The following books have been added to the College library: Farrow, E. S., Military Encyclopedia, 3 vols., 1895. Smithsonian Institution, Contributions to Knowledge, 1895, vols. 30, 31. Oceanic Ichthyology, vol. 32. Life Histories of North American Birds. Annual Report, 1894. U. S'. Congress, Congressional Record, 54th Congress, first session, vol. 28, pis. 1-7, with Index. U. S. Education, Comm, of, Annual Report, 1893-94, 2 vols.; Annual Report, 1894-95, 2 vols. Weston, E. 8., Friction of Water in Pipes, 1896. In the magazines may be found the following serials: ATLANTIC MONTHLY. Cheerful Yesterdays, by T. W. Higginson. Emerson, Sixty Years After, by J. J. Chapman. The Story of an Untold Rove, by Paul Leicester Ford. A Rose of Yesterday, by F. Marion Crawford. Campaigning with Grant, by Horace Porter. Hugh Wynne, Free Quaker, by S. Weir Mitchell. London as Seen, by C. D. Gibson, harper’s weekly. Jerome, A Poor Man, by Mary E. Wilkins. Soldiers of Fortune, by Richard Harding Davis. . The Conduct of Great Businesses: I. The Department Store. 11. A Great Hotel. Ask at the desk for back numbers of the magazines. The exchanges of the Free Lance are now on one of the tables. There are about fifty colleges represented. These should be of great interest to competitors for Free Lance story prizes. The following magazines contain interesting short stories: The Hamilton Literary Magazine—Miss Dean’s Driver. The Brown Magazine—“ Dat Big Meeting.” Bob the Bellman. The Morningside—The Bristol Mail. The Wesleyan Literary Monthly—An Evolution. The Dickinsonian —The Dead Letter. Oberlin Review —Among the Berkshires. A Remarkable Scien tific Discovery. OTHER ARTICLES. The Minnesota Magazine—A University on the Neckar. The Red and Blue —The German Student. Columbia Literary Monthly—The Significance of Literary Form. Recent American Verse. The Free Lance . LIBRARY NOTES CENTURY. SCRIBNER’S MAGAZINE. [February,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers