Bowdoin Orient . ed his duties in a highly sat-isfactory manner to all concerned. 76.—Arlo Bates, the author of Pattys Perver-sities and The Pagans, is soon to publish a newnovel, through the house of Chas. Scribners Sons. The prograraiue for the [serai-annual meeting ofthe Maine Pedagogical Society at Bangor, May 14thand 16th, includes papers on discussion by Rev. Ben-jamin P. Snow, 55, President M. C. Fernald, 61,Dr. D. A. Robinson, 73, and Charles H. Clarli, 76. 77.—Roberts has been teaching at Norway LakeMaine. 79.—Kimball is in an apothecary shop at Nor-way, Maine. 81.—E. E. Briry has bee
Bowdoin Orient . ed his duties in a highly sat-isfactory manner to all concerned. 76.—Arlo Bates, the author of Pattys Perver-sities and The Pagans, is soon to publish a newnovel, through the house of Chas. Scribners Sons. The prograraiue for the [serai-annual meeting ofthe Maine Pedagogical Society at Bangor, May 14thand 16th, includes papers on discussion by Rev. Ben-jamin P. Snow, 55, President M. C. Fernald, 61,Dr. D. A. Robinson, 73, and Charles H. Clarli, 76. 77.—Roberts has been teaching at Norway LakeMaine. 79.—Kimball is in an apothecary shop at Nor-way, Maine. 81.—E. E. Briry has been appointed city physi-cian at Bath. 81.—Achorn has been invited to deliver the Me-morial Day oration at Damariseotta. 81.—E. H. Chamberlain, , lately practicingin the West, has returned to Massachusetts and set-tled in Chelmsford. 81.—Haggerty was recently elected a member ofthe School Committee for three years at Southbridge,Mass., his opponent being a prominent Orthodoxminister of that \l Pass the butter gently, Mabel,Shove it lightly throughthe air,In the corner of the dish, will find a nut-brown hair. What fond memries it awakens Of the days ere we were wed,When upon my good coat-collar, Oft was laid your little head. Lovingly I stroked those tresses, In the happy days gone by;Now I strilte them every meal time In the butter or the Harvard Library contJf,ins 184,000 volumes ; Yale, 115,000; Dartmnuth, 60,000; Cornell, 53,000Brown, 52,000 : Columbia, 6 i,000; Williams, , 49,000; Michigan, 45,000 ; Iowa, 18,000Oberlin, 16,000; Minnesota, 12,000; Delaware,^2,000.—Ex. A good college paper is worth more for the moraland gentlemanly tone of college life than a wholelibrary of by-laws and an army of faculty spies.—N. T. Independent. The average annual expenses of a student at Har-vard is $800; Amherst, $500; Columbia, $800 ; La-fiiyette, .$400: Princeton, $600; Yale, $800 andWilliams, $500. Four cribs in his pocket, an
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