capacity, eight and thirty-six hundredths cubic inches. A Union. College Scheme.—Arrangements have been made at Union to endow a chair in some practical “every-day” subject. The scheme is to have a course of lectures throughout the college year delivered to the whole body of students. The lecturers will be men at the head of their various professions, and will include prominent lawyers, merchants, journalists and others. Among the prominent men who will lecture are ex-President Cleveland, Governor McKinley, Chauncey M. Depew, and Andrew D. White. —Amhersl Student. EXCHANGES . The Observance of Ivy Day by the classes of many of the leading institutions of the country has proved to be one of the most pleasant and memorable events of their college history. Would it not be a good idea to revive this custom, which was for a time observed in our own college ? It has been the custom of Maine State to observe this day as is shown by this paragraph from the cadet. It has been the practice for each class to observe an Ivy Day before graduating. A very desirable practice, and though the expense is quite heavy to the class conducting the exercise, yet the pleasure to them and their guests is well worth the cost. It is hoped that each class will leave behind them some mark of their having been here and having prepared themselves for making a mark in life. CompijETb Stock of[- $ Base-ball, BU)§!C THE FREE LANCE. GEO. T. Foot-ball and Lawn Tennis Goods ] Always on Hand at Lowest A FUZZ, ZZAE OF STATIONJS'BX. Send for Catalogue. Twenty four athletes have received commence ment appointments in the present Senior class at Harvard. Harvard’s foot-ball account for the season of 1891 shows a balance, after all expenses are paid, of $6,978.28. The Princetonian, form erly a tri-weekly, has been changed to a daily paper, making the sixth college daily. Twenty-eight foreign countries and every American state and territory except three, are rep resented at the U. of Penna. The Franklin and Marshall College Glee and Mandblin Clubs are to make a tour of the Pacific slope during .the coming summer. College dailies are now published by Princeton, Cornell, Yale, Harvard, Brown, University of Michigan, and University of Wisconsin. A southern students’ conference, similar to the Northfield Conference, will be held this summer at Knoxville, Tenn., on the canipus of the State University. From the records of Yale College during the past eight years it is shown that the non smokers were 20 per cent, taller than the smokers, 25 per cent, heavier, and had 86 per cent, more lung capacity. In the last graduating class at Amherst College the non-smokers have gained in weight 24 per cent, over the smokers; in height, 37 per cent., in chest girth, 42 per cent., and in lung BUSH, BULtiFeNTI, BA. Prices.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers