[Continued from seventh page. }
burgh, N. Y.; Philip William Grece,
Jersey City, N. J.; Eugene Hale, Jr.,
Ellsworth, Me.; Henry Winslow
Hincks, Bridgeport, Conn.; Job Edgar
Johnson, Summit, R. I.; John Riley,
Livermore, New York City; Denn's
Joseph McCarthy, Stafford Springs,
Conn.; Julian Starkweather Mason,
Chicago, Ill.; Orlando Paul Metcalf,
Pittsburg, Pa.; Charles Thomas Payne,
Cleveland, Ohio; Harold Sylvester
Recknagle, Great Neck, N. Y.; Alfred
Ernest Richards, Hartford, Conn.;
Samuel Newton Spring, Le Mars, Iowa;
Lawrence Thurston, Whitinsville,
Mass.; Robert James Trumbull, Jr.,
Morristown, N. J.; John Wilson Walsh,
Chicago, Ill.; Paul Whitin, North-
bridge, Mass.; Arthur Baldwin Wil-
liams, Jr., Scranton, Pa.; Arthur Col-
lins Williams, Hartford, Conn.
FIRST DISPUTES.
Burnham Carter Benner, Wellesley,
Mass.; Frank JoSeph Born, Poughkeep-
sie, N. Y.; John Merritt Bromley, New
Haven, Conn.; Henry Emerson Butler,
Ogontz, Pa.; Robert Henry Crowell,
Cleveland, Ohio; Dana Lee Eddy,
Leavenworth, Kansas; Manfred Wil-
liam Ehrich, New York City; Justice
Miles Forman, Minneapolis, Minn.;
Robert Thompson Garrison,. Pittsbure,
Pa.; Ernest Howe, Washington, D. C.;
Walter Meigs, New York City; Her-
bert Elwin Nims, AShburnham, Mass.;
Goodrich Barbour Rhodes, Cincinnati,
Ohio; William Jacob Shroder, Cincin-
nati, Ohio;William Newell Vaile, Den-
ver, Col.; Edward Reed Whittemore,
New Haven, Conn.; Frederick Ely
Williamson, Cleveland, Ohio.
SECOND DISPUTES.
Arthur Douglass Baldwin, Maui, H.
I.; Arthur Henry Bartlett, Plainville,
Conn., Martin Toscan Bennett, Hart-
ford, Conn.; Edward Lord Clark, New
Haven, Conn.; Horace Bushnell Clark,
Hartford, Conn.; James Dickerson Coe,
Newark, N. J.; James Tilden Crane,
Newburgh, N. Y.; Raymond Moreau
Crosby, Grand Rapids, Mich.; Philip
Earl Dudley, New London, Conn.; Ray
Llewellyn Evans, Cincinnati, Ohio;
Thomas Melton Evans, McKeesport,’
Pa.; Robert Henry Gay, Burlington,
Vt.; Charles Frederick Gehrmann,
Peoria Ill.; Walter Godchaux, New Or-
leans, La.; Winfred Morgan Hartshorn,
Colorado Springs, Col.; Franklin At-
kins Lord, Moorhead, Minn.; Paul Au-
gustine McQuaid, New Haven, Conn.;
Julien Ashton Ripley, New York City;
Maxwell Warren Rockwell, S. Wood-
stock, Conn.; Thomas Max Smith, Yon-
kers, N. Y.; Norman Arthur Street,
Chicago, Ill.; Edward Clark Streeter,
Chicago, Ill.; Roderick Terry, Jr., New
York City.; Julius Tuckerman, Saxton’s
River, Vt.; Arthur Gustavus Ward,
Evans Mills, N. Y.; Payne Whitney,
New York City.
FIRST COLLOQUIES.
Clifford Edward Bear, Lyons, N. Y.;
Abraham Rosecrans Baldwin, Chicago,
Ill.; Isaac Bliss, New Haven, Conn.;
Daniel Joseph Brown, Thompsonville,
Cenn.; William Patrick Callanan, Hop-
kinton, Mass.; Orrin Melville Clark,
Whitewood, S. Dak.; Charles Job Fow-
ler, Thomsonville, Conn.; Frederick
William Huxford, Stamford, Conn.;
Theodore Alexander MeGraw, Detroit,
Mich.; Samuel Andrew Marshall, Crom-
well, Conn.; John Randolph Paxton,
Jr., New York city; William Stevens
Ray, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Howard Dick-
inson Reeve, Appleton, WisS.; Harry
Hosmer Rowland, Brooklyn, N. Y:,;
Herbert Adolph Scheftel, New York,
City; Frank William Sheean, West
Haven, Conn.; Ralph Henry Shone,
Camden, N. J.; George Pritchard Stim-
son, Cincinnati, Ohio; Isaac Newton
Swift, Ypsilanti, Mich.; Edwin Bry-
‘ant Treat, Wallingford, Conn.; David
Cushman Twichell, Hartford, Conn.;
Victor Morris Tyler, New Haven,
Conn.; Frederick Theodore Van
Beuren, J.. New York City; John
Aloysius Walsh, Stamford, Conn.; John
Welles, Wethersfield, Conn.; Horace
Wilder Wilcox, Summit, N. J.
SECOND COLLOQUIES.
Thomas Allen 3d., St. Louis, Mo.; El-
mer EllSworth Beech, New York city;
Alexander Bunce, Hartford, Conn.;
Jacob Burnet Burnet, Cincin-
nati, Ohio; Clifford Dudley
Cheney, South Manchester, Conn.;
Nathaniel Hartley Cowdrey, Edge-
bration is to occupy three days.
oo Asie 1 Ue
water, N. A 1 Ashbel Parmelee
Fitch, Jr., New York city; Otto Gold-
smith, Portland, Oregon.; Joseph Hall
Hart, Cincinnati, Ohio; Adelbert Stone
Hay, Washington, D. C.; Robert Rey-
nolds Hitt, Mt. Morris, Ill.; Thomas
Martin James, Kansas City, Mo.; War-
ren Bowditch Johnson, Enfield, Conn.;
Carleton Coffin Jones, Wilkesbarre,
Pa.; Sidney Robinson Kennedy, Brook-
lyn, N. Y.; Everitt Phoenix Ketchum,
New York city; Edwin Burruss King,
Warrentown, Va.; David Thomas
Leahy, Jr., Brooklyn, N. Y.; William
Robertson Letcher, Silver Creek, Ky.-;:
Theodore Morrell, New York city;
Grenville Dodge Montgomery, Denver,
Col.; George Colton Moore, Madison,
Conn.; Edward Morris, New York
City; William Satterlee Packer, Jr.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.; Charles Henry Peix,
Jr.; Danbury, Conn.; James Otis Rodg-
ers, Toledo, Ohio; George Gebner
Schreiber, Hoboken, N. J.; William
Edward Selin, Chicago, Ill.; Henry
King Smith, New York city; Fred
Wheeler Tenney, Worcester, Mass.;
Ernest Walker, New York city; Ernest
Wales Whittemore, Rye, N. Y.; For-
syth Wickes, New York city; Lewis
Mason Williams, Glenville, Ohio;
Oliver Tousey Wilson, Evanstown, Ill.
—___ > oe —___—__
PRINCETON'S SESQUICENTENNIAL,
One Hundred and Fiftieth Anniver-
sary to be Celebrated Oct. 20-22.
Elaborate arrangements are being
made for the Sesquicentennial celebra-
tion of Princeton University, October
20-22, the first charter of the old col-
lege of New Jersey having been signed
October 22, 1746. This will be one of
the most important college anniver-
saries that have occurred since the cele-
bration of the two hundred and fiftieth
anniversary of Harvard in 1886,
During the week preceding the
celebration, public lectures will be do-
livered in Princeton by ‘some of ‘the
distinguished professors from British
and Continental universities who are
delegates to the Sesquicentennial ce’e-
bration. The lectures are divided in-
to six courses, being given by J osephy
John Thompson; Cavendish ProfessoY
of Physics in the University of Cam-
bridge, England; Felix Klein, Profes-
sor of Mathematics in the University
of Goettingen, Germany; Edward Dow-
den, Professor of English Literature
and Rhetoric in Trinity College, Dub-
lin; Andrew Seth, Professor of Logic
and Metaphysics in the University of
Edinburgh, Scotland; Karl Brugmann,
Professor of Indogermanic Philosophy
in the University of Leipsic, Germany;
and A. A. W.Hubrecht, Professor of
Zoology in tthe University of Utrecht,
Holland.
Inasmuch as the first charter was
Signed October 22, 1746, the Board of
Trustees has resolved that the Sesqui-
centennal celebration shall end on the
150th anniversary day of this event,
and has further decided that the cele-
Ac-
cordingly the three days fixed upon are
Tuesday, Oct. 20th, Wednesday, Oct.
21 and Thursday, Oct. 22 of the present
year.
On the first day, Tuesday, there will
be a commemorative religious service,
beginning at 11 o’clock in the morn-
ing. President Patton will deliver the
discourse at this service.
The second day, Wednesday, is dis-
tinctively the great day for the alumni.
In the morning the oration and poem
will be delivered, the orator being
Prof. Woodrow Wilson, of the class of
1879, and the poet, Rev. Dr. Henry Van
Dyke, of the class of 1873.
The third day, Thursday, is the ac-
tual Sesquicentennial Anniversary day.
In the morning there will be a proces-
Sion to Alexander Hall, the announc:-
ment will be made of the University
title and of the endowments secured
and the conferring of degrees and
other appropriate ceremonies will be
held. With this morning celebrat'on
on Thursday the public exercises of
the Sesquicentennial Celebration will
close, although in the evering there wll
be a farewell dinner given to the de'e-
gates from the visiting universities.
At the seSsion of Yale Corporation
held during the last. Commencement
week, the Rev. Prof. Fisher was ap-
pointed as the delegate from the Uni-
versity to attend the Princeton cele-
bration.
————— +4 ___
The Banner will be published on or
before December 10th.
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American Plan, $3.00 per day and up.
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IMPORTER AND MANUFACTURER OF
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American and European Plans,
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WHAT IS
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