.//"?~ J' ~ - /:1~.--'-r<_, ~~// Jy ~l~ui~tu. l V ()r.. ELA\\' ~ RE ' ·~Gollege~Review. Delawar J LY, 18 7. n t a Ill) LLE ;g \ hav Publis h ed Mon~ hly durinrr th e College Year, by the Press A sociation of Delaware Coll ege. lish c.l all \\' 9 wish n ith r h av \\' ' alway. b' ·n sali:fi d with th r : ult [ o ur lab rs. \ arc consci u · f man '-sh rt r('d ~ali:rl 'd did not alwa ·s EDITOR!AL BOAP.D: ('lllEF J. E. J. Whis U r, ' 7. Jo:IJ ITII I'S : Sam'l A. Buchanan, '87. ASSCl ' JATI ·: J·: IHT!lRS : J . E. J. Whis Ucr, ' 7. \ Norm ... n E . L ayfield,' 9. I :"'T J·:R-Cl l l . I .I·:<: l t\T E. Jo:X( ' JIA:'\C:Jo:. ~· Harry T. Price, • A. F. Polk. ' 9, l>E t\J.U:'>I. ' IS. J.(l(',\1 .. Business M an ag r. S. A. BUCHANAN, '<.: 7 , A s s't Bu .. incss Manager. H. T. PRICE, -. E. s. "' HE wh cl I tim ma 1 an th i · laun h 1 int \\ ith thi · iss u pia rs S II AR I', ·~I l>() J>I' 'S9 1..\ \' I· I Jo:J.Il ·~, l f. th HtL'IJ.\. ' .\:", ~7 ditorial: an<l 1,000, LA,..l.'lON, T c:. H\'1{ ( ) , ' l 'n:.,idcnl, \ ' i~e l'rc. iclcnt, . ·cret:uy, T n.:a:-.urer, 111 wh ur sm r hav assist d us in any mann r during th r g r t ur in a\ ility t thos stud nts wh sh uld --- ·----~-- --·- -- ~ DELAWARF. COLLEGE REVIEW. 4 a s nsc f h n r al ut us in r gar I t justi ur aclv rti s rs and r clit rs. Th futur l - -= - ---= -=---==--==Rr:: IE\ an 1 n · r. I t has n th hard ·st w rk t k p it up this y ar, n t\\'ithstan lin gth ,,. rk f ur Bus in ·s Manag r. So, fur the last tim a nd fl r th last RE JEW \\' [!' 1 a c ' rtain sadn ;-;s in \\"ritin g th Ia ·t wo rd s. W ell , Br th r Ex ha ng :, fa r w 11 , :tnd •u all hav ·1 h tt r fat than that of th () L L E . E R E v 1 E \\ . T H · R EVIE W ha b e n printed by th ApJ 'al Pu l lishing 01111 any, of Elkt n, M l. , in a v ry sa ti ·fa tory m a nn r during th p ast [( ur y :us. Their \\ Ork an't r fleet an) thing b11t 1 rais a nd cr dit to their ofti c. W h p ' the R EV I EW may alway c so fortunat in s cu rin g such good print r . m ay But t I pap r mak s it all th t Jd nt have J ositi Iy n DELAWARE COLLEGE REVIEW. 5 m The De I rn tio n Co nt e t. At! c 1 , a1 Annlvers ry. n .an 111 att 6 DELAWARE COLLECE REVIEW. sp ilati n f DELAWARE COLLEGE REVIEW. ti n 7 " Hi titl f Emp r r, gl ry b cam gl ri us wn, 1;\ IR (J:'\ ~I E 1 TS. A writer in one of our most 1 opubr mng-a 7.incs bc!•in · n r ce nt nrti lc upon th e . 'tars and the :\c\\· ,\ strmHltiiY l1y referrin~ to the in11nen-;e oll ·ction of ul1jech gath ered in the ~ o uth 1\:cn: ington Museum, and tu till: lllultitucle: f peopl · who res rt ther to linger over anti study them. 1I · c n tinuc · IJy stating that," There is one shel f, h wev ·r, ' hi ch seem.:; to h:wc s me attrn tion com mon to all socia l grad ·s, ~ r it · con t nts .1ppear to be of eq ual interc: t to the peer a nd th t.: c stennonger. It is the repre ·en tati n of a n1:1n rc"iol c<l into hi · chem ical clement., or rather , a n cxhihiti n >f th • material · of which the hum an b ely is composed. Th ·re is a clclinitc am ount of matter, fur in. la nce, in our bl d ami tis. ucs, nncl there on the shelf are ju"it ~o many gallon -; of water in a large vessel. Another jar !:: hows the exac t JU;In tity f ca r!Jon in u: ; : ma llcr hot ties nta in our iron a1Hl ph ~ph ru: in just prop rtiun, while others exh ibit : till tiler con ·titucnt: of the I.Jo ly, a nd the wh le repo~e"i on th e hclf a: if r ady for the c min ~ of a new Franken: tcin t n.: crc.1 tc th ori uinal man and 111 :1ke hin w . lk about agnm as \\'C du." Th e purpo.~e f the writer i m re for iiJiy t~ illu·.trat : tl~ • cli:co\·l!ry ,f the spectros ·ope th at' we have lttcrally wttllln ur bod ies sa mples of th mo:t imp rtant · lcmcnts of which th e great univ r..;c without i: c mposccl, an~ that you. and L nrc not only ltke each oth er, a~d brother~ 111 humnntty, ~ ~ ul chilclrcn of the ~ un and !>t:lr · 111 a 1110re literal se n ·, hnvtn g l1odie nctu. lly mad e in 1. rge parl of the :a rne thiu~;"i tha t m. ke . ' inu.; and \ldebaran," ami "th at they and we arc near rel ativ : ." Hu t th e : pcctroscopc, wonderful instrument th at it is, nncl analy1.ing as it does the c nponent parts o.f the h~ma_n_ l>ocly .and the most dbta nt nelmh.c 1 bus only gtven scteu uhc uefi· 8 DELAWARE COLLEGE REVIEW. nitencs. to a truth whi ch the leader of I srael implicitly a . erts when he tenclil:S his p ·oplc an l u that the same 'ocl who creates the heaven and th e earth also formed man of the du. t of the ground. nd just here ha · the scie ntist, with all hi dilig nt d elvi1 g into the sec ret:-; f nat ure, as!:. i.;tecl by hi · most penetra ting ancl minutely a nalyzing in. lru :ne nt, fuund a limit t hi. di .~c ve rics. I Ie may as-;e rt, IJUt h e h:1s not yet proven, th a t lift: lies hidd e n in th o. e ja r:; n the sh If in the 'outh Kensin g ton Museum to be call ecl into mani~ tc ti on I y a f rtunate co mmin glin g of th e ir onte11t s. IJ e may t II us th a t the energy f life is hut th e ordinary e ne rgy o f matte r-the . ame force whi ch persist. and conserve ..; itsel f in th e bom b ~ ncl the . hell and ferment · in th e vat, and with amu ing 111 ta1 hor liken th e principle of vitality to th e hor logi ty of the cl ock, hut he has not y t demon stra ted it in hi laboratory by forming matter into living orga ni: m . . For urselv s we prefer, when accounting for the exi tence of man upon earth, to turn ~gain to the in. pired of J ehovah, and to believe th~t the Lord God after IIi own image and from Hi: own spirit breathed into thi du t the breath of life and made of it the temple of the living oul. Let us place our:elves right upon thi: point at once. We will await furth er inve ligation before accepting the proposition that even simple vegetable life i nothing but the work ing of a machine con lructecl out of material atom and operated by the ordinary phy ical and chemical force alone. For man we will not accept the th eo ry of the one substances, or double-faced unity with two se ts of properties, nnd two sides, the phy. ical a nd mental. We have no faith in the doctrines of Animi m, and do not believe th at th idea o f the immortality of th e soul is but a developm nt from the drea ms and cli: lurl>ed digesti ns of our a vage ancestor:. n th e other hand, we do believe that the " F g " f each one f u. i · th e immorta l oul-c rcated a ft er the im nge of its maker-set, like a brilliant, in its e nvironment-o f diiTerent s cnce from matter and di. tinct from and uperior to all its surrounding. ; th a t " )ur birth i: but a sl ' ep an<l a forge ttin g . The s ul that ri:cs with us, o ur life star, llath had else wh ere it : setting, nd cometh fr m afar. ot in entire fo r~etfuln s: , And not in utt e r nak ed ne. s, ut trniling clouds uf glo ry do we come From God, who is our home." It is thi. oul a a di stinct per. ana lity-as a simple, in rlivi ible, elf developing and self determining center of pi ritual force, which pre ·erves a con:ciou identity through all tim e, of which we are here to-night to sp ak and l de c ibe a well as we may some of the many relation it bears to the phy ical, ocial and political ~ rcc which surround it. We a. sert what we believe very one ncre feel s to be true, that the soul i: ·elf-determining and e::lf·developing, and in a great mea sure maker through free -will of it · own charact r. lathed with flesh, it is n t entirely sunk in matt e r. Dwell · ing in the temple of the I tly fr m which and through which it I oks up n and hear · and feel · the life with out, it yet can from within it. elf do mu ch to determine the structure and nppearan ce of it immediate and remote ab de. Like it · creator, after whose image it is made, it manife ·ts itself visibly and tangiuly by and through the organ · of the b ely, and thi immortal and incarna te soul, armed with n rvc and len. , tnembrane and mu clc-t hear and ee and feel and fight it· wny amid the contending (I rcc around it, until th e fittc t nly urvives; thi. union of b dy, mind, and . pirit, co n ·ti tute · th being called man, and h •. · a variou · hi.·tory, both a an individual an l an aggregate. It i a plea ant occupation for ethnologist who are theoretically di po ed to argue as their fancy dictate ·. · me [I r the progre ·ion theory, and other for th e degradation th e ry of his hi tory. They may, with tln: writer of 'e ncsi ·,give him a h appy and contented parndi: iacal orgin, or with 1 arwin, tb y may ded uce him from . om extinct anthropoid ape. pr fane hi. tory , how e ver, which has acquirerl a n hi storical se use sufli cicntly critical to distingui ·h fact from fiction, find s him n ith c r as " blau e less Ethi pian," nor taill ess monk ey; and it i a hi story pr . ent him that we must trea t of him to-ni ght. ' r will we treat of him except inc id e ntally ac; he has appeared in the anci e nt civili t.ations of A ·. yrb and Egypt, ' reece or Italy; nor even a he now appear;; in mod ern Furope, in the vast aggregation of A sia , or the teem ing million · o f Africa. f his general advance from avagery, it is suffici nt that we quote th word of 'ibbon, th e celehrat d hi ·torian of the l<oman Empire. It is the pas age which Taylor lake: as hi. text to repr .;ent the d evelopment theory of culture, and it read a: ft Ilows : "The di coveries of a ncient and modern na vigators, aml the dome tic hist ry, or tradition, o f the most e nlight e ned nations, repre ·ent the human sa vage, nake<l both in mind and body, and de ·titute of Jaws, of art s, of ·idea·, and almo t of lan g u.1ge . From thi s abject con<li tion, perhap the primitive and universal state of m:111, he has gradually ari ·en to command the anim als, to fertili t.e th e earth, to traverse th e ocean, and to mea. ure the heaven·. IIi. progre s in th e improvement and exe rci e of his me nt a l and corporeal faculties has been irregular and variou · infinitely low in the beginning, and increa ·ing by degree:; with redoubled velocity: age of labo rious a cent have Lce n followed by a moment of ra pid downfall; and the cveral climates of the globe have felt the vicis ·ituues of light aml da rknes. .'' We will to-night tak e man as h e h as appeareu and as h e now appears in thi:;, hi s American home, and we do it bc cnusc we believe th at in this laml of freed m th e h ig h es t type of ma nhood ha · b e n d eve loped, and bccn. u'ie th e co ntra t of its appearance during th e Histo ri cal ag und er sa vage and civilized rule respec tiv e ly pre:e nts a most forc ibl e picture of the p wc r f civili t.e d ma n ove r na ture. It required n l a 1 fenry Ccorgc l tell us th a t from the da y th e sea wcr ga th ret! together a nti th e dry la ntl ap peared the portion of the earth fitt ed ft r o ur habitation ha: ueen limited in quantity. Ma n may drain th e stagnant marshc: , build out a few steps into the sea , or even live upon the water · in hi junk ·, l>ut he cannot ma te ri a lly e nla rge the capncity f his home. H e ha · not added through the countless age of the pa 't, an<l will n l ad d through the myriad yea r. which are yet to come, one cubit to th peri] he ry of the earth h e inh au it~ , I ul mu. t ever wait on the low accumulation · f th e s t ar-J u ~ t a it fall fr m the infinite pace around him. What a la rg proportion f th e habital>le acreage f th e g lobe do th e American wn? and how richly ha l'rovid e nce enclowetl it! Ma ny and mighty river are drawn over its surface to form a network of commercial channel ·. Not with. ta nding the reckles · eleva. tation of c nturie , va t forest till hade the earth and offe r th m ·elv es to the axe a willing ministers to the neces itie: , comforts and luxuries of me n. For innumerable year ~ had nature toiled within her secret la boratories, forming within her bowel · rich ein · of preci u· mineral ·, va t re ervoir of petroleum an l vn ler bed: of coal. 'avannahs rich in all that vegetable growth dema nd · spread out in wid e ex pan e for the plow, and laugh with plenty at the touch of culture. The e that nre now ours were once the po se sion of the Indian, ancl the land over which the savage recently roamed civili1.ati n now crowds with humanity. Bancroft, our national hi storia n, e timat but one hundred and eighty-fiv e thousand Indian as cxi. ting e::tst of the Mi i. ippi at th e di ·covery of America. Where the ·e th ou a nd could w1th difficulty t:cure en u h for their Winter's ub ·i tence we pour out of our abundance to the nations of the w rid aml fill th eir market. with plenty. Innumeral>le citie. , town . and village · ha ve replaced the hut of the avage hunter. Wh ere hi war-whoop nee al~rmed the silent air, the 1 enceful team-whi tie now calls the arti ·an to his labors, and the I)ELAWARf4.: (;<)LLE<iE REVIEW. 9 engine now . peed with it precious freight along path. upon hea rty CO-OJ eration lighten the burden of each, i' a very which hi: treach erOll tread once tea hhily fell. For him different poverty-diAerent in kind, diAerent in influence our school ·, our churches, our a. ylum , our work-shop,, our and effect-from that con ·ciou · nntl humiliating indigen e factori es had n ex istence. Everywhere nature reigned whi ch L every dJy f, reed to contra t it elf with nei~hboring supreme - nowhere had ·he rec gnized the supremacy of ' ealth on which it fe els a en e of grinding dependence. ma n. H ow th en • 11 we more strikingly illu trate the power The pove rty of the frontier i indeed no poverty. It is hut of man over his e nvironme nt than by this comp:niso n of the 1 eginning f wealth, an I has the boumll e ·s p s ·ibiliti es Ameri ca as she appeared to th e se ttl ers at J ame ·town and of th e future alway · opening lie ore it." And well may the elo JU ent · ul gist stat that fr m the th e Pilgrims on Plymoulll Rock to th e . cc ne which pres nt s itself to th e innun1erable imn igrant · cro\ cling to our shores loins o f . uch t-i on ers th u ·a nd. f eminent Ameri ca ns hav e in all ge nera ti on: ·prung-men like lay, WelJster, J a k ·on, in this centennial year of our nati nal constituti on. But do n t thit•k that thi s change has lieen wrought with - Lincoln, anrl J rfi ell him: elf. While Americ can pro luce men like the e , why grieve out much toil and sufl ering. America may he the sce ne of w nd er:, hut th ey are not uch as are wrought liy a touch that he ha. as yet no distinctiv e cla. s of he. terfielc.ls r upon Aladdiu's lamp. ll cre as elsew here, if man subdue. Turney i rop. . Th e tim e ha pa sed wh en the English taunt of "\ ho read s an L\mcri can book ?" is po: ·e. sed of natur it must he uy th e sweat of his brow. 1 or must we f, rget th at the men to whom the task of subany signifi ca nce ; but n t London nly, but ur wn Boston duing this land to th e u. es of civilization was committed by - Hull of th e universe that it is-now nrragantly as·erts th at l'rovidcnce were men richly endowed with a prcci ou. he rit- there is no " cult r" west of th e A ll eg hanics, and as. umes age of me chanical, social and political aptitudes. Litera- an easy superiori ty OYer hicago, the metropolis f the Lak 'S. tu re ami oratory are : tocked with eulogi,;tic c mmonplace · That superiority, however, is only in the hum : 1.11itie of the up n thi · theme. thnol ogi:ts have recognized, but not yet sc hools-a nd has no place in that uroadcr humanity which scientifically accounted for, the exceptional capacity and gathers into it ·elf th e powers that subdue nature t it · will. propen ity of the Anglo 'axon race for civilization. The We assert th at wh ther he 1 claily dre ·erl in "fine linen " aclmirntion of our eludes for anything 1-.nglbh you know is or know. a "bilcd sh irt" only liy tradition; whether a indeed not entirt!ly without cause and may have it origin in student at N ewa rk, or a cowboy on the plains; whetltcr in the many estimabl e qualitie , both of mind and body, that the work hop, or in th e fidd; whatever lie his trade, calling we have inherited from our ance!;tral home. or profe sion; whatever his immediate environment, that the Daily and continuous toil is OJJpres ·ive and repugnant, true American pre ·ents the hi ghest type of manhood yet mentally and phy ically, to the uncivilized man, and in com- attained by humanity. mon ' ith th e oth er European , it req uired years of lavery Let u: cxa nttn e him as he appears in his physical, social, aud vill a nage tu impres UJ on our English an cestors habit · and political environment. Premising that nun is endowed of \V ork and Jab r, and the skill in ma nual occupation. with free ' ill, we may j!rant to Uuckle a nd others that a whi ch a race fin ally acq uirecl th rough use aml custom. A !artie influen ce i. exerci ·etl over him uy the physical c nmea : urable intellectual and religious fr celo m was theirs by fonnati n of the country he inhabits. limate, f, I an<l inh erita nce and 1 urchnse. The i alated po::.ition of their sui I ha c e\'er been most important factors in the aggregation lsbntls f ma nkind, ancl th e general a pect of nature must l ar~cly CO lltrol ur th ought. and irn :~g ination ·. An a rctic c ld will That like to rich and ,·nriou. g-e m-; numb the fa culti es of the r>quimaux; torrid heats enervate 1 nby th e unad rnad liosom of th e deep, th~ min I · ancl inten ify the pa ·:ions of the negr ; while a. haJ for centuries preserved th em fr m c Jmpletc external t •mpt!rate zone be. tows intellectual and physical vigor upon interfcre n ancl c ntrol. First the l o n~ · l>ow and then the its inhabit ant. l,o try has ~ver taught us th at the m unmu. ket h ad prc: erved th e li bert 1es of the yeomanry until a tai nec r differs in character from the dwell r upon th e plain co ntinuou: practice in their local instituti n had end wed - th at around th e eagle's eyrie freed om only reign ·. But we in their local in titut ion-; had endowed them with a pec uli ar ca nn ot agree with th o e pessimists wh o predict that the capa ity f, r political organi 1.ation and ·elf-go crnm _nt, :o Angl -Saxon race in America i · doomed by its en vir nm ent that the ompact up n th Mayflower and the fir,.;t assemlil y t physical degradation. of hurg es. es in \'irginia was uut the natura l ou tcom from Th e aborigine is ind eeJ inferior to the white man in their prcviou. history. bod ily vigor · the panther or American lion would have littl e •'uch men could uot change th eir nature: when they sailed cha nce in a fight with its Asiatic confrere; and ur native over th e seas to oth er kies anu a ne w env ironment, and : parrow is rapidly di. appearing before its Engli:h cou ·in. hi ·tory ca n never tire of tellin~ how well they have perHut what uird can fly higher and scream louder than our formed the work allotted them hy I rovidence. American eagle? Where i · there to day in London a hard er We ·tward the . tar of Empire takes its way, but we with rider than liuAa lo Hill ? An l above all, who has ever the selfi ·hne ·s of Ea. tern ease are all too apt to forget th e thrashed the llonoraule John L. Sullivan, our national her ? toil and danger that have made our 1 rc ent comfort pos ·ible. Th e truth is, that while . ufficient tim e ha not yet clnp ·etl We mu t not dem:md the arni h af the gentleman from the rough frontier man, for the work he has to do will breed no to enable u · to determine the ultimate effect of our phy-;ical carpet knight. . . ' uffi cient that they o se the urawny environment upon our d velopment, and the ·e cau ·e have u1u ·cle, sturdy will and kindly heart, though they may not not yet diffcrentialed u~ into a eli ·tinct race, we hav e no boa. t th e graces of th e solon. In all periods of our history rea on to be abrm ed by gloomy vaucinatiiJns f d generacy. The tim has pa . . eel when as a nati on w can be taunter! the. e frontier. men have can ied into the wildernes · minds and bodies train e I in th e chool of civilization, and by reaso n with pr fcrring- th e cunning of th e market -place to the vigor of the influence of h red ity are uperior t the sa vages which of th e athlete. Everywhere boys and girls-young men surround them. Nowhere can we find a beller illu trat'o 1 nne\ ma iden s-arc finding health and Lodily and mental roquet, lenni , arch ry, of the mutual intera ction of the indtvidua l man and hi. :trc ngth in their favorite outings. phy ·ical nvi ronm ent. The priv<ttion of the pioneer is th at ball, boating, tri cycle and bicycle have their num ·rou · of ci ilized man alon · ' ith nature. It is not the degrading devotees among u . Nor arc the e s rt blindly pur ·ued , ancl cleb: ing de:titution f our crowded thorough(; res, and with n c n ·ci u ~ purpose directing th em. Juvenal tell · u rivation at all to the savnge, for he kn ow · of n other to pray f, r a. ounrl mind in a ound b dy; hut modem is n wants and dream of no other life. As Mr. JJlaine well puts . cience pre. cribe · rules by which the ·e great de: iderata are to l>c secured. Phy: ic logy teaches u: that the mind, the it in hi eulogy upon Pre ·ident 'ar~ie ld: Jy"The poverty f the fr nticr, where all arc engagccl in a center of nervous force , is indeeJ king over the common stt uggle, aml wh ere a co mmon sym pathy and though hi · suuject may sometimes rebel, for our organ are JO D ELAWARE COLLEGE REV IEW. determined to a hea lthy r unhe althy gro \'lh by ur volunt < ry a Lion · ; tile ·e a tion · in t;m i.: ~ rm h. IJits. am\ th ese habit · nc form ed tfct <:n nln the permaeent concliti n of .ur b dies. Scientific nonH:ncl.tture has never been in a happict: mood tha1 wh ·n it c. lll:rl th e a1t of hc.tlthy xercisc alisth enics, or the !Jea utiful, . trengtlt conferring a tt-fnr '\'e n ns the so ft er tis. uc of th · !Jrni tt an 111nuld the skull into form nncl shape , '-O ca n the soul with gcnt!c:,l touch train th body int line: of strength :ll d b , uty. Th s ul lJ ·gin: it s earthly car r with that body in whi ch the laws f herl'rlity a nd tb '> tilT undings of a hclpl e. · hildhoocl have n asc cl it, n.ncl it is not till the powl!r of forming a rati nnl jud gment ari -;c: in hi s mind an I fre e-will has play in the funnation of I is habits th . t ntn n begin: to lise rnhle, indeed , his f.1tc \ ho then rule over his destin ies. awakes to a on. ciousncss th at her dity nnd e:nly en ir nm nt hn.vc contaminated both hi s mind and hocly; hut th e mass of m:1.nkincl when th ' Y arrive :1t that period of life find that nature and a loving par 11ta l cn.re have conferred upon them h clic · vigorou: and ca1 able of a he. !thy de vel pment. Nord ·: 1 ar ·nt~l and state care st p ther . At the very thre. hold f his life the child i. lJ ing th roughly instru cted in the laws of health and in th physiological and the hygienic efl cts of hi action . The modern educator recognize. the fact that the child i · father to th man, ancl that nature, a r. .lawgiv r, punishes ignorant as well ns wilfui eli. obedience. .Ignorant i tt l1:![is 11 1'1/tin en excusnt is am ng her mnxims, as well as nmong man s. Jlere, sa ys 11ualey, "Jgnoranc i. visited as . haq ly as wilful dis hedi n -incapacity meet: with the sn me pun·ature's discipline is not eve n a word ishment as crim . and a blow, and th blow first· but the blow with out the word . It i: le ft for y u to find out why your ears ar boxed. ' 1 n thi s ng , however, provision i'> m:1.d ' th at th e child shn.l l 11ot be able to pl ead ig n rnn c , for everywhere he i · t:1 Ut{ht th conditi on: fa pru p ·r phy~i o l g ica l de,·c lopm nl until a popular s icn e ha. made hy~ienic truth:; as familiar to him as housh ld word :;. ur ow n . 'tate ha. lly rcc nt l ;:; islation . h wn its npprei::tti on of the inlluen ce of kn ow ] ·dge o er th ~ rnuti on of youthful hn.hit s. Hy fequiring 1 r Jvisio n to lle mntlc for t aching all tlte JUpils in our pul ,Ji c :ch ol-; physiol0gy n1Hl hy ienc, with speci. I r ·fl!renc e t th e efl'c t: of nl ohul ic drink:, stimulants a nd narcoti c: upon the humnn '-)'StC111, :-~ nd r quiring su h in: truction: to J, • gi ven ra lly in prim:u y school wh r ' p11J il,; cannl1l r ·. d, it is triply ::trilling the h y ag.1inst the s du cti n» f the s, loo n bd re th e la tter :111 ontaminatc hi imm:lture years. \' s. Early is the !1 y taught that thi. t mple in v hich the soul dwell · i · lnrgely built 11p a. the oul wills ; that h re, a· everywh re el. ·, the chara ter f the architect lincl s e pre ion in hi. work, anc\ that hnnd s me i. th at hand:ome doe. , has a phy ·ical a. "ell as a morn] !>ignifican and that tru e hn1 pine .. accompanic the uni n of bodily vigor with moral integrity and intellectual er::t ity. The industrial world i · the . c n of man's greatest viet rics but numer u as th ' Y have been, they would incrense infl nit ·ly w ·rc he tit rough ma tcr of himself. 'cratch the ivilit. I mnn :1ntl you will ftnd the origmal ·avage beneath the skin, is Lut t truthful a aying. ur nature i not yet completely subdued to the ways aml arts of 1 eace, and we seem incapable f sec uring any great advance to our elve · cxc •pt we sea l it with ur Ll or\. Innumerable have Le n th religi u. , comrn •re in!, socinl and in lu. trial wars out of \ hich man ha em rg ·tl, ·till looking forward with h r . tmqucnchccl by the lc ·olation an 1 destruction around him. \Vere he abl t subdu e hi wn 1 a: ·ion. , nature s b ·ta cle · would of th m c\ve · : tep a:idc from hi p::tth. Indeed fr m the time m, n ftr 'l a qui red a cnpacity for daily toil and learn d the value of divisi n of lab r, abundance of procluction has never been ft r him an inclustrinl probl m. It i · not here that his difftculty in ompletely adju ting him elf to hi n ironment lie . Nor however auundantly he may produce will he cv r sat iate his capacity for con umpli n. IIi · nnhine ..; and fi\cto ri · lll :lY m uld and :1.rvc and l>uilrl up the rough pr ll u ·h f th ~.: w rid into innutncra iJi e utiliti c..; IJUt hi: acquire<~ .t:lste,; :1 nd need.; will lik e Oliver Twist .t ili cry fo~· more. l he . t:1ndard of co mfort ~ r all la :sc.~ grows wtth each ag . And the ah. lute nee l : f man increase.> with each gc n ration. arry u. back ev n for a c ntmv only and place U "i in th at industrial worlt.l, and life would IJC for many of us an unen<lural J!e burden, and a wee!· of snch experience w uld he a clra.;tic ure to him who fin ·! · the g ld ' 11 age in antictuity. It i: not a demand . imply, but an cfflci':!nt demand-a. th political econ mi ts ay-that is wanting when our m. rkers arc glutted with over·proclucti n · for while the c unt rs and ware house of a gr · l ity :1r~.: heaped with unsold mer· handtsc , only a. few slr ets away thousands f poor and needy are end unn g th e pangs of hungry :1.11 l th e mise ries of de ·titution. . 'hakespea rc ha: w ll cx1 res ·ell th e great indu: trial probl m when he say. "So l>istributi n shoultlundo excess and all men have en ough-" 'l ~1e Cult, \\'e re J~Cat, lies not in man's capacity for produclt n.or cun ·umptwn, but in hi · ·elftsh cunning a ..; dis · played tn the greed of th e market anJ the other ml!dia l• f exchang-e. .But w ' must not .be clisma. ed becau:e we arc yet groping bl!ndly nft er a ~o lutt o n of tl11: proulem. There i · no danger w1th of a con01ct betw eu capital :-tnd lab r a repr . nted hy the cla.ss.e~ a nd the ma · ·es, b cause th re is no ~ uch permanet t tllvtston f our people. "h·om shirt :-.lcevcs to shirt : lccvcs" is a hnppy epitome of mo. t f ur family ltistory. \Vhy sh uhl we dr<.:. d . tr ik •: or orga ni,:atio ns o f l.ti>Orl!r,; a-; precur:"o rs of a. . ocial w:n in a land \\'h~.:re c\·cry one i,; eith •r r hon r:ny kni~;ht uf labor, a nd we all mu ·t at an actm le·1-.t pl~y nt worl· if we wi ,~h to pre ·cn·c our re,pe tnl>ility. \\ . bchl.!ve th nt the people uf An1C1 ica arc cap:l hle of nta . tcn ng- nny pr hkm thnttttny nri : c in heir : oci:1l, cco non.ica l nn cl poli ti a l li fc, nnd \\'e la.: li<..!\'e thi -; l>ec. u:-.e we ha,·e an abiding f.tit h in the future of lll.l n. 1Iotlc rn soc i I ~gy-.-:nny, r mny well omit the app Jlnt i,·e term-fur the sc1·ntth c study of th e bws of man 's :ocial rgnniz:1 i n hacl no existen c until th e most recent tim c..;recogni ; es th e great fund . tttent. I truth th, t the ·h:nn tcr of th~.: nggn:gale must pnrl ake f th · ch a r:1 tcr of th e uni ts \\' 1ich comp , 11. 11 pl! rc ·i\'C"i that :-i tnilar heap: ca.ttno.t be m:1de of tl.c r ntnd :1 11 1 , 11 ootlt l>.tll, f the regubr ;-,q u. re. Lr ick , ai.Hl . f. the mi: ' .t ~ pen n:ru~l.! of the ((ll :1 rri c~ ~·t:" J?c . lt\'cly. J·or tllt"i '.'ea ,;o~l 11 m inute!) in\'estigntes th e 11Hitv1cl ual m~n and tudte. !11 ,; per · na l ch. r.1' te r p!tysica lly, mor~lly and 1111 llcct~'· lly, IJe fore turnin g to the investignti on of h1s movements tn mao;. es. It early a ·certainctl th at "moral po\\'cr depend s large ly upon material environment It doc not nourish. with tilth ~r famine. elf-respect, th al fu~da~ncntal n cc ·1ty of the h1ghcr attribute: , cannot well x1 ·t. m rngs ant! dirt." It ha. th ere fore adopted as its max.un that wh ocvc~ i.ncrca ·es the material comfort, widen. the mtelleclual d minion, nnd trengthen the moral principle · of the greater number of individuals, tend · tow.m.ls the accompli ·hment of that utility for whi ch ,oc ieties arc formed. It can have no cia favorite ·; recognize no de ·imbility in ca. t . • • D ELAWARE COLLEGE REVIEW. s lf~r• ... p•rt ucl s• ll~ rclia t n <••, lutll' 'tll'' 11lyinndntu oftb oLh ' I'S ittll ll'!! ' ll l'l':l l p rOg' l'l'S.' Of ltUtllllllit y [O\\' Il l'cl tlllllll' ' p •r fet' t 11dju ~ tm ' Ill. t• > it. ' ltltr • mat •l'i tt l , Slll'in l tltlll poli ti <·al •ul·iwn 111 ' IlL. ~uy:; Adam Htt<l l'll ll , in h i:; Ari:-.lot•rut·y itt Eug'ltlltd: " \. 11'01111111 o f 1'1\llk 0 11 ('(' tt s k ~· d 11ll', I \VI tl ll, or all j llll<l Sl'l' ll ill F.llg-ltLlltl, .'ll' IJ t• k Ill ' Ill(). t liH'(•ilJ Jy '(' J lt ttd 11 0 doubt ll'htll '\'l.'l', lltHJ ttli H\I' 'I'l'd : ''J'h•di stitt<'L illll O fC'lu ~.··s ,thc •x i, l•tt ('l' oft·usl•.' 'Hu t ,' site i11 q uir •d, 'd11 )'llll l'Cillly III CII ll Il l !;II)' that ill A Ill •riC'Il til ' g' t' 'IlL 111 t·t·hnllt-;' daught•r do e:; 11 ot ltJil k d t> Wtt 011 th • IiLLI • gr·ocers' tiiLIIg- ht •t·'!' 'I' ·r htl p ·,' . nid l, 'th • 1-{reat 111 •n•hn11t s' dtlll gh t •r doc:; luok clt >ll'tl, hut n·t·y t·t·rtuiuly th • IiLli • g' l'Ot ·r~' tl:tught •r d o ·s 11 otlook 11p :' tttttlllt L' ll'lt o l • ('t>lll!JilliY II'ILS hurrt fi ed nl lit • id 'IL of 11 ~t HtiiLt ' )" ll'h •rc t h • litll • ~ro · •r 'd ~tught •rs • doll ' l hl <lk up.'" Th e iLtdir idunl Amcric·nn ~ n1·c n oli<" to tit w o r ltl tlutt II • w ml <l ·' lo<• k up to" u o t)tt • !Jut (;od und him ~ •I f II' h e n thr<, ugh lti .' lion .· . or H v)ll'P,l' lll tllil' ·s It. n·ftts •d to addr •ss ; 'lll'g'. \\'tt: h i 11 gto u II !< II is II ig-1 : m•s.; th e l'r · id cnt o f the L' n ilc d ~tat .,. nntl tit • l 'r ll 'f' lllr of tltvir lil,t•rtil'S. 'l'II L'Y w ·II kllll\1' tll nl t la·y who ar • w orl hy n f lib rty will hal' 11 0 Jll'•>l t·<'llll' or it IJttl tlll·tttse ll· •s. ThHt lun kin g 11p to is bllt tit • c·or'l' ·lut in• td' ill'ill~ lcJIIkl'<l d own II!Jiltr, :rnd tlttlL tit • lull •r is l.Hti urtu~lt er l'111'11t uf L' Xjll' t•~:- io t t fcJ r IJ ·itt !:( trud llJ•ll llllllli t'l'U It •tl. \\' lr nt :rrr lll'l'llg"llttla"·' 'ttt rpt in tt of !<l tp •riorily il i. for Oil' ·ltlsS <Jf tttt'll LLJ :-uy tu utrolltL·I' !·Ia ,.:, ·, II'~: ktt tJW IJ •tt ·r· t lmn yon wll •r • yl)lll' lrtt • ittll'l'v:t s li •, IIH·t· ·fuJc le t u s 1;• 11'1.! 1'11 yott ; y •t until Litis tlt~y tlttti IHt:<IJt• ' II lll • tit 'I ll')' ttpon wi ll ·II ill • ltl:t ~~ o r llltlllJdud Ita: l•eeu J.{ll \ ' •r·ut•tl. l:u l ll ,. · tttltt·y of I> ' IIli i rn c· y Lrittrn phtm l is l L' Ht:hi ttg' til • ll' llT'ld th • f:tll:t<·y u f tlri s prin C'ipl•. 'l'lt 1 ·ell' •tt is work itt).!" o ut it: r ~~ ttlis to 1111 •rt frntt ·lri ;;ed individlllll d .,. ·loping- hi11t xel r tlr r\lt tg- lr fr •c- ll'ill i 11 th • •ttl'il'll11tll ·nL II ' i"l' lcc·t:-, ll lld II' Itil' h l• d ' I' •lop.' llit WK·l f, llSSb tittg' hi .' r •111111'-lll Cll illtL Iii; • <kn:lo pn t •trL 11 1' lit ·ir ittdiri<luul c· lmmc ·t •rH, lllltil tit • l'tttir • u~g- r· ·;;n t · udnlltl' •s itt it: prug r •,:; ltlll'lLl'd · g-e u e ml und u ll il' ·rsnl ·ontrort tllld rl'li tr ' lltl'ttL. Afr··epcuJit:,htttt)..(illgth irlil •r ti cs up n nwluttTh om u <.~ Jcfl 'c r son t'ILII s the two )ll)ok s o f cdu ·uli 11 n :uul lu<'al ~l' ll'gol' •nrut ·ttl w ill , iu tim •. thoro ltg- hly m n-; t •r· all tit • •xi;.; ·nt tptcsLiun tltut }H'l'S ' tiL tit •n1. •II· •;; till' :o !ttlio n. Tit ·y will read und ·t ndy Ji1 t' llt t: ll1 il' ll'l·.' tit • work : o f I I •ttry t;v orgt• , lou t will !'Ottlille lti ;-; t 'lll'hitlg'i to Lit • atnnx •ltll'tttu r tlt l'ir I ·t,.,ttl'l' hotJrs-a ,; tltt•y IIIli'(' ltrtlldt· •d.; ,If· otlrl't' l'lopitr..; :tiHI olrt·nt rt-', u :cll"i.' lti .• tit ·~i.' s llllltld uttitua1vly pl'l ll' l' to ill' u gt'l'lll t nlllt nttti l't~ rc·c· it,l·lt·. a ,.: !lll g t· 'IIi t rlltlr: tllll 'l nt rd will li ttal11· d o , uport t it · jt td•.{tlle rtts of 'l'l'll tire• mo,;t ltttll' iltirtg-. 'J'hvtt ll'lh'tt til l· f••t'<' <'l >l tit· tl'lttlt lr:t. t' c>ll<t ltl' l'l'd tit\' ('lllhl' l'\'t lli >"ll l 1\' )tic-lt l'I'L'l' l'h:t l'll! 'll' J'i. •;, lL fi'L' llllol irtll'ili ;..:l't l )ll'll)ll l' 1111 I ti cl'<Td t il • <·t•ttl'll'tiotl tt)lll tl llrL•tt l tlt:rt tl,; ad•1ptio11 Wll1 lllll'k Lit~· g t'l'llll'. l g'•HH I l<> tloe g'l'l'lllt·"t llllll lllvl', tl tl' l' 11 ill 111' tltL•rn ;., •ll'l'• n ·dt l\' · it to pnll' tit· · nt wltntl' l'l'l' I'O. t 11111i tltllll~lt it lltny itn·o lr • a · tltorotrgh tttt ·xti tH: liou uf a !'Ia~: m. thnt ot' tit· tit!L-cl :u·i, tctc ·rnc·y fr•.rn 111tt' lllitl . l. Jtt . \tt ll l'l' : ti ~ tll lltld :\illilbtn till'\' \I i l l ~- l·t~ l.ut th • in tcr:-.til itt l tll'ntlt wlril'lr lil'('llllt J•:rtti v:-. nll lil'l-, ,·ll'l l ittar·ily 111 h · t·nt'l' i ·cl ()II' l1y tlr • (ll'g'llll ,_ ll f till' iJ , JI!~ po Jitit• 1 Willlltill db: ll'l ll ll ,l!l.! llll'lll or lllL'it' J'tllll'iillll " loll[ Wlrt•tJ ()('l'll Sifltl dt.:lllll ltd l'o l<l ],1.! lll tllitl ·lrill h ly L'X·hv d l1y tit • .' Ut '~ t· o tt ' . l;~tif'c. \\\· t'L':l""l'l' L tlrnt ll'l' ltlll'l' f1tith to l,t•li '\'l' t1111i lh .,. will ~ut• <'t'""r' II:; "oln· ti n· gr ·n t p!'llld •rtt 111' llw tli,triilttti o tt ·~~ f II'L'IIItl1, and tltlll itt tlr •ir l'Oilltiott tit •c xti'L'llt•· 1'1:1 H '.' of \ ' nntlvrllill~lltlll Jlllll)l •r,; II iJI cJbll)l)>t:ll l' J':11111 It Wo rld II lrl' l' ';.,; l'tl •t'll ll'Ol ltfiH'l Will JH'l'\' llil. \\'l' IJl'iit•l't' tlrnt Wt•, 11..: .\111 ·ril'ltll ,.. , nr · ]oi utt ·t·rs itl tit· p ru·~l'l' "S 11f lll:tllki ttd l()l\'ltrcls IL lllt>l'l! l'&llltpit-tl' t~djtl'• l lll ' Ill Ill tlll'il' llll' il'lll\111 •ttl. Ht t lllllli'H L'IJ\' i :l>llllll'l ll b loL'i tlg ('IJotlittll llll"l\' 1lidL' ll l'd II.' 1111 , . J,y <In\' lr is i t1< 'l'l'l':-i ttg I; tHIII' ll'clg- • IJri ng: Jr itn· iutu ·un:<: ious ··oulu ·L ·with 1te11ly dl. 'O \' L· t·c d 1-.11'<• ·s uf 1 Jll ~lJJ!' '1 . 't' ll'lll' • is n •ilh ·r r •rlulous n or iu rcdulnns o f n •w 1li sco1· •ri s; it s ns:c tr L Wtti ts rt ol up11n ass ·rtion Jut up o n tc:st und ·x>l' t'im ·nt. )' •t it hn s its pn>ph ·li. · tlt!llll : trt: wlc •tt it .t'lllttii)L tid · what 1od w uld revea l. and tL SL' · .~ til tit • lt L'tLr Jtttu r · 11 11 ·11· Jn <•to t· wltil'lt w ill r ,. Jllttionizc tit • lllllt· hiu ·ry of pl'lltlll •tion ltiOl' ·thoroughly thau tl1 · uppli ·atiu 1 uf t 'lllll htts r .,. luti n nized li in tit • pust. In t1 ' lnlt·ll• ·tual w l'ld, ttl. · • new i<l 'IL.' ur c 1·cr :lmg-g-li11g fo r pr ·d >rllituttH' . ·II' t:llll w • tl! ll in thi s ttg'L' of lll'II'"Jinpt•r,.; and th • mpid db · •ntin a tion o f th o u g ht. 11hut will lie tit· p r ·d nnimLtitt).{ id •a u f tl1L' n ext d i.!<•arl c . ll ·r ·, us ·1 : •\\'It •r ·, Lh • lti l-{ h •;; t ~utd u obl ·: t eham t r w ill. tr u g~;ll' to '' t r u e to it · ·U:to bt• int ·lkt•LuH II r \'e rudou s und to ltu\· ·lit • c· u uru gc of it : '0 11 vit'li o u x. \\' i ; U\0\: ' I' 0 ' 'll! ·llliOil h 'IIIU)' foll ll W, h ' Will h LL \ ' ' llU i<l 1\.I ILiltl will ~e •k to ltnpr ·ss it 11)1011 hi s r 'lln w s . 11 will ('IJ il !< id ·r w~:ll tlr • wo n Js of II ·rl> ' rl • ' p ' IH' ·r: "\\'It o •v •r b : itat cs lu lilt •r I haL which h • til i11k : tit • hi g h •s i I ruth, I 'HL iL b • LCJO 11111('11 illlltll'ltllC' • Of tlll' tim , 1111LY I' 'IJS)IUI'I.! him s •If by J oo kill ~ ILl lti H n ·t: i111111 imp ·r~ uul p iut f l'i · w . L •t l ~i t u <July r ·uliz ·tit· I'lL ·t thui o pini o n i,.; tlJ • U" •ttt·y tnrc t1 ;;h whr<•h t'hHrtlC'IN udllpt: L'Xl 'l'lllllHI'l'llllg •ut c tJ LS toil~ ·If ; tlmt hi s opin i >n ri g htly foru · Jllll't o r thi : ll" •ney- i: 1L Ullit f f'lll'C, ('O ll s tilttlill~ With Otlr 'l' s l1 l' lr 11nils , tlr · ~t· n ·rul p 1\1' ·r wl ic-h ll'lll'k.' o.llL ~~~clt tl ·hun g- •s: 1111 I It • will p •r ·l'il' • thnt h mtLY ptoJ •rly g' l\' • lull utt ·m il t' • t u Ids inllt' l'lllll~t P<llll' ic·tion - lt• •l\'tll~ it Lo JII'IHiut• • whut ·ni: <·t it ltlny. lL is ltot f1H' nothin~ thut h · ltiL in hi tn th e:' sym p!Lt hi •: with 1'10111 • p ri tH·ip l •: llltd l'l' Jlllg'llllll<'l.! to ot h er:. 11 •, with all Jti · t' llJ >~ll'iil .,. uud ll"!Jirution:, uud hl'livf'!<, i. not un n<•<:id ·ttl hilt tl prll<hH·l o r lit • lime. Jl c lllll tr 'lil l' lltb •r thu.i whil • h • i. n d e,.-· ·1Hhllll o f lhl' p11. t, h ·is n ptLrent o f th • f11\11r ·: u.u<l thu.t l.tit. tlt uug ht · nrc u.s cllildrcu boru to l.tlln, wbi<.: lt be mu.y u ot l COM rviENCEMENT D AY. J( 12 JJELAW~RE COLLEGE REVIEW. DELAWARE COLLE<!E RE\'IF:\V. IJ 14 DELAWARE COLLEGE REVIEW. THE MED IC L PR FES I N. \Vh::ttever bu ·iness man es. ays to fullow, hi s DELAWARE COLLEGE REVIEW. many hoo. e m dicine ;-.sa profession? It is a le fa t that men pm ·ue th se v ati ns in 1i fc in w hi ·h t h y can rea Iiz _ t h ~ m c; t m on y. This certainly ·an not be . aid of th physi ·ian . True, th r a n.; ·o me wh make th a · umi.!lation >f wc:1lth th ~ ir 1 rim ary object in life, but the: c arc general ly doomed to di ·appo intm nt, if n t in this we rld, th y arc in th n xt. 1\:rhap. one n.:a:on wh y so many ·hoose the mcdi .tl profc. · sion is, th at man i:l ·o ntinu ally st'a rc hin g ~ r mort: " orlds t corHI'H.: r and cr,re,ltcr fi .Ids of lab r to xplore. Th ey know th at the gr ·ater t:,e :trua.gle in attaining the a endancy the greate r will be th e victory and h no r. But neither money nor fun c are primary obje ·ts of him who embark:-, in the noblest and grandest vo ation in lifl. There lies imbedded in man's nature a grander and nobl er s ntiment: 'Vh at is the motive which pr mpts the art i ·t to . pend months and y ars in the study of tr es, or still water, or ro cks o r hills, and t produ ·c th . e things on canva: at so much cost? ls it d nc fur money or for f m e? N, no . It is power with in him ri . i ng up and c.a lli ng for expression. Thus it is with the physi ' ian. Th e man who thu:-- wor ks and t ils- and it is at tim e· hard w rk with n hope c f gain, with no tho11ght of gain - is th e image of hi :-; 'rea tor. Did , o j make th world and m:n th :lt th y might crve llirn? }] ;) w an th ·y prol1 t Him? H mad th em in th exe rcise of TC tive power; a nd nun cx cr ·iscs hi-; own creative rr w ·r- frail now in this <"ompari~ n, but ~ till a r ·ative p wer, \\'i lh · out a ·kin g wlut motive pr mpts, with ut a. king whethe r it is to bring grief or pl eas11re. notice~l.l Th e tuJ cnt who toils on through uhjc taft T suhj c ' t is in pm uit f the sam . He an not, pcrhap. , g ive a reas n for hi s action ; he cannot say it i:; fur thi s r that. Th re is a motive-a moving for e th re · l>ut it 1.' thee hoof God' ow n ·n~a tiv c en -rgy whi ·h calls h1m and sti rs him to speak on ma rbl e, on anvas, in word or in ac tion, in poem or in novel. The fa t that the motive has ·on ·idcraule t d with man's u cess in any profession i cxemplifi d in the charac:e t.. of Cu ·ta us '\ lulphu.; and Nap 1 on. 'The former was a ' lui ·tian soldi er, leader in th grand, g l nou struggle for religio'.l lib rty · whil th e btter fou cr ht for hi s wn ag~ran iz _m ' nt. TIL ·x~lmple. of th sc great men and, ind e d, th e examples o f th p::t'it see m to lead u: to th c n ·lu sion that not only doc. a little g od o ~r om a great ·wr ng, b11t al that th ~ 111 n wb are engage in the grand work of lifting bun"'anll y from th e fallen nditi n ar th . c who ar the lea t li able t th rea te:t mi . ~ rtun c:. TiH! d ·to r f 111 di cine shoul b a man of ur ad ·ultm . f.>r the pr fe sion fa ph . ician 1. a mo'it r sp nsil>le ·ne . n~ rtunat I he is oft n a ma n of no ulturc at all. manifest has tht be orne that some of the tate have r tsse laws rtquiring recent IS gr:lduat s in medic inc, unprovid d with lit ra r d cg r c. or oth r ad r. .·qu a e crtifi ·ates f arqu ircm nt , to pass an xamination b ·~ rca ' .a te H1 ar l i~1 su h br~n ·h s a go to mak up a go d En g1~:-.h du atl n, and li ce nsed t pra ·ti · ·within the ir limits a r gr, nt cd nly n th i: c >11 liti un . Th t such e na tm e nt: hav • bee n f<und nen.:~:>a ry t:i a r proa ·h tL our m ·dical in . ti tt ion · and a rlisg ra to apr fcssi :1 that c.all:-; itse lf k .Hn r_·l l. r J man r \\' l man sho lld he ont~... a ph ·. ir i;tn wh ha -; n t penetra te d th " temple f 1.:-~1 ;>r '' to the h li e t of holies, who [i cls not at cad t cl:ly dawn th wakening or fresh inspiration pr mpt ing s If- acrifice; perhap. t toil with ut ·o:llpcn sa tion and to d cd of mer y unthankfully re eivcd. The work of th ph·. i Jan m y hav a wide ran e. In hi s ·hJra ter of c.onfcs r, and by vir tu of th freedom all ''ed hi · quc: tiunings, he r a ·h :s in div iriual Sl> Ur · s of the g~... ncral ·vii, wh enc e very th orough reform mu st flow. I rn m rality always aff-.! · ts the physi ·a l ,,. ·11 -bcing; ob ) ing the \· w of r acti on, bodily pain q ttic k ·n · th e moral ~c n se . Its logic i:; universall y pow e r ful, and if empha. iz . : d by prof '.s i nal a uthority may well b onvin ·ing and c n ertin g. T he physici ln who i" fcark . and ur c mpronti ...,ing in his ·ondcmnatinn of \nong and wh fl' ·b t hr.: ob li gation that opportunity imposes , will not ortly pr vent Ji -; as, hut onfT inlalculJ IJlc bendlt upon Sf>r·iet y in th e rn . t viral of its mor al r ·lation . Th life of th e ph ysi·c ian i. vi ariot t ~·--an m s h >m' aflcr labor o ~T~ ring fur th r. . I lc f mu. <. k and mind, h ping ~H an hour to r ·st, nly to hear th e dour-bell dis1 l hi · w,tkin g dream f happy hour · and to ann u1w e he i: " want d." It wtll not b th e bl....ak wind whist lin g about hi s cars that will awak ·n the n gr ·t that he had n t sotrght orne oth r professio n · 1t "'ill b the mise ry ons qu nt on folly r viC" , which per han e he mu t witn es ·. The physician who ha . . ecur d a {!ood pra ·ti e ne d hav lillie fea r for hi . future. IIi· ca 1 ital, knowl edge and skill 1annot he li : turhcd 1 y flu tu a tions in valtre, and draws an ·ver-in r asin r rate of inter ·~,t. Fin ncial r.ri : i · that mean di !->:lSt r to he IJll <.,in ·:: ma n, afft:ct him only indirc ·tly, and rar ·ly mak · scri u en ·roa hm ' nL · upon h h irwomc. Th e medi al adviser i-; the s cia! qual of his p ti cnt ·, and t h i. i: tnt of no o l h r a IIi n r, w i t h a s i ng le T b . ur , the re ar fa sht nahl · d ' t rs who c f.t hi nal> le ·li nt:-; d m nd tlwir undiv i }';!d a ttenti n · b11t g nerally th . urT 'S ftrl praC" t it ionc.;r se rv ·s both rid1 and poo r, and . uff ·r.· no di"l a "age m nt in th min :-; f eith ·r. ln th i: rc: pcct hi ·; j))"li ion i; 1111iq rt:.. . > o ·at iD.1 fu rni. lt c-.; occa· ion n. re apt lor the c ·e rci :c f tru' phi!J.n thr phy. · gu rd1an of th publi · he:1lth hi ffi cc is to relieve · uff~ rin rr ttJ re ov th e au es of and to cure disea · . People all upon t6 DELAWARE COLLEGE REVIEW. him to r ·li ·v th em of tlv·ir a ilm nt'" . l\'h :1ifcstl y th e g rand t and mo t sul>lime o f all sturli cs. l1i : fir: t dut y i:; t pr<.: p:!r him:cl f by every m ~a n s In pursuing th e study of it, th e whol e world in hi s p ,,. ·r i the ·nd th :1t th o. c who se<: k his s · ic nce i. a il ed upon to lend its aid; all th ._ in( o ttn ~, c l !-,hall have th e bcndi t of th e ac umulat ed ves iga ti ons and rli ~ ·ove ri cs of age have mkn(l\\ kd g · c1f hi : art, whil · p !icy and ons ·ien bin d to r nd r it one of th e mo ·t ex tended :dike li cta tc.: th at hi s advi ·c. ha ll r e fl ~ ·t the m st studi es of ur tim e. ;1dvann:d tl1 ught in matt er:; p~: rt a ini ng to th ~ Altho11gh .. o m e may wi c.., h th e existence o f a , :\ ·n i. · o f it. C d to bc proven lJ fore th e su l je ·t is ·o nsi lerTh l i~ · \\' Ork of th e physi ·i:111 mu. t be wroug h t d. a nd although th ere i. mu ch in th e study f it :nn n ., a ll th at i!-, m st ~ a c r e d in th li k o f the whi ·h wou ld lead to that onclusion, )et it is f,tmily. Sicknr . , th a t among his boob pn:s nt: ca. ily s en th a t fo r Theology to exist at all, the a ~c ri s of in teres ting pLt:nom ena, at th e l>cdsidc rx istence of (~ d must be pr - ·uppl)sed. lli C'rt ll . p ~tin, anxi ty, th e slnd ow of deat h- beIt is but natmal that man should investigate rcavcmc nt. ll is his pa rt t a II viatc, su ·tai n and thi s world whi h surrounds him; that he hould ntrc thc ~ i r k, if 1 :sil>lr, uu t it bring. 110t so study the relations of every part to the rest; llltt c h pi ·asu rc a. to tea ·h one's neighbor and and that he should endeavor to classify and arfl'l low -man th laws of h a! t h. T o sh w th em 1 ran ge them. t hal happiness is th e result of ol ·dicn ·e to law.'tarting at the v ry foundation of th e earth, to mak · th m fee l it and x mJ Jify it. This hemistry ~haws us that the various co mbination s l>rin ,•c; tht': sc ul ample rC\\CHd. I t ·I th e: him are a ording to c rtain fix ed laws, whi h ha\ c who thm. labnrs with raim nt g rrt tc ful to the eye not ·hang d sin ce th e beginning. It shows us, of Y(JOd n ·ss. It make him who thu s liv~;: s bea r in theory, th wonderful atomi affinities, out likL·n ·ss to th e Gr at I hysi1 ·ian . annot tell ns the suurc of th m. 1. t th e pra ·titi n rs ask th m'iclve., if, a; a I' isin g a step hi her, we come to rga nizcd title, :t r · th ey m n tnt e and vittu ou:? N:1y; m::tt t ·r. H ere we arc onfro nt cd by something I IH di c;tl mLn <t re 101 r xa :11pks. Th ey Jiv e down whi ·h nev e r has, and never will b , dcfin ·d . \V c th eir principles. If th ·ph · ician is i>IJm cless, find matt r compell ed to ob y anoth r and gn:atcr f.,r h · is oft ·11 ,·i:- itcd wi tIt I lam , he 1 a rn <; a.l. o fo r · , th an its natural affinities. The lemcn ts th :tt II ' ·n kn w ho v to he gr~1 t ·ful. C ent! ness do not co ml>ine willingly to form a Jl ant or :t nd ~ ) tnpathy <1 1c <J wliti cs up n whi ·h hi s pia animal, forth instant life lea ves it, th y s t to in th e comn lttnit) vcr~ large ly~ ' pcn.ds. Expcri · wo.r k to tea!· d .wn wh.at ~h ey hav unwillingly c tH T has f 111nd no h1gh er sa tisfa t1 n th a n that butlt up. \: s, life, whi ch IS so sub tl and y t :u whil h com s frt 111 a s ns f duty d on ; if mi ghty, bas baffl ed th e ~ill and .k t: ow) ed c:re of a thm11 gh its fait hful 1 er f rman , life ha s b n l arned world, ~ r en tunes, and It I ' still a.. mu ch J•ro ln ng d, and . tt ffc ri ng mad m rc tolerabl , ttn so lv d as eve r. surely th e on:c icnti ous ph y. icia n, hav in g fi11i shrd \Vhat ha T~1eolo gy to d with th ese? l o you It is course, may lo k a ·ro. s th e yea rs a nd 1J at not . ee th at m the . tudy of Nature we have a p ·arc.: . Natural Theology! That in the phenomenon of !if we have a proof of the existence of an etern al "Whnt is nol•k? tis th ' fin r 1 nrt ion o f ur mind nnd hcrlrt, r ator. That lJy the great regularity and sym _ J.inked to ~o methin g- . till divil\cr th :1 11 m er~t l.ll lfT U.lbe cnn in 1part; metry whi ·h we find, we learn one attribute of Ever prr> nl pti P~ . ,. r s ci n~ so111 , impr ve n1 cnt y .t to plan, G od, order. The perfe tion f ord r is seen T uplift c1ur r ·I I >w ltcill'', and lik e m :-~ n, feel for mnn. I throughout nature . By the labors of hundred f men for two thousand years this great world Wh at i: nnl•k ? th. l whi ch pia ·e<; tnt h in its cnfr.lllchi,;etl has b en syst mized until it is :tlmost umplete. will • As we b g in to study th individual from I . ·:-~ vin~ ~~ :rs lik e angel trn ·es. th :1 t mankind m:-~y fllllow ~ ti ll ; am n th e thousands, we are still met by the Even lh llugh ~t'o rn' · malibn:ml ginn cs prove him poo re .~ t . a. me perfe lion ot order in its individual arrangehi ., da n, men ts. Th e old, l>ut still un:msw red, and we J I c's th nnl,lc who :1 lvnnce · freedom nnd th e ca u•;e may sa.y, unan sweral>le ar ument of d e ign is lll <l l l !' f und in nature so oft n and so perf t, that in fid elity i almost on tra in ed to admit it. It w uld take too mu h tim e to numerate eve n a few of th e thing that show spec ial design. Ev ry wh re th e world i · teeming with th ou and of li ving being. , a h of whi h di -I Jays the handi w rk of God in Its tru ture. \V e may be abl e lJy means of th e knowledge TilE L 1 \\ e ga in in th e tudy of nature, to di cover some The logy or the sc icn whi h tr at: o f th of th e attrilJut s of God, hut what relation d r elati n whi ·h xist b tWl: n (J d an tl un1 n 1 i: we, a. th e hi rr hcst of his reat ions, bear to him? I I DELAWARE COLLEGE REVIEW. 17 ---------- \Vh at i hi will toward t:s? In the beautiful God' s hildren hav not lH::c n <ii. app int t'd h fi r11r f had I> urn , " \ find Jltr.· ·lves in this th e lett 'f they have rc · ·ivcu. I t ha:; platn a11d \\'orld, lik e childr n in a pal ac i>nilt and furni : h- simpl :-~n . w rs to all th e mo t imJ ortant que!ltic n · c uy a roya l father wh om they hav ~;; n vcr see n. that ar dev ' iop din the st udy of tntun..: . Th y ad11 ir it. grand eur and bea uty, and wonAs th r ha e be ·n matH' who have ~ pent th eir Jcr at its marv ·lou adaptations to their wants. Ji ve· in see king out th e hiclJ en I> ·a u tics of 11at ur-e, As th ey in crease in age, a ttd tht!ir want increase , so th rc hav been tn::tny wh hav pati ently stnu n w adaptat ion . arc constantly di ce rn d to meet ied th e a r d pa (Y s of re\'e lation, finding in th ·m their wants. rtainly the ·e ·ondi ti ns would all th hea rt d ires to know; all th e mont 'tHmt.; awaken in them some d . tre to kn w if thev were qtt e: tions answered, and all anx iety r Ji cvcd. to co ntinue t en~ nt at th eir own 1leasu re, and Whil e othe r ar vain ly seek in g a n an . wcr to their en joy su h provisions for v r, with out any ac- , apprehensions from other ·our ·es, th ey q 1ickly ountability to the 1 rovid r." Th ose four g r at find an an swer. \Vith the revelation from God Theology wa <; questions th:lt were suffi cient to awaken to a new lif e one of th e greatest writers, John Bunyan, I completed. It could not h th rwi -e, for Cnd would prese nt themse lves to every thinking man ' in his wi sdom, kn ·w well what was nc -cs~ary f •r with sol mn and awcful for e. "\Vhen ·e arne it. ·ornpl ti c n. I? " \\h at am I?" "\Vhither am I goin g? " , Thu ·omplctcd it be orncs one of th e mo'it " \Vh_at do s God want me to do?" w uld l>e inter stin g studie. . It may be pursued i>y all, asked by all, and they would ask in va in. There with th e grea tL·st plea.- un:: and pr fit. Not only is not th leas t probability of an an~ w er to any 1 thi s, but it i'i th e duty of C\' ry ne to inv sti ga te of th em, to he found in natur . Th e discoveri s I its truth .;;, and we arc sure it su h invcs tig <tti on c:~nd in\'cstigati ons of a thou and yenrs ha ve not I . .: c ndu ct d with an unlJia d mind, and on· found an answ .r. \ ith out 0t hcr mean~. f kn ow- willin g to jtrdge fairl y, th · t th e r suit need not l>e ing-, we would never know wh ·t h ·r there 1s an th r feared. Ev ·n if it he d n by one who wi .~ h "; li~· other th 111 tlr prese nt , and if so , we woul<i to prove it f.dse, th e wond er ful beauty and rl'a. 011 not know t: c means by ,,·hi h th :-~t oth er life displayed m:-ry be en ugh to ch· 11''C hi .:; vie ws encould be nwde a pkr~ s:-~nt c nc. \Vh ·n dc:-~th stcj tir ely. in and t<d.;: cs away ou r loved ones, nature can giv e l\lan ow s it <ts a duty to him self to cnnsi In II.' no co111fort. 'o ld and c:-~ lm she lo ks upon thi · . ui>j ed can·fully, fur it c:t rri e · \\"ith it th . .: u·; and ~ay., "They are gone from you for v r th uuht of ctcrni:y, an l til rcforc, it shottld re and n ver again will you b ha ll them. " \V e rei\'t.: th . con:-id ·ra tion th at tcrnity r cprirc: . mi ght draw S( me poor and weak ·o n ·lusion s from L ·t him, th en, de ·id e for him elf, nc\· r fur g ·t nature, uut th y wou ld b .-o far short of certainty 1 ti ng that he is dtciuin g th 'most momentous that th ey would giv no co m~ rt in times of th e qu es tion of mankind. rr rrates t sorrow. We ar · in this wo rld and pitia ~ . . l>l c would be our · nditi on , with nothi ng but the R \'. A. N. h. · tg-~nn, . books of nature for ur guid . But an all-wise 1 c.r cl th annual ~ra~tt on· : ubJ ·t, and ever watc hful providen ce has se n our neces- tt n f th lei ·a I.C.~ ov ·rn m nt. ~ ity <-~nd pro\'ided f1Jr it. lle has given us a writ - 1 \\'as ,·cr an hour 1n 1 ngth an l ten cxpressi n of Hi. will. Like those ch ildren st. It \\'a S lfl1d ul t uly th m st in th e pala e, th ere will be some who will glad ly I ~ llr ss that\\' C\ ' T had til 1I asur rece ive it a:-; a lett r from their Father, \ hilc 111 g t< · others will doubt its ge numcn e. . . \V e have the I Pr sid nt <~It~\\· II onf< .rr cl th c1 gr ' ' .of g r at Boo k of nat ure whi ·h we kn ow arne from B. A. upon\\ ti!Jam : • 1111t h, f P ~n sy lv ;.u~ta , our father, th e eternal Creator, and by simply a n l th ~I ·~-r t.: f B. S. upon J< hn I:... J. \\ ht:-.t. mparing th e tw we ran easi ly de ·ide th ques- I rand S. A. l?u han an, both f D ' la\\'ar ·, anJ ti on. And b Ji eve rs are mad glad h. the di - H ;;u:r ' 1\ I. I an:,. of TV~ar ·land. ovrry of the 11\0.' t strikin g ~ imilarity [ th e two. ~ h r cbm;1tiO I1 pnz \\'aS ;t\\:ard cl t Ba ·;,rei That of naturt.: is grand ancl xcitcs th e <1dm ira· II 1~; I an I al: th J apan : pnz fa valua l I' ti o n f mankind, but th at f r ,. lation i:; ven 111 clal. .. mor grand. By th e lah1>rs o f man wh ha · } o h~1 . n )' 1 \\ ~, the rc qten~ o f th e $ ~p.oo devoted mu ·h tim e tu the work , it ha: b .:e 1 'hem 1st ry prtzc. I he first tw pnzcs wcr :1\\'aruproven b yond a doubt th at th y have one :1nd cd by ."enct;.~ry. f .'tate ... ubbury and th e last by th ame author. H w happy th e children of H erman JJ ussy 1n a1 pr J!IT te rem rk ·. Cod are to know that this is the w rk of th · ir •ath er . \Vi th what a g rn . t h .Y sr a n th e . a n d · t:'S f \" A FTER~O ::-J • . pages to find the will of Go . I nger n "ed I \\' f:() , r .. ), th y live in doubt and un ertainty, but all may 1 Th t: iati n m tin the Prc!>idcnt's know what relations th ey bear o their rcator, if r m at 3.30 P . r. Thcr~ was a full att ndancl', 1 I they will but read his letter. I and riou · matt rs were d1 ussed. Thr ugh the DELAWARE Ct)LL EGE REVIEW. 18 Rl.ggs & GA1·1es t ! lVTE 2'8 2E ·+·lll rn1 111 n.1 Dr. g, F. English, illl1u cncc of them cti ng th rc ,-il l be . i prizes r,ffnc d nex t year, l·nown a. foll ws: lkntOlt' s Lat in prize, ~ 1o.oo : Gov. Di rgs ' De ·l:llua ti n DE~TIST;, 1 priz .: , go ld medal ; l ·~c k ·l' s pri z<: $ I o.oo, for excell r~ce in C l' rrn ~m · F ·rri :-;' 'hctni stry prit. L', 1513 Delawar~;. Ave., \V1L~ll~(;'f :\. 1 ] c\·. J. ·. \\'ill is' Enturn I gi ·a! prize, 703 M arkct Stre \\'1 1.\11'\t ;Tl' r 11 1: 1.. e lt- ( r i An 1li v r :1 Branch O ffice: New~rk. \II brnn c lte ~ of till: lJc nt a l pro fe ;o;iut t ~I, d lfull y attcndL:Ll ry . to. \\' E 1J . . E ~ Dt\ '\' .ll" :\ E 1 5. -= ~ ·cw:uk u!fiCL' o p e tt Tu c,;d.t ys a n ~ \ . 'a tmd.ty ~ ' :1C h \\'C 1·. f 'I'll' ViCty-~.c t <>:1d A11nin.: rsary of the J)dta Phi -:\onp.trcil I.nun clry . Li tnary ."' m it:~y was helJ in th e 'ollcgc Ur;-Jl<H) \Vl'dn<: .. day e\-ening, June 15. \t eight u' ·lock EAB LE::JS th ·o rchestra pla yed a liv ly air, whil e the mem" ~ arah E. Zigler I hers >f ~h . ·u ·ictr_mnr hed_ in tw o by> tw , lead ~alleries ~ !\" ~"'/' 'F ,. . ! by th e h ~llrm an, 1. D. Hc1 1, and h.cv. J. . \ _ 11 ' • 1 ' ·. • 11 .r~ ~· . \Villi s. Th e xer i es w re open d by the h . v. I -Ar\ I·. \ .\ 1' J, • lH.L. j T. H. Knowlc~, aft r wh i h th C hairman made a L OOKING-G Li\.SS Raogcs, Stoves, rurnaces, few neat !ntrod u tory r mark_· . \ V. c . n:ith \V ,\ 1\ 1~- R ) J;\IS, <>1' 1·: .· C:I' .\TE .·, Et c. wa!> th en Jntr duc'd, and d ·ltv r d th e JCty I Br6 Chestnut St., Philada KITCH E N HARDWARE \d lr :s, upon " An im in Life." Mr . 'tn ith'::; '"' i\1.1. KI.'IJS, i\~ ll a drc. s was li: t n d t with pe uli ar in te rest, on I R o,;'l'rs' Crrmts, En.~-rovi11.~~ ! .. l .lii'S ..: SI'.·I CI/1-'l'r a · unt of til X( ell nt advi ·c wh1 hit o nt ain d. The addnss . h " d ·arl'lll l pr 1 aration . (/) The Pcv. J.. ·. "illis was th n in trod u cd ns the 1 ~T IC~S o:·ator f th e \'t: ning. Mr. \Villi s' attrar·tive , ~ ~ ::: ~ matter in addit io n t th e xc ll n e f his ad- 1 v u ··h,l'r th :l n:l.l.rn t ~H.:r,n nd drc:. , fair ly won for him the titl e of ora tor, le ~ ~ 0 ::I Hcals Like M aglc . I stowed llJ on him in virtue of hi s po:,ition. 1lis ::c ; ::a a ldrcs. abounded in so und advi · ·, wi:e and ,..; .\h ·nt · for - 1 ---------- 1 olt's courl Plastor B (,,:-~ I· I '\ UI·:~Tl srr.r.: .) U 1 Paintings g ~ ·h c ....... larly P.. ag s '0 11 .h d in _t l! . most c l ~·gan t I and rh to n al language. A c nt1 tsm f hts ad·~ ~ "d drc: s w ·w ill _n t at t 1111 t. w 1~ ~t.c_r mthl _t,h .. 0 1ch s~r~a'. . A. Bu r: h.~nan 520 COMMERCE ST. ~L'Iltl 1 nts i 11 . tnmps 1 d ltH!t cl t~1e l~te\\c_ll Add t ~S:, to th e. 1t . f,,r :1 l.1rg-e. hcet, or 2 5 cent,; In ·onn e ·twn wil h h1 -; alt.:dt tory r mat ks, f,r three. Btt ·hanan d ·li' rc j :~n x ·r ll er.t \) ration on "The Ne·w ark Pharmacy ' phc:c >f \\ >man's :\ ct ion.' ' Th e. peak r sp ke is th place to buy LT, wi th con ·i lt'rab le ea;-;e and in a clear, di ·tin ct 1 voic ·. \ Vith fe elin r wo rd s h._ m urne 1 th e dePHAR MACIST , parture ·of th e lass of ','7, fr m t :~ ose ln. ·i PURE DRUGS, .if,,r<·ct 7111 d s,-.rtlt Strt'l'ls, halls and clo ed with a loyal au1 ea l to pres nt Patent .Afrrlit inrs, \\'11.~11:\CT<>\', DFI .. and past members t sti ll hold th D Ita Phi lye !Nffs, l1anner hi tr h in th · es ti n1atio n of it s friends. H _ Comb, Br11sltf'.f, Ph 1 dl'livnL·d on' of th e ft n st F:ucwell \ ddrcs c: P('ljillll t.1 , ('/( . i adelphia Badge Depot. ! ·~i·\'l'n'd_ fur . \' ·r,,l . e~rs. . I l 'hy: i i:ln . 1'1: : crip!i om; I h · h 1 rhl · ·nt rt;un1n g and enJoyab l ust m nnd hmdy 1, ·tpc · 'ulll J acob Somerset, f calling upon old tn mb •r for : h rt xtcm1 - 1 pound<::cl with care . COLLEGE & ~CHO OL ra nt ou" :- I H~t'C'hcs was re. rtt d to. A ft r mu :-; i T T · -Presid : nt Pmnel l, IL ~-Knowl es, J. H :u ey E. · DILWOR H, \Vhitcmnn, J. H t'rringan d P • ] . . \Villi. mad DRUGGIST, impr mptu :- pe che~, whi ·h w rc en ·o uragi ng t ~EWARK , 1>EJ. \W \RE. 722 CHESTNUT Street, th, memb .: r~ f th e r di.a Phi and wer re eived all at nny hour r dny or night. Flii!.ADE!. Fl!JA. with r(lpturou app lau . c. U v 1? Z, JAM ·-8 E3 1 BADGES, ADVERTI E IN THE DELAWARE COLLEGE REVIEW. CIRCULATION 1;,000. DELAWARE COLL EGE REVIEW. Artistic Paper Hangings AND "'\IVINDO""\JV S:H:A.DES., J 1-22 MAR.f..~ET W RK D NE Street, I:-i TilE r: TV!LiJ:fiNGTOlv~ UKT RY D el. ITY PRICES. AT ff&_ 'ampl e · mai l l when r quested . DUB ELL, 1 {C I ~· 'J •l ,_, l~ ".l..', l ' III J.A JJEJ.I' I IJ.\ . THE HOLDER will R ECEI V E \ 'V iltnin:.!.' i <ln, At Spe · i l ON E DOZEN ""\JVORKS. MONUMENTS, TOMBS, t9ndo~u-z e~, &c. The Largest Stock, N~we st esigns a nd Lowest Price! in the Slate. University of Virginia. SUMM E R LAW LECTU H.ES (n in · w ·kly) l1egin q th Jul y, t SS7, nncl en tl qth . 'cpt ·ml .er. 11 . vc pro\' ·.d of ~i gn. 1 use- bt. T o student: who de~1g n to p ur ue th 'II' studies a t thi -; or olh r l .aw :-1 lillOI; _d . T th o-;c who pro p se to r '::tel private ly; nnd 3d. T.n pr:1 titit.mer-; w.hu I.1nvc not had the advanta ge o f sy,tcln'1l l C 111stru ti<Jil , h>r c1r U· br apply ( P. 0. L' ni ver:-.ity of \ 'a. ) to j ll ll '~ H. ~ I I 't •l~ , Pro f. o m. a 1Hl . ' ta t. l .a w. ' \1.1. .\'1' WORK GUARANTEED FIRST CLASS. DAVIDSON & le nt $ _______ __ S(~'ll ed ·---- -------------- ____ -------------------S. J. WALK E R, Photo. A rtist. DELAWAR E - Steam Marble and Granite ~ALL CIGARETTES. E. THIRD STREET, 2 - 1 igar lt e . ' mol' ' r,.; wh are willin g to p:l)' a littl · m or th a n th 'p ri c charged~ r the t!R t lt. 'AI\Y T Ri\IJE 'H:AREl"J'ES will find Tli.I. ' JJR \r\1> superi or t a ll thers. The Richmond Straight Cut No . x Cigarette s :trc m ad · fro m th IJrigh tc;.t, mo, t d ·li cak ly na\' reel a nd high ·;.t . t Ctll.ll l .t·:AF g r wn in \'irgin ia. This is the Old an d Ori ginal brand of Stra ig ht Cu t 'igare ttcs, a nt! was broug ht out l1y u-; in th e ) ar 1X7 5· ~ Jh :w ,\I\ E t>F bt 11 XI' I<' ' " • a nd b. rve th at the Fl l' :-.r !\A;\ I E 1\ S HEI.Il W i: on V ·ry J!:l •J.: ;lg '. ALLEN cr G l ' TER 1a nufa tme rs, l JC' JJ ;\ 1 :--:n, .fly preSI'IIIillK t/tis --?«THE HATTER~~ No. 11 1\ ONJ) STRAIGHT CUT No. A- K- G USTIS:J ER0 ... =- 5th and King Streets, WILMI NGTON, DEL. -TJJ J·:- Ar i t Heir Cu tt r n1 h \I' ) DEER P.rlRA" .1./0TEL. J _ "'\IV _ P ARRIS:H::J Fulmer's Dining Rooms -PRACTICAL- WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, At the old tand form erly occ upied by W. . Wo drow, l'tEW ARK, DEL. 1.1r pecial attention given to RErAIRI~<; Fine Watches, ·.at the old land. FOR LADIES AND GENT , No. soB Market Street, NILMI NGT N, DELAWARE. • DELAWARE COLLEGE REVIEW. 20 r I TRAUTWINE S POCKET-BOOK " ll oncl nll JU CStion the b est prncti al manu~! forth a nginc r thn.l has vcr nppcar ·d. ' - I' ROF. ;EIIi{(;l·: L. \ 'us E, ·.E., in" Manu'\! ror 1' . ilrond E ngineers." TRA. UT""'\1\TIN"E;,S RAILROAD CURVES "i · prolJnl,Jy th most ompl 'l nn(l p r~·ct lr nt i" on tho! single ...,u l•jE: t oi' Railro:ttl i,; pu\ ,li:.hcd in the Eugli ·h \anguagc . "-En.;'in arin.~' . \ ·L',,•s , .7" ~1 ' J 1 ''6. EYS' urv s thnl ""'\J\TF[EEL~EN'" : TO Dll . HUM PHRE YS' H ook o f ld t 1 isca !'<' , Cl oth & Gol d Binding 9, IS T 11 4 l' ug•·•· "ltlo S lo•o•l E u l! r u \lu g , ~I \ I I .I'II FH O : . en verv h' un .\ l.lllll ' ~. a ny dea ler in T1 ile t . · aps - -:1:- Ove r 17,ooo B ottles "Ideal To oth Powder" Sold Since J an. xs t, 1887 . 4- G r and P rize A w a rds-4 ;\ ·w < >rl a ns·, 1 X84; J . ui ... vill , .Ky., 1 ~ ) , l'hd acl lphi.1, 1 ' 'G; . T Jun r loll , ~~~G. 1'1 ·n s<l nl In ·, ·, ll anlc ns th (;um ,;, l' n.: vents IJ<.:cn y a nclle:n · ·.-. ~ ~~~. ~ \.~ '\. ()\.\ the 111 uth inn. 'wcc t and llealth nlition. A ~ l · y ur I >ru rgi st ror it· or, s 111 loy ma il -sc. per houl . \ ' ,\ 1 L 111\0T I I ERS, -3< ?l larkel St, l'hil. d ·lphia, Pa. A shoul<l n tiry u. nt on ·c, in r c ive cop~c · re..;ubrly and pmlllp Iy. Th 's · wh wi.;h t< ru rthcr the 111 l rest. r I >clawnrc ulh:gc nnd the J~E IE\\ : h uld uh scribe forth R1·:\ lEW nnd imlu cc llh rs to sub=- rille. Adverti~ in th RE\' IEW. l'atroni 1 it. n lverti:.er ·. ontribute nrticlcs aml item · of intcllil!ence. r ADVERTI SE IN T:a::a ..LF>:F>::EJ..A..L7 E LKTON, Cecil county, Md. IT HAS A LARGE C I RCULATI ON. $ 1 A YEAR . 1'1/E AFPEAL P UBLI. Ill. G CO. • DELAWARE COLLEGE REVIEW. ~OID F:H:OSF:H:~TE For Dyspepsia, Mental and Physical Exhausti c>n, N ervousness, Diminished Vitality, etc. Prep:1red a ccord ing to th e d irect ions o f P r f. E. r. l I or: ~ rd, o f a n brid ge. A prepa ra ti on o f the p ho. ph a t f lim e, m agnesia , pota ·h a nd iron ' ith pho:p~wric ac id in such form as to b~ feadily ass imil ated by th e syst m. Universally recomm enclc 1 ;m el prescril·erl by pl1ysic ia ns o f a ll sch oo ls. Its action will hnnn o ni 1. wit h su ch ·timubnts as are n cce ·sary to take. It is th e b e ·t toni c kn own , furni shi ng su·;t nance t both bra in a nd uod y. It mak a clc lic iou dri11k with w. te r and ~uga r nly. As a Brain a nd N e rve Tonic. -UR. E. \ . RoBE J<T ' ., snys : "From my experience, ca n cord iall y recomm e nd it a a. brn in a ncl ne n ·e ton ic, c.: 1 ecblly in n rvou · l)u,; dys peps ia , etc. , etc. For Wake fulness . - !JR . \ JJ. J.I A~ I P. J.trf'II I ER, nunal ' ~ . Y ., S:l)'S : "I pre ·cribed it fo r a a tho li c pri est, who "':tS a h a rd stu dent, for wak efuln es:, ex treme nervo u-;ne,;: , etc. , nml h e r ports it ha · bee n o f great IJc ne lit to h im." In N ervous ·'bility.- D R. Euw 1 ~ F. c. E , Portla nd , 1\Ie. , sny · : "I h a ve p rescriucd it for m nny o f the various form s o f n ervo u · d· b ' ity, antl it has never f.1 ilecl to d o good. " For the Ill 1 ff .:ts of Tob acco .-D rc C. A. F ER:'\ \J. D, to n, sn ys : "I ha ve used it in en.. es of impa ireu nerv( function with be nelicw.J re. u lt 1 e: pecia lJy in C:l. C.:S wh ere the S)'S(Cil l is af t.:Cted U)' the toxic action of to JxtCCO." no. INVIGORA7ING, Prices reasonable. STRENG7IIE~ J: G, JJEA L71IFUL, R EFRESJ.IING. P a m1 hl e t g iving parti cu lar: m 'l iled fr c. Manufactured by th e RUMFO R D CHE M I CAL WORKS, Provid ence , R. I. REECE BOO. .IIIilll-, Tho following honkR nr pulJlish rl in ncr.t pamph l t form, many of th m handRom ly ·cH. rl, and a ll tu ~·~~t\it~·~o~~ f,~~.'· c~;:u 1 ~~~~~ ~~~~t1::~r~~·r ~·~~~~~~c ~~~~~ ~~o~•'/3 ~~~;t S~~oo 0ca~f/ ~•~'ci.·~;oC·i~ ~g~·~l~t~ ~~: lt~~it?uu 1 1 illu ~t r nt 1 A n cllot c of th o ltt•h <' lllnn • .\ rnllt•ctlnn 1 ~:::1 \~.~ :~i~~ nf h nmnron~, : :.\,::·:;: ,1,!'·'~~~~·~·.·r~·;;·,~~ :.~~.::t,.~\',~ ~~~::~ ·.~·~·~~:;~H~tn :~ ~~;~:~~ 1 0 Out oftht• l" cn. A 'u'' I. lly C't .AIIA AII OIIRT ,\, :}f.nt~~~~~·~ ~~.t 0Y~~,.;' ;;;~~~r~: ~!{'·~ ~!·:;·~· u~·:u.;f~~K •• Hl nl' lcs <•f p l'lsun lift•, of t h I; I' 11 L Uunomla, of Jll r. Lin coln, ••I c. 0 01.1.1:>8. J ll1r•trrtled. 'l'h J,lt't' of' G c n c •·nl 1 • ~ . G nuat. l y W. A . l' K1'KUM. Th c r, m•t. of th o UuUt vcn11. A ovol. n y J\l les J\l uLOO K. l\' IJh pni'LmiL 111HI tolloo·t·lllu~tl'flllunR, llltt•trutrd. l'o c m,. , by Jcth n (;. \\' hI HI cr. 'J'hn only rh nt>ed iti on A U •ntl Jlcnrt. A Novel. Dy A nth or or " Oorn 'l 'ltoro c." pn ltiiHiol'tl -• hooul• l l•• In en•1·y lotoiiHt·lo nlo l, }1/ll ~lntl cd. Cl ul ul' th l' U t• pfh !l. A 0\'CI. fly !It 1111 ~o WA Y, J'O l' lll ll, h y Jl e ur·y \\'. Lou.:l'dlvw. l'iu 011 · ·uu nfTord to 'J'h Uomnutl c Ad\' utu r c s o1 n .MJJI, muld. '' 'ovcl. !Jo w iLiuou J l hiH lluo• ~oolh•o • Jioon. Jlllldtl'fllr•rl. n y 'I'II U~ I.\ K II AIIIrV . l'o c m ... b • .\ lfn•d T t• uu y"" "· 'l'hl • WOI'Ic rnntnlt18 some Jn th(• llolldnyl'. A 'n,·rl. lly ~I •nv rt:ru . 11 v. ofth lltH'tiLt•utnl"'"lllonMul t lous; •··n trnt'l l.•lll rcu to. 'J' h o Ji c lrto A10h l y. A l'iovr•l. My MrH. II >.:..uvWoon. J'nrl or Amu~ •· uH• ut o<. A ln•·t;o ull oc lloon n f A c tin ~: ChnMh<o< or Mrs t A uvol. Jl y W ti.KIK Culot. l. s. Jl ltt~lroted. r n<l s , l':ll'ltll' ll rnii iiiH, Hlontl<•w l'nntm u lllH'K , On mos, f'll ?.t iOH , 1\tor~ Hi tter thun ncuth. A !\uvul. lly t ho A uthur ur ctr., for ~rwlal ~(n t h ·•· lns;t~,puhlh: ntu.l )11·h •11tu u t ~r ttth t iii CII I K " Uoru '!' horn •." lliHI venin ::• Ill h!OIII '• l lliiHII'ttl tl. UnrriMtou'o< (~I ft. A Novrl. By n t 011 C'OSWAV. l lltnlratrd. l\Jnu unl ol' fo'lurh•ul c urt'. 'I 'llrh~R tho beR t mo th otl n fprop'I' h e Futnll,lllcll. A 'nvo•l. Hy A uthu rttl" On111 'l'htuut•." ns;ntl ns; ni l Jill' tlllft•l'lllll plniiiN, h•lls huw In rur diHrnso nntl A hnclow nn t h c 'J'hr c t<huJ.I. A :-im•t• l. lly MAllY( '. ll AV. lll'll!ll Pli (Oi nRo•l't JlCR I K, gl\'1'• d Ire ·tlo> II Rr,,. lllnkl ns; IJ •nutlfll l flo rnl 'l' h ( )ur .. ' uf(]urt·w. A 1\uvcl. lly nnthur (II" Uur 'l'llfJIII . " 111111 ot ht•r tlc •·lt-•·•, fur whuluw s;nrtl •t llll tr, !'I c. l ll u6tro.t d. 'l'h Jllutchford UcCAUCIIt. A 1\uvcl. Uy ll uu u CONWA Y, Uul•l • L11 :-4 u tll work, t.:nlttlnac nnrl Croc h et. on- llltutrat d. tnln lng olt••l l( ntl ntul <llre1·tluns fo r ni l kh11I K or ~' u 11 cy N ·mil o· A Qu • •n A mona t \Vonacn.. A Novel , Dy tho a uthor or w u rk , Al'tl•tlt: ~: 111 b ro l d •ry, J.nru 'Vork, Kulttln g, 'l'uttlu g, "l)uru 'l'h o rn ." CF~:·.~~;::~ ,;~~.~~~~~~ 'i~~Rll~"lt.tcdi. cnll cc tl on or lhrlll ln ~; nnr- ~~~:~~~;s ,?8r~ i 1 ,'~ \~~~f•·=!'1 ;:;:~ucu, 111 ny or lh~m w r tucn uy uc tuul Yanke \VIt mul Jlumor. A coli ctl on or hu morous :~~l~s~~~~c~c~:c~j ~;:,· •;!:c:~.' ll _£~·;~~~~:~:~~ by Lbo l calllug ru u uy Th., My11t. r y ut JUuckwood Grnnare. .A Novel. Dy lfn, MAY Ao. K J.' l,l>ltll l>/11 , ~t: Et.':,~yt~~".! 1111tor~. ole~o,.~f. ~;.~ir;~;~~=·o. AUS'I'JN. 'f'lr.~·~t~f· ~l.~.rr~n§~·~cl~ ll~,·~:~A. 1:ry,~I~A: \~~~;,~RAoooN. ~ ~!:~'!f~oo~:~~v':' f N":vv~~· Jily ~:·.~:::';{"::~~~~-:;horne." A A Nov I. fl y uutlwr nr" n.. r.. Thorne. " nJ~::K·. J.:lttl1~~~.~~!~[.llleo My tcry. Nov~l. lly <; u Au t. &a Jn~rll· rl cw 11nu lll'• \V cddcd nncll'urt d. A Novt'l. n y nulhnr or" n nr ThornP .•, A t'ort.uno JluutcJ"• A Novul. n y ANN II~ T II UMAH, J ll'd, tt::':'l'o~h"C::~'~'N"~vctcrr 0.vclny~fr~~ A/I'~s;:~ ~~~~:~ · i ll' a. s-Wewlll sendanyfour ofthoabo v bo ks bymallpost.palduponr c ip t of onlyTw lve~ nt111; a ny lm for lllli enta; any tw ntt,;,ftve Cor liO Cent ; tho otire li st (40 books) for 't& ~en til; tl JC nLlr li Hl bound In board s with cloth back, for 81.10. Th e nr th ch ap st books ever publi sh d and •unrau t N.l wo r th thr tim s tho money asked f or them. Satl~actt onouarant ca ormone11 refttnded. J>os ta~to &tam pH t.llk n for frn tlonH of o. uollar. .Aa to our reliability, we refer to noyn wspnp r publish din New York, llkcwiR to th omm rclal Ag •ncl s. Toovery ooos ndingforthoentLreU8tofuook8 &111lbov . we wl11 8 nd, without extra charg , elth r sixty cents' worth of tho Imp rlnl Pion d Pnper Patterna,tobelllectedbyyourslffromacattll gu whlchwlllbes ntyou,orTboP opl' HumeJournaaJ, a large 16-pare, 64-colualll U111 11tra~od ll tE>rar_y_paJ1':!~ for on~ _year. .A 11 orders filled Ill' r tu rn mall. Spec ··a I Offer! .lddreaa aU letters: 1', M. L1.1.PTON, FubUalaer, Wo. 8 rark Place, New WoriY DELAWAR E COLLEGE REVIEW. POLISH. One bott ~ o .S . u d' n Po! ish "ti d R btor·c r wir! 1;·,,:k c ~ :~ol'f.e ful of furnitur e lo o!: r.e-vv f o 25 cr-nt . G t of GO "- & CO., or ask you:- Druggist for it. . -- ~· - Rcliab!e F1rnitureS O!,~·", T1-:if j YGr.::~ Esti-JJ!i ·l tte.: , al ways givingsatisfaction, :111.! h:-~n· W Prl 1- w id <· rq ·u t 1ti 11 f. o:· h.l\·in;.: .dw. y. '' .1 '. f ot it 'I • c t' •11 :11 d Jiv ·ry t:,.. lll~ ···. t, 111 o•. t s·: 1 ltuti .1, (; •JJi,,n;l ,(c 1 hc:-~p ~ ~ aut! J,, t 'l" I. .,f l'11 rt1 itun·, lkd. 1:1i·: :•uti l ' .. qw ts t• ~,.· • t fr !>. .\' ,, ') _., r < ),, I ( •,:: lrc! Ch:tllll"·r Suit , • 11 ~>Ill Onu r , iu prices fl •llll : !(''" t • ; , '" ,, .. ,\ ud .. ,., r l l1w llu n In·· I ]',,d ,,. ·,,;,. ''" • 1 :' r fi ;, ' • · ful :•11 d un iqu e in t <.:~iJ.,;n, :. ~.no t11 ~6 •'.00 . l k i IL~ a Col\11111>~ ,,.:,· ty 'r .. th· r .llt il ll·, , ,I p r \ ., ' ' I •w ·'' I' . ' ~ .,: h :til ' I !. IS!' I •. C o:n<.: :.11d ~···· (o\lr gr<'al s tock. Y ou •.t w illr<.:c•·iv·i'"lit·· .J <<••· ti" "·Jlll l'i.- 101''-' .. r n•t. Oak Chnmb "· . 1· S :. ll 'Uit. ~ \ •u\\:ll·· '" tn ,, i t , trorn $ 1 ~ .P:O. EL.:: T! l • ' ':i'H .\. n :1~ •. ;;~: E 'B' f<t J 'at'' ory--ao;> ~ <• a •.rl <rn•. lVI. ··.<. C ·.. lttiful Sc li Cherry or Old ' :~7 nd Asll ~ t. . :\HI :-t! .; n . '!' S~·:CONU ST. 'OIJ. ' JA l. UAR ", 1 ! O. c~~~w~~(E (@l~f'(€ fPi~~~~Wo _--- ~ ~( I J - ( I ~~~·-- -:========= - ====~=====--Edit rial , N w Y ar d ', I ·lawar ,'s Plac ' in th R '\'- 3 /i 6 I I :I I·:x hang , . Sp . lltJJlg No tt · ~ , .I uluti< n, Dt:l L.H I .lJ'fS ~ T - I • Alumn is, \\' 11 an 1 ~am pu ~, 7 .: l Ium n r ou: I UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE OTHES. Memorial Library nau \n:! aaYCTL se for the College trade ? We want both, Or, for the "orld beyond it ? vVe'll speak to both. Our clothing is first-class clothing. It varies in quality, style, cost a: its use varies. But always first-class. ~\Ve have full-dress Suits for the social teu. \Ve have semi-dress Suits for the dressy hundred. , \V c have everyday Suits for the careful thousand. Good clothing is our hobby. We don't descend to the lower sorts. Can't furnish f..s suits or $1 pantaloons. Our pla tforn1 is : High standard clothing at lo" est possible prices. The nobbiest young men wear our clothing. vVe n1anufacture for nobody but ourselves. (If you get our goods anywhere else you get thetn from our Agents). Yet we manufacture ntore than anybody in the country for retail sales. E¥ery year we have to make 1nore. Do you know why? \Ve've got the confidence of people through onr reliable qualities. But Lowest Prices is our hobby too. You ask over the UuiteJ States ·who has n1ade reliable, satisfactory clothing easy to get, and see who they'll say. \V n1a '-:e g od Clothino- lo\v enough for everybody's pocket. Wanamaker & Brown, Send for .·am pl .·. TilE S'l'CDJ·:}rr, · OF 1'f I PO U MS lr Ji) !IfA/,.. E. DB~A TVAnf~· corJJ.J:GJ·) GAl'..' 1'ELIJ roc lVHA'L' ~oRr OF 'U LI.ELE RE\ ' IL\\. DEL r\\ V RE C W. KENNEDY & CO.J 719 Mark t St., x Wilmington , Del. The la r rest a n 1 finest 1.'1 1\~() (~ ())~(; i\~ in th ~~ ~ ll()l . 11 of th b st 111akes of P ian s · s ~ > hmn : ! lazclto n : l bu ~. J :um·s <.'\: ~ lo lsl r<> lll: I knnin .~: .0.'il. ·o n: Stuy\· ·s;u1 t: S mi t h <.\:. c1 . Th e b ·st ( >rgan , th e Farra nd L ·. \ 'c> t ·y can only he har l at o ur storl's . T11ning· :tncl rvpa iring in and ()lit ur l<J\\'Il pr()mptly :ttt l' nd ·cl to . Tlw ~()hill ·r Pi <tll(J th <. hl·st 11()\\' 1318 Chestnut Fhila .. Pa. ~ t ~ n ~ ad ·. ________ Tt > >t h .\l ark<.·t a nd s · · \\'h:tl a ' lothin.L:· !)lac · it is: \rlmt Kind or (;oods. \\·ha t Q ua ntiti ' S. \\'h at Styk: and h t> \\. ]m ,· pri · ·cl c \'c ry th ing· is lc> r the ,·:due g i n~ n. ( )ur C ll sto1 11 Dc: partm e nl is \\-ell knmrn and is consta nt] ' in Tc:tsing .in usvftd nvss and \\T propos<· to lll :tkt' l' \ ' ·ry gar me nt tur nvd c 111t ;t t ·I lin g· ach· ·rt ist·tn t· nt or th · kind of \\'C>rk done. \t\ ·' II try to gi\'C· yuu t' ntirc: ~: tt isbrtio n a nd sa \"l' yo11 mt >li t') 111 cn·n· tr:ul s: tcli(l Jl. Ci t Jth itT:.;, () th ("- ~ J' kt. , \\ il. , l)l'l. T a ilur ~ . 719 M ' k ' t, St., Wilmington, Del. -----·-..- ... FINE C.LOT/1/iVG ,.,.,....,.._,..,_,_.._ waca:s. w . ._wx:::::.e:ww:::=::s:se ws::nn: c;:;::=s::x:a;;ca wsa::::> :-.;., dl'n·pt i' L' ,· h l' : tp tt ··~s a11d fat " ' ' ' ltig h I'' i,,..... class rl'li:t ldl' tll :t< k <. ,.,, h i11 g :. t tIt <..' c ltll y lt r~ t T. H. \!VII S( )N, q_X :\n ·h St. . l'h ilad :t. MILITARY GOODS, SOCIETY SUPPLIES, SWORDS. BELTS, CAPS, BADG~S, EMBROIDERIF.S, LACES, J.' 1.:\( ;~ . I \. \ \' \' 1·: R S. T R I \1 \1 "' :\ I 'l'clt.tllt T ai luriii ,S.: i11 :. 11 i t. t:r:11 111t ·-. . Hus to n On -pri · · l()t h:ng ~ lcn1 s ·, - 1 ,-; .\ f ar k ·t . ·~_. \\'ilm i n ~~ l()ll , 1 t·l. Ju. t:s "~ n ~ t ,.; 1:-.<Jn , Pn q>.... I n \\'r ;t;ng ll l<' l1l i1111 til :~ l':qwr . I ~\(;~ . I·: TC . ·0 l . ! .f·:C E }{ E \ I F \1\ . D E L AW A }{ E I v I1NA /I I I K 1~~ /< ,S. Th e 1 i..,-g st I C!lc r a l St r · 111 tht-! \N D LL O T!IT--.. R S, h·t,·ing· \\'o rl l l. A n y gn in .~· good thin g fo r an in t ·r ·st in R l R A L FF AlR S h a n<l -w ear, o r fuo t - w ~ a r o r head-w ·ar a r · r ·q ues t ·d to se nd I( H· a c o p y o r a n\' W t· ~d-. of - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- L Th turn ·o \· r f B oo k s eve ry y ea r in d th' Rural Re ister for I 890 . o ur B?ok- t o r.e i s !l~ o.r th a n th a t o f a•ly an re s g __ th r tn m n ca. 1 h111 k o f boo ks atj.ur p 1'iceso n1 y! Think o f a 1 o ()k -s t ~ rc th ·• pri c· l . l ] l · I) I d t 1l a t m a r~ Ill v r y )() (lo\ , a n 1 ri c as lik e as n t half o r q tta rt r f th e i p u bli s h r 's! A n) ti t :>o k is h e r ·o rw c.:' ll ~-r<· t it. A ca ta1 g u -· fo rth ' as k in ,!_!·. 1 \ V h a v e o n · 1 u b li ca ti o n -- B ()ul\. N t·: ws ( 5 c t s. soc a y a !'. ) 1t k ps a careo n th e \\'h l e boo k world . ' ful ey 1 O n ce a m on th i t lifts v r v n ew l,u o k ft ,r 1 • • • • • .. Co n ta 111111 ~,. a ln ndsom 'l y tllu stt .l t- ' ..... r • I p a tn y ·d ata lo,l(u ' nf No,· ·Itt ·s ant standard ,·arieti·s of V·g- · ta bl ~ and Fl o\\' ·r . ·t·<·ds, \\' i th al ·nd ar fo r .,. ·ry munth, slw\\·ing· " ·h ·n tl> plan t ;: nd hO\r to plant. \ Ta il ·d f'r · ' to all appli a n ts. I • • .J..::!..,j - 1 - - w ig h s its w o rth , t ell .s ) o u its drif t-, th ST.. I g i ves y o u th e th o u g hts n f th e b s t -r iti cs Phil a cl·l p hi ~t. · abo t:t it, \ r y lik l y h o w s yo u a sa mp1 ~ .~~· pi c tur e - i f tlwr e a r e iilu stra ti o n s. T ] ] "?.,-i' ~ I~ A & - .) · ·· ,.,.. "'·-==·- - = I I& ()N I yo u , 1 Horstn1an11 Bros. & Co., F ifth and h ' IT · j ( )H ~ wA Al\1A KER . S t r -cts. l >hil;t<lciJ >hi :t. MA TL' RER S & l 1F ~ULITARY ~0 :\TR ' T O R S. EQUIPMENTS M ilitary S ·IH ols a nd A ·a I ' tn i ·s . II] pl i d. I Columbia Light Roadster Safety T ill ·: BI ·: ST . Hart Cycle Co •. ~ II ,\ Rt' ll ST ., l'lt ,la dc lp lti ;I, l 'a . Charl s Naylor, I I ~ l~il-.\ l : t n ufa l' llll' l' l' I\. Fifth St., J>h ilacl 'lphia, Pa . and lm p orll'l' .' ,, f\ So · iLl y a n d .\ I ilita r y I ;uod s . Ba d ges. Rt•g- di a , l'a r.t plt ·rnalia . ·t c F. M:. S:E3:ER ~OOD .. D al ·r in fi ne :-;tation ·n ·, I o >k s, um bn.:llas, musi ·al instrum 'nts, I oot. · ancl sho s and 111 n': fu r ni shing· g;o d s. ***--- - - - I\E \ V RK , D E L. E. B. FRAZER, Newark A OTHECARY rugs, i\1 di ·i nc:, 'h mi 'llls. F ull an d com pi ~ t lin Toi l ' t ;u ds. J> ·rlt ml n ttl ·ry, ·t ·. \\ all P:tpl' l'. T ·I ·plwn · 1 .~· Dei, · r~ · . Sta ti on ·r y. ftn
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