which the Sierra Club proposes to construct in the Yosemite Valley as a memorial to Dr. Le Conte. The Grand Arch Council of the Phi Kappa Psi met in Pittsburg April 2 with nearly 500 members from all parts of the country present. The Order was founded fifty years ago, and the semi-centennial exercises at Cannonsburg, the scene of the founding of the fraternity, are responsible for the large attendance. In the afternoon a son of one of the founders was initiated into Alpha Chapter of Washington. The usual excellence of its fiction always makes the Columbia Lit a welcome addition to our exchanges, and with three short stories of notable merit the April issue is no ex ception to the rule. "Her Holiday Humor," ''Sketches of Augusta," and "The Way of Temptation" are all delight ful reading and all deserve commendation. In the March College Student, we have noticed the arti cle "A Few Thoughts on Evolution." The subject is treat ed in a popular manner and the article is very a readable ex position of this important principle which so dominates modern thought. Another interesting essay appears in the Lesbian Herald, entitled "Sidney Lanier's Sense of Har mony." The Monne Holoyhe contains a short story, entitled ''The Shadow of a Fear," worthy of note. The plot is strong and well-developed and the whole is characterized by the display of rare descriptive power. A yell proposed for Carnegie's new-college: Kihies and knee-caps Bare and braw; Hoot mon! Hoot mon! Rah! Ran! Rahl—Ex, EXCHANGES.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers