PN eo A LLU M Nee IM TORS " SHEFF.” ELECTIONS, Taken Into the From °99S. Men Societies The following men from 998. received elections to Berzelius on Tuesday : Carle Cotter Conway, of Oak Park, Tl. apes Philip Flint, of Los Angeles, Cal. Hades cas Windus Knight, of St. Louis, Mo. 4 Otto Hayes Lindenberg, of Columbus, Edward Armstrong McCullagh, of Irvington-on-Hudson, N. Y. Myron Turner Townsend, of New York City. : Louis Schnebly Treadwell, of Hurst- ville, N. Y. Willis Ogden Warren, of New York City. BOOK AND SNAKE. The following members of ’99 S. re- ceived elections to Book and Snake Tuesday evening : Archbald Marshall Bell, of Allegheny, Pa. ; Henry Skyrin Clark, of Cincinnati, Ohio. Philip Thornton Dashiell, of Bustle- ton, Penn. Osborne Atwater Day, of New Haven, Conn. Charles Randall Drummond, of St. Louis, Mo. . ee Howlett Durston, of Syracuse, Edwin Milo Eddy, of Bay City, Mich. Richmond Macleod Graff, of Pitts- burg, Pa. Leeds Mitchell, of Chicago, III. Benjamin Venor Norton, of Detroit, Mich. : Pies Brady Sutphin, of Cincinnati, i0. Elections from the Scientific Fresh- man Class have also been made as fol- lows : THETA Xi, John Milton Fiske, Jr., of Chicago, M1. Joseph Reed, of Pittsburg, Pa. George Raymond Hall, of Philadel- phia, Pa. 3 George Hall Smith, of Chicago, Ill. Frederick Addison Warner, of Nauga- tuck, Conn. Frank Herbert Warren, Jr., of Chi- | cago, Ill. CHI PHI. Donald Palmer Cameron, of Salt Lake City, Utah. Northrup Fowler, of New York City. Louis Allston Gillet, of Chicago, Il. Elisha Sears Lewis, of Springfield, Mass. George James Warner Mabee, Jr., of Denver, Col. Gilbert Cornwell Summerfield, of Brooklyn, N. Y. Herbert. Forsythe Van Every, of | Brooklyn. N. Y. William Gordon Woolfolk, of New | York City. From the class of Ninety-eight Sheff. the following men have been taken to the society : Robert Ernest Broatch, of Middle- | town, Conn. Pierce William Grace, of Brooklyn, Y ) Howard Blauvelt Jackson, of New York City. Allan Edgar Philbrick, of Little Sil- | ver, N. J. THETA DELTA CHI. Ward Slosson Gregory, of Norwalk, Conn. Robert Goodell Church, of Meriden, Conn. Raymond G. Clapp, of Northampton, Mass. : Frederick M. Jourdain, of Branford, — Conn. DELTA PHI. Frank Fowler Baldwin, of Honolulu, Robert Livingston Dunn, of Tidioute, a. Charles J. Freeborn, of Paris, France. James Albert Hogle, of Salt Lake City, Utah. Charles Rees Lloyd, Jr., of San Fran- cisco; Cal. Edward Everett Marshall, of Phila- delphia, Pa. ; Carl King Palmer, of Danville, Ill. Alexander Hammond Rutherford, of San Francisco, Cal. Walter Murray Saunders, of Mont- clair, Ni J, Sidney Frank Shattuck, of Neenah, Wis. Seth Edward Thomas, Jr., of New York City. - Benjamin Fred Tritch, of Denver, Col. ¢ Why should an Educated Man be Handicapped ? — One certainly is if he goes into business of any kind without knowing what is likely to be required of him. Those who know what is Best in Academie Education can appreciate most keenly the best PRACTICAL EDUCATION. Education in the minor details of any business may be obtained, it is true, by experience. But don’t be educated in this way unless youmust. IT’S EXPENSIVE. Employers charge dearly (in reduced wages) for what they teach. The long wait for a fair salary means more than the small outlay and short time required for thorough training in Eastman Business College, POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., THE BEST TRAINING SCHOOL OF THE LAND. Write for its catalogue. It will prove interesting reading. If you cannot well attend the College you can certainly afford a course of instruction BY CORRESPONDENCE. [=-By the way, Lieutenant-Governor Timothy L. Woodruff, of New York, Yale ’79, finished his education with a course at Eastman. 104 Fifth Avenue, under Fifth SPRING STYLES .. ‘* NOW READY. KNOX’s WORLD-RENOWNED THE STANDARD OF FASHION EVERYWHERE. Avente Hotel, New York. See 219 Broadway, cor. Fulton Street, New York. ; 340 Fulton Street, Brooklyn. 191 and 193 State Street (Palmer House), Chicago. AGENTS In all the Principal Cities. _ Six Highest Awards At the Columbian Exposition. Prompt Attention given. . one. 10 all Mail Orders. HANDSOMELY EMBOSSED. Whe efficiency and life of a Bicycle Wanterm depends upon the brightness of the reflecting surfaces. Reflecting Surfaces in the “ Search-Light” are protected by glass and cannot become smoked or tarnished. Flame Cannot Jar Out, as demonstrated by thousands of riders who have used our patent method of attaching lantern to the wheel. New Adjustments. The Bracket and Oil Res- ervoir are so constructed, that the operation of these parts is even simpler than heretofore, BRIDGEPORT BRASS COMPANY, 19 Murray St., N. Y. Bridgeport, Conn, 17 No. 7th St., Phila. 85-87 Pearl St., Boston. Send for Circular. AN ENTIRELY NEW PAINT is now wsed on HENLEY MELFORT BRAND and O. K. GOLF BALLS. SAWL BUCKLEY & CO. 6 Maiden Lane, New York, S0LE AGENT= WHAT IS ODE INHALER ? X-ODE is a product of electricity. It forms on asbestos while being electrically treated in a solution. This asbestos is put up in a glass vial. When the cork of the vial is removed and the air comes in contact with the asbestos, it emits from the inhaler a soothing ecm substance, which will penetrate any part of the body. When inhaled through the nose or mouth, it penetrates every nook and crevice of the mucuous surfaces, kills the germ that causes the disease, and gives the tissues a healthy condition, thus effecting a permanent cure. Itis unlike snuff, drugs or medicine. X-Ode penetrates parts that it would be impossible for drugs or medicines to do. Catarrh, Asthma, Hay Fever, Coughs, Head- ache, Bronchitis, LaGrippe, etc., yield ite influ. ence with marvelous rapidity. This inhaler lasts from one to three years, Trial size inhaler, 15 cents: large size inhaler, $1.00, All druggists or by ; The X-ODE CO., 19 Union Square, New York City. Edy aT i: z t Uf eines Z 4 MANS ||; GA i ‘No, boys; I have not been burning the midnight oil to get all that material for my address. I have not spent hun- dreds for books of reference. I could not have got these up to date facts and figures in that way. : ; “JT simply send to Romeike for Press Clippings. ae ‘Day by day he sent me editorials and original articles collected from thou- sands of newspapers and periodicals which are read in his offices, and I only had to arrange the material.” ROMEIKE’S Press Cutting Bureau will send you all newspaper clippings which may appear about you, your friends, or any subject on which you want to be “up to date.” A large force in my New York office reads 650 daily papers and over 2,000 weeklies and magazines ; in fact, every paper of importance published in the United States, for 5,000 subscribers, and through the European Bureaus, all the leading papers in the civilized globe. Clippings found for subscribers are pasted on slips giving name an d date of paper, and are mailed day by day. Write for circulars and terms. HENRY ROMEIKE, 139 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK. Branches: London. Paris, Berlin. Sidney.