Bowdoin Orient . ichhe wishes to have appended. Entered at the Post-Office tit Brunswick as Second-Class Mail Matter. CONTENTS. Vol. XIX., No. 8.—October 30, 1889. Practical (poem) 143 Editorial Notes, 143 Bess 140 The Other Side 148 Foot-Ball (poem), 149 Option or Compulsion? 149 Y. M. C. A. Convention 150 Foot-Ball (Tufts vs. Bowdoin) 151 Book Reviews 151 Collegii Tabula, 153 Personal 155 College World 156 PRACTICAL. In a field where a farmer was gathering hay A student of science walked one day. In his hands some new-found treasures he bore, Prehistoric relics, and, he guessed, more. Approa


Bowdoin Orient . ichhe wishes to have appended. Entered at the Post-Office tit Brunswick as Second-Class Mail Matter. CONTENTS. Vol. XIX., No. 8.—October 30, 1889. Practical (poem) 143 Editorial Notes, 143 Bess 140 The Other Side 148 Foot-Ball (poem), 149 Option or Compulsion? 149 Y. M. C. A. Convention 150 Foot-Ball (Tufts vs. Bowdoin) 151 Book Reviews 151 Collegii Tabula, 153 Personal 155 College World 156 PRACTICAL. In a field where a farmer was gathering hay A student of science walked one day. In his hands some new-found treasures he bore, Prehistoric relics, and, he guessed, more. Approaching the farmer: Sir, do you know Why these rocks are seamed and furrowed so ? And forthwith proudly began to relate How a glacier once swept across our State. When the old man cried, Dye spect me to blieve that ?I can knock all yer learned theries stone here, I tell yer naow,Was hit by the pint of my new steel plaow,And that cut there, so long an narrer,Was made, I think, by my scratch tooth In this issue will be found an articlecriticising one of our recent editorials. Wewere anxious that the subject be not con-tinued ; but a refusal to publish opposingviews would be an admission of editorial referred to was written onlyafter much hesitancy and careful considera-tion, and its sole incentive was a sense ofduty to all concerned. Nor should we pro-long the matter by reply, were not the criti-cism referred to calculated to give rise tograve misapprehension to those unacquaintedwith the circumstances, or not having perusedour preceding editorial. Our friend begins by making the allega-tion of reflection upon the character of thepastor, than which nothing could have beenmore foreign to our intentions or with a beautiful inconsistency he hasfailed to dispute a single point or, as we shallattempt to show, refute a single the pastor be the victim of such graveslander, it were incumbent upon his defenderto specify and controver


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Keywords: ., bookauthorbowdoino, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookyear1890