·:T, abov' THIRI, P III I.AIH~ Ll'lll LARGEST VARIIDTY," Students an th r vi sitin g sh ou ld not f<t il to ta k lunch at I IN l FA T AND WILMINGTON, IJ •LAWA RE. ~ePd ~,ttre. 1621 Market Street, Philadelphia. Samplt: and Circulan 1.ti l ·d Free TREET, AST THIR 2 W. H. JONES, \VlLMI N T • , D LA W ARE. E. W". HA INES & SON, D NT/5]'5, EWARl , D l~ L . All operations on the teeth, whether natural or artificilll done in the b est manner , and OD tho moat r"aoaable terma , ~~-HE F R A N~ KAvE S~EI):D · A L L S S 0 A Which is delared by Editors, Housekeepers, Scientific Men, Physicians, and by Army and Navy Officers, to be o~e of the ~l I Most Wonderful Discoveries of Modern T1mes. FOR LADIES TO READ OVL Y T HIN J\.1 ONE OAP FOR A L~ U E 0 I - TH ! K ! lothc.; Clean,. wcc t, a nd De;. utifully W hite with out c;ca ld ing or ho ilin ' I he. onp po.,it ive lv gu. tra n tecd not to inj ure •v n th e fi nt:<;tln ce.. 'o Y ellow ' lnthc - ! o • . tC:llll to. 'poi I \ Vall Pa per an d i<'u rniture ! N o smell on "':t ~ h d:~ y 1 'o R ed I Lll tl.ls! J ' T T ill r K ! Fla nn..:ls :~ nd 111ankct a . uft a . whe n new T he mn<; t d hea t · 1ored Law ns a nd Print<; actu all y hri •h tcned! and bc~t uf a ll, th e " a"h tln1e in lc. ~ thau h.tlf the uc; ua l tim·. and th e labor o.,o li •h t tha t. g irl 12 or 13 ca u ca~i ly d n lar •e \l':t•h " itl to tlt even being' tired. ~e Th e Fran k . iclcl alls . np fur was hin g d is he~: - it i.. t hl! only So:1p th.ll h:~l\ l!S t he dish-rr~.:; . 'weet a nd \V hitc, and the on ly ' oap t ha t can be d l! pended upo n to remove th · ~ m ·ll nf Fi ~ h , ( Jui l ns, etc. \ hen ) Oil have a dirty di ~ h -rag or dish-pa n dout blam e your !ocrv:mt-.: it 1:1· 11t1l l/1.-ir frwll; yo u h :~vc give n them a soap mndc of Ran cid ;rca .. , :'lll cl the re~ult i, :1 f11tt l di,h- r:tg: 1 g i v~ tlt em Th ! Fra nk ."iddall. Sorlp ; it is made of Pu re Beef S ue t, and ·ou will always kwe :~ cle;\u , ~ w cct smell ing cloth ;- - So Ito·.: is tltr f f pu scl..·c,•j>t• l 's CIJm:, t: rr fo u l d i 11-Yrt.f,'-or-F, rr uk Siddrd/s .')r>rljl and rr rli.~h 1 SPECIAL FOR PHYSICI ~:: It> /•,· frt'llll ,,: A~ A C BABIES & BABY CLOTHES /•(1> FOR THE SCHOOL BOY AND CIRL - - lf'rt ,dtil •• (:r.tr/nn/t' ,J/,·t/,\1/lo'.r r111l .JfriJ/ti/S l/ IS /11'1/Cr /·iflll tll/)'1/l''tl,l; r·/st!. t io n ~ . l·:m>ncn t l' h y, i,·i '"~ 1 !.tim t ha t ~kin d r ~•·:t'e' s twlr .ts 'l'ett·r, l 'i u •worm, l' imp l""• tc. , arc ·au• ·cl h y Soa;J m.td · fr•nn t .oll< id gt .1~ • :-u · T he Frtnk. idda ll ., So;qt :on d avoid .111 uc!t t rnnhl '' Arti li~oi;tl T •t tl· ''"" ·\ tttfi <:i:d 1·\·t~' will reta in the ir origi na l IHil:i.tn<.: y un i mpa ired when k pt wa:-.hed \\ ith T h,· I· r;~ k ~ullall~ !-wap. It "' '' ""e" tl!i•·" "il'' luhtS u11l P hwo-: r q l w~r · Pl . t ~ withn ttl a po...,ihil ity c,f -.cra t h lug the 111 , "hi I· it i, !Je in..; ' "''" "ith l te "'" t •r. tt ify ing- rc ... ul h in St hnob " f IJe i •n fnr wa .. hi n • the :\)'l!l~i,· l m~ht!-oll ' edl>y t• C tnd,.. tlt,. \\' hen 1111' I· ra u l< '-iddall~ S ,1p i, 11 ed , t h • h ~n d of t ho!-· :\l f.tn n \~ O rk \\ill nnt t. ha p fro m h usking cn1n , d rivin-: !1 '11 11 •, .utd ot lw r nl d ou r 'mpl y m e nt ~ , l111 t of t.our...,; no ho 111 e · ut:tdc or ot her ."u.t p nut 1enla •tl le1 m u ~ t b · u-.cd . - - '1'1 y it ./.II' ot•nshilll.,' ;;•o11 r Hy,·-Kia .fsl's rrud S j>t•c !ac!cs - Jf yo n have a I' ·t I' "~ "· a~ h 1t with l'hc Frank Si d .t:~ ll s S ap : he "" ' e to lc1 ve p le nty ot the lmh -r in It ' ha1r, a nd ) 1111 will h o , urpri' ·d nt th e im prove ment ; a d c.g 1\ ,..,hcd occ~t!>ion a lly with thi ' "•'i > will be; t" '' le •II to ktrho r fi e. s. Usc it f•• r t. >k ng l! l l!:t'c " P" t" out of fine carpet '\ a nd for cl an ill :! r.tg c;. r pe t~. l l-te it for w i pin ~ uff ot l dtt h!-> , Iiii tH ' Lilli , &c ;- it d oc~ awa y with scr uub in g th e m a nti kcc po.; the colors brig ht l\ l il k P :111 s, C" h m ns, :1ml a ll i\ l :lk l ' tensil' when wash ed with Th P. F r:mk Sidd:lll o; oap do 110! r t'f/1111 1' ,,·,/ding'" j>u/lin ~· ou t in rlw .1'1111; !Itt•)• 7!td! bt• clt•nll ""d fl.r S7Cto't' f tiS llt'.ll. It rr/s(l 'I ll <>NOCc, /1 /, J' rc'I//(/1'<'S 1/tr sml'll.fr pm lilt' lm11ds '!/11'1 mill•iii.J,'. And now for the Clean, Neat, Easy, Genteel, Ladylike FRANK SIDDALLS WAY OF WASHING CLOTHES. t\ \V ;~s h · hP i l c: r l\ll ST N I' he u•cd. V OT R / ' 1~.\' 1 0 1/f:.'.·l 1' Ti l /:' . I ·.1.\11- 11 '.1 'l FN, :tn d a' the wa,h-wa ter m ust on ly l.te luke:1 stnall ke ttl e holds enoug h for a la r 't' w. tsh. w:11lll, ~ ;;;r~nc ~urc tn hea l the w. tcr 1n the te:1-kd le the lir-t time, no m.tll"< how odd it ~eems. \ \V;...,h. \n iler 11 ill .tiw.1ys h;l\c a lkpn .. it fcmned o,· I' l llllll the -phetc, i11 .<jlilr• r1/ lilt• II/PSI c'rrr,~/ul //(1/1,,·,·/,·,•,.f>• ' ., 1J thts in- :11111• j ute~"" me of th e dcl il. :ttc iug redicn t!> that a te in th i ~. ""•'· lil't \\ t.W , • ., di''" h·e a ~; m : tl l pic:cc of . np in th e , t.trch : illm.l kc the ironi ng e:t. i ~~ r . :1nd th e piect:s 1 k mnch h. nd omer. It wa~hc freelv in h trd wa ter wi hnu t • oda, Lye, Bor:t x,· mmun ia , r• r :tny wa~h i n~ com po11 nd . :m never 11 c any oth •r ~ un p on :111y p.t rt of the wn h . \1 12 ye rs of ag . - ·t ho has comrn 1n s nsc - wi ll ha v n o t ro ubl d in fo ll o w ing th .m Fl l'"i l' - l> ip~>neoftlw ~ 1r m ; n h i n th· 111h of w.ttl! r ; d r.t 'V it out on t.hc w.tsh -hna n l a 11 tl ru b tlw SJapov··r it V El' \' l. l l ; ll t'I. Y h· i•t p trtr tl. tr n •t tullli .. 11p11~ t• ty uf thl! ~ni l <~d plat'e o;. T hen ' R O L l. I I' I 1 I IG IIT Rt Ll :, ju t .1 ~ pi •!CC i. n>lle I w'1 ' II i " .trtll ·k I I" If 1 11n ~ ltv i in th e bott u lll of the tub und e r th •; w .ttc r, a11d o n 1111111 all th ; pw l!' h.tvc th e .. up ru'J'Je I •111 th : n .111 I .tol! 11111; I 11 11. 1 """ ro w sy for 20m nu s o • r.o ho1or- by 10 loc~ )nd lc Tho Ftaok Sidd lis Soap do 1 s wo 1k, • I·.' 1' - \ ftL·r' >aki-1~ he F 1.1. tin·~ • llllll"IIC: r t11'1ioo.! t 11" <.loth., (. f(;lli'L Y o n the w,1..,h h >.lr I A'\D TIP lllll r ~\Ill Ill .'' ",!'.'; t.u~u t.h .' ~.trt n ;·'.' ~' 11 1 11l• w1 t t11 ~··t •t 1'1; "':till•, hu t I)( T n ~e .an y more oap ; 1 1 l . (' (' ( , 1) O RI, OI I. A 1\l l, l-, /flo.t.. I;, <J k iii i·. Y\ 11 1.1 I \I·.I. I, ) V ; a nd iJ O L wa., hthru g h t wo.,uds . lfthc wa.., h wa tl! r gl't~ ton dtrty, dip "li n ' out a nd add a ltttl•· l'lo ,Ill w. t•cr. lf a -;t reak i · h ard 10 "'·""· rnl>, Hil t! tnnr•· 'i 1 ,111 I h r•> W it back in to th ·sud for a ~ · w min u tC'i I X l' l() \I E'i TIIEI'I . -, 1'\i t : -.,hwh t .t>h;d, ·it l tk•;v.tn n w.t t• r, \'ll!tSt'•k l'll l~ t •t'llt ' s"''''.'''" TTt· c t\l t.. llll' .st tJ sll 'll ' , :tntl i -.tr>hc:dllt';hf.>ll"w~ \' ,, h ·t•lt pi.; · I. l t; HI ' L ona\ ,to; h. IJo:t rd t hrnug h tiH: ri n ~e wat· r (w tt h t JUlllstn~a~tV l nnrc..,ll.qt! A . IJ ."I-: 10: l'IIAI ' A L I. li ! ED IJ ' I Y S UIJ ' ARI!: ' l' OU I' AN\' s l .\1<1' II OU~I-111, 1 I• IL 1\' I U. h: .'O W jtJST 110\V 'ltJ tl • I ll S 'c.' ' · the lll nc w.ttL' r - whi~oh c, tn 1, · ·· ithc· • I n~··; v:1rm or t~ol I: , .. littk· or no Rlu ei n , for thi .. S11ap t tk t'H! pl.t c of nl t•lll,:;. :-. 1 / R 1\ l'l l·,l~ l·. t!F 1' 111·. 0 \1' tortlwhln•:wot·rU, I'II. T IJ E WAI'EP <; I·: l' SI EC i l l Ftti V ."ll A}' \'. P n,t t he~ l ~th.e~ T II I U) ·~ ;1 1 1 1~ 1 :'. 0\I'V I! L Ut:. W\1 ' 1-.!{ , wri llg t.hct!t, a n t~h . n • u oto dry \ lrt l A. \ ~ ~ HU, lU~ . I. G nnd W I I II O U I SeAl. 11 , ••r 1. >I I. I (, \ 1. (, Ll'.. l'l b C K '"I'"" 11 .11111 ·I~ wi h th e oth •r \\'b ite Ptncc·-.. Be al\' r ~!l.lP); th• clothe ... will ' >I' !.Ill ·II oltho· s•1.• p. bu tw tll he .t'i wee1.:1• if ue,·· r '''llllt .tnd M.tith litH h: l\ C bCt'll U\'t.t lonk ·d in W a~ h ing Will uleaCit OU t wl.i il! dt } in ' • and the d ,nlt e!. will irun m11 ch en icr "' \V ;,sh the \ hi te sn~ •. to .d w;1ys m.tke the it TISEPT IC AND DISINF ECTANT- Odd Uses T h re is no t h in g intri cat e a b o ut th ese d irections :-a n y c h ild over ~ ~ A I ct ers .trL' "" fill.' ;It •111r ,ffic · fru•ll w ·II knuw u l'h y'i' i ll lS, d e.,rr ihing- th tir c .' (l "l i •nee with T he l' rilnk Sui !all, S np i 11 thl!ir pr tt. t i..:c, wl11ch ll!;n·e 11 0 duuh t 11 f t h e truth rl! the ·c ns cr- lh,·m ,·nfi,·dy ji·,·,· · 1 ill .lt'd r;/l i\IIJ.crfumc . re injutinu· tntlw . kin; f'h ,• Frt~nl.· Si.ldt ,:,· Sflaj> is 111! j>n./iflllt'd, bu t h.ts au agtCL··,Itk ft.tgr,lllt <•tl• r from i " ingr• dt~onts, lllfll i.1 tl'i7<f(l)'·' jl .'t'rt S<IIt /, ,·~···"In"" ill7't t llil. It 11 v• ·r 1<·,1\·o• a 1) tlll"r • 11 the. kin; t lv· fil t.e lit'\ t•r ha-. uy .,f tho.! llnpk:~•ant glos' that th r '"·'I" pro luo ,. . it ~l11ntld .t lw:~y .. he w.ed for 11:1~hon · tlw h.111ds wd f 1 e ,,f tho~l! t t•ll tlt l ·d w ith 'b .tppt·d l.in: 11 du'ld ;·•1, >lr>!dr··adlltt~'lll.;' lfs./;1 ,· 1o•.l.dll•.l•t•hc·>l I'IJ. /o'J'rtiii.· Sifldttl!s Sf?uj> il 11 c·d, as it dOl'' unt C. lll•e t e eyes tn ~mar l \lith the d rr ·.cdcd it t cn~l! 't i·> g th1t cv ·n the ltnPt1rtcd ·a~tilc So.tp r.nt,es: it a l way .~ k:wc• the ~I: in Sof anti .~lll•lO t he . litt le nn the tuo th lm;-.h tnak..:' the lw>uth, teet h and 't ll n~ perf_ ·tl y clean: it lea\ ·sa p i ·a-:ttol aromntil. ta~te and ,, ~ w ee t brea th - - . ' \'t> !t•o lll jJP<••d,· r or tooth il1t1Sil a•id ct>lllj>fl l >' with i l . -- - 1\nv pcr·;on who dc~pio;c~ a musty <; pOn).{c or \\'a~h-rag wi I app rl!ci:~ t c the Fran k Si dda ll So:· p \V hl! ne,cr a sp onw· has :1 di •ngreca ult·:-.rn dl it i, dul! l'll f i , dy to t he ~o-c:d lc d fin e toile t M>:lp th at i... su h a lnv•lt itc wit h you; it i . the place of '":I ll to 1-. el! p a !.pon ge or w a~ h - r :l~ . wcct and ..:!.:a n, a nd The l•'mnk Si J ual b Soap "ill do it wtt hlHtt nny occ:h ion to e.\ )Jt>Se it to (h e Slltl !II :ttr. \\' hen usc I fotr w:1shi ng th e head it i ~ bette r th :~ n ."h. unpot~ i n g: pl<·nt)' of th e rich . foa my, w hill! !.other ~houh l he le ft iu th e hair f11o / wasl:cd Pil l;) It l!" tircly doc- a \\ , y wlth the 11. e nf ] loi r T .. 11 i<.:. lb • J ~um , lbndnl in e, P t> tu ade, t> r :111y hai r dte ~ •in~. C. eel th is w:1 it r mm·es dandru ff, ilHl lr.1 ir will nn c llc<.: t du ~ t , :~ nd t here wt l! nc>t h e any itc!t in r of the S..:alp :- 'oa t ollar -, f Ia t Lin ings nnd 1eck- we.rr will k ee p cl,.,ll l v •ry mu ch I nn~ ·r. ~'ff"> NS F or \\'a-.lu n' old l ' ·111u 1n.: "' '"• lied ."0res, l' u ts, \Vou nd-. :1mlll urth, f,r w.t hin ·CI~;.I fed pl.tcc,,n l nf11:'' .111d \ dult,; for u~· by pl!r,on' !>u O'.:ri ll~ wi t.h •.lit. ){'"'.ttlll, l ett•r J...ut ''"'nn, l t<l:i ·~ l'tl• · , 1 111 lli 111-. on til" f.tC<!, a ud fi> r ch tl ~n·n atllt \.lcd wtt h 'ic tly '·"' ru-;ta tullt., it i' withoHt t ,oil\' of olw i njt~•ioll ' ,·ffn:ts "ll ofte n t• xpn ten..:ed w t~ ··n a n y t tl n· r . • "·'P '' ." cd , wh ile f,,.. wa .. l in,! tl \1' Ill\ tit I ll· IIIII\ .. ·q uires nncc " '' " ~ to 0 11\'111 ' . ll o' l' h lCI.I'I th.t ll t l<, a most v.t'u,thlc~ ;>•d tn hi, tn ;ttlllo'lll, hv till! thonHtghtw .... \\ itlt \\:hid1 it ~l!lllll'· '. d ll' t' ·h , 1;, ~!~111~ ft nlllth•·, k in th tll •lddn th tn•i·t tt'tllltnt'nll nt.:r:t<tthe.lr t lllllnfht u•·dl 'llte by lostn~ up tlw pnn· , 1111d ·Iii, /1 ttlll'l·'ll•e "','till~/· i.1h,·d l·y ,uty oljlr.r St>aj>. . . , . ( ·"' 11 j,,,. II t~d/111 • '' 1 ., ,,, / :1,· f,·,·t, .-.ul.\•.11•)' ;c•,I.I•IIIA' '" 11• .,, Ill •' l1;.:nl s/111 r. l·.or \\',,,l ung i:l!d ( 'J, th•·~ an I 1\. ·d l•u;.! , t \t:ll 11f l'.uient . wtt h C•• ttl.H i11"' aud iuf·,.t iouo; d i ~t·a-.c~. and f"r \ ... hinc! te'""" '"''" i 1 tlw S1Lk l ~oon 1 , tl • 11 lw ro·ltt• 1 <)II to dcan .c a nd punf • 7t•illll•llf lito•! t/1'/llt 't'.uily r•l .1 tldi11.; r>rl·oi.in.; f1 .\·iut:l·· n1·11t·/,•. oilct it is 1 / 'I'U 1' 111•: Pl l \'-,1 ·r \ 'J, T i ll-: Dl' lJ I ; ' IS I' rt TITE NU R .' I•: it' im por~:t n · i~ beuun i n~ lll •l l ' .tnd ut.,re wi I ·ly kn nwn nnd :tppr.c<.: i a tc~ ! and ll i ~ r. pi ll y '-II Jl <!Tsl!d tnl!' .l mpllt'lcdCtticaud~itnit . trwcll knnwnstt, tp , fn rll ~l! llttlv~. t c k l' o lll, the 111'-CT}' ·II.u l ll usl.ll;tl. 1:--1 ',\ '-,E ()I ' 1 (; 1{1) VI. ( ~ 1'01·:-:-.1 .\lL ·,in pl.wc of cott on-wool, a lttt lt· of I he Prank !-.iddall So.tp. '11ntld h · c~>n,t.llllly kep t pre .. ~cd be tween th e uail a nJ te nde r tll!~h ; -a ~ingle 11i.d " til pr•>Vt' i t~ ~upctiott ity over Cllltlll t-w nl To b.ll1y "ill t ,. 1 h;wc• it l u~t ly <''"'e t d \1 ith p ri• kly heal or h • t roublc•d wit 1 ~·lie 11f .ouy kt ud \\ h ,, l!nthiu-: llll Th e l'r:1111· ~idlL.Ib Sn:1 11 i. u-t·d, tt - invrr dtents h• in~ "" pnn· .tot! mild. /J:•J:I us, · .'lt••llt tow 1 It ntt ~ in~ lhHlle~ <•r 'lllll 1111 1 -d·•nf t'7'•'11 .lt'tT.'d 1/:on-h tt w.1~h them 1111 ly "i th tlti~ ."u.tp, and th ·y wi ll ne,·l!r g• · our, Iotti "ill alw.ty e :tweet aud dea n - LL U.. E FOR SHAVINC- For Horses, Carriage.s. Harness~ et~ . - . - FOR HOUSE CL EA NiNC- !1 1:1· 111, f•,•sl ll1i11. ·.for 7(1f1Sill·ll.~' /Ji,rr/.!•ott ~tis rrnd sdltlr>! sin I ··· , f,•.t7'l'l.< _/10111 .~lt't!St', nn.l ol'ill:t'lll ca usiil.'' rr .\'o·ntc· /1; file'. ••tt/> do,·s 11r1! hn;•,· It> f, READ-- It i v:>!->tlv o.,up -rior to ·a- tile Soap fur wa"h in • a hor~c· . m_:u~c a nd ta ll , wlu le for w.1~.lun~ Sore~, C ;\1 1,, !-. ·ratt hcQ, etc, it i.. ind i. pen,ahle. For ha rn e5.., 1t ~~ b e tt e r t h :u~ ll ar n ·~' · o.1p, t ho rnu~ hl y ck·au''"~ the l,•a t1cr, rc n d crin ~-: it soft.a nd pli •. h l , ' ':h1)e f':'.l wa. ht n: c,n ·'!HI ·:~r windu~''" • ·kat in. t h · ruuui 11 g ~t·a r a n d u<die<: of li ne c:trnagc', ll 1 ~ ~v 1t h ou t a 11 val ; by th u-.c p. int at•d \'.H nhh will la. t muc h l on~l! r, a nd th e wiud uw a nd la mp<; ' Ill u e a s · lc.tr a~ ..: ry ~ t.1l. T hi.. i ~ wh r · T he F tr~nk ~ i dd,. ll s 'o. p :1ppeals n the r .tl l:ttly likt· h nll~l!l 'c1wr:- \\'hL' II ttwd f 1r :--nn hi ing and Cleaning th ere wi ll Ul! till Ct<ltllll I :u.: .. , no, Red \111 '• uo Rn:u he .dl ~~~~ h p .. ts co me fr·•m using · mmon Sonps. l '~e it fPt \ \' a hin~ \\' i'lrl"" aud \lin< r, (; >l>let , \ Vinc·-g!,t ~s cs, Fruit .lnrs and a ll ( ;1:1~ \ 'c,,el~: llr<l in;try Soap i.. tto>t lit f 1r l~;t~lun~ gl.t ". "I til· T he Fr;lllk Sicldall s Soa p i~ the 11\0J!>t elegan t a rtic.le ior tins purpo~t: th ll t..\11 he ltn:tgtlled. - FO I WASHI TO N E ..C.", OAPFOR It ~ ~o ft, hca ,·y , l.t, ti n~ l:uh cr i.; ~o d ilfcren t fr m t ha t fa n y othe r Sh a vin g oa p that I'~ 1peri\11·it • J, a lm .. -. t int rcd ihl ·: th e fa c · 111.. ve r bu rns or smarLi, n o m, tt cr h w ~lull the r. tnr. how clo. ely ,.havecl, or h ow ten,fer th e skin, nnd the S po n e a nd ."oa p Cup wil l a lw:t)" I · 'wect smel lin g . - - FOR LAUNDRY AND KITCHEN USEJU. T Co111111t111 St1ajl and FOR MEN L J' TJII A./ I 1 ur I The most brighter. Address all Letters :- Office of THE FRANK SIDDALLS SOAP, 10~9 CHE~'IN UT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. I 1- E5 l~ A B L I 5 HE D, OLDEST CLOTHING HOUSE IN AMERICA I ECOND AND SPRUCE ST EETS, F:E:IL~DELF:E:I..6... - --C l_JC) THING r :--~~~-~ Boys For Men, Youths, and Children. Our bright, beautiful New Store, is the lightest in the city. We manufacture all our goods, and know that for thoroughness of make, excellence of style and fit, and general superiority, it cannot be surpassed. Our Business Principles are now, and always wer money refunded. ONE PRICE. SATISFACTJON GUARANTEED or OUR DEPARTMENT FOR GOODS TO ORDER ur ntir · cond floor. ur t ck i alway r pl t with th hoicest N velti s, b th Foreign and ur UTTE arc r n wn d ~ r the LL N 0 THEIR T L AND FITS.
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