and can be depended upon at all times, and some of the men who represent State on the track this year for the first time will earn an S before the season is over; The reviyal of interest in tenuis seems to have reached State. Great enthusiasm is being - manifested in the tourna ment now inprogress and before the series is finished some very interesting - and exciting - g-ames may be expected. Even golf seems, for the time,-to have lost its power of attraction, and a number of the enthusiastic golfers are now seen daily at the tennis court. The following - letter from a ’95 man who is now Assistant Engineer, on'thel. C. R. R'. is l of interest.' It is another case of illustration of'the kind, of’men'turned out at State. Editor Free Lance State College, Pa. Dear Sir : In the “Saturday Evening - Post” for May sth, there is an article, by Mr. J. E. Wallace, of the Illinois Cen tral Railroad, in regard to the making of a Railroad Man, that all State men ought to read. In the course of his article he calls the Track Apprentice system of.this road the “Kindergarten” of Railroad. Eng ineerin g -and then goes on to say~“Of the one . hundred and twenty young - men who have applied for theposition.of track, apprentice in the serviceof this road and have been accepted during.the past three , years,- only thirteen ‘flunked’ when first they faced the stern.and.humble nature of their initial work. Thirty-nine stuck through, thick and thin and have been promoted to fairly profitable positions on> the regular Freeport, Illinois, May Bth, 1900,