TABVLÆ RUDOLPHINÆ, QVIBVS ASTRONOMICÆ SCIENTIÆ, TEMPORUM LONGINQUITATE COLLAPSÆ RESTAURATIO CONTINETUR Tabvlæ Rudolphinæ, qvibvs astronomicæ scientiæ, temporum longinquitate collapsæ restauratio continetur ( - ) Einband ( - ) [Frontispiz]: Ulm um 1627. ( - ) Titelseite ( - ) [Widmung]: D. FERDINANDO II ROM. IMP. SEMP. AUG. GERM. HUNG. BOHEM. &c. REGI. . ( - ) DEDICATIO. ( - ) ASTRO-POECILO-PYRGIUM KEPLERIANUM, ASTRONOMIÆ ORTVM, PROGRESSVM. ( - ) INDEX CAPITVM ET PRÆCEptorum in has Tabulas. PRÆFATION IN TABVLAS RVDOLPHI foli. IN PARTEM PRIMAM TABB. ( - ) [Abb.]: Schema referendum ad CAP. XX. fol. 56. ( - ) [Karte]: NOUA ORBIS TERRARUM DELINEATIO SINGULARI RATIONE ACCOMODATA MERIDIANO TABB. RUDOLPHI ASTRONOMICARUM ( - ) IN TABULAS RUDOLPHI PRÆFATIO. (1) CAPUT I. (9) DE ARITHMETICA LOGISTICA, IN HIS TABULIS NECESSARIA. DE NUMERATIONE. (9) CAPUT II. DE ADDITIONE ET SVBTRACTIONE NVMERORVM TAM SIMPLICIUM, QUAM Logisticorum. (9) CAPUT III. (10) DE MVLTIPLICATIONE ET DIVISIONE LOGIstica visitata, pro hic Tabulis; et deHeptacosiade, cujus ope suffulti, seblevamur illis. (10) RATIO EXCERPENDI EX Heptacosiade. (4 [12]) CAPUT IV. DE LOGARITHMORUM ADDITIONIBUS ET SUBTRAktionibus Cossicis. (5 [13]) I. REGULA DE SPECIE Arithmetices. II. REGULA DE SIGNO exeuntis. (5 [13]) [2 Tabellen]: (1)Additionum Cossicarum formae. (2)Subtractionum Cossicarum formae. (5 [13]) CAPUT V: DE REGVLA TRIVM SEV PROPORTOINUM, OPE HEPTAcosiadis exercenda in numeris Logisticis, ad venandam partem proportionalem. (5 [13]) CASVS I. (14) EXEMPLUM PER SEXAGESIMARIAM SOLAM. EXEMPLUM PER QUAdrivicenariam solam. (14) EXEMPLUM PER COLUmellam utramque. (14) CASVS II. (15) EXEMPLUM EX SEXAGESIMARIA. EXEMPLUM EX QUADRIVICENARIA. EXEMPLUM PER DUAS COLUMELLAS COPU. (15) CASVS III. (16) EXCEPTIO. ALIUD CONSILIUM IN HAC EXCEPTIONE. (16) CAPUT VI. DE LOGISTICOVM NVMERORVM QVADRATIS, RADICIBVS ET MEDIO PROportionali inveniendis. (16) DE LOGISTICI NUMERI, UT QUADRATI, RADICE EXTRAHENDA, OPE HEPTAcosiadis. DE MEDIO PROPORTIONALI INTER DUOS LOGISTICOS INVENIENDO. (17) CAPUT VII. DE VSIBVS HEPTACOSIADIS ALIIS. (17) DE CONVERSIONE HORARUM ET MINUTORUM IN Tempora seu Partes & Scruplua Æquatoris, & vicissim. (18) CAPUT VIII. DE ORDINATIONE, CANONIS LOGARITHMORVM, MESOLOGARTHMORVM, ET ANTIlogarithmorum, in his Tabulis exhibit: Et quomodo sit excerpendus cujusque Arcus vel Anguli Logarithmus, quomodo Antilogarithmus: quomodo vicissim cujusque Logarithmi vel Antilogarithmi Arcus vel Angulus. (18) CAPUT IX. IN RECTANGVLO RECTILINEO, DATO ANGULO INTER LAtera, data et proportione laterum, determinare angulos reliquos. (21) COMPENDIA SEV CAVTIONES. (21) [Tabelle]: TYPUS OPERATIONIS. (22) CAPUT X DE TABVLA ANGVLI, EIUSQUE USU. (23) CAPUT XI. DE ALIO PECVLIARI USU CANONIS LOGARITHMORUM, præcique in STATIONum punctis indagandis. (23) [Abb.]: (24) [2 Tabellen]: (1)Pone ergo secundo, angulum C tantum, quantus prima correctioneprodiit, scii. 14°· 35'. (2)Eum igitur proba tertiâ iteratione processus. (24) DE ANTILOGARITHMORUM INTERPUNCTIONE & usu. (25) [Tabelle]: EXEMPLUM. Sint latera sublimis anguli, seu ardua (26) CAPUT XII. DE ASCENSIONIBVS RECTIS, MEDIATIONIBUS COELI, Declinationibus, & Angulis Eclipticæ cum Meridiano. (26) CAPUT XIII. DE AMPLITVDINE ORTIVA: ET DE DIFFERENTIA Ascensionali, ejusque Tabulæ Synopticæ usu. (28) DATO PUNCTO SPHÆRÆ quocunque Declinatione ab Æquatore, indagare ejus Amplitudinem Ortiva. (28) DATO PUNCTO SPHÆRÆ QUOCUNQUE, EIUSQUE DECLINAtione ab Æquatore; indagare ejus differentiam Ascensionalem sub data Poli altitudine. (29) [Tabelle]: Via posteriori (29) DATA POLI ALTITVDINE, PER DATI LOCI SOLIS DIFFERENtiam ascensionalem indagare tempus semidiurnum & seminocturnum, âdeoque dici artificialis longitudinem. (29) VICISSIM DATA LONGITVDINE DIEI ÆSTIVÆ LONGISSIMÆ, invenire altitudinem Poli. (30) CAPUT XIV. DE ANGVLO ORIENTIS, seu altitudine Nonangesimi, ejusque Tabula & usu in querendis Asc. obliquis, veletiam punctis Eclipticæ orientibus. (30) [Tabelle]: Ergo valet (30) DATO PVNCTO ECLIPTICÆ ORIENTE, PER EIUS CUM HORIzonte constitutum angulum indagare Asc. obliquam. (31) SED ET IPSVM PVNTVM ECLIPTICÆ ORIENS, PER ANGUlum ejus Horizonte datum vel sumptum, & per Asc. obliquam datam inquiri potest. (32) TANDEM DOCEBO, PER SOLOS LOGARITHMOS, SINE ULLIS Aliis Tab. computare & angulum arientis, & unâ ipsum punctum oriens, ex datâ Asc. obliquâ universaliter & exactè. DATA PROFVNDITATE LOci Solis sub Horizonte, inquirere distantiam ejus loci ecliptici à puncto oriente vel occidente, mediante angulo orientis. (32) [Tabelle]: Sit Asc: obliqua 346°.48'. Ergò est supra Horizontem, & ad occasum; quærendumque est latus Eclipticæ ab occasu usque in o. Ei verò respondet latus Æquatoris 13°.12', quantum sc: est ab 166°. 48' descensione obliquâ ad 180°, seu ad o. (32) DATA STELLÆ LONGITVDINE ET LATIDUDINE; SUB DATA Elevatione poli, invenire punctum Eclipticæ ei cooriens, mediante angulo orientis. (33) [Tabelle]: Esto Planeta ♂ in 2°.3°' ⩗ cum Latitudine 4°.40'. australi sub alt. Poli 56: quæritur punctum ei cooriens. Cùm Mars, oriente 2°. 3o' ⩗ sit adhuc infrà, ponam angulum aliquem eorum, qui 3 ⩗ sequuntur. (33) CAPUT XV. DE ÆQUANDO TEMPORE IN ÆQUALITATEM DIERUM naturalium & Tabulis huic rei in servientibus. (33) CAPUT XVI. DE REDVCTIONE TEMPORUM IN DIVERSIS LOCIS Numeratorum ad Meridianum harum Tabularum: & de Catalogo Locorum. (36) [Tabelle]: Augustâ Vindelicorum Madritum Hispaniæ censentur milliaria Germanica 200: Fides æstimationis sit penes viatores. Divisis 200 per 15, fiunt partes circuli magni 13°. 20'. Augustæ est A. P. 48°.22', Madriti 40°.45'. (40) [2 Tabellen]: (1)Strabo libro XV Geographiæ, Susis Persepolim numerat stadia 4200. Vt autem sciamus quot stadia faciant hoc loco gradum circuli magni, notandum quòd idem author à Promontorio Caramaniæ australissimo, quod fretum Sinus Persici constituit, ad Portas Caspias numeret 14400 Stadia. Alt. Poli illic est 25°.3°', hic 43°.3°'. Intersunt Gr. 18 sub eodem quasi meridiano, quia Strabo longitudinem Persidis ducit à Septentrione in Austrum. Si Gr. 18, patent 14400 stadiis, uni competent 800 stadia. Et si 800 stadia dant unum, 4200 dabunt 5°. 15'. Tot sunt Gradus Susis Persepolim. Est verò altitudo Æq. (2) ALIUD EXEMPLUM ET TYPUS operationis. (41) DE MAPPA MVNDI VNIVERSALI. (41) CAPUT XVII. DE REDVCTIONE ANNORUM MENSIUM ET DIERUM, qui apud alias Nationes in usu sunt vel fuerunt, ad Annos ante & post Christum, adque Dies Menses & Annos Iulianos, quibus hæ Tabulæ sunt accomodatæ. (42) DE TYPO ANNI CONFUSIONIS; ET UNA, ANNI ROMAnorum veteris Popiliani. (45) DE CONVERSIONE TEMPORUM ÆGYPTIACORUM Iin Iuliana. (46) DE CONVERSIONE TEMPORUM PERSICORUM, IN IULIANA harum Tabularum & vicissim. (46) DE CONVERSIONE TEMPORUM ARABICORUM ET TURCICOrum Hegiræ in Juliana, & vicissim. (47) [Tabelle]: Vt, reliquit Leunclauius in Pandecte suo historiæ Turcicæ notatum in fine diplomatis Sultani Amurathæ, Annum Transmigrationis (Hegiræ) Mahometis 991, diem 27 Silchidze, id est Dulhajati. Quæritur in quem diem cujus anni Iuliani is competat. (47) [Tabelle]: Vicissim, Anno Incarn: 1576, die 23 Decemb. seu X Cal: Ianuarias, in quem diem cujus anni Arabici ab Hegira competit? (48) DE APPLICATIONE DIERUM IN ANNIS; ÆGYPTIACO, & Armeniaco, fixis, ad dies Julianos. DE CHARACTERISMIS ET FERIIS ANNORUM & dierum. DE CYCLO SOLIS: (48) PER CYCLUM SOLIS PRODERE FERIAM DIEI IULIANI propositi. (48) FERIAM PRODERE DIEI IN ALIIS ANNORUM FORMIS & in Arabica. DE CYCLO LVNÆ SEV AVREO NUMERO (49) IN PARTEM SECUNDAM TABB. RUDOLPHI PRÆCEPTA: (50) CAPUT XVIII. DE TABVLIS EPOCHARVM ET MOTVVM MEDIORUM, ET QUOMODO COLLIGENDI SINT MOTUS MEDII ex his Tabulis, & loca singolorum Mobilium media assignanda. (50) [Tabelle]: Sint colligendi motus medij ad diem 24 Iulij anni 3993 ante Christum currentis, horam 0°.33'.26" post Meridiem Vraniburgicum æquabilem. Invenitur ergo Epocha proximè antiquior 4000. hinc ablato numero anni 3993 ante Incarn. currentis, qui per suprà dicta bissextilis est, relinquntur anni 7 completi. Quare operatio erit talis. (52) [Tabelle]: Natus est RVDOLPHVS Il. R. I. à quo Tabulæ istæ sunt denominatæ, Anno Incarn. 1552, die 18 Iulij, Hora 6°. 52' Viennæ Austriæ. Esto tempus æquabile. Epocha proximè antiquior, & minor, quippe post Christum, est 1500. Ergò (53) CAPUT XIX. DE CANONIBVS SEXAGENARIIS ET RATIONE COLligendi ex iis. (53) [Tabelle]: Desidero motum Solis in annis ante Christum 3992, mensibus ultimis à Julio de anno 3993, diebus ultimis Iulij 7. Horis 23.26. 34. Ergo anni 3600 dant l". 0'. 0', restant 393. Sic anni 360 dant 6'.0', restant 32 pIeni. (54) [Tabelle]: Exempli gratia, Mercurii Revolutiones integræ fiunt mensibus ternis; itaque in anno Iuliano communi fiunt quatuor, idest 24', & insuper Sig. 1. 23°.43'.15'', id est Sex. 24'.43' 15''. (55) QVOMODO FORMANDA SIT UNIUS CUISQUE EX SEPtem Planetis Anomalia media: (55) CAPUT XX. DE TABVLIS PROSTHAPHÆESEON, ET DE RATIONE EXCERPENDI EX IIS MOtus Anomaliæ, vel etiam æquationes Eccentrici. (55) COMPENIVM PER LOGARITHMOS SV MENDI partem proportionalem. (58) [3 Tabellen]: (1)In Genesi RUDOLPHI superius in venti sunt motus. (2)Sic in Saturno, erant (3)In Jove. (58) [4 Tabellen]: (1)In Marte. (2)In Venere. (3)In Mercurio. (4)In LUNA denique pro Anomaliæ solutæ motu coæquato, quatenus luna adhuc est similis planetis caeteris, essetque planè similis, si contingeret eam simul copulari Soli vel ejus opposito. (59) ADMONITIO DE LVNA. (59) INVENIRE ANOMALIAM ECCENTRI ALICVIVS PLAnetæ, vel per Anomaliam Mediam, vel per Anomaliam coæquatam cognitam. (59) DE EXCERPENDA ÆQUATIONE ECCENTRICA EIUSque partibus. DE EXCERPENDO LIMANDOQUE CVM INTERVALLO, tùm Logarithmo intervalli Planetæ. (60) COMPVTARE LOCVM, SOLIS QUIDEM VERUM, QUINque verò Planetarum, (ut & Lunæ pro Copulis) loca Eccentrica, in suâ cujusque Orbitâ. (61) CAPUT XXI. DE TABVLIS LATITVDINARIIS. (61) [Tabelle]: Vt in Genesi RVDOLPHI. Inventa sunt loca sic. (61) DE REDVCTIONE, CVRTATIONE, INCLINATIONE, Ejusque Mesologarithmo, excerpendis & limandis. (61) DE LOGARITHMO FORMANDO INTERVALLI CVRTATI; & de curtando ipso intervallo, si quis eo uti vult. LOCVM ORBITÆ AD ECLIPTICAM REDVCERE. (62) [Tabelle]: In Genesi RVDOLPHI erant Intervallorum Logarithmi (62) CAPUT XXII. DE PROSTHAPHÆRESIBVS ORBIS ANNUI; QUIBUS PLAnetæ locus tandem absolvitur. (63) PROPORTIONEM FORMARE INTERVALLORVM, SEV distantiarum, Terræ & Planetæ, à Sole. ANGVLVM COMMVTATIONIS ILLVM DEFINIre, in quo contingit Prosthaphæris Orbis, (Seu etiam in Inferioribus, Elongatio à Sole) per quamlibet datam proportionalem Intervallorum maxima. (63) EXCERPERE VEL COMPVTARE PROSTHAPHÆRESIN seu Parallaxin Orbis, per Angulum Commutationis & Proportionem Intervallorum. (63) [4 Tabellen]: (1)Vt in Genesi RVDOLPHI Imp. Quia in Saturno Angulus Commut. fuit 155°.49".13", Proportio Intervallorum 225784: cum 156° in margine Tabulæ & 220000 in fronte, invenio Prosth. orbis proximam 2°. 53', sed cum 230000 invenio 2.34. Erit igitur ea circiter 2.44. Sed sine Tabula sic ago. Proportio intervallorum 225784 dat ex Canone Logg. 6°. l'. ad summum. Ergò Prosth. Orbis quæsita, quia de Saturno agitur, est minor hoc arcu. Et quia additis 90, fit Commutatio 96°. 1' multò minor quàm 155°.49'; multò igitur minor erit Prosth. Orbis quàm 6°. l'. Sit 3°. o'. Ergò secundum Caput IX. (2)Sic in Jove. (3)Sic in Marte. (4)Sic in Venere. (64) [Tabelle]: Sic in Mercurio. (65) ELOGATIONEM PLANEæ à Sole definire, tàm cujusque temporariam, quam Inferiorum Maximam, cujusque Intervallorum proportionis. (65) INTERVALLVM INDAgare; Terræ & Planetarum quinque unius, ejusque, si detur, Logarithmum. (65) INDAGARE LATITVDInem Planetæ. (66) CAPUT XXIII. DIRECTORIVM GENERALE, EX PRÆMISSIS PRÆCEPTIS particularibus, expeditè computandi vera loca Planetarum quinque, secundùm & longitudinem in Eclipticâ, & Latitudinem ab eâ. (66) [4 Tabellen]: (1)In præceptis superioribus jam traduximus exemplum hoc per prima septem membra præcepti hujus. Igitur octavò, cùm fuerit Locus Eccentricus in Ecliptica, in (2)Nonò, cum Argumentis latitudinum excerpuntur ex sua cujusque Tabula latitudinariâ Inclinationum Mesologarithmi isti (3)Ab his summis sunt auferendi Logarithmi Commutationum, petendi ex Canone. (4)Hi ut Mesologarithmi, quæsiti in Parte Canonis Mesologarithmorum, produnt Latitudines veras. (67) [Tabelle]: Sint indaganda loca, Martis & Veneris ad annum 1590, diem 3/13 Octobris, hram quintam matutinam, quia MÆSTLINVS Tubingæ hoc momento vidit Venerem quasi sub Marte. Primùm computetur locus Solis, quia nobis ille opus est ad utriusque Planetæ locum. (68) ADMONITIO DE ABBREVIANDO HOC Calcula. (69) ALIA RATIO, SINE LOGARITHMUS, COMPVTANDI loca Planetarum quinque ex iisdem Tabulis: ut facilitas superioris præcepti pateat ex comparatione membrorum singulorum. (69) [Tabelle]: Iam angulus Commutationis est 53°.18'. 38". semissis ergò 26°'39" 19": cujus Tangentem 50199 multiplica in Quotientem. (69) [Tabelle]: Sic etiam in Venere, Anomalia Media 173°. 58'. o" dat distantiam in orbita 71915. In hanc multiplicata curtatio 77, absectis 5 à facto, efficit 55: quod ablatum ab intervallo, relinquit curtatum in Ecliptica Subordina interv. (69) [2 Tabellen]: (1)Iam pro Latitudinibus, divide sinus Commutationum (prolongatos mente 5 Cyphris) (2)Denique in Tangentes Complementa Inclinationum 1°.49'. (70) CAPUT XXIV. DE APSSIONIBVS, VTI VOCANT, QUINQUE PLAnetarum. Habitudines Inferioreum ad Solem, distinguere. (70) PROPORTIONEM INDAGARE, ARCVVM DIVRNOrum Eccentri, Solis & Planetæ. (70) CVILIBET ANOMALIÆ PLANETÆ SVOS COMMVtationis Angulos & Prosthaphæresin Orbis, seu in Inferioribus Elongationem assignare, in quibus is fiat Stationarius. (72) [Abb.]: In hac figurâ S. Solem repræsentat, O Terram, A Planetam unum ex Superioribus, vel econtario, A Terram. (72) [4 Tabellen]: (1)Sic diurnus Eccentrici Solis est, hac Anomalia Solis, 58' circ. Ergo summa E & B 89°. 31'. (2)Cùm autem 8 sit semissis de 17 priori correctione, patet, si in repetitionibus pergamus, nos per semisses correctionum ultimarum venturos ad 24°.29', 24°. 31'. Hic est angulus C correctus, quod licet probare. (3)Et cùm proportio Intervallorum ut Logarithmus ostendat angulum 27°. 25', ponatur C minor. (4)Cùm prima correctio demserit de positione 66. secunda 14½, erit ut 66 ad 14½, sic hoc ad 3 circiter, & fiet. (73) ALIA FACILIORI VIA COMMVTATIONIS ANGUlos illos addiscere, in quibus, stante unaqualibet proportione Intervallorum,fiunt Stationes; idque præterpropter. (73) QUO PACTO SINT DISCERNENDÆ STATIONES, PRIMA 6 Secunda: item, quomodo cognoscamus, recténe sumptus sit diurnus arcus & distantia Solis à Terra, in operatione pæcepti prioris? (73) QUOMODO COGNOSCATUR, NUM PLANETA SIT directus, stationarius an retrogradus? VTRVM MAIOR AN MINOR INCLINATIONE, FVtura sit Latitudo Planetæ. (74) VTRVM LATITVDO PLANETÆ CRESCAT, AN DEcrescat, annè consistat? (74) SEDIMIAMETROS PLANETARVM APPARENtes indagare. (75) DE PLANETARVM κρύψϵι OCCULTATIONE, ET Επιτολή Emersione ex radUS Solis, QUOS OCCASUS Ortúsque Heliacos et ab usu frequenti generis voce Poëticos appellant. (75) CAPVT XXV. DE LVNA SEORSIM, ET PRIMÒ DE ANOmaila SOLVTA: (76) DE ANOMALIA SOLUTA. (76) [8 Abb.]: (1)I (2)II (3)III (4)IV (5)V (6)VI (7)VII (8)VIII ([78]) [Tabelle]: IN ANOMALIA MEDIA (79) CAPVT XXVI. DE MENSTRVA LVNÆ ANOMALIA ET ÆQVAtionibus. (79) DESCRIPTIO TABVLÆ SCRUPP: MENSTRUORUM ET VAriationis etc: (83) QUOMODO PER VIAM INDIRECTAM, SECVNDVM INgenium Hypotheseos physicæ computandus sit locus Lunæ ad quodvis tempus propositum: (86) DESCRIPTIO TABVLÆ ÆQUATIONIS LVMInis seu compositæ. (87) QUOMODO PER VIAM DIRECTAM, ET ASTRONOmiæ veteri magis accommodatam, computandus sit Lunæ locus in Orbita ex his Tabulis? (88) CAPVT XXVII. DE LATITVDINE LVNÆ MENSTRVA, ejúsque Tabulis. (89) CAPVT XXVIII. DE PARALLAXIBVS LUNÆ. (92) [Tabelle]: Itaque punctum occidens quærendum est. Erit igitur (94) IN PARTEM TERTIAM TABB. RVDOLPHI PRÆCEPTA. (95) CAPVT XXIX. DE ECLIPSIBVS SOLIS ET LVNÆ EMINVS CONIECTANDIS. (95) [Tabelle]: Contingebat autem solstitium illa tempestate circa 28. Iunij. Ergo (96) DE CYCLO OBVIATIONVM ⨀ & Ω & ratione indagandi ex eo, diem in anno Iuliano, Conjunctionis medij loci Solis & Nodi Lunæ ascendentis. (97) CAPVT XXX. DE TABVLIS MOTVVM ⨀ ET◗ SVBSIDIARIIS. (97) [2 Tabellen]: (1)Haud multo diversus est usus subsidiariarum, in computando loco Lunæ ficto, quod ejusdem temporis exemplo docebo. (2)Hic si Summa dierum in Revolutionibus integris, quæ proximè minor est collecto tempore, deficiat plusquàm dimidio Revolutionis, utendum est proximè majori, & processus fit alius. (98) CAPVT XXXI. DE REQVISITIS AD COMPVTATIONEM ECLIPSIVM. (99) CAPVT XXXII. METHODVS ECLIPSES COMPVTANDI. (100) QUOMODO COGNOSCATVR EXACTVM Copulæ, seu Eclipticæ, seu cujuscunque, locúsque ejus in Solis & Lunæ Orbitis. (101) QVO COMPENDIO IN VICINA ALTERVTRIVS COpulæ, locus Lunæ fictus convertatur in verum. (101) DIRECTORIVM, QVOMODO EX PRÆMISSIS COMputandæ sint Eclipses Lunæ. (102) [Tabellen]: et in hoc tempus desinere debet diurnus, quo indigemus, quia Copula cadit ante meridiem loci Lunæ computati. (102) [2 Tabellen]: (1)Ergò cuym distet Luna ab Apogæo D. 3. H. 16: erit (2)Comprobato loco Lunæ in ipso momento Obscurationis maximæ sequuntur reliqua. (103) ECLIPSIS SOLIS, QVOMODO SIT COMPUTANDA UNIversaliter, in quantum scilicet pars quæcunque Hemisphærij Telluris ad Solem conversi interventu Lunæ; privatur lumine Solis vel toto vel in parte: Quodnam tunc sit tempus Obscurationis maximæ, quæ mora Vmbræ Lunæ in Disco Telluris, quæ duratio Eclipsiationis omnimodæ per universam Terram, quod initium finisvè utriusque, tanquàm Vraniburgi. (103) [2 Tabellen]: (1)vel etiam inter Logarithmos Semicirculi. (2)Nam quilibet ejus Gradus valet 15 Milliaria Germanica. (104) INQVISITIO ALTITVDINIS GRADVS ECLIPTICÆ NONAGESIMI AB ORIENTE. (105) DE LOCIS IN TERRA, QVIBVS OBVENIVNT PHASES PRÆCIPVÆ IN ECLIPSI SOLIS. (106) DE CALCVLO ECLIPSIS SOLIS AD CERTVM ALIQVEM LOCVM. (108) [2 Tabellen]: (1)Primùm itaque quæro distantias Centrorum Solis & Lunæ. (2)Secundò quæro distantiam duorum Lunæ situum. (108) CAPVT XXXIII. DE CONIVNCTIONIBVS ET OPPOSITIONIBVS ALIORVM Planetarum, & de ΕΞΕΛΙΓΜΟΙΣ & ΑΠΟΚΑΤΑΣΤΑΣΕΣΙ. (114) IN PARTEM QVARTAM TABVLARVM RVDOLPHI PRÆCEPTA. (116) CAPVT XXXIV. DE OBLIQVITATIS ECLIPTICÆ VARIATIONE. (116) SPORTVLA GENETHLIACIS MISSA DE TABVLARVM RVDOLPHI VSV IN COMPVTATIONIBVS ASTROLOGICIS: Cum Modo Dirigendi novo & NATURALI. (121) DE ERECTIONE THEMATIS Cœlestis. DATA SIDERIS LONGITUDINE ET LATITUDINE, ASCENSIONEM ejus Rectam & Declinationem computare. (121) [3 Tabellen]: (1)Quare aufer arcum à latitudine, restat 6. 39. 30 subtensus angulo. Sic ergò operor. (2)Locus datus rursum est Sept. latitudo verò Mer. & major, casus iterum IlI: ablatâ ergò illâ, restat 8. 47. Ergò. (3)Ablatâ ergò latitudine à 22. 24, restat subtensus 20. 35. (121) [Tabelle]: Consentit igitur hac in plagâ cum loco dato, Quare casus fit primus, & lat. l0. 22 addenda est ad exscriptum ex Declinationum columnâ 22. 24. 27, fiet subtensus 32. 46.27. (122) DATA ALTITUDINE SIDERIS CUJUS EST NOTA LONGITUDO ET Latitudo, indagare Distantiam ejus à Meridiano, & hujus, comparatione cum loco Solis, Horam. (122) [Tabelle]: Ecce Opus (122) QVOMODO VENIATUR IN COGNITIONEM ASCENSIONIS OBliquæ Horoscopi, & per eam Gradús orientis, caeterarumque ordine Domorum. (122) [2 Tabellen]: (1)Sic igitur operandum. (2).hujus Antilogarithmus ablatus ab Antilogarithmo altitudinis Poli, relinquit Antilogarithmum altitudinis ejusdem Poli super circulum Domus propositæ. (122) [2 Tabellen]: (1)In exemplo. (2).cujus Declinatio 22. l0. 30 Meridiana additur huic altitudini P. 29. 22, fietque. (123) DE DIRECTIONIBVS secundùm REGIOMONT ANVM: (123) [2 Tabellen]: (1)Distat ergò à Meridiano in ortum, arcu 41. 43. Opus itaque tale. (2)Hic sub Alt. P. 45 super Circulum Positionis Significatoris habet ad scriptum Angulum Orientis (123) DE DIRECTIONIBUS secundùm KEPPLERVM. (123) DATO NVMERO ANNORVM ÆTATIS, ASSIGNARE LOCA DIREctionis, quatuor Significatorum. (124) ELECTO LOCO, AD QVEM DIRIGENVS SIT SIGNIFICAT ORVM unus; seu dato loco Promissoris, veL ejus radij, invenire numerum Annorum, quibus is venit ad Significatorem. (124) DATO NVMERO ANNORVM alicujus Accidentis, electoque ejus & Promissore & Significatore, qui sit vel Horoscopus, vel Medium Cœli, vel Pars Fortunæ, corrigere tempus Nativitatis, & sic locum Significatoris. (125) NOTÆ ET ANIMADVERSIONES NON NULLÆ AD PRÆCEPTA TABUlarum RUDOLPHI. ( - ) TABVLARVM RUDOLPHI ASTRONOMICARUM PARS PRIMA, QUÆ COMMUNIS PLVRIBVS STELLIS VEL etiam aliis aliarum disciplinarum usibus. ([1]) [Inhaltsverzeichnis]: ([1]) [Tabelle]: HEPTACOSIAS LOGARITHMORUM LOGISTICORUM & Quadrantis Arcuum respondentium. (2) [Tabelle]: CANON LOGARITHMORUM ET ANTILOGARITHmorum, ad singula scrupula Semicirculi. (12) [Tabelle]: Tabula ANGULI, pro Prostaphæresibus orbis Annui. (20) [Tabelle]: Pars Canonis LOGARITHMORUM Gr. 10. pro latitudinibus quinq; Planetarum. (22) [Tabelle]: Particular Canonis ANTILOGARITHMORUM exactiorum, ad denarios secundorum, pro Eclipsibus. (23) [Tabelle]: Tabula Ascensionum Rectarum, Declinationum, & Angulorum Eclipticæ cum Meridiano. (24) [Tabelle]: Synopsis brevis differentiarum Ascensionalium. (25) [Tabelle]: Tabula Altitudinis Nonagesimi, seu Anguli Orientis, ad singulos gradus Altitudinis Poli, & ternos Eclipticæ, pro Parallaxibus. (26) [Tabelle]: Tabulæ ÆQUATIONIS TEMPORIS TRIPLICIS. (32) CATALOGUS LOCORUM EUROPÆ PRÆCIPUE, SED ET AFRICÆ ASIÆQUE NON NULLORUM, CUM DIFFERENTIA TEMPORARIA MERIDIANORUM AB URANOPYRGICO, ET POLI BOREI ALTITUDINIBUS: EX FIDE OBSERVATORUM & Observationum cœlestium, ubi haberi potuerunt; aut ex intervallis itinerariis, chartisque Geographicis recentissimis. (33) A, B (33) C (33) D - L (34) M (34) N - R (35) S (35) T - Z (36) SYNOPSIS ÆRARUM USU ALIUM, QUOTQUOT AD NOSTRAM NOTITIAM PERVENERUNT: SUNT AUTEM COMPARATÆ, SINGULÆ CUM SUIS ANNIS ANTE VEL POST INCARNATIONEM VERBI: assignata etiam usualia Annorum initia Mensibus & Diebus anni Juliani. (37) [4 Tabellen]: (1)TABVLA Reductionis Dierum anni Iluiani veteris, ad Dies anni gREGORIANI Novi, hodie usitati in plerisque partibus Orbis. (2)ROMANORUM JULIANORUM. (3)ÆGYPTIACORVM ET PERSICOVM. (4)ARABICORVM HEGIRÆ. (39) [5 Tabellen]: (1)TYPVS ANNI CONFVSIONIS qui finem imposuit anno Romano veteri: nec non Iulianorum primorum 49. vitioforum. (2)Tabula ostendens, quomodo Menses exotici Solares fixi hodie cohæreant cum Mensibus Anni Juliani. (3)TABELLA HEBDOMADICA, ad Feriam diei indagandam, Primum in anno JVLIANO, benefico CYCLI SOLIS. (4)Deinceps Calendæ Mensium usualum, sie responderum diebus mensis Juliani ex observatione hodierna. (5)Rursum per TRIACONTETERIDA in anno ARABICO vago Hegiræ. (40) TABVLARVM RUDOLPHI ASTRONOMICARUM PARS SECUNDA, PLANETAS SINGVLOS seorsim complexa, (41) [Abb.]: (41) [Inhaltsverzeichnis]: (41) SOLEM (42) [2 Tabellen]: (1)EPOCHÆ SEV RADICES. (2)MOTVS MEDII. (42) [Tabelle]: MOTVS MEDII in Annis expansis et collectis. (43) [Tabelle]: Tabula Æquationem SOLIS. (44) [Tabelle]: CANON Sexagenarius Motuum mediorum SOLIS. (47) SATURNUM (48) [2 Tabellen]: (1)EPOCHÆ SEV RADICES. (2)MOTVS MEDII. (48) [Tabelle]: MOTVS MEDII in Annis expansis et collectis. (49) [Tabelle]: Tabula Æquationem SATVRNI. (50) [2 Tabellen]: (1)TABVLA Latitudinaria SATVRNI. (2)Termini Stationum SATVRNI. (53) JOVEM (54) [2 Tabellen]: (1)EPOCHÆ SEV REDICES. (2)MOTVS MEDII. (54) [Tabelle]: MOTVS MEDII in Annis expansis et collectis. (55) [Tabelle]: Tabula Æquationum IOVIS. (56) [2 Tabellen]: (1)TABVLA Latitudinaria IOVIS. (2)Termini Stationum IOVIS. (59) MARTEM (60) [2 Tabellen]: (1)EPOCHÆ SEV RADICES. (2)MOTVS MEDII. (60) [Tabelle]: MOTVS MEDII in Annis expansis et collectis. (61) [Tabelle]: Tabula Æquationum MARTIS. (62) [2 Tabellen]: (1)TABVLA Latitudinaria MARTIS. (2)Tarmini Stationum MARTIS. (65) VENEREM (66) [2 Tabellen]: (1)EPOCHÆ SEV REDICES. (2)MOTVS MEDII. (66) [Tabelle]: MOTVS MEDII in Annis expansis et collectis. (67) [Tabelle]: Tabula Æquationum VENERIS. (68) [2 Tabellen]: (1)TABVLA Latitudinaria VENERIS. (2)Termine Stationum VENERIS. (71) MERCURIUM (72) [2 Tabellen]: (1)EPOCHÆ SEV RADICES. (2)MOTVS MEDII. (72) [Tabelle]: MOVS MEDII in Annis expansis et collectis. (3 [73]) [Tabelle]: Tabula Æquationum MERCVRII. (74) [2 Tabellen]: TABVLA Latitudinaria MERCVRII. (2)Termini Stationum MERCURII. (77) LUNÆ (78) [2 Tabellen]: (1)EPOCHÆ SEV RADICES. (2)MOTV MEDII. (78) [Tabelle]: MOTVS MEDII in Annis expansis et collectis. (79) [Tabelle]: Tabula Æquationum LVNÆ. (80) [Tabelle]. Tabula Scrupulorum menstrorum, eorumque; Logarithmorum, particulæ Exfortis, et VARIATIONIS. (82) [Tabelle]: Tabella VARIATIONIS demonstrativæ, quarta parte maioris quam Tychonica proxima; quam tamen Observationes Tychonis nonnullæ confirmare videntur. Deducitur autem ex appendice Gr. 132. 45. Elongationis ◗ à ⨀, ad Lunationes integras I 2, in anno fiderio. (83) [Tabelle]: TABVLA Æquationis LVMINIS, compositæ ex Æquationis Menstruæ proportione competente reducta, Particula exforte, et Variatione TYCHONICA. (84 - 85) [2 Tabellen]: (1)Tabula Latitudinis LVNÆ simplicis, una cum Reductione loci Orbitæ ◗ ad Eclipticam, quæ valent, Nodo Ω in Quadris existente. (2)Tabula exhibens portionem ipsam Latitudinis Menstruam. (86) [2 Tabellen]: (1)Tabula pro Augmentatione Latitudinis Menstrua. (2)Residuum Tabulæ exhibentis portionem Latitudinis Menstruam. (87) TABVLARVM RUDOLPHI STRONOMICARUM PARS TERTIA, DE ECLIPSIBVS SOLIS ET LUNÆ, ALIIS QVE PLANETARUM CONGRESSIBUS ET CONfigurationibus. (89) [Tabelle]: Typus Aurei Numeri, neque Politicus, neque Ecclesiasticus usualis, sedmere Astronomicus, serviens indagandis Mensibus Eclipticis in Methodo Anni Juliani. (89) [Tabelle]: CACLO OBVIATIONVM Solis Medii et Nodi Lunæ AScendentis in Periodo; minori Annorum 37. Julianorum cum dieblus 2, maiori verò Annorum 2828 Iulianorum exacta. Et ponitur in anno huius Periodi primo, ♂ ⊙ Ω fieri inipso articulo mediæ noctis, quæ inchoat primum Ianuarii, quamvis nulla Epocharum seu initiorum possibilium id exactè habeat. Dies autem intelliguntur currentes, et cum latitudine à media nocte antecedenti usque ad mediam noctem fequentem. (90) [2 Tabellen]: (1)TABVLA Subsidiaria Motuum Solis. (2)Canonion dierum in Mensibus Anni completis. (91) [Tabelle]: TABVLA Diurnorum SOLIS, cum Horariis et Semidiametris. (92) [Tabelle]: TABVLA Subsidiaria Motuum LUNÆ. (94) [Tabelle]: CANON Motuum Lunarium in Periodis Anomaliæ integris, per centum annos expansos, perque; Centenarios et Millenarios collectos. (95) TABVLA ficti Motus seu Elongationis Lunæ, à loco, in quo ipsa proximè Apogæ fuit vel erit, velut in mense vacuo: cum horario ficto, pro Syzygiis Luminarium indagantis, et pro computandis locis Lunæ ad tempus propositum, si addas Æquationes Menstruas. (96) [3 Tabellen]: (1)TABVLA Latitudinis Lunæ in Eclipsibus, cum Reductione loci Lunæ ad Eclipticam, vel Loci Solis eisque; oppositi ad orbitam Lunæ. (2)TABELLA Parallaxum et Semidiametri Lunæ, cum Horario eius vero in Copulis, à puncto fixo numerato. (3)TERMINI ECLIPSIVM. (98) [Tabelle]: LVNATIONVM seu Coniunctionum Solis et Lunæ EPOCHÆ. EPACTÆ in annis solutis. (99) [Tabelle]: CANON Sexagenarius Dierum. (100) TABVLARVM RVDOLPHI ASTRONOMICARVM PARS QVARTA, De Obliquitatis Eclipticæ, Præcessionis Æquinoctiorum et Latitudinis Fixarum Prostaphæresibus. (102) [Tabelle]: Epochæ Argumenti Obliquitatis et Prosthaphæreseos Æquinoctiorum forma quintuplici. (103) [2 Tabellen]: (1)TABVLA Motus Medii Argumenti Obliqitatis Eclipticæ, pro Forma Obliquationis quintuplici. (2)TABELLA CORRECTIONIS OBLIQVITATIS. (104) CATALOGUS STELLARUM FIXARUM MILLE, EX ACCURATIS TEYCHONIS BRAHE OBSERVATIONIBUS ET CALCULO AD ANNUM INCARNATIONIS MDC. COMPLETUM. (105) VRSA MINOR, CYNOSVRA. VRSA MAIOR, HELICE. (105) DRACO. (105) CEPHEVS. BOOTES, ARCTOPHYLAX. CORONA BOREA. ENGONASI, HERCVLES. LYRA, VVLTVR CADENS (106) OLOR, CYGNVS. (106) CASSIPEIA. PERSEVS. (107) AVRIGA, HENIOCHVS, ERICTHOIVS. (107) OPHIVCHVS, SERPENTARIVS. SERPENS OPHIVCHI. SAGITTA SIVE TELVM. AQVILA SEV VVLTVR VOLANS. ANTINOVS. DELPHINVS. QVVLEVS, EQVI SECTIO. (108) PEGASVS, EQVVS, ALATVS. ANDROMEDA. TRIANGVLVS, DELTOTON. COMA BERENICES. (109) PARS SECVNDA DE STELLIS FIXIS XII. SIGNORVM ZODIACI. (109) ARIES. (109) TAVRVS. GEMINI. CANCER. (110) LEO. (110) VIRGO. LIBRA. SCORPIVS. SAGITTARIVS. (111) CAPRICORNVS. (111) AQVARIVS. PISCES. (112) PARS TERTIA CATALOGI COMPLECTITUR FIXARUM, QUÆ XV. IMAGINES MEridionales offormant, à veteribus annotatarum partem potissimam. (113) CETE. ORION. ERIDANVS. (113) LEPVS. (113) CANIS MAIOR. CANIS MINOR, PROCYON. ARGO NAVIS. HYDRA. CRATER. CORVVS. CENTAVRVS, CHIRON. (114) IN HYDRA. IN CENTAVRO. IN LVPO. IN THVRIBVLO. IN CORONA AVSTRALI. IN PISCE NOTIO. (117) GRVS. PHŒNIX. INDVS. PAVO. APVS, AVIS INDICA. APIS, MVSCA. CHAMÆLEON. TRIANGVLVM. PISCIS VOLANS, PASSER. (118) DORADO, XIPHIAS. TOVCAN, ANSER AMERICANVS. HYDRVS. (119) [Tabelle]: TABULA REFRACTIONUM TRIPLEX, TYCHONIS BRAHE diutinis & multiplicibus Observationibus confirmata; potissimum in freto SUNDICO, quo mare Balthicum Oceano Germanico infunditur: pertim verò etiam in Regni Bohemiæ arce Cæsarea BENATICA: aëre defæcate, quàm fieri potuit, ad hoch electo. (119) Einband ( - ) Einband ( - ) Buchschnitt ( - ) Buchschnitt ( - ) Buchschnitt ( - ) Farbkeil ( - )
The purpose of the article is to discuss punishments of kürek, i.e., penal servitude on the galleys, and forced labor at the Imperial Arsenal (Tersâne-i Amire), imposed on Jewish men by kadis and Ottoman governors during the 16th-19th centuries in the Ottoman Empire. The kürek (lit. "oar") punishment was inflicted for serious crimes, e.g., adultery, heresy, prostitution, and coin-clipping, as well as other grave offenses for which the Shari'ah/Kanon prescribed the death penalty. At times it was also administered for lesser crimes. We learn that this punishment was administered particularly when the Ottoman navy needed more working hands, mainly after the Battle of Lepanto in October 1571 and during the campaign for the conquest of Crete in the 1660s. This punishment was meted out mainly to Jewish offenders from Istanbul and Izmir. The article discusses the execution of these punishments in light of many sources and draws conclusions in the light of extensive research literature. 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In der vorliegenden Dissertation werden Fremd- und Selbstbilder im Feuilleton der deutschsprachigen Zeitungen aus der Steiermark (Marburger Zeitung und Grazer Tagblatt) und Krain (Laibacher Zeitung) von 1900 bis 1914 anhand eines heterogenen Korpus von literarischen und publizistischen Narrativen untersucht. Den Schwerpunkt der Dissertation bilden die Analyse der Fremd- und Selbstbilder, Untersuchung von Verfestigung und Verflüssigung von Auto- und Heterostereotypen, poetischer Verfremdungsprozesse und derer gesellschaftlichen Funktionen. Die für poetische Alterität charakteristischen Verfremdungsverfahren auf der Genre-(Groteske, Märchen und Sage) und Handlungsebene (universalistische Kulturthemen wie Tod, Krankheit und Wahnsinn) sind vorrangig in der Laibacher Zeitung zu beobachten, wobei sie zur Sensibilisierung der Leser für interkulturelle Erfahrung und Verschränkung vom Eigenen und Fremden sowie De-Konstruierung von Homogenität beitragen und die Texte eine Funktion der inoffizieller Geschichte und eines kritischen Korrektivs erfüllen. Die Verfremdungsverfahren der Allegorisierung und Ironisierung werden dagegen in der Marburger Zeitung und Grazer Tagblatt politisch-ideologisch instrumentalisiert. Anhand der Selbstbilder der Superiorität sowie der Abgrenzung gegenüber dem Anderen treten die Funktionen der kollektiven Identitätsstiftung, des kollektiven Gedächtnisses und der Gedächtnisorte, der Reduzierung der gesellschaftlichen Komplexität und der Konstruktion von Nationalismen auf. Unterschiede in der Inszenierung der Fremd- und Selbstbilder in den untersuchten Zeitungen können auf das Zeitungscredo und -programm der jeweiligen Zeitung, die nationale Zusammensetzung der Bevölkerung, die politisch-historischen (Krisen-)Ereignisse und nicht zuletzt auf die Homogenisierungstendenzen einer Gemeinschaft als Folge der Zuwanderung zurückgeführt werden. Die repräsentativen Beispiele der Selbst- und Fremdbilder in der Marburger Zeitung und Grazer Tagblatt laufen stets auf eine nationale Unterscheidung, d.h. in Anlehnung an Giesen auf primordiale Codes hinaus. Als Antwort auf die zunehmende Autonomisierung der slowenischen Kultur in dem 'deutschen Festungsdreieck' der Städte Celje, Ptuj und Maribor, die zum 'feindlichen Fremden' wurde, ist eine Abgrenzung ihr, aber auch anderssprachigen Bevölkerung der Donaumonarchie gegenüber zu beobachten. Die Tageszeitungen als Medien des kollektiven Gedächtnisses ermöglichten ihren Lesern in historischer und regionaler Thematik ein Erinnern an deutsche Tradition, Sitten und Rituale und stützten sich auf traditionelle Ordnungsmuster, die in der tagtäglichen Erfahrung mit Fremdheiten vermeintliche Sicherheit boten und eine kollektiv identitätsstiftende Rolle erfüllten. Die Repräsentationen von China, Süd-Afrika und den Nahen-Osten sind verankert in der dichotomisierenden Denkweise und dem Othering und werden mittels von Oppositionspaaren Okzident/Orient, Zivilisierte/Barbaren, Kultur/Natur usw. inszeniert, wobei die kulturelle Fremderfahrung, die vorerst in Reiseberichten thematisiert wird, zwischen den Polen Faszination und Bedrohung oszilliert. Während Marburger Zeitung die regionale kulturelle Heterogenität, die Zirkulation kultureller Transfers aber auch ausländische Literatur weitgehend ausblendet und zusammen mit Grazer Tagblatt auf einer Repräsentation der homogenen deutschsprachigen Kultur beharrt, die sich in dem multiethnischen Staat nicht zurechtfindet und deswegen einer Utopie von einem national homogenen Staat mittels einer groß- bzw. alldeutschen Lösung entgegensieht, lässt die Laibacher Zeitung – obwohl es der deutschsprachigen Kultur Vorrang gibt – einen 'dritten Raum' für seine inter- und intrakulturell differenzierte Leser entstehen, wodurch ihr ein großes Potential für die Förderung einer friedlichen und toleranten Kohabitation der unterschiedlichen Kulturen im transkulturellen mitteleuropäischen Kontaktraum innewohnte, in dem Kulturvermittlung als selbstverständlich galt. ; The thesis deals with cultural representations of Self and Other in German newspapers from Styria (Marburger Zeitung and Grazer Tagblatt) and Carniola (LaibacherZeitung) from 1900 to 1914, based on a heterogeneous corpus of literary and journalistic narratives. The thesis focuses on the construction in discourse of "self-images" and their contrasting "other-images", as well as the representational practice of stereotyping and the presence and forms of poetic alterity, such as specific genres (grotesque, fairy tale and legend) and on the plot-level on culturally universal topics such as death, disease and insanity, that are mainly observed in the LaibacherZeitung. This literature and its otherness play an important part in raising the awareness among readers of intercultural experience, in deconstructing the homogeneity of Self and Other, while also functioning as unofficial history, alternative worlds and as a corrective critique of society. The strategies of poetic alterity such as allegorisation and irony, which are characteristic of the discourse in Marburger Zeitung and Grazer Tagblatt, form part of the political and ideological instrumentalization of literature. The study emphasizes the differences in the mediatization of Selfness and Otherness in the three newspapers and their feuilletons, differences which arise from each newspaper's credo and program, as well from the historical context (specific political, cultural and ethnic features) of their locality and region. The representative examples of images of Self and Other in the Marburger Zeitung and Grazer Tagblatt tend towards national distinctiveness, in the sense that collective identification follows the primordial code, which according to Giesen, is the basis for the formation and consolidation of collective identity. In response to the increasing autonomy of Slovenian culture in the cities of Lower Styria, the Slovenian and other ethnicities of Habsburg Central Europe became, through strategies of distinction, constructed as the "hostile stranger". As the medium of collective memory, the newspapers used historical and regional issues to remind their readers of German traditions, customs and rituals, which were based on traditional patterns of symbolic order and offered security amidst the everyday experience with otherness and strangeness. The representations of "distant" cultures, such as Chinese, South African and those from the Middle East, are rooted in a dichotomizing mindset and in othering ; moreover, they are staged in rather rigid binary oppositions such as Occident/Orient, Civilization/Barbarism, Culture/Nature etc. The intercultural experience with the otherness discussed in travelogues, oscillates between the poles of fascination and threat. Marburger Zeitung refused to accommodate the heterogeneity of the particular locality, region and multiethnic state of the Habsburg Monarchy and mostly blocked the circulation of cultural elements, for instance by mainly excluding foreign literature from their feuilleton and persisting, along with Grazer Tagblatt, in projecting a homogeneous German culture in Lower Styria. This policy resulted in politically utopian projections of a nationally homogeneous state based on unification with the German Empire, in which case the poetic alterity and the procedures of literary transformation were instrumentalized by relations of power, such as politics. In contrast, the German-speaking periodical from Ljubljana – although it does project the preeminence of German culture – created a third space for its socially and culturally differentiated readers. This expanded its potential for promoting peaceful and tolerant intercultural communication among the different cultures in the transcultural Central European space ; cultural mediation along with overcoming and embracing the cultural, political, religious and national differences, as well as heterogeneity and plurality, constituted its main aspirations.
Auseinandersetzungen mit dem Islam prägen seit einigen Jahren politische und mediale De-batten um Multikulturalismus und Integration in westeuropäischen Einwanderungsgesell-schaften. Der Rekurs auf das christliche Abendland , der Entwurf einer Leitkultur und die Verteidigung der Festung Europa sind im Zuge dessen oft genannte Stichworte. Gegenstand dieser Debatten ist jedoch nicht ausschließlich die Ausgrenzung des Islam und von MuslimIn-nen: Die Bedeutung, die so genannten christlich-abendländischen Werten wie Toleranz und Meinungsfreiheit im Rahmen dieser Debatten beigemessen wird, verweist vielmehr darauf, dass zeitgleich und in engem Zusammenhang damit die (Re-)Formulierung einer westlich-abendländischen Identität auf dem Spiel steht. Eine zentrale Stellung kommt dabei dem Re-kurs auf hierarchische Geschlechterverhältnisse zu, die als Wesensmerkmal des Islam darge-stellt und als Begründung der angenommenen Differenz zwischen Angehörigen der so genann-ten islamischen und denjenigen der so genannten westlichen Kultur herangezogen werden. Für feministisch Engagierte stellt dies eine Herausforderung dar: Sie sehen sich durch die vielfa-che Bezugnahme auf scheinbar feministische Argumentationen in Massenmedien und Politik in die Position einer Avantgarde derjenigen Kämpfe versetzt, die im Rahmen dieser Debatten mit dem Ziel der (Neu-)Bestimmung einer westlich-abendländischen Identität ausgetragen werden. Die vorliegende Untersuchung unterzieht feministische diskursstrategische Reaktionen auf diese Herausforderungen am Beispiel feministischer Zeitschriften in Deutschland und den Niederlanden einer kritischen Betrachtung und setzt sie in Beziehung zu ihren jeweiligen massenmedialen Pendants. Die Forderung eines diskurstheoretisch inspirierten, diskursanaly-tischen Vorgehens nach der Kontextualisierung des untersuchten Materials ernst nehmend, wurde für die inhaltliche Ausgestaltung und sprachliche Konstitution sowohl massenmedialer als auch feministischer Islamdiskurse ihr jeweiliges Zusammenspiel mit historisch-theoretischen sowie migrations- und integrationspolitischen Kontexten als prägend ange-nommen. Mit Deutschland und den Niederlanden wurden zwei westeuropäische Einwande-rungsländer ausgewählt, die sich trotz immer wieder zu verzeichnender Annäherungsbewe-gungen durch eine überwiegend differente Gestaltung der jeweiligen Migrations- und Integ-rationspolitiken sowie eine unterschiedlich weitgehende Institutionalisierung des Islam als Minderheitenreligion auszeichnen. Mit welcher thematischen Schwerpunktsetzung und mit Hilfe welcher argumentativen Strukturen konstituieren sich also feministische im Vergleich zu massenmedialen Diskursen zum Thema Islam vor dem Hintergrund differenter diskursiver Kontexte in Deutschland und den Niederlanden? Der erste Teil der Arbeit umfasst eine um-fassende, ländervergleichende Betrachtung der historisch-theoretischen (Kap. II) sowie migra-tions- und integrationspolitischen (Kap. III) Kontexte von Islamdiskursen in Deutschland und d! en Niederlanden. Das darauf folgende Kapitel unterzieht massenmediale Islamdiskurse an-hand ausgewählter diskursiver Ereignisse einer genaueren Betrachtung (Kap. IV). Nach der Darstellung der in der Arbeit angewandten Methodik (Kap. V) umfasst die folgende empiri-sche Analyse in einem ersten inhaltsanalytischen Schritt die quantitative Erfassung geografi-scher und thematischer Schwerpunktsetzungen in Bezug auf das Thema Islam in den unter-suchten Zeitschriften (Kap. VI). Mit dem Ziel der Erschließung der argumentativen Struktur feministischer Islamdiskurse wird im zweiten empirischen Schritt ein diskurstheoretisch in-spiriertes, frame-analytisches Vorgehen gewählt, das die detaillierte Rekonstruktion und quantifizierende Auswertung der Frames Deutungsmuster erlaubt, derer sich feministi-sche Zeitschriften in Deutschland und den Niederlanden bedienen (Kap. VII). Abschließend wird unter der Überschrift Rettungsszenarien im Widerstreit auf feministische Positionierungen fokussiert, die sich im Zuge der Auseinandersetzung mit dem Thema Islam innerhalb hegemonialer feministischer Diskurse in Deutschland und den Niederlanden herausbilden. ; Since several years discussions on the Islam shape the political and medial discourses on multiculturalism and integration in Western European immigration societies. The recourse to the Christian Occident , the outline of a Leitkultur , and the defense of the Fortress Europe are frequently mentioned keywords in these debates. The underlying subject-matter is, however, not exclusively the marginalization of the Islam and of Muslims: As so-called christian-occidental values such as tolerance and freedom of opinion are of high significance in these debates it becomes clear that it is rather the (re-)formulation of a western-occidental identity which is at stake. Interestingly, the recourse to hierarchical gender orders occupies a central position in depicting the central features of the Islam and in justifying the assumed difference between members of the so-called muslim and the so-called western culture respec-tively. Gender is considered as a marker of an ascribed difference between the Islam and the so-called Western world. As a category of differentiation it constitutes a challenge for those engaged in feminism: Because of the multiple references to ostensibly feminist argu-mentations in mass media and politics feminists consider themselves to be in the position of an avant-garde concerning the struggles for (re-)configurations of the western-occidental identity that underlie these debates. The analysis in hand critically reflects strategic discursive reactions to these challenges using the example of feminist journals in Germany and the Netherlands and relates these to their respective mass medial pendants. Its design is inspired by discourse theory and is taking seriously a discourse analytical approach: Historical and theoretical discourses as well as migration and integration policy in both countries of inves-tigation are understood as significant, influential contexts of the reviewed material, being of high relevance for the content and the linguistic constitution of mass medial and femin ist dis-courses on Islam. Germany and the Netherlands are two Western European immigration so-cieties that despite their every now and then occurring convergence are predominantly displaying a different shaping of the respective migration and integration policy as well as a different extent of institutionalization of the Islam as a minority religion. Accordingly the main question is: With which topical prioritizations and with the aid of which arguments do feminist discourses constitute themselves in comparison with mass medial discourses on Is-lam against the background of divergent discursive contexts in Germany and the Netherlands? The first part of the analysis in hand consists in an extensive comparison of the historical and theoretical (Chap. II) and the political migration-related and integration-related contexts (Chap. III) of discourses on Islam in Germany and the Netherlands. The following chapter takes a closer look at the mass medial discourse on Islam in both countries (Chap. IV). Fur-ther to a detailed description of the applied methods (Chap. V), the empirical analysis encom-passes in a first step (content analysis) the quantitative acquisition of geographical and topical emphases regarding the topic Islam in the reviewed journals (Kap. VI). The aim of the second empirical step is to analyse the argumentative structure of feminist discourses on Islam; the applied frame-analytical approach permits the detailed reconstruction and quantifying evalua-tion of the frames interpretative patterns that are used by feminist journals in Germany and the Netherlands (Kap. VII). This concluding section is especially bringing into focus the various feminist positionings described as antagonistic rescue scenarios that are emerg-ing in the course of the debates about the topic Islam within the hegemonic feminist dis-courses in Germany and the Netherlands
La tesi, dedicata alle committenze dei Comneno Duca in Epiro tra il 1204 e il 1318, è articolata in sette capitoli. Nel primo è tracciato il quadro storico-politico, entro gli estremi cronologici della dinastia dei Comneno Duca: dalla costituzione dello "stato" di Michele I, a ridosso del 1204, alla morte di Tommaso nel 1318. Il "secolo d'oro" (I.1) è stato suddiviso in tre segmenti cronologici, che corrispondono a) all'ascesa e alla disfatta di Teodoro e dei suoi immediati eredi (I.1.2), nel loro progetto di occupare Salonicco per riconquistare, forti del titolo imperiale, la capitale Costantinopoli (1204ca.-1246); b) al "regno" in Epiro di Michele II, cui viene conferito il titolo di «despota» e che fonda, di fatto, quello che viene definito «Despotato»; c) agli anni di potere di Niceforo e del figlio Tommaso, quest'ultimo sostenuto dalla co-reggenza della madre Anna. I successivi due paragrafi tracciano il quadro culturale e artistico, sia del periodo precedente a quello in esame per comprendere quale fosse la tipologia dei committenti in queste regioni periferiche dell'impero bizantino tra IX e XII secolo (I.1.3); sia del Duecento, prestando attenzione ad alcuni personaggi importanti, impegnati, oltre che sul versante politico, anche su quello artistico (Giovanni Bardanes, Demetrio Chomatenos), o a singoli centri (Hagios Nikolaos a Mesopotamon, Hagios Nikolaos a Kremastos, Bonitza), in cui è attestata – da fonti testuali o da sottoscrizioni librarie – la produzione di manoscritti (I.1.4). Il secondo capitolo si apre con una serrata disamina storiografica dei termini «despota» e «De-spotato» (II.1), necessaria a comprendere come venisse concesso tale titolo e che cosa implicasse nel XIII secolo. È inoltre occasione per ripercorrere i principali studi sul tema e presentare le figure dei Comneno Duca (da Michele I a Tommaso), cui è espressamente dedicato il paragrafo successivo (II.2). Dopo una breve premessa sulla tipologia di fonti utilizzate (numismatica, sfragistica, diplomatica, epigrafia), sono illustrate in modo analitico tutte quelle attestazioni nelle quali ogni "regnante" ha inteso esprimere in modo consapevole e con una certa chiarezza il proprio ruolo nelle vicende del tempo. Attraverso queste scelte di autorappresentazione emergono chiaramente le ambizioni politiche e ideologiche dei Comneno Duca, anche tenendo conto dell'assenza di fonti testuali "interne", ossia redatte da intellettuali organici alla corte di Arta. Il terzo capitolo è dedicato a un contesto cronologicamente e geograficamente circoscritto (l'Etoloakarnania tra il 1210 e il 1240 circa) attraverso l'approfondita analisi dell'attività di due figure eccezionali: il metropolita Giovanni Apokaukos e Costantino, il fratello di Michele I. Proprio le numerose lettere dell'arcivescovo aiutano a illuminare le vicende molto travagliate che riguardano questa "strana" e irrequieta coppia di rivali. La contesa per la giurisdizione su Naupaktos e l'area circonvicina si trasformò ben presto in un violento scontro: a questo tema, nonché alla presentazione del territorio e dei due "contendenti", è dedicato il primo paragrafo (III.1). Nel successivo (III.2) sono per la prima volta sistematicamente raccolte e commentate tutte le fonti, gli oggetti e i monumenti che è possibile riconnettere, per varie ragioni, al metropolita Apokaukos: in primis, attraverso uno spoglio della sua corrispondenza allo scopo di ricostruire la sua attività di committente sia sul versante dell'architettura e della decorazione monumentale sia su quello delle arti minori (in particolare i tessuti). Emerge in questo paragrafo anche il suo ruolo di concepteur di programmi iconografici e di autore di epigrammi destinati ad accompagnare oggetti preziosi. Il paragrafo III.3 introduce invece la figura di Costantino attraverso l'esame dell'exonartece del monastero di Varnakova, che egli fece costruire come mausoleo per sé e la sua famiglia: sfortunatamente molto alterato dopo la parziale distruzione del 1826, vengono in nostro soccorso documenti scritti seriori ed epigrafi metriche che dovevano essere apposte sulle due tombe. Grazie ad Apokaukos è poi possibile, nel paragrafo III.4, dare conto di altre iniziative "artistiche" di Costantino: in particolare la costruzione a Naupaktos di un soufas, ossia di una sala di ricevimento, che almeno nel nome richiama modelli dell'Anatolia selgiuchide. Tale impresa è stata letta alla luce del contesto in cui viene ricordata della citazione (una lettera di Apokaukos indirizzata al collega Chomatenos) e specificandone le particolarità sia architettoniche che simbolico-funzionali. L'ultimo paragrafo (III.5) verte su un altro monumento e in particolare sulla sua decorazione pittorica, patrocinata (come apprendiamo dall'iscrizione) da un certo Alessio Comneno Duca intorno al 1230. Si tratta, nonostante le precarie condizioni conservative, di un caso di studio molto interessante sia per gli elementi prosopografici (può Alessio essere identificabile con l'omonimo sepolto a Varnakova ed essere, quindi, un parente di Costantino?) sia per alcune soluzioni iconografiche, specie nel catino absidale. Il quarto capitolo è dedicato alla capitale del Despotato, Arta. Il nuovo ruolo di cui la città venne investita, soprattutto a partire dal 1230, comportò estese trasformazioni che le conferirono un'inedita facies monumentale, specie tenendo conto che nei secoli precedenti essa doveva apparire più dimessa, nonostante vi fossero – come si evince dal primo paragrafo (IV.1) – già diversi monumenti, alcuni dei quali ancora oggi esistenti. Il successivo paragrafo (IV.2) raccoglie le fonti storiche e i dati archeologici sulla città al fine di ricostruirne un più ampio quadro sociale, politico e topografico nel XIII secolo. Ciò permette di passare in rassegna (IV.3), evidenziando gli aspetti più interessanti ai fini della nostra ricerca, i monumenti che costellarono il centro urbano e l'area circonvicina, ma in un modo diacronico, ossia privilegiando una trattazione cronologica progressiva piuttosto che l'analisi sistematica di ogni chiesa o monastero. Questo perché ciascun monumento ha più fasi cronologiche, che spesso corrispondono a committenti differenti e quindi a diversi periodi storici. Un'analisi di Arta decennio per decennio può offrire quindi un quadro più chiaro del processo di monumentalizzazione iniziato da Michele II e proseguito da Niceforo, non senza il contributo delle rispettive mogli, Teodora e Anna. L'ultimo paragrafo (IV.4) getta uno sguardo d'insieme sulla città, seguendo un taglio particolare, quello topografico, per evidenziare – attraverso i monumenti principali – lo sviluppo di quella che Eastmond ha definito, a proposito di Trebisonda, «the ritual geography of the city». Nel Capitolo V, sempre privilegiando una lettura diacronica, si analizzano i due monumenti che più di tutti esprimono la ktetoreia dei despoti Michele II e Niceforo: i monasteri della Pantanassa presso Philippiada e della Parigoritissa di Arta. Essi presentano una storia costruttiva comune, segnata da due fasi, la prima legata a Michele II (1242-1267/1268) e la seconda a Niceforo I (1268-1296/1298). È proprio in questi due edifici che si manifesta con chiarezza non solo il "passaggio di consegne" tra una generazione e l'altra, ma anche la complessità della produzione artistica in Epiro. Ribaltando la prospettiva storiografica corrente, si prende in considerazione dapprima la Pantanassa e poi la Parigoritissa, questo perché, come emerge dal paragrafo V.1.1, è il monastero di Philippiada a vantare la precedenza cronologica su quello di Arta, che invece, nella sua prima fase, molto probabilmente non venne mai terminato (V.1.2). Niceforo, dopo aver ereditato il potere paterno, intervenne sui due edifici in modo differente. Nel caso della Pantanassa (V.2.1), provvide a costruire un complesso peristoon che inglobava il nucleo originario della katholikon e che si contraddistingueva per alcune soluzioni architettoniche estranee al contesto epirota, quali le volte a crociera costolonate e i portali strombati. La riqualificazione del monastero fondato dal padre Michele si tramutava, così, in un'"occidentalizzazione" del suo aspetto esterno. Nel caso della Parigoritissa (V.2.2) Niceforo optò per una ricostruzione integrale, secondo un progetto architettonico davvero straordinario e arricchito da alcuni elementi (come le gallerie e il baldacchino "aperto" sul prospetto occidentale) che richiamano soluzioni "imperiali" costantinopolitane. Per decorare il nuovo edificio reclutò mosaicisti da Oriente (Costantinopoli? Salonicco?) e scultori da Occidente: questi ultimi realizzarono opere molto singolari, che tuttavia rispondono – come vedremo – a un programma iconografico unitario. Nel Capitolo VI è tratteggiato il fenomeno della committenza aristocratica in Epiro, finora ri-masto decisamente ai margini degli studi. Si inizia con una disamina delle fonti epigrafiche attraverso cui è possibile conoscere il nome di questi altrimenti ignoti fondatori, di cui si precisano – per quanto possibile – i dati prosopografici. Nel primo paragrafo si cerca di tracciare un filo rosso tra le loro committenze, sia dal punto di vista artistico (stesse maestranze, stessi materiali) sia, soprattutto, da quello politico-topografico: una prospettiva di lettura, questa, che ci consente di ipotizzare una sorta di progetto "a tavolino" nella distribuzione geografica di tali fondazioni (VI.1). All'unico personaggio cui è possibile ascrivere più di un'opera, ossia Michele Zorianos, è invece dedicato il paragrafo successivo (VI.2). L'esame delle fonti epigrafiche e testuali si associa allo studio delle opere a lui sicuramente riferibili, il codice Barocci 29 della Bodleian Library di Oxford, l'anello d'oro del Metropolitan Museum di New York e, soprattutto, il complesso di chiese a Mokista in Etolia, per il quale venne coinvolto anche il monaco Cosma Andritzopoulos. Il VII e ultimo Capitolo raccoglie le conclusioni della ricerca, da un lato soffermandosi sui luoghi e i protagonisti delle imprese artistiche (in particolare sugli scultori occidentali della Pantanassa e della Parigoritissa, VII.1.1, e sui mosaicisti attivi in quest'ultimo cantiere, VII.1.2), dall'altro sulle componenti ideologiche e politiche sottese alle opere esaminate nei capitoli precedenti (VII.2).
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The Russian war against Ukraine has had multiple impacts on NATO's deterrence and defence stance vis-à-vis Moscow, which today presents a number of challenges to allies – particularly European ones. The 2022 Madrid summit and the resulting Strategic Concept signalled a substantial departure for the alliance in terms of focus and posture.[1] First, the new Concept represents an unequivocal return to a Russia policy based first and foremost on deterrence and defence, rather than calls for cooperation that had been typical between the end of the Cold War and the Russian illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014.[2] The 2022 Concept stands in stark contrast with this period of détente and instead explicitly points to Russia as "the most significant and direct threat to Allies' security and to peace and stability in the Euro-Atlantic area".[3] This new focus on deterrence and defence is accompanied with an enhancement of NATO's military presence along the northern and eastern flanks.[4]The impact on crisis prevention and management and cooperative security On the contrary, crisis prevention and management and cooperative security, the other two core tasks featured in the 2022 Strategic Concept, are clearly de-prioritised in comparison with the previous 2010 Concept. First, it is explicitly stated that they serve the overarching goal of collective defence. Second, the sections devoted to these two tasks are worded in a cautious, vague and modest way, especially if compared with the ambitious, concrete and robust section referring to Article 5, which enshrines the principle of collective defence. To make just one example, two long-standing NATO partnerships such as the Mediterranean Dialogue and the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative are not even explicitly mentioned in the Strategic Concept. It appears somewhat inevitable that the focus on Russia's threat on the eastern flank must be balanced with a de-prioritisation of the southern one.[5] To be sure, terrorism is still formally indicated as a major asymmetric threat to the Alliance; yet, the ruinous NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan and, above all, the war against Ukraine have radically turned NATO's military posture towards the conventional scenario of a peer-to-peer conflict waged by a state actor on the Alliance's eastern border stretching from Scandinavia to the Black Sea. As a result, the crisis prevention and management core task may be relegated to a background role, at least in the short to medium term.[6] This new reality will affect some European allies on the Mediterranean shores as they seek to keep NATO engaged in North Africa and the Middle East.A membership postponed sine die The war in Ukraine has ushered in a number of unexpected developments with regard to NATO's enlargement, with Finland joining the alliance and Sweden currently in the process of doing so. At the same time, the issue of Ukraine's membership has remained controversial, as it has been since the 2008 Bucharest Summit.[7] At the 2023 Vilnius summit, allies reiterated that Ukraine might not enter NATO while the conflict with Russia is ongoing, closing the door to such an outcome for the mid-to-long term.[8] On the same occasion, G7 countries gathered in Vilnius pledged long-term military support to Kyiv both as a group and via bilateral agreements, in primis between Washington and Kyiv.[9] As a result, for the foreseeable future, Article 5 will apply to the current NATO limes and will not include Ukraine as a third country: allies will continue to provide military assistance to Kyiv while refraining from a direct conflict with Russia on Ukrainian territory.The challenges of the new NATO Force Model The Alliance took several steps in order to meet the collective deterrence and defence goals set up by the new Strategic Concept. Among these, a new NATO Force Model stands out as a particularly ambitious undertaking. Among the initiatives under this model, perhaps the most advertised was the increase of the Rapid Reaction Force to 300,000 troops from the current 40,000 to be deployed within one month.[10] Indeed, NATO is aiming at a force model in which allied troops are divided into three tiers based on their respective readiness level: tier 1 forces (over 100,000) are to be deployable in up to ten days; tier 2 (200,000) in around 10-to-30 days; tier 3 (500,000) in between 30 and 180 days.[11] This move will, in all likelihood, prove to be as difficult to implement in the short and medium term as it is ambitious. The task is particularly arduous considering the magnitude of the leap required in sheer numbers and, above all, the fact that most NATO countries outside of the US are already under pressure to maintain high readiness across domains as they concurrently make huge investments in the modernisation of their forces and re-stocking of ammunition.[12] Notably, these numbers entail a level of enablers and logistics not seen as necessary during the post-Cold War era marked by crisis management and stability operations. Even at the peak of its military engagement in Afghanistan in 2011, NATO deployed a maximum of 130,000 troops from 51 allied and partner countries,[13] though they did not necessitate the air and naval components, as well as the land heavy equipment, necessary to cope with a peer adversary. For sure, from an operational point of view, it is much easier to plan and implement a major defence posture in Europe than in Central Asia. Still, military mobility remains a priority issue for NATO, to the point that even non-EU allies such as US, UK, Canada and Norway have joined the PESCO Military Mobility project to improve the related infrastructure and legal framework in Europe.Forward defence in practice At the same time, the 2022 Summit led to the commitment by NATO to strengthen its Enhanced Forward Presence (EFP) – first established in 2017 with four multi-national battalion-sized battle groups in Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia and Poland[14] – both in size and scope. Indeed, they are going to be upgraded to brigade-sized forces.[15] Moreover, under the enhanced Vigilance Activity (eVA) label, four other multinational battlegroups have been deployed in Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Slovakia, led respectively by France, Italy, Hungary and the Czech Republic. Again, framework nations and other contributing allies are, in many cases, encountering serious hurdles as they attempt to keep a battle-ready force in theatre, given the shortages in troops and equipment that appear to affect all Allies except the US.[16] These land forces are integrated within a broader deterrence and defence posture which includes air policing of the whole European allies' airspace, standing maritime groups activities in the seas adjacent to Europe, and integrated air and missile defence (IAMD).[17] Moreover, the Strategic Concept recognises space and cyber as operational domains where Article 5 may be invoked should an attack against allied assets occur, and sets the goal to integrate space capabilities within the Alliance's deterrence and defence posture by laying the ground for multi-domain operations. Meanwhile, the underwater environment is gaining more attention also within NATO. Inevitably, NATO's ability to properly bolster its forward defence capabilities represents a crucial element in the credibility of its standing forces along the eastern flank as a conventional deterrent. At the same time, the Alliance is developing new regional plans that aim to blend with those of front-line nations, and testing them via large scale exercises such as Steadfast Defender 24. Still, these plans will require that the new Force Model effectively raises the number of high-readiness troops.[18]Mass and credible deterrence The Ukraine war has exposed substantial gaps throughout European militaries in terms of capacity: ammunition stocks, number of available weapon systems and the defence industries' ability to quickly ramp up production without clear international coordination and procurement commitments by governments. Ammunition stocks have rarely been a priority among NATO allies and should be brought to a level befitting a protracted, high-intensity conflict such as the one taking place in Ukraine. At the same time, the wide-ranging modernisation drive already underway in many allies' armed forces must deliver exquisite capabilities to the armed forces at scale, especially considering that the technological edge long given for granted by NATO forces has gradually been eroded in key areas, including emerging and disruptive technologies. The war in Ukraine showed how mass is still a necessary precondition for victory in drawn-out conflicts between peer or near-peer forces. Mass, however, is not simply achieved by a number of troops, but by the amounts and quality of available equipment, large ammunition stocks, the ability to quickly move forces as needed and adequate training beyond élite, front-line troops to bear high levels of attrition. Achieving adequate mass thus requires a concerted effort that transcends the purely numerical dimension, but combines crucial industrial, budgetary and readiness elements. First, Western and especially European armed forces must be backed by solid industrial capacity. The European Defence and Technological Industrial Base (EDTIB) needs to be able to scale up production of low- and high-end equipment and ammunition in order to avoid the ammunition shortages that were widespread even before Russia's full-scale invasion. The fragmentation of the defence market in Europe, with countries pursuing separate national programmes for systems often answering similar requirements, is an obstacle to the achievement of true economies of scale making European products less competitive.[19] This also means that the scarce funds available for research and development separately at a national level cannot be combined and leveraged together, at a time when much of the military spending is directed to filling post-Cold War gaps. Second, defence budgets are increasing throughout NATO, though critical gaps accumulated over decades of prioritising stability, peacekeeping and crisis management operations are set to absorb large part of these efforts in the short and medium terms. Many militaries will likely face an arduous task as they seek to prepare for large-scale, protracted and high-intensity conflict against peer- or near-peer level forces while at the same time bringing ammunition and equipment stocks to adequate levels. Third, while the war in Ukraine presents many traditional features of 20th-century wars, such as attrition and the central role of artillery, it is also witnessing a number of revolutionary developments such as the massive use of uncrewed air vehicles (UAVs). NATO allies must put warfighting readiness back at the top of national priorities, with particular attention to morale and motivation but also training and education of personnel, in a way that favours a flexible and adaptable approach to military operations that transcends domains and requires an increasingly integrated use of wide-ranging technologies. In conclusion, NATO has taken a number of meaningful steps to maintain a credible deterrent for its members in the face of Russia's war in Ukraine. Still, to prevent an attack to eastern allies by a risk-prone adversary, it must demonstrate to be on the whole capable of effectively responding to full-scale conventional war, and to do so for as long as it takes. This is probably the greatest challenge for the new NATO posture caused by two years of a large-scale, high-intensity war fought by Moscow at its borders.Elio Calcagno is Researcher in the Defence Programme at the Istituto Affari Internazionali (IAI). Alessandro Marrone is Head of the Defence Programme at IAI. This commentary is a revised and updated version of a chapter written by the same authors for the study Russia-Ukraine War's Strategic Implications, edited by Alessandro Marrone, Rome, IAI, February 2024.[1] NATO, 2022 Strategic Concept, July 2022, https://www.nato.int/strategic-concept.[2] Elio Calcagno, "Dove punta la bussola Nato", in AffarInternazionali, 1 July 2022, https://www.affarinternazionali.it/?p=4236.[3] NATO, 2022 Strategic Concept, cit., point 8.[4] Ibid., point 21.[5] Alessandro Marrone, "NATO's New Strategic Concept: Novelties and Priorities", in IAI Commentaries, No. 22|30 (July 2022), https://www.iai.it/en/node/15667.[6] Enrico Casini and Andrea Manciulli (eds), La guerra tiepida. Il conflitto ucraino e il futuro dei rapporti tra Russia e Occidente, Rome, Luiss University Press, 2023.[7] Andrew Gray, "Bucharest Declaration: NATO's Ukraine Debate Still Haunted by 2008 Summit", in Reuters, 10 July 2023, https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/natos-ukraine-debate-still-haunted-by-bucharest-pledge-2023-07-10.[8] Sean Monaghan et al., "What Happened at NATO's Vilnius Summit?", in CSIS Critical Questions, 14 July 2023, https://www.csis.org/node/106347.[9] Laura Kayali, "G7 Countries Pledge Long-Term Support for Ukraine", in Politico, 12 July 2023, https://www.politico.eu/?p=3333672.[10] "NATO to Boost Troops on High Alert to over 300,000 - Stoltenberg", in Reuters, 27 June 2022, https://www.reuters.com/article/instant-article/idUKKBN2O80R0.[11] NATO, New NATO Force Model, June 2022, https://www.nato.int/nato_static_fl2014/assets/pdf/2022/6/pdf/220629-infographic-new-nato-force-model.pdf.[12] IAI interview, 6 September 2023.[13] "Blood and Billions of Dollars: NATO's Long War in Afghanistan", in Reuters, 15 August 2021, https://www.reuters.com/world/india/blood-billions-dollars-natos-long-war-afghanistan-2021-08-13.[14] Each Battlegroup is led by a framework nation, respectively US (Poland), Germany (Lithuania), UK (Estonia) and Canada (Latvia).[15] "NATO Reaffirms Plan to Have 'Combat-Ready' Brigades in the Baltic States", in LRT, 11 July 2023, https://www.lrt.lt/en/news-in-english/19/2032611/nato-reaffirms-plan-to-have-combat-ready-brigades-in-the-baltic-states.[16] Robbie Gramer and Jack Detsh, "All Unquiet on NATO's Eastern Flank", in Foreign Policy, 13 April 2023, https://foreignpolicy.com/2023/04/13/nato-eastern-flank-battle-group-russia-poland-latvia-lithuania-estonia.[17] On NATO IAMD see, among others, Alessandro Marrone and Karolina Muti (eds), "Europe's Missile Defence and Italy: Capabilities and Cooperation", in Documenti IAI, No. 21|05 (April 2021), https://www.iai.it/en/node/13072.[18] Ben Barry et al., "The Future of NATO's European Land Forces: Plans, Challenges, Prospects", in IISS Research Papers, June 2023, https://www.iiss.org/en/research-paper/2023/06/the-future-of-natos-european-land-forces.[19] See in this regard Michelangelo Freyrie and Michele Nones, "The Implications for the European Defence Industry", in Alessandro Marrone (ed.), Russia-Ukraine War's Strategic Implications, cit., p. 107-116.
2009/2010 ; L'ordine stabilito a Yalta e' crollato insieme al Muro di Berlino. Con la fine della guerra fredda l'Urss e' scomparsa, lasciando al suo posto la Russia, ridemensionata al punto da classificarsi nel 2004 in termini PIL a parita' di potere d' aquisto al decimo posto mondiale dopo il Brasile. Le sue spese militari in dollari erano pari a 1/23 di quelle del Pentagono (dati di SIPRI). La fine del Bipolarismo ha inaugurato una nuova configurazione: quella Unipolare, con i soli Stati Uniti definiti come "iperpotenza". Il mondo e' profondamente mutato, e gli equilibri dell'epoca bipolare sono diventati un ricordo del passato. L' indipendenza delle cinque repubbliche centro-asiatiche (Kazakistan, Kirghisistan, Tagikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan) e delle tre caucasiche (Armenia, Azerbaigian, Georgia) al seguito della dissoluzione dell'Unione Sovietica, ha comportato un completo sconvolgimento dello spazio geopolitico. E' impossibile non rilevare la straordinaria posizione geopolitica di questi stati. Essi sorgono, infatti, al centro della massa euroasiatica, nel cuore di quella "Terra Centrale" che Halford Mackinder considerava la "chiave" del dominio mondiale, all'incrocio di civiltà millenarie, lungo quella che fu la "Via della seta" e, finalmente, in prossimità del Medio Oriente. I dirigenti di Mosca hanno tardato a valutare in tutta la loro portata i cambiamenti geopolitici del dopo guerra fredda, e in particolare la determinazione di Washington ad approfittare dell'indebolimento dell'influenza russa per rafforzare le sue posizioni strategiche dal Caucaso all'Asia Centrale.La perdita dell'influenza di Mosca e' iniziata con la Perestrojka, mentre si rafforzavano i movimenti nazionalistici. La nascita di stati indipendenti ha fatto cessare qualsiasi forma di controllo diretto, mentre i blocchi legati ai conflitti acceleravano il crollo dei legami economici. La determinazione della Georgia a sganciarsi al più presto dall'influenza russa e' anche il risultato della strumentalizzazione da parte di Mosca dei conflitti locali che, fin dai primi anni '90 sono continuati (Abkasia, Ossezia del Sud). Mosca non appariva come una risorsa per la risoluzione di questi conflitti; al contrario, ha tentato di utilizzarli per i propri fini. E' stato, questo, uno dei principali argomenti avanzati dagli americani nel 1997, al momento della creazione del Guam (Georgia, Ucraina, Azerbaijan, Moldavia). Gli Stati Uniti sono incontestabilmente i maggiori protagonisti della ricomposizione dello spazio post-sovietico, con tutta una gamma di interventi: sia trattati bilaterali di cooperazione economica e militare, sia trattati multilaterali, quali il sostegno dato alla creazione di Guam (Georgia, Ucraina, Azerbaijan, Moldavia). Gli attentati dell'11 settembre 2001 forniscono agli Stati Uniti l'occasione per piazzare le proprie pedine nell'ambito 'antiterrorismo" nel cuore dell'area euroasiatica, al fine di garantire la sicurezza degli accessi alle ricchezze petrolifere del Mar Caspio, (in piena collaborazione militare in particolare nel Uzbekistan, Kirgistan, Georgia, Azerbaijan). In Georgia, strategicamente importante per Washington, sono sorte numerose ONG locali, finanziate e sostenute dalle ONG estere e da organismi internazionali. I finanziamenti vanno a programmi di ogni genere, ma sempre con l'imposizione di un modello unico. La strategia di Washington, finalizzata al duraturo indebolimento della Russia nell'ambito del suo spazio tradizionale, viene completata dalle rivoluzioni politiche: in Georgia alla fine dell 2003, in Ucraina alla fine dell 2004. Da allora la percezione delle minacce per la Russia si e' evoluta sino al punto in cui il potere militare degli USA e della NATO e stato definito come la principale minaccia militare, come affermato da Putin nei suoi discorsi (con la sua affermazione la minaccia missilistica farebbe tornare USA e Russia ai tempi della guerra fredda). Come sappiamo la Sicurezza Energetica e' priorita assoluta, punto cardine dello sviluppo dello Stato. La dipendenza energetica influenza direttamente la capacita' di uno Stato di esercitare il suo potere nel campo della sicurezza. Gli Stati importatori sono particolarmente vulnerabili di fronte alla minaccia di una loro interruzione. Il Petrolio e' protagonista di molte crisi internazionali, ha provocato guerre e alleanze internazionali. La decisione sul trasporto del greggio sui mercati internazionali non solo e' una priorita' assoluta, ma riveste una piu' profonda valenza geopolitica. Molteplici segnali indicano chiaramente la volontà e la determinazione del Cremlino a perseguire un disegno neo-imperiale nelle aree ex-sovietiche dell' "estero vicino". L'essenziale per Putin - Medvedev è mantenere il controllo dell'hard core, ovvero l'unità e centralizzazione dello Stato, la coerenza geo-politica. Oggi ciò che conta per Mosca è rafforzarsi, durare. La scelta unipolare induce le Potenze di rango inferiore ad allearsi tra di esse per contrabilanciare l'egemonia dell'Iperpotenza. La politica di pressione energetica non è una novità: questa, gia' ideata negli anni '90, e'stata perfezionata nell'era Putin, il cui piu' ambizioso sogno e' quello di controllare l'intero sistema di distribuzione regionale del gas in Europa, secondo il principio seguente: chi controlla le pipeline, controlla l'acquirente/buyer – ed, in qualche misura, il Paese produttore di gas. Così, prima tappa del progetto di Vladimir Vladimirovich è l'Europa, dove Mosca ha stabilito stretti e collaudati legami con alcuni governi (Germania, in primis, il gasdotto sottomarino baltico tra Russia e Germania. gasdotto sottomarino posato nel Mar Baltico che permetterà a Gazprom di portare il gas russo in Germania e nel resto dell'Europa nord-occidentale, forse persino in Gran Bretagna.) e compagnie energetiche per organizzare una grande rete di sicurezza e business. La "Sicurezza energetica" è oggi il servizio più importante che Mosca vuole vendere all'Europa. Tuttavia esiste un ostacolo, la cosiddetta "Nuova Europa" di Rumsfeld: tutta la "Nuova frontiera orientale" della UE e della NATO, dai Paesi Baltici a Polonia, Ucraina, Georgia, è percepita da Mosca come ostile: NATO dell'Est. L'incubo per Mosca e anche il "corridoio" Caspio - Azerbajan – Georgia - Mar Nero – Odessa (Ukraina) (già esiste l'oleodotto Odessa – Brody con possibile estensione fino a Danzica, Mar Baltico) per portare il gas centroasiatico direttamente alla "Nuova Europa", bypassando la Russia; in prospettiva fino al terminale di Danzica (Mar Baltico, Polonia), dove è possibile liquefare e mandare il gas via mare agli USA; oppure da Brody avviarlo alla commercializzazione regionale via Ucraina e Polonia. Mosca ha percezione della minaccia: già da tempo compagnie occidentali che operano nel Caspio azero e kazako hanno costruito postazioni sulla costa del Mar Nero per favorire i futuri flussi di idrocarburi centro-asiatici verso occidente. Inoltre l'ingresso nella UE di Romania e Bulgaria ha reso attuali i progetti di "corridoi" per portare il gas azero e turkmeno in Europa via Caspio – Caucaso – Turchia – Europa sud-orientale (per esempio il progetto Nabucco), escludendo Mosca. Infine è operativo l'oleodotto BTC (Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan), che per ora trasporta solo petrolio azero fino alle coste del Mediterraneo orientale, bypassando i Dardanelli e la Russia. In un non lontano domani si potrebbe realizzare una pipeline sottomarina caspica, in grado di portare anche il greggio kazako di Tengiz, Karatchaganak, Kashagan, sottraendolo alla servitù delle pipeline russe. Di conseguenza per l'intero East-West Energy Corridor ci sono alcune preoccupazioni. I conflitti nel Caucaso: tra Armenia e Azerbaijan rigurdante di Nagorno Karabach e in Georgia (Abkazia e Ossetia del Sud) . A partire dal crollo dell'URSS, la Georgia raggiunta l' indipendenza, ha dovuto lottare per proteggere la propria integrità territoriale. A causa dei conflitti con le repubbliche separatiste di Abkhazie e Ossezia del Sud, protrattisi fra il 1990 e il 1993, con particolare violenza nel 1992-1993, Tbilisi aveva perduto de facto la sovranità su due territori anche prima della drammatica svolta del 2008, con il conflitto russo-georgiano e il riconoscimento da parte russa dell'indipendenza delle due regioni. Questa guerra possiamo definirla come lo scontro di interessi Russo-Americani. Inoltre , l'evoluzione in senso filo-atlantista della politica georgiana, soprattutto dopo il 2003, e stata la base del grave inasprimento dei rapporti con la Russia, di cui la Georgia dipende in gran parte per l'approvvigionamento energetico. La questione del conflitto russo-georgiano, il problema della sicurezza energetica, quello dell'allargamento della Nato alla Georgia e i conflitti hanno rappresentato i motivi d'interesse principali per l'Unione Europea e per l'Occidente in genere.Tutti i dossier appaiono, al momento molto delicati a causa dell'importanza dei rapporti fra Europa e Russia. Mosca si è fermamente opposta all'integrazione euro-atlantica della Georgia e ai progetti euro-americani di nuovi gasdotti che dall'area del Caspio utilizzerebbe il corridoio transcaucasico e la Turchia per eludere il territorio russo. Cedere alla richieste russe a lasciare Armenia, Azerbaijan e Georgia nell'orbita russa non è un'opzione per l'Europa. Le nazioni piu influenti dell'UE hanno interesse a favorire un alto grado d'integrazione regionale nel Caucaso meridionale e a fare del Caucaso meridionale una zona di trasmissione virtuosa (politica ed economica) fra l'area euro-atlantica, quella nord euroasiatica dominata da Mosca e quella medio-orientale. Per ottenere tale risultato , gli europei dovrebbero favorire la pacificazione completa del conflitto russo-georgiano e di quello azero-armeno per il Nagorno Karabakh, coinvolgere Turchia, Russia e Stati Uniti in negoziati multi-laterali. Senza tale evoluzione si rischiano anni di alta instabilita in un area sempre piu importante per l'Europa e per le relazioni Internazionali. La classe politica Georgiana cerca di far entrare il paese nella NATO e nell'UE dal 1991. E' vero che la pace e la prosperità sono di cruciale importanza per la stabilita della regione, e per i grandi progetti di East-West Corridor e dell' Europa in generale. Perciò i paesi dell' Europa guardano con grande attenzione tutto ciò che succede e succederà in questo Paese, affidabilita dei sistemi e dei regimi. Nell'aprile del 1991 la Georgia proclama l' indipendenza, è stata il secondo Stato dell' URSS a chiudere con il regime comunista. La vittoria elettorale della coalizione nazionalista Gamsakhurdia avvenuta il 27 maggio del 1991 ha introdotto il sistema elettorale diretto. Gamsakhurdia viene eletto primo Presidente della Georgia dopo il crollo dell'URSS. Le conseguenze dell' eredità post sovietica (fallimento nel rilanciare l'economia, inesperienza nella gestione dello Stato) hanno causato un colpo di Stato militare nel 1992, ed il forte nazionalismo ha provocato l'aggravamento della situazione in Abkasia e Osetia del Sud. Nel tentativo di normalizzare la situazione interna del Paese, nel marzo 1992 venne richiamato Eduard Shevardnadze, affinche si assumesse la responsabilita' di ricoprire la carica provvisoria di Presidente del Consiglio di Stato, grazie ad una delega del consiglio Militare, in attesa dello svolgimento delle nuove elezioni. Nel 1992 diventa Presidente del Parlamento. Nell' agosto del 1995 il Parlamento approva una nuova Costituzione, e Shevardnadze viene eletto secondo Presidente della Georgia. Nel 2002 il suo governo entra in crisi politico-economica. l'ex -Ministro della Giustizia dello stesso Shevardnadze , leader dell Oposizione Mikehil Saakashvili (fortemente filo Americano) ha guidato il popolo contro i brogli delle elezioni, contro il Presidente Shevardnadze, costringendolo alle dimissioni. "Rivoluzione di velluto" o "Rivoluzione delle Rose" cosi è stata chiamata la protesta esplosa. Il 4 gennaio del 2004 Saakashvili e' stato eletto terzo presidente della Georgia. Dopo 3 anni, il suo governo entra in crisi e costringe Saakashvili ad anticipare le elezioni presidenziali al 5 gennaio 2008, e quelle parlamentari nella primavera del 2008. Dopo essere stato eletto con un secondo mandato nel 2008, Shaakashvili e' stato fortemente contestato dall'opposizione e da parte della popolazione Georgiana per i brogli elettorali. Il governo Saakashvili e' entrato in grave crisi, soprattutto dopo la guerra russo-georgiana riguardante all'Ossezia del sud dell' agosto 2008. Nella tesi si pongono varie domande: ci si chiede se le continue turbolenze in Georgia siano conseguenza degli scontri di interessi Geopolitici delle Potenze Esterne oppure l'esito degli scarsi rendimenti politici dei Governi della Georgia. Ci si chiede anche se in questo scenario internazionale, la Georgia potrebbe superare le nuove sfide Geopolitiche. Cosa accadde dopo la caduta dell muro di Berlino in un Paese con una popolazione di circa 4 millioni di abitanti, che si estende per 69.700 km2 , e cosi' strategico per Washington e Mosca? Quali sono le paure e le aspirazione della popolazione? Qual e' il mondo visto da Tbilisi? Quali sono le prospettive e gli scenari futuri? ; XXII Ciclo
The College Mefcufy. VOL. IV. GETTYSBURG, PA., DECEMBER, 1896. No. 8. THE COLLEGE MEftClPRY, Published each month during the college year by the Students of Pennsylvania (Gettysburg) College. STAFF. Editor: ROBBIN B. WOLF, '97. Associate Editors : LEWIS C. MANGES, '97. ED. W. MEISEN H ELDER, SAMUEL J. MILLER '97. CHARLES T. LARK '98. JOHN W. OTT, '97. CHARLES H. TILP, '98. E. L. KOLLER, '98. Alumni Association Editor: REV. D. FRANK GARLAND, A. M., Baltimore, Md. Business Manager: HARRY R, SMITH, '97. Assistant Business Manager: JOHN E. MEISENHELDER, '97. ".". jOne volume (ten months). . . . $l.no iMiMS-\Siuglecoples, . . .15 Payable in advance All Students are requested to hand us matter for publication The Alumni and ex-members or the College will favor us by-sending Information concerning their whereabouts or any Items they may think would be Interesting for publication. All subscriptions and business matters should be addressed to the business manager. Matter intended for publication should be addressed to the Editor. Address, THE COLLEGE MEHCUKY, Gettysburg, Pa. CONTENTS. EDITORIAL, 114 DE ORATORE, - --. --- 117 AN ADVENTURE (Poetry), --- 118 AN APPEAL, "9 A LULL FROM THE HIVE (Poetry), --- 120 COLLEGE LOCALS, 120 ALUMNI NOTES, -- 122 ATHLETIC NOTES, 125 TOWN AND SEMINARY NOTES, 127 FRATERNITY NOTES, - --- '--128 SUBJECTS FOR "ROMAN LAW" THESES, 129 LITERARY SOCIETIES, --- . - - 129 EXCHANGES, --- 129 EDITORIAL. REVIEWS ! Examinations ! ! Vacation ! ! ! The stereot3rped program is about to be ren-dered. The term, on the whole, has been un-usually pleasant. Seldom has there been a fall session of so much charming weather. This has been conducive to good spirits with the professors as well as with the bo}rs. Sev-eral interruptions broke the monotony of col-lege work—the foot-ball games, the visit of the Columbian Club, Election day, Thanksgiving day, Institute week and several others. The work in the class-room has been very good, and this is somewhat surprising in the face of the great temptation to stay out-of-doors. The moral and spiritual work of the term is shown in the excellent results in the Y. M. C. A., alike in the meeetings, in the efforts among the non-members, and in the continu-ation of the week of prayer during the second week. Neither has athletic activity been neglected. The "gridiron," bowling alleys, gymnasium and tennis courts have been well patronized. After all comes vacation, especially desired by the Freshmen. The MERCURY extends to all its heartiest wishes for a Merry Christmas and a Prosperous New Year. ' + * * INTER-COLLEGIATE ORATORICAL CONTEST TO BE HELD AT GETTYSBURG.—The annual meeting of the delegates composing the Com-mittee of Arrangements of the State Inter-collegiate Oratorical Union was held at the Windsor Hotel, Philadelphia, on Saturday, Nov. 21st. Fourteen representatives were present from the seven following colleges : Lafayette, Lehigh, Muhlenberg, Franklin and Marshal, Ursinus, Swarthmore and Gettys- "S THE COLLEGE MERCURY. burg. Our delegates were G. F. Abel, '97, from Philo, and R. B. Woll, '97, from Phrena. President Yetter, late of Muhlenberg, called the meeting to order. The unfinished business was then taken up and completed. The re-quest of Susquehanna University for admission was refused on the grounds that the Union is large enough and the University very young. After hearing the delegates, it was decided to hold the contest at Gettysburg on March 27th, 1897. Hon. John Stuart, of Chambers-burg; Hon. J. B. McPherson, of Harrisburg, and Hon. Rob't E. Pattison, of Philadelphia, were chosen to act as judges of the contest. The officers elected are: Pres., R. N. Hood, of Lehigh ; Vice Pres., W. E. Stoeckel, of Muhlenberg; Treas., G. F. Abel, of Get-tysburg; Sec, \V. H. Kready, of Franklin and Marshal ; Executive Committee, Blair, of Swarthmore; Shenk, of Lafayette; Wolf, of Gettysburg, and the Pres. and Sec. ex officio. A rotation system was adopted so as to have the contest held once in every seven years at each college. The contest will be held at Gettysburg, 1897; Lafayette, 1898; Lehigh, 1899; Muhlenberg, 1900; Ursinus, 1901; Franklin and Marshal, 1902, and Swarthmore, 1903. A communication has just been received from Muhlenberg asking Gettysburg to ex-change with her. The following considera-tions make such an exchange desirable : the expense and trouble attending the contest and the fact that our oratorical talent does not promise us the prize. The expense will be from sixty to one hundred dollars, even if we can overcome the trouble; but when Gettys-burg has the contest, she should have a fair prospect of the prize. The only objection to the exchange is that Muhlenburg has already had the contest there, while Gettysburg has never had it. No action has yet been taken on the matter. * * * IT is to be hoped that the article in our last issue, on the Gettysburg Club at New Haven, by Wm. J. Gies, has been thoughtfully read and pondered by the different Alumni. This is at present the only Gettysburg Alumni Club in existence, outside of the general associa-tion. There should be other clubs of this kind at such centres as York, Philadelphia, Balti-more, Harrisburg, Altooua and other places. Such organizations are not only pleasant for the members, but are beneficent to the institu-tion. One of the chief objects of the clubs should be to furnish recruits for the college. No doubt the motive which prompted the New Haven men to form a Gettysburg Club was their interest in their Alma Mater. There are few better ways of showing your interest in the college, than by the formation of such clubs. The New Haven men have already had let-ter heads printed. At the top of the page in large characters are the words, The Yale Get-tysburg Club, while to the left in small type is a list of the officers for i896-'g7. Pres., Wm. J. Gies, '93; Vice Pres., C. F. Kloss, '94; Historian, H. L. M. Hoffman, '95; Sec, A. H. Brown, '96; Treas., D. F. Culler, '93, * * * OUR RELATIONS WITH DICKINSON.—There has been considerable talk, throughout the present term, in favor of contracting friendly relations with Dickinson. Our neighbor has intimated that we ought to come on bended knees and uncovered heads and apologize for all the defeats which she has suffered at the hands of the Gettysburg athletic teams. Get-tysburg has too much dignity to submit to such conditions, but being eager to renew the annual games with Dickinson and desirous of being on friendty terms with her neighbors, the Gettysburg boys held a mass meeting and selected one of the professors to meet with rep-resentatives from Dickinson. So much for Gettysburg. What has been the response of Dickinson ? She sent fifty of her boys to Harrisburg on the day of our game with Swarthmore, who did their utmost to have Gettysburg defeated. The Dickinsonian in their issue of Nov. 7th, recog-nizing the disgraceful character of such be-havior, offers the following by way of apology: THE COLLEGE MERCURY. 116 "There were some men whose behavior at Har-risburg, had they been college men, would have disgraced Dickinson. The}7 were town boys and not students of the college, yet Dick-inson will, in all probability, get a bad repu-tation on account of the incident.'' This sounds plausible. But the facts are in evidence against it. Several of the Gettysburg boys, being fraternity men, went up and spoke with the Dickinson men belonging to their respect-ive fraternities and thus found out that the students had been doing all the mean work for which their Weekly blames the town men. But in glancing over the Dickinsonian, a second article is noticed. This was probably written by one of the associate editors, who was ignorant of the scheme to get out of the trouble. This article says : "Dickinson rooted lustilv for Swarthmore and we do not consider this in any degree objectionable. We do, however, think that the ungentlemanly con-duct and disgraceful language of a few of the students is deserving of the harshest censure. Just such actions as these are the cause of so much talk about college rowdyism." Let the readers form their own conclusions, from the two quotations, as to the attitude of Dickinson towards Gettysburg. * * * WE take pleasure in calling the attention of the readers to the publication of the '98 Spec-trum. The work is being pushed vigorously by the class, and judging from the present prospects, it will be an unusually interesting one. The men on the Staff are the leading members of the class and are exerting all their powers to make it a success. The Alumni department of which Win. J. Gies, '93, has been elected editor, will be one of the import-ant new features. The artist's corps is also very good as was seen in their work on the '97 Spectrum. Many new cuts will supplant the old ones which have been reproduced in nearly all the preceding issues. These and several other features point to a good book, one which deserves support. It comes only once a year. It need not be paid for till May, '96. Send in your subscriptions now and thus give them encouragement in their task. All suggestions which may tend to improve the publication will be very thankfully received by the Staff. * * * EVERYONE desires to enter the coming new year with a clean record for the past year. To this end, kindly pay your subscription fee to the MERCURY. Our treasury is very low and we, .too, would like to enter the new year with everything squared up for the old. If you are in doubt as to the amount of your ar-rears, consult the Business Manager. ' * * * FEVERISH HASTE.—Americans are always in a hurry. Proverbs on the foolishness of haste seem to have no influence. We work with one eye on the clock. Trains move too slow for us. Steamers are regular snails. We can "do" Europe in a month and he is a poor sight-seeing traveler who cannot see Rome in three days. We "run" down to the city. We "run" out west. We "rush" to conventions and "rush" through them as well. Every-thing must have the electric movement, in seeking wealth, in seeking pleasure, in ac-quiring an education and even in prayer and praise. We have gotten beyond the "long" sermon and there is no place in the liturgy of devotion for practical men and women for the "long" prayer. We sympathize with John Foster who longed for the power of touching men and women with the spell of "be quiet." No thorough work can be done in a hurry. No great picture was ever painted by contract against time. The author who writes the book that lives must have leisure, quiet and the seclusion of his stud}7, away from the rush-ing tide of busy life. The old "A B C" method may be slow but it is sensible. He is wise who takes time for thorough preparation for his life-work, who is willing to work and to wait. Feverish haste to get into college, feverish haste to get through and into the business or profession of one's choice is all a mistake, a costly blunder. The old proverb can be wisely applied to one seeking an edu-cation, "Make haste slowly." G. THE COLLEGE MERCURY. WILLING WORKERS.—There is always work awaiting the willing worker. He who puts his whole heart into his work will be success- ! Inl in it. He will always be wanted in his business or his profession. He who goes grumbling to his task will soon find himself going backward in his work until finally he may be "out of a job" altogether. In every business and in every profession we are told there is always "room at the top." Here at the top is where you find the willing worker. What an army of unwilling workers then there must be in the world. There are far too many workmen who throw down their tools where they stand on the instant the bell announces '•quit work" and who will wait next day. patiently for the signal to begin again. Where you find one man who magnifies his office, by throwing his whole soul in his work, and bending every energy to success in it, you must find nine or perhaps ninety-nine who work mechanically. Even in the ministry there are men who are forever haunted with the fear of doing unrewarded work. I sup-pose it is true in every profession that the few willingly work for the work's sake, and the many struggle along merely as a matter of business necessity. This characteristic of will-ingness to work is to be seen in student-life, where habits of work are formed and fixed. Many boys, and girls, too, for that matter, are in college merely to "finish" their education, as if that were a thing possible of achievement, or to get a diploma, to be graduated. The result is they "finish" when they get their diploma. They are at the end of advancement then, and have reached the limit of progress. For the remainder of life, as up to that time work pushes theni, they belong to the great army of Unwilling workers. But he, who comes to col-lege not to "finish," but to fit himself for life work, not to get a diploma, but to get a basis lor future growth and development, will prove himself in all his college work to be a willing worker. When he leaves the college halls he will join the army of willing workers who adorn their profession or their business, and who are a power in the world. May the army of willing workers inc. ease ! G. DE ORATORE. [In anticipation of the coming oratorical contest and in order to arouse more spirit in the society work, we publish in this issue an article, entitled "De Oratore," by Morris W. Croll, '89, Professor in the University School, Cleveland, Ohio. The article was taken from the University School Record^ There has recently been a noticeable revival of public speaking as an art. While we were deploring the decay of oratory, we suddenly found that we had a number of public men be-fore us who, whatever their failings, are at least successful students of eloquence. The platform, with its pine table and its semi-circle of influential citizens, has again become a feature of political campaigns, and the square-jawed orator once more receives, with his hand thrust between the first and second buttons of his frock-coat, the wild greetings of his fellow-citizens. There has been, moreover, whether it is or is not due to the revival of oratory in politics, a similar revival in some of the largest col-leges. Everyone who has read the news-papers must have noticed that the debating clubs of Princeton, Harvard, Yale and "the Tech" have taken a prominent position among the student organizations of their respective institutions. In most large colleges there are now two rival societies, which command the respect and enthusiastic support of the student-body by the direct, simple and convincing ex-temporaneous speaking of their members. In short, it is evident that the old-fashioned de-bate has become popular. This is a consummation which many of us have devoutedly wished. The debating-club was the school in which Americans of the last generation learned statecraft. And they learned not only that, but two yet more desir-able things—the power, namely, of thinking at once rapidly and logically, and the power of putting .thought readily into consecutive language. The=e ends are as desirable, surely, for us as they were for our fathers. It is useless, however, to insist upon the THE COLLEGE MERCURY. 118 profitableness of debating. That is obvious. It is as a form of amusement, as a sport, that debating I think, is not appreciated. "The spice of life," says Stevenson, "is battle." Who would compare the enjoyment of seeing the best horse in the world run against an invisible record with that of seeing six raw-boned trotters striving toward the line at a country fair ? And who would not go further to hear a subject tossed about between affirma-tive and negative than to hear the same sub-ject expounded by its most learned advocate ? There may be some pleasures of which rivalry is not an element, but the sum and substance of all that which we call sport is eager compe-tition. And, with this definition in mind, I venture to say that there is greater striving, closer application of the powers of a man to a desired object, a narrower watch for advantage, and a quicker grasp of opportunity in a lively debate than in a foot-ball match. Consider, for one thing, how much depends upon the manner of marshalling facts. When you have ended you know whether or not each one has fitted into its place and helped to strengthen the whole. You know whether or not they are real, significant facts, and whether, if they are not significant, you have made them seem so. You know, too, if it is a good, fair-and-square extemporaneous debate, what you have forgotten and where you lost your grasp and failed to make your point; and you squirm with eagerness to try again. But it is all over with you. You have had your chance and either won or lost with it. You must await patiently the decision of the judges, who sit, like the fair ladies in the tournaments of old, ready to award the prize to the better combat-ants. Here is sport enough in all conscience, and nothing said of the hundred details of the game—of the skill in anticipating the oppo-nents' plan of attack, of the incidents that oc-cur, so unexpectedly, diverting the fight to this issue and to that, of the fine fencing with the swords of rebuttal and rejoinder which be-gins after the opening speech. Is it not clear that success in the art—or, let us say the sport—of debating requires rare qualities ? Finally, like all good sports, debating demands a fine balance of temper, equal parts of spirit and good humor; and he will be most success-ful and win most judges who is "eager to fight, yet not averse to quarrel." M. W. C. AN ADVENTURE. While the western sun was sinking On that feast-day of the Fall, Through the corridors we wandered Of old "recitation hall." On Professor Bikle's blackboard, As through his room we did pass, We had written our initials For to morrow's I^atin class. We had viewed the halls where students Oft orating, raise their voice, "Phrenakosmian" was quite nice, but "Philomatheau" was our choice. On the walls the shadows, deepening. Plainly marked the close of day. Warning us we'd miss our supper, Should we longer dare to stay. Dearer joys there are than supper, (Leastways on Thanksgiving Day) So we tarried in the "Sweat-box" •Singing, "When I'm far away,'' "Sometimes you may think of me dear." And the old familiar song Had, to me, peculiar meaning As we sang it, lingering long. Groping then adowu the stairway, We were one and all quite shocked, On arriving at the entrance, There to find the door fast locked. We might shout from out a window To some passing boy or man, But, for several obvious reasons, We objected to this plan. In our minds there was strange mixture Of amusement and dismay, When we found to leave this prison There was but one other way. We must stumble up that stairway To the gloomy upper floors, Down the fire escape and exit Through two swinging iron doors. In this pleasant manner, took we, Down through tower dark and tall, Unconventional departure From the recitation hall. I will ne'er forget that visit, Neither do I think will you, To that building of the college Of the "orange and the blue." M. G. IK) THE COLLEGE MERCURY, AN APPEAL TO THE ALUMNI AND FRIENDS OF THE COL-LEGE FOR SUPPORT OF THE "SPECTRUM." The Junior class would respectfully call the attention of the alumni and friends of the col-lege to the Annual soon to be issued by its representatives, the '98 "Spectrum" Board. The "Spectrum" idea has always been cordi-ally endorsed by the Faculty ; the students in college are enthusiastically co-operating in the consummation of the special plans designed for the forthcoming Annual ; the class of '98 is unanimously as well as heartily supporting the work now devolving upon its chosen rep-resentatives, and the Staff of editors and man-agers itself is using every endeavor to publish a "Spectrum" that will be a lasting credit to the college and the class. That the Staff will be able to accomplish this desideratum, with the co-operation of the student body and the alumni, it feels entirely confident. Numerous decided improvements over former Annuals have been devised and several entirely new features will be presented. Sta-tistics and historical data in regard to college events of the past year and with reference to the classes, fraternities, societies, athletics, as-sociations, etc., etc., will receive special at-trition. Original literary contributions, of a character suitable for the "Spectrum," will be given the prominence they deserve. ' In order to make the '98 "Spectrum" of particular interest to the Gettysburg graduates a large section of the book will be devoted en-tirely to the alumni. This department will comprise all of the statistics, etc., given in the '93 "Spectrum," revised to date, and, besides, will comprehend many new and additional lads and features of interest and value to all who are in any way interested in the affairs of Gettysburg College. The Staff, in the arrange-ment and compilation of this department, have been fortunate in securing the kind assistance of an able and enthusiastic Gettysburg Alum-nus. The Staff feels assured that this part of the volume will be generally considered of special importance and no labor will be spared to make it the most complete and valuable alumni record issued within recent years. Suggestions in regard to this department as well as to any other matter relating to the book will be very thankfully received. General communications should be addressed to the Editor, E. W. Meisenhelder. The Staff earnestly appeals to the alumni for financial support of the "Spectrum." Prac-tically every student at Gettysburg has favor-ably responded to our solicitation for subscrip-tions and we respectfully urge every alumnus to do likewise. Many graduates have already placed their names on our subscription lists, but we hope to receive many more before the next term opens. Subscriptions given to any of the students during vacation will be promptly transmitted to the Staff. Business communications should be addressed to the Manager, S. M. Lutz. We hope to make the '98 "Spectrum" the very best annual ever published at Gettysburg. To do so, however, it is quite obvious that we must have the united support of the alumni. The student-body is doing its full share to aid us in every way. May we not hope that the alumni will freely give us the material assist-ance we need in order to publish an Annual that will be received by every friend of the college with a feeling of real pride and pro-nounced gratification? We mean to leave nothing undone to perform completely the part expected of us. Will the alumni do theirs ? We make an earnest appeal for unanimous support. May this sentiment now, and al-ways, receive universal approval and adop-tion—" Every Gettysburgian for the 'Spec-trum' and the 'Spectrum' for Gettysburg." THE STAFF. Why don't we have a few class games of foot-ball. Last year these were among the most interesting we had. Surely there is good material in all the classes—especially, the Freshman. THE COLLEGE MERCURY. 120 A LULL FROM THE HIVE. Be earnest forever ! Be this our endeavor ! Be honest, be cheerful, be kind ! Making the spirit the test of our merit, To outward appearance blind. Our memory Will cherished be By teachers and class mates and friends If efforts are made towards these ends- Whenever you roam from the pales of your home In the bright sunny days of a spring, You see the bees gather from forest, from heather, Golden stores while they buzz and they sing. They nectar sip From lilies' lip Which gives to them food and good cheer When days become cold, lone, and drear. In the spring of our life, when earth's joyous and rife, And all things are happy and gay, When song birds are filling the air with their trilling, Your honey, O store, while you may ! When days of gloom And sadness come. The heart and the memory will hold Its treasures more precious than gold. W. H. B. C, '99. COLLEGE LOCALS. EbMUND W. MEiSE.NHEi.niiR and E t,. ROLLER, Editors. Dr. N. (to 190b Cadet who is verj' much in-teiested in something between himself and the board)—Mr. K., you had better take that to the window where you have better light. Mr. S., '99, recently went out after turkeys. After a walk of about four miles and a half, he arrived at the desired place. Cautiously walk-ing along a fence, he is surprised by the owner of the property who immediately begins to shoot. Walton now held up his hands and said, "I surrender." But when three men strive to tie him he makes a brave fight and finally succeeds in gaining his freedom. Now knocking two of the men down he makes a bold dash for the road. The men follow in hot pursuit and Walton falls over a plow. Never losing his presence of mind, he immedi-ately jumps up and runs into a brook. Hav-ing thrown the pursuers from his track by this piece of strategy he proceeds to a neighboring woods where he lies behind a log. till late at night. Finally he makes his way home where he is received with open arms by his worried com-panions. The MERCURY extends its sympathy to Mr. S. for injuries received. Dr. N. (to Mr. D., 1900, who is up at the board and holding a book under his coat), "You might injure your arm.by holding things so tightly under your coat." Mr. E., '99, tells us "many of our presi-dents had a very humble beginning, for in-stance, George Washington the rail-splitter." Prof. Van O., in Prep. Greek, to Mr. M.— "Have you Kelsey's edition?" Mr. M.—"No, sir." Prof. Van O.—"Who's have you?" Mr. M.—"Anabasis'." Mr. D., 1900, says that "James II, of Eng-land, w7as of a weak character because he chewed tobacco." Dr. B.—"Mr. M., what was the Koran ?" Mr. M., '97.—"An officer appointed by—" Class laughs and Mr. M. stops short in his explanation. Mr. R., '99, would like to know who Mr. Hastings is and what position Mr. Hastings is holding in Penn'a. Mr. K., '98, (translating German),—"My hat fell down confused." Prof. K. (to Mr. B., '98, who has been sleeping and has been rudely awakened to re-cite)—" Mr. B. you ought to feel refreshed after your little nap." Dr. B.—"If your eyes were shut how would you recognize Br." Mr. F., '98.—"By its color." Mr. B., '99, (in gymnasium and talking to Mr. L., 1900)—"M. L,. don't get on those mats with your feet." William Harrison Winfield R., of Prep., re-cently jewed a town storekeeper five cents on a broom. After a vain effort to jew him more he asked him, "Wouldn't you just wrap it up since I don't like to carry a broom along the streets ? " Mr. M., '99, (explaining the habitability of the moon)—"The moon revolves around the sun and has its own moon and is inhabited and the inhabitants revolve on their axes. Mr. G. 1900, wishes to borrow a horn, on which he wishes to increase his breathing ca-pacity ; Dr. S. having marked him minus. Every evening, about dark, G. will stick his head out of the window and look around to see if any one is near. If no one is near, he will blow a feeble blast on the horn and quickly withdraw, appreciating the joke hugely. We wish Mr. G. all success in his efforts. Mr. E., 1900, recites with great feeling and with good effect, "God bless the man who first invented sleep." I .'I THE COLLEGE MERCURY. Prof. K (to Mr. B., who is reading an es-say)—" The last sentence is not correct. Can you tell me why ? " Mr. B., 1900—"It is too much like a Soph-omore's writing." Prof. K.—"That's right. Quite a number of pretty words which mean nothing." Overheard at the W. M. R. R. depot from the lips of a young lady : "Well, Mr. A., I think you are the nicest man on earth." Ernie, '97, is strictly in it. Several bright Sophs intending to have some fun paid a visit to "Jess" K. the other night. Cayenne pepper was wafted about the room and burnt in the flame of the lamp. "Jesse" stood the test very well and . the "Sophs," after a short while, were compelled to leave. A more crestfallen crowd would, with difficulty, have been found. It was plainly a case of "the hunter hunted." Josey K., '99, who is a remarkable wit, said that "T., '99, received a ten for night work." Joe had reference to the Prep. fire. "Stocky" recently asked on what date New Year came last year. Mr. F., '98, has a new way of getting off from reciting Greek—he hides his book when the recitation period comes. Prof. Klinger is on to it, however. Prof. K. (in Greek, to Mr. B., '98, who has just flunked)—"Mr. B., I supposed you would have been better prepared to recite after your pleasant little nap." The back row in Lab. of the Classical Jun-iors have suddenly been deprived of the sober-ing effects of the presence of Mr. A. B. B. V. O., who departed for more peaceable climes about a week ago. "How can a fellow do sat-isfactory work, Mr. Stover, when there are a lot of bums banging around ? " The standard of the college is surely being raised, at least the standard of the Sophomore class, when a '99 man discourses fluently upon the Darwin theory—as was heard a few days ago. Truly we have "all sorts and conditions of men" around here, Darwinites, Silverites, Atheists and Preps. Mr. H., 1900, received quite a "moist" re-ception at the rear door of middle division lately. It always pays for a Freshman to "look aloft," especially when he has his Sunday clothes on, for the more moisture greens re-ceive the longer they will retain their verd-ancy. Mr. S., 1900, was lately giving his opinion about a certain "dramist." We suppose he meant "dramatist," but then he's only a Freshman and will learn. Prof. H., in teaching Anglo Saxon, has at last succeeded in impressing upon the mind of Mr. L-, of the Dummies, '98, that we get from the old English gumena our word grootn. "You may have occasion to use it some time." Mr. F., '98, (in Anglo Saxon)—"And he hastened about an ell.'' Prof. H.—"Mr. F., he wouldn't have has-tened very far in that case, would he?" A word about the College Musical Clubs. The very creditable manner in which they fur-nished the music for the recent Adams County Institute has again brought them before the people. The music this year, both of the Glee Club and of the Violin Quartet, has been very much better than any before given— simply the result of diligent and frequent prac-tice. The Glee Club has been rather unfort-unate in losing temporarily its second bass, Mr. Manges, whose larynx was injured in foot-ball practice, but his active and neces-sary work as manager has still continued. The clubs are in good condition now and the stu-dents in general will lose nothing by taking an interest in them—for they represent the col-lege musically, as the foot-ball and base-ball teams represent it in the capacity of athletics. The Juniors are writing plays for Prof. Himes. The whole college is awaiting the re-sult anxiously, for they will no doubt revolu-tionize the whole dramatic science. They range all the way from Adam and Eve to the Judgment Day. One of the sources of pleasure of the last month, was Dr. Everett's lecture on "Our Girls." A fair sized audience greeted him, which, however, should have been considera-bly larger, in view of the frequent announce-ments. The lecture was very entertaining, brim full of humor and anecdotes. We all , want to hear the Dr. again. Overheard in the Shakespeare recitation : T., '98—Say, Nick, what does "Gervinus" mean in the notes to the plays ? Nick, '98—"Why, that's the German for the author of the notes.'' S., 1900, seems to take quite an interest in the establishment of the Battlefield Photo-grapher. If he wants his pictures taken free, he is certainly going to lots of trouble. There i may be other reasons. THE COLLEGE MERCURY. This is about the time when the Sophomores ; are beginning to put on a little dignity. How- ' ever, they cannot overcome their little habit of giving their class yell every time they see a Freshman walk across the campus—just to show him how brave they are. Our society reading rooms are being mis-used by some of the fellows—especially by non-society men. They ought to realize that the rooms are for "reading," and that for this absolute quiet is needed. They were not fitted up for club rooms or places to play foot-ball. If everyone would individually realize this fact and respect the rights of his fellow student, it would certainly be better for all concerned. "Bobby" W., '98, has lately been quite at-tentive to the fair sex—one of them. This is quite surprising, viewed from our past knowl-edge of W., but then it must happen to them all, and Bobby has been captured. Congrat- | illations. During the recent convention of the Adams County Teachers' Institute some of the college fellows—especially those of the musical clubs— had the pleasure of associating with Prof. Park-er, of Binghampton, N. Y., and who conducted the music. He is a jovial good fellow, and took quite an interest in the boys, as did the boys in him. He sang several solos at the In-stitute. "Herbie" F., '98, recently in chapel one morning uttered quite a feminine shriek. It is said he "saw snakes" —one, anyway. The latest capture that the girls of Gettys-burg have made is "Albertus." Well, well, will wonders never cease ? We thought he was hardened. It is said, too, that the young ladies have been also inquiring earnestly after Fv '98. One of the fellows recently in German used the word "compar-able," accenting the second syllable. Dr. M.—"I would pronounce that 'com-par-able.' " "Since when ? Thats the first time I ever heard it pronounced that way." Dr. M.—"Well, you are not so old that you can't learn a few new things. There are many things happening continu-ally in and about college that would make very interesting items among the locals, but which never get there because they never reach the ears of the editors. It is the duty of the fellows, and to the interest of them all, that they hand such things in to the local de-partment, and thus increase its interest. Very few items are handed in and the editors have to do entirely personal work in getting such as do appear. We ask your assistance. The skillful investigation of scientific intel-lect, expanding in every direction, will ever bring to light new and wonderful discoveries. Following close on the disclosures made by the now famous Roentgen, which prove that cer-tain rays of light can be made to pass through even the obtuse head of a Sophomore, the an-nouncement now issues from the Chemical Lab. Dept., that the fruit of the genus Dios-pysos Virginiana of the natural order Ebena-ceae, commonly called "persimmons," may be obtained from the Platanus Occidentalis or syc-amore tree. This startling fact, like so many others in the scientific world, was chanced upon by the "Professor" quite accidentally, but that makes it none the less interesting. Samples of the delicious fruit recently secured, and a full explanation showing with what ease and rapidity it is digested, may be obtained upon application. Be sure that vou are not faked. ALUMNI-I. C. MANGES and CHARLES H. TILP, Editars. '41. St. Paul's Lutheran church, of Steel-ton, Pa., and the new church at High Spire, Pa., are to be formed into one charge. Rev. E. Miller, D. D., will be the pastor. '44. Rev. Peter Anstadt, D. D., of York, Pa., is considering the question of publishing a biography of the Rev. Doctor Ezra Keller, '35- '45. Rev. J. F. Probst has left Asbury Park, and will spend part of the winter at Ashville, N. C. His health has not improved to such an extent that he is able to resume the active work of the ministry. '46. Rev. Conrad Kuhl, D. D., prepared the history of the Central Illinois Synod for the 50 years of its existence, that was read by Dr. Rhodes, at the convention held at Hills-boro, 111., in October. '48. Many requests have come to Rev. P. Born, D. D., especially from former Theolog-ical students, to have his Inductive Bible Study ot the Old and New Testament issued in book form. Now that he has retired from active work as professor the call comes louder than l-?l THE COLLEGE MERCURY. ever. The work will compose a volume of about 300 pages. '50. Dr. M. H. Valentine's new book on "Ethics," will be out before Jan. 1st. The work will be used as a text-book in our col-lege. '52. Rev. Prof. John J. Scherer, of Marion, Va., has returned from a trip to Texas. '54. Rev. John Tomlinson, Dixonville, Pa., has compiled some valuable statistics, which appear in the Lutheran World of Nov. 26th. They are worthy to be read and pondered. '55. Rev. P. Bergstresser, D. D., of Rock-wood, Pa., spent vSunday, Nov. 22, in Alle-gheny City and filled the pulpit of his son, Rev. Fuller Bergstresser. '57. Rev. H. L. Baugher, D. D., has been elected Managing Editor of The Lutheran Wo//,/. The Doctor will give his undivided attention to this arduous and responsible work. This excellent paper is indeed fortunate in se-curing the services of so learned a man. '58. The Lutheran Observer of Nov. 20, con-tains a poem entitled, "Nearer Home," by Rev. B. H. Hunt, that was written and pub-lished in the Observer while the author was a student at college. The song is found in many song books. '59. After nineteen yearsof editorial service, Rev. J. H. Sieker has transferred the editor-ship of Zeuge die Wahrheit, to pastor Stack- In^/., of Paterson, N. J. '60. Rev. Prof. M. H. Richards, D. D., de-livered the first of a series of lectures at the Moravian College, Bethlehem, Pa. His sub-ject was, "An Excursion to Eden." The lec-ture was highly praised and the students and friends are looking forward with pleasure to the second lecture, soon to be delivered. '61. Rev. L. Grab has accepted the call of St. Mark's church, Omaha, Neb., and is at work in his new field. '62. Rev J. B. Keller, late pastor at Smiths-burg, Md., will spend the winter in Georgia. '62. The corner stone for the new Lutheran church at Vandergrift, Pa., was laid on Thurs-day November 12th. The sermon was preached by Rev. M. I,. Culler, president of the Pitts-burg Synod, and the cornerstone was laid by Rev. J. W. Poffinberger, '72 of Leechburg, Pa. '62 Prof. H. E. Jacobs, D. D., LL- D., president of Mt. Airy Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, filled the pulpit of College church, Sunday, Nov. 15. '63. Rev. J. L. Smith, D. D., of Pittsburg, Pa., on Sunday, November 29, organized the St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran church of Wilkinsburg, Pa. This is the first Lutheran congregation organized in that thriving town, and was brought about through the untiring efforts of Dr. Smith. '63. The November number of The Luth-eran contains an obituary and cut of the late Prof. Davis Garber, Ph. D. Muhlenberg Col-lege, where he labored for 26 years, has sus-tained a great loss in his death. '63. Rev. E. J. Wolf, D. D., recently at-tended a meeting of the Common Service Com-mittee at Alleutown, which is now preparing a Liturgy. '64. Friday evening, October 30th, the Rev. J. G. Griffith, pastor of the English Lutheran church, Lawrence, Kansas, by request, deliv-ered an address on the Reformation of the 16th century to about 400 Indians at Haskell Insti-tute. '64. The Zanesville, (O.,) Times Recorder of Nov. 30th, contains an account of the 20th anniversary service held in St. John's Evan-gelical Lutheran church of that city. It gives a review of the work done by the pastor, Rev. Frank Richard, D. D., during his long service in this church, and shows that the work has prospered in his hands, during the past fifth of of a century. The ladies of the church gave an elegant reception and reunion at the par-sonage, on Nov. 26, in honor of the occason. '65. Rev. Joseph Hillpot died on October 30th at Quakertown, Pa. He was a member of the Pennsylvania Ministerium. '69. Dr. J. A. Clutz and Rev. H. L. Yar-ger, '83, assisted at the dedication of the First church of St. Joseph, Mo., on November 15. '73. Rev. T. J. Yost, of Cumberland, Md., preached the sermon at the opening of the State Convention of the West Virginia C. E. Union held at Clarkesburg, W. Va. '73. Rev. J. A. Singmaster, D. D., Allen-town, preached the sermon at the dedication of St. Matthew's English Lutheran church, Brooklyn, on Nov. 12. He also presented the chancel windows given by Hon. and Mrs. Schieren. THK COLLEGE MERCURY. 124 '73. Rev. Chester H. Traver, late of Rhine-beck, New York, has taken charge of the Lutheran church at Churchtown, New York, and thus succeeds the late Doctor Marcus Empie. '77. Rev. J. A. West has taken charge of the Lutheran church at Londonville, O. He has been warmly received by the people of his I charge. '77. The congregation of Christ Lutheran | church, of Los Angeles, Cal., of which Rev. j M. H. Stine, Ph. D., is pastor, dedicated a new j pipe organ on Sunday, Nov. 15. Rev. Stine has been very successful as pastor of this church, j '78. The good Lutheran people of Palo, 111., are arranging to care for their pastor, Rev. Holmes Dysinger, right royally. The founda-tion is already laid for a fine $3000 parsonage, to be built of dressed stone in harmony with the church itself. '78. Rev. O. C. Roth, pastor of Grace Eng- ! lish Lutheran church, Broadway and Gough street, Baltimore, Md., commemorated his seventh year as pastor on November 2nd. He preached two sermons on the event. '79. The new Lutheran church in Benders-ville, Rev. U. A. Hankey, pastor, is to be dedicated on the second Sunday in December. Dr. E. J. Wolf and Rev. H. H. Weber will have charge of the services. '80. Rev. M. F. Troxell, D. D., of Spring-field, Ills., preached an eloquent sermon on the Reformation, in Grace Lutheran church of that city. '81. Rev. J. W. Byers, D. D., of Nevada, 0., and the people of his congregation royally entertained the Eastern Conference of Witten-berg Synod, during its 97th convention, which was held in Nevada, O. 82. Rev. Chas. R. Trowbridge will spend the winter in Easton, Pa., where he has taken up work in his new charge. '82. Frank E. Colom, Esq., is one of the best and most active lawyers at the Bedford Bar, and a worthy son of his Alma Mate). He was elected president of the Bedford County Sunday School Association, at its 15th annual convention, held at St. Clairsville, Pa. '83. Rev. W. W. Anstadt has accepted the call to Hollidaysburgh, Pa. He will take charge of his new field on the first Saturday in December. '83. Rev. L. M. Kuhns, of Omaha, Neb., laid the corner-stone for his new church a few weeks ago. Rev. H. W. Kuhns, D. D., '56, was present and participated in the services. '83. Rev. H. L. Yarger assisted Rev. W. F. Rentz, of Atchison, Kansas, in a series of special services, and proved himself a valuable assistant. '84. Rev. L. M. Zimmerman, Baltimore, Md., is preaching a series of sermons on "Pil-grim's Progress." One of the subjects was, "The Pitfalls to Young Men." '85. Rev. A. F. Richardson, of Grafton, Wt Va., was unanimously elected president, for his third term, of the West Virginia C. E. Union, which convened in Clarkesburg, W. Va., Nov. 18. '87. Rev. Herbert C. Alleman will be in-stalled pastor of College Church December 6, Rev. Alleman, D. D., of Lancaster, Pa., and Rev. J. C. Kohler, D. D., of Hanover, Pa., are the committee on installation. '90. On Nov. 8th, the cornerstone of Beth-any English Lutheran church, New York City, was laid by the pastor, Rev. J. Fred. W. Kitzmeyer. '90. Rev. Oscar H. Gruver has resigned as pastor of the First English Lutheran church, San Francisco, California. 91. Rev. Stanley Billheimer, Washington, D. C., was in Gettysburg Thanksgiving Day, visiting his parents, Dr. and Mrs. Billheimer, '91. Rev. S. Gring Heffelbower has been called to Mauheim, Pa. '92. Rev. George Beiswanger, pastor of Calvary Lutheran church, Baltimore, Md., en-tertained the members of the present and retir-ing church councils at the parsonage, Thurs-day night, October 22nd. '92. Rev. Edward O. Keen completed his studies in the Reformed Theological Seminary, Lancaster, Pa., in May last, and is now pastor of St. Paul's Reformed church of Waynesboro, Pa., having begun his work there Aug. 1, '92. Rev. D. P. Drawbaugh, McConnells-burg, Pa., has been doing faithful and thorough work in his field and his efforts have been crowned with excellent results. '93. Rev. Marion J. Kline preached the first of a series of four sermons on "The Life of Joseph" in Bethlehem Lutheran Tabernacle, Harrisburg, Pa., on Nov. 15th. The audience was large and the discourse was exceptionally fine. I •■■ THK COLLEGE MERCURY. •93. Rev. \V. S. Oberholtzer has changed his address from MifBjntown, Pa., to Harbin, Indiana. '93. Rev. F. II. Knubie, of New York city, has accepted a call to begin a new English Lutheran church on the west side of New York city. '93. The English Evangelical Lutheran church, Jersey City, Rev. E. E. Neudewitz, pastor, was the recipient of a very costly pul-pit Bible recently. It was given by a member of the same. '93! Rev. John C. Rowers was installed as pastor of St.'Mark's Lutheran church, Wash-ington, I). C, 011 Sunday, November 15th. The charge to the pastor was delivered by Rev. M. L. Beard, '75. of Middletown, Md., and that to the people by Rev. Geo. S. Bow-ers, of Hagetstown, Md. '93. Rev. G. W, haulers, Jr., of Argusville, N. Y., delivered a lecture on "Normal Train-ing in the Sunday School," before the Sharon Institute, at I.ecsville, N. Y., on November 17th. His address was instructive and well received. '93. On Sunday, Nov. 29th, Rev. Wm. C. 1U finer formally began work in his new field at Fayetteville, Pa. '93, The examining committee of the York Bar'met Nov. 20, to examine P. M. Bortner, who has been reading law with Niles ec Neff. Mr. Bortner passed a very creditable examina-tion, and on the motion of J. E. Vandersloot, Esq., a member of the committee, was admit-ted to practice at the York County Courts. '93. Rev. A. A. Kelley was installed pastor Of the Trindle Springs church, Sunday, Nov. 8. Since he has been pastor of this church the membership has been doubled. Rev. and Mrs. Kelley were visiting friends in Gettysburg, Thanksgiving Day. • '94. Herbert A. Allison is a member of the faculty of Susquehanna University. The Oc-tober "number of The Susquehanna contained a good cut of him. His department is the Greek language. '94. Prank E. Pickinger, principal of Cham-bersburg schools, was manager of the foot-ball team, composed of ex-college players, that played our team Nov. 21, on the new athletic held. '96. W. H. Mengcs was captain of the York V. M. C. A. foot-ball team tins fall. ATHLETICS. CHARLES T. LARK, Editor. Gettysburg, 6—Maryland University, o. Gettysburg, 58—Chambersburg ex-college plavers, o. Gettysburg, 64—Western Maryland Col-lege, o. Maryland University having 700 student from whom to select, as a matter of course, has a strong foot-ball team. This eleven, by its excellency on the gridiron, has won for itself the championship of Maryland. It is com-posed of a set of big fellows, almost all of whom have had years of experience in their respective positions. In spite of the fact that our grounds were wet and soggy, the game between Gettysburg and the above mentioned team, on Nov. 14th, was one of unusual inter-est. The players were about evenly matched as regards weight. The playing was so sharp and close that almost through the entire game it looked very much as though neither side would score. Deuson, the left half-back and Capt. of M. U., although the lightest man oh the team, played a most brilliant game. His three years experience on the University of North Carolina eleven, showed up to a good advantage and his work received merited ap-plause. Too much can not be said in praise of Capt. White and Lawyer for their magnificent play-ing. They always play a good game but in this particular one they excelled themselves. Their runs and tackles were the feature of the daw Had our team made more preparation for this game than it did, we would have won by a larger margin. M. U. kicked off and the ball was downed on our 30-yard line. By an elegant exhibition of team work," our fel-lows took the leather from this point to our opponents' 10-yard line, where it was lost on downs. Through the successful use of a quar-terback kick, and their quarter proved himself an adept at this, they captured the hall on their 30-yard line. The ball changed hands ofteu but we finally forced it to their 2-yard line where, on an account of an unfortunate I fumble, they obtained possession of it and again advanced it somewhat down the field, it being on their 20-yard line when the first half ended. The second half was marked by many fine plays. The ball was kept entirely within the territory of M. U., nevertheless it changed hands frequently. . During the last five min- THE COLLEGE MERCURY. [26 utes' play our men summoned all their strength for one mighty effort and after a series of de-termined, desperate rushes, the ball was taken across the line by Capt. White after a 25-yard run. The crowd yelled itself hoarse. Dale added two more points by kicking the goal— 6 to o. Time was called a few minutes after the ball was again put in play. Among the distinguished spectators present were Congressman-elect Benner and Judge Swope. This was one of the most exciting games of the year and we take great pride in placing it under our list of victories. The line-up follows : MARYLAND UNIVERSITY. POSITIONS. GETTYSBURG. Allen left end Moser Steele left tackle Byers Gauss left guard Koppenhaver Riley centre Stifel McCain right guard Hagerman Lewis right tackle Nicholas Dawson right end (Kite) Doty Riddington right half back Dale Barrow quarter back Lawyer Armstrong full back Sheely Touchdown—White. Goal—Dale. Refree—Kump. Umpire— Kuendig. Linesmen—Steward and Leisenring Time of halves—25 and 20 minutes. Our students had anticipated a closer con-test than that which took place on Nov. 21st, between Gettysburg and an eleven from Cham-bersburg, composed of ex-college players. Although somewhat heavier than the oppos-ing team we should by no means have had the walk-over we had. Fine individual playing but lack of team work tells the tale for Cham-bersburg. Our fellows made gains wherever and whenever they desired. "Willie" Burns, 1901, played the star game and seems to be as much at home on the foot-ball field as in the box. We scored 32 points in the first half and 26 iu the second, making the total 58-0. Dale, 1900, missed but one goal out of ten. ■ The following was the line- up : GETTYSBURG. POSITIONS, CHAMBERSBURG. Stifel centre Sherrod Koppenhaver left guard Plank Hagerman right guard Shaefer Ott left tackle Brown Nicholas right tackle Parrott Doty right end Wragg Young (Loudon) left end Pierson Lawyer quarter Orr Burns left half back Smith Dale right half-back G. Fletcher Sheely fullback F. Fletcher Touchdowns—Burns, 3; Dale, 3; Nicholas, 1; Stifel, 1; Sheely, 2. Goals—Dale, 9, Referee—White. Umpire—Kuendig. Lines-men— Leisenring and Lark. Timekeeper—Wheeler. As a matter of course interest on Thanks-giving Day centers around the turkey, but foot-ball comes in as a very close second. This is the first time for a number of years that our team has played at home on this holi-day, and, as the day was pleasant, an enthusi-astic crowd of 500 people turned out to see us line up against Western Maryland College. This was the best game of the year, at least in one respect —in point of attendance. Western Maryland started the game with a dash, and for the first ten minutes' play held our eleven very nicely. They then lost confi-dence and their playing during the remainder of the game looked to the foot-ballist like the first attempts of a lot of novices, while to the referee it looked like 64 to o. Lawyer, 1900, was, unfortunately, physically unable to be in the game, and his position, quarter-back, was ably filled by Capt. White, whose place at left-half was filled by Burns, 1901. Dale, igoo, did excellent work in kicking ten goals out of eleven. In short each player played his position well. Line up: WESTERN MARYLAND. POSITION. GETTYSBURG.' Stiaugh. Reckford left half-back Burns Johnson left end Fite Joice left tackle Nicholas Little left guard Ott Satlerwight '. center Stifel Warfield right guard Hagerman Baker right tackle Manges Edwards right end Doty Zepp right half back Dale Patton quarter back (Capt.) White Crockett full back Sheely Touchdowns —Dale, 7; Burns, 2; Manges, 1; Hagerman, I-Gials— Dale, 10. Time of halves—25 minutes. Referee— Kuendig Umpire—Murphy. Linesmen—Wolf and Whalen. The feelings of a Gettysburg man, in look-ing over our record in foot-ball for the season which is just now past, can be but those of gratification and pleasure. We have indeed been eminently successful, having won six games out of nine, and to-day stand higher iu the foot-ball world than we have ever stood before. In spite of the fact that we contested with some of the strongest elevens in the coun-try, we have to our credit an even hundred more points than have been scored against us, as is shown by the following: State College, 40—Gettysburg, University of Penn'a, - 32—Gettysburg, F. & M., - 24—Gettysburg, Baltimore City College, o—Gettysburg,' F. &. M., Swarthmore, University of Maryland, Chamb'sbg ex-Col. pl'ys, o- Western Maryland Col., o-o— Gettysburg, 4—Gettysburg, o—Gettysburg, -Gettysburg, -Gettysburg, o. o. o. 50. 10. 12. 6. 58. 64. Totals, 100 200 127 THE COLLEGE MERCURY. Certainly this happy result of a seasons work demonstrates most clearly the value of a coach. We were very fortunate in securing the services of Mr. Best and our success is largely due to his efforts. He did remarkably well iii developing such a team from so many inexperienced players. Koppenhaver, 1900, Stifel, 1900, and Hag-erman, 1901, at left guard, center and right guard respectively formed a center which held like a brick wall against all our opponents. Each member of this trio, averaging 195 pounds of solid muscle, at the beginning of the season was new at at the game, but their de-velopment has been remarkable. They broke through constantly and opened up well for the barks. Ott, '97, Manges, '97, and Nicholas, '98, are the men who efficiently filled the tackle positions. "Pop" Ott is one of our old relia- ' bles and always played an aggressive game. The reputation of Manges as a ground gainer is thoroughly established, while "Nick," be-sides taking ample care of his man and mak-ing gams when called on, kept things lively by his seemingly inexhaustible supply of jokes. Doty, '99, Fite, '98, Young, 1900, and Lou-don, 1901, at the end positions, upheld the orange and blue. Although this is their first year on the team, they played like veterans. Doty, after having been tackled, is fond of shaking the man from him and going on. He is a hard man to down. Eite, besides being a good tackier, is a snappy player and runs well. Young and London each played a steady game and made their presence felt. Lawyer, 1900, as this is his second year at the position, has become quite proficient as a quarter-back. He keeps his wits about him and gets into the interference well. Sheely, '97, made many fine tackles and struck the line hard, besides kicking very cleverly. burns, 1901, Dale, 1900, and White, '97, played at half. The first one mentioned kicks well and runs fast. Dale is adroit at kicking, is a swift runner, a fine tackier and an all around good player. Capt. White seems to be entirely at home in the game. It is quite unnecessary to enumer-ate liis achievements and abilities as a foot-ball player, as he is a heady player, was always in the game, and was a source of encouragement to his men. Perhaps the secret of his ground-gaining, is the fact that he sticks like a leech to his interference. We must not overlook the second team which, under the leadership of Kuendig, '98, turned out so faithfully. Their services were of great value to the first eleven, as they there-by were given sharp, hard practice. The scrub contains many players of promise, among whom are : '98, Kephardt, Tholan, Briner, Kuendig; '99, Herman, Brumbaugh, Trimble, Roehner; 1900, Good, Wisotzki, Brandt, Kohler. As we lose but a very few men, the prospects for next season's team are of the brightest. Our players may now retire from the grid-iron and take merited satisfaction in looking over a season well spent. TOWN AND SEWJINARY NOTES. S. J. MILLER, Editor. TOWN. It seems as if improvement has become the ' adopted watchword of the town. Telephone wires by the dozen have been stretched across the diamond, thus to communicate with all the important neighboring towns in the county. The Water Company has enlarged the water supply by replacing the old pipes with larger ones. Several new and costly buildidgs have been erected, among which is the new school building, known as the Meade High School, and which in all probability will be occupied at the beginning of the New Year. The association of the survivors of the Twenty-first Regiment of Pennsylvania' Cav-alry recently held its seventh annual reunion in this place. About seventy-five members were in attendance. At a business meeting the following officers were elected: President, Major Robert Bell, Adams county; Vice-Pres-ident, Captain E. McMillan, Lancaster; Secre-tary, J. Harvey Cobean. Gettysburg; Treas-urer, Captain Long, Gettysburg. The anniversary exercises of the Women's Bible Society were held on Sunday evening, Nov. 15th, in Christ Lutheran church. Rev. Dr. Huber presided. Prayer was offered by Rev. Dr. Richards, of Gettysburg, and ad-dresses were made by Rev. Dr. Jacobs, of Philadelphia, and Rev. Dr. Morrow, Secretary of the Pennsylvania Bible Society, after which a very creditable report of the society was read by Rev. A. R. Steck, pastor of the St. James Lutheran church, this place. THE COLLEGE MERCURY. 128 The semi-annual convention of the Adams County C. E. Union was held in the St. James Lutheran church, this place, on Friday and Saturday, Nov. 20th and 21st. The conven-tion opened on Friday at 2 P. M. The ad-dress of Welcome was delivered by Rev. A. R. Steck and the response was made by Presi-dent Longanecker. The sessions were very interesting and were largely attended through-out the whole convention. Rev. C. H. Rockey, of Shepherdstown, W. Va., preached in Christ Lutheran church on .Sunday, Nov. 22. The Christian Endeavor Society of St. James Lutheran church held their eighth anniversary exercises on Sunday, Nov. 22. In the morn-ing Rev. E. F. Jeffers, D. D., Principal of the York Collegiate Institute, preached the anni-versary sermon. At the evening service Rev. A. R. Steck presided. An excellent program was rendered. Rev. Rockey offered prayer and Rev. Dr. Jeffers delivered the address of the evening, his subject being, "Spiritual Power.'' The old tin roof on the Methodist church has been removed and a slate one put on. The St. James and Christ Lutheran congre-gations held a union Thanksgiving service in St. James Lutheran church on Thursday morn-ing, Nov. 26, at 10 o'clock. Services were also held in the Presbyterian and Reformed churches in the morning. SEMINARY. Rev. J. E. Byers preached at Williamsport, Md., on Sunday, November 1. Rev. J. H. Harmes filled the pulpit of St. John's Lutheran church, Hagerstown, Md., on Sunday, Nov. 8th. Rev.' Paul Koller preached at Hagerstown, Md., Shepherdstown, W. Va., on Nov. 15th and 22nd respectively. Rev. W. H. Feldman was sent as a delegate to attend the Inter-Seminary Missionary Al-liance at Chicago, on Nov. 12- 15th. While there he also had the pleasure of attending the Luther League Convention. The pulpit of the Second Lutheran church, Carlisle, Pa., was filled by Rev. Brady on Sunday, Nov. 22. Rev. M. S. Kump preached in Christ Luth-eran church on Sunday evening, Nov. 29. Prof. J. H. W. Stuckenberg will deliver the following lectures in Brua Chapel, beginning with Monday evening, Dec. 7th: Monday—"The Importance and the Method of of the Deeper Study of the Age." Tuesday—"Characteristics of the Age." Wednesday—"The Dominant Ideas." Thursday—"Social Trend." Friday—The New Social Era." Saturday—"Higher Education in Germany." This is a new course of lectures prepared es-pecially for Gettysburg, and we are indebted to the Seminary students for his coming. FRATERNITY NOTES. PHI KAPPA PSI. A. J. Smith, '83, a Professor of the Univer-sity of Texas, recently suffered the loss of his wife. We were pleased to meet Dr. Philips, Presi-dent of West Chester Normal School, who de-livered a lecture before the Teachers' Institute convened in this city last week. J. C. Bowers, '93, made a business trip here a few days since. W. F. Lutz, '94, is engaged in journalistic work at his home in Bedford. A. C. Carty, '96, attended the New York City rally on Dec. 4th. . PHI GAMMA DELTA. Bro. Jacobs, '62, preached in the College church recently. Bro. Knubel, '93, has started a mission in upper New York City. We wish him success in his undertaking. Bro. Roth, '95, of Bucknell, spent a few days in town recently. We were glad to have with us during the past month Bros. Brewer, '83, Garland, '85, Fickinger, '94. Bros. Fite, '98, and Albers, '99, spent a few days with Bro. Stahler, of Norristown, Pa. Bro. Kolb, 1900, spent Thanksgiving at Mechauicsburg. SIGMA CHI. Bruce Trimmer, Kappa, '98, of Bucknell, made us a visit several weeks ago. Leisenring spent Thanksgiving with his parents at Chambersburg. I2CJ THK COLLEGE MERCURY. Win. Hersh, '92, was elected District At-torney of Adams Co., by the largest majority ever given a candidate. Rosensteel was called to his home in Altoona several weeks ago on account of the death of his grandfather. Edwards, Alpha Psi, Vanderbilt University, played end on the Western Maryland College foot-ball team in the game here on Thanks-giving. Munro and Fredericks were at their homes in Lock Haven over Thanksgiving. Frank Hersh, '92, who was home for several weeks, has returned to his work in Braddock, Pa. Keith, '99, paid a flying visit to the Chapter at Dickinson several days ago. Fredericks stopped at Bucknell on his way home on Thanksgiving, and visited the Chap-ter there. Lawyer spent Thanksgiving at his home in Westminster. PHI DELTA THETA. J. A. Singmaster, '98, was initiated Novem-ber 23d. Kain, '97; Meisenhelder, '97, and Beerits, '99, attended the 24th Biennial Convention of the fraternity held in Philadelphia Nov. 25th to 30th. M. F. Holloway, '84, and A. S. Cook, '95, were also in attendance. Chas. Reinewald, '88, spent a few days in town recently. J. C. Moore, Jr., Pa Zeta, paid the Chapter a visit the beginning of the month. ALPHA TAU OMEGO. Saturday night, Nov. 21, the Chapter held a banquet in the meeting hall, which was pro-nounced by those present to have been a very enjoyable affair. Edward Gaines, a member of the U. of Md. foot-ball team, spent Sunday, Nov. 15, with the Chapter. William O. Nicklas, '93, has been admitted to the Chambersburg bar. William H. Menges, '96, visited the Chapter during Institute. Dr. Franklin Menges, '86, was with us In-stitute week. James P. Michler, '97, is at present a stu-dent at Washington and Lee. SUBJECTS FOR "ROMAN LAW" THESES. ABEL—Spread of the Roman Law Through Barharic Invasions. ARMSTRONG—Marriage and Divorce Among the Romans. HIKLE—Influence of the Laws and Organization of the Roman Empire on the Laws and Organization of the Early Church. CLUTE—The Extent and Limitations of the Patria Potestas. COBLE, Sr.—Slavery Among the Romans. DUCK—The Indebtedness of Modern States to Roman Juris-prudence. FRIDAY—The Roman Law of Succession. HUTTON—Roman Citizenship-Different Kinds, How Acquired and How Lost. Miss KEITH—The Nature and Authority of the Jus Respon-dendi. MILLER—The Functions of the Roman Praetor. Miss SIEBER—The Roman Method of Legal Procedure in a Province as Illustrated by the Trial of Christ in Pal-estine. SMITH—The Roman Judiciary System. WHEELER—The Change from Republic to Empire in Rome, a Change to nu Autocracy. WOLF—Influence of Christianity on Roman Legislation. LITERARY SOCIETIES. JOHN W. OTT, Editor. PHILO. Messrs. Baker and Markel were initiated during the past month. On Friday night, Dec. nth, Philo will render her last special program of the term. The program promises to eclipse all others. PHRENA. Messrs. Gilbert and Hitchner. both of 1900, were elected members last Friday evening. On account of the various interruptions 011 the several past Friday evenings, Phrena will not render.her next special program till next term. EXCHANGES. The MERCURY is at present receiving a very large number of exchanges. We mention some of them as follows: The Lafayette, Ursinus College Bulletin, Bucknell Mirror, F. and M. Weekly, College Folio, Phoenix, Wittenburg, Midland, Mer-cersburg Monthly, Roanoke Collegian, Dela-ware College Review, Dickinsoniau, Monthly and Weekly, Occident, Mielensian, Lutheran Ensign, National Educator, Muhlenberg, Ora-cle, Lutheran Observer, Perkiomen Seminary Bulletin, Free Lance, Susquehanna, Western Maryland College, Augustana Journal, George-town College Journal, The Reflector, The Mountaineer, The Crescent, Orange and White. ADVERTISEMENTS. Yale annually buys $7,000 worth of books for her library. Harvard expends $15,000 for the same purpose. Columbia expends$43,000 in the same way. A National University, under government control, is to be established in China. The faculty will consist of foreigners. The first president will be a former tutor of Li Hung Chang. "Age comes to every man, hut fate Is kind to women fair ; For when she reaches twenty-eight, She stops right then and there." FPU. H. WIlNNlCrl at onfeetionmj I OYSTERS Manufacturer, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in peam. ] SEASON. NEWS DEPOT & SUBSCRIPTION AGENGY. IVIaln street, - - Gettysburg, F=a. SOLE MANUFACTURER OF DR. TYLERS COUGH DROPS TIMNTCODORT DEALER IN BEEF, PORK, LAMB, VEAL, SAUSAGE, York Street, Gettysburg. a-Speclal Ratesto Clubs."a R. A WONDERS^ Corner Cigar tParlors. ,.A FULL LINE OF. CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES, &C, Scott's Cor. Opp. Eagle Hotel, Gettysburg, Pa. T« F. HBNSTXG utn\.tR \u BREAD, ROILS, PRETZELS & CRACKERS YORK STREET, GETTYSBURG. 8@TReasonable Rates to Clubs. L. Dm lf|ILLLl\j GETTYSBURG, Qrocer, (^onfeotioneT and fruiterer. Ice Cream and Oysters in season. /,. Foot Ball Supplies. EVERYTHING FOR THE PLAYER, Jackets, SHoos, Stockings, Jerseys, Shin Guards, Etc. Spalding's Official Intercol- A^cj 'Mffift legiate Foot Ball, '*^^F^. Officially adopted by the Intercollegiate Association. COMPLETE CATALOGUE FALL AND WINTER SPORTS FREE. A. G. Spalding: & Bros. NEW YORK, PHILADELPHIA, CHICAGO. 1108 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA Xl/righi's Qngraving jfeouse 'AS become tile recognized leader in unique styles of COLLEGE and FRATERNITY EN-GRAVINGS and STATIONERY. College and Class-Day Invitations, engraved and printed from steel plates;. Programmes, Menus, Wedding and Reception Invitations, Announcements, etc., etc. Examine prices and styles before ordering elsewhere. 50 Visiting Cards from New Engraved Plate for $1.00. ERNEST A. WRIGHT, 1108 Chestnut Street, PHILADELPHIA Visitors to Settysburg College, Settj/sburg, !Penn'a, Will find the CUMBERLAND VALLEY RAILROAD running in a South-Westerly direction from Harrisbnrg, Pa., through Carlisle. Chambersburg, Hagerstown an I Martinsburg to Winchester, Va., a direct and available route from the North, East and West to Gettysburg, Pa., via. Harrisburg and Carlisle. Through tickets via, I his route on sale at all P. R. R. offices, and baggage checked through to destination. Also, a popular route to the South via. Carlisle. AsK for your tickets via. Cumberland Valley Railroad and Carlisle, Pa. J. F. BOYD, Superintendent. H. A. RIDDLE, Gen. Passenger Agent. ADVERTISEMENTS L M, BUEHLER, SUCOKSSOU TO A. D. BUEHLEK & CO., -HllBoofig st£giS —.A_isr:D— (gO TO ->M0TEL GETTYSBURG* -XBA'RBER SIIOPX-Centre Square. ^^B. M. SEFTON. 2/ou will find a full line of SPure 'Drugs dc J'ine Stationery ^People'a *Druff Store. {Prescriptions a Speci'ctity. Elliott & HOUSGP. H. B.—Stiff Hits mads to Fit the Head is two minutes. (Z>, B. KlTMpLEfJ, HATS, CAPS, —^ ^rr BOOTS* SHOES. CS^3=S=»tisfaiotion GSuara nteed.ii3 No. 6 S. Baltimore Street, GETTYSBURG. PA. por all the latest styles in Suitings and-Trousers, AND FULL LINE OP Cents' Furnishing Goods, CallonD. H. WELSH, York, F>a. ADVKRTISKMKNTS. DURING VACATION GO TO CHAUTAUQUA F~ F? El El FULL INSTRUCTIONS. NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED H. B. WILLIAMS, Secretary, Geneva, N. Y. YOU CAN KAKN Sill To SUM) MONTHLY AND KXPKNSICS IF YOU WORK FOR THE NURSERY CO. Stock sold with a guarantee and replaced. ~R.$H.$REMINGER,~ MERCHANT TAILOR. fH?e Best Work at tJye Lowest Wees. NEXT DOOFJ TO POST OFFICE, UPSTAIRS. Suits from $121 to $40,00, Pants from $4,00 to $12,00, G^Centre Square, gQLLEGE OF PHYSIC&NS 1 SlTftGEONS, -BALTIMORE, W|D.-^ The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Balti-more, Maryland, is a well-equipped school. Four ses-sions are required for graduation. For full informa-tion send for the annual catalogue, or write to THOMAS OPIE. M. D. Dean, Cor. Calvert and Saratoga Sts. <_g^Established 1876.5^^—3 ^iPBNfiOSR MYBfiSjfe- WATGHMAKEE AND JEWELER, Gettysburg Souvenir Spoons, College Souvenir Spoons, No. 10 Baltimore Street, GETTYSBURG, PENN'A. J. A. TAWNEY Is ready to furnish clubs and boarding houses BREAD, ROLLS, &G., at short notice and reasonable rates. Cor.Washington and Middle Sts., Gettysburg. fiSSSS^Si^ m*w^i^^jid^wo^^*a WEiWIilHoNJflS DEALERS IN Fresh Beef, Veal, Lamb, PorkLJ Pudding, Sausage, HAMS, LARD, &c-., GETTYSBURG, l\jr\J'A. JOEKL. SHERDS. NEW CIGAR STORE Next door to W. M. Depot, Gettysburg,
The Mercury January, 1894 ADVERTISEMENTS. IRailroab "The "Royal "Route" New and Direct Line To and From QETTYSBURQ. Fast, Frequent and Superbly. Equipped Train Service Between NEW YORK, PHILADELPHIA, Allentown, Pottsville, Williamsport, Reading, Harrisburg and Interior Pennsylvania Points, with through connections to and from all parts of the Middle States, New England and the West. Visitors to America's Greatest Battlefield can obtain through tickets and baggage checks, via this new and most picturesque route, at all principal stations and ticket offices throughout the country. I. A. SWEIGARD, C. G. HANCOCK, General Manager. Gen. Pass. Agt. Barber Sfy°P> CHARLES C. SEFTON, PROPRIETOR. BALTIMORE STREET. THE PLACE FOR STUDENTS TO GO. ONLY FIRST-CLASS WORK, K& /Wat* C°ff£SS and /ViUgrc arjd ^v-fc £or)S£r«VatOr° REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONE. ADVERTISEMENTS. Irving College, For LJoung Ladies. A Lutheran School for Lutheran girls. Chartered 1856. Confers degrees of A. B., and M. E. L. Experienced Fac-ulty. French and German spoken. Music—full conserva-tory course—piano, organ, pipe organ, violin, guitar, voice. Specialist in elocution and physical culture. Fine brick building, splendidly furnished, steam heat. Pupils carefully drilled sociably. Course high, thorough. Twenty minutes' ride from Harrisburg. Art a specialty. The only Lutheran school for girls in Pennsylvania. Synchronized time. Elec-tric bells. Send for catalogue. PROF. E. E. CAMPBELL, A. M.,- President, Mechanicsburg, Pa. F. WEBEK & CO. Drawing: Materials and $p: Drawing Instruments DRAWING PAPER, PENCILS, &C. A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF DRAWING MATERIALS OF ALL KINDS. J. WOODFIN MINIFIE, Manager, No. 5 NORTH CHARLES ST., BALTIMORE, MD. Special Attention to Orders by Mail. Main Office, 1125 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. # {|attepg> * and ||?ei?'§ fupni§bei®§, "@K® TRUNKS, LEATHER GOODS, AND VALISES, 12 W. MARKET ST., YORK, PA. Special Attention to Mail Orders. H. S. Benner, Choice Family Groceries,, Chambcrsburg St., Gettysburg, Pa. Coffees, Teas, Flour, Fish, and Canned Goods. Queensware, Glassware, Etc. PITZER HOUSE. A temperance house. Pleasant and home-like. Teams and Guides to all points of interest on the battle-field. REASONABLE RATES. 127Chambersbarg St.,Gettysburg, Pa. JOHN E. PITZER. MEMBER POST 9, G. A. R. J. W. EIGHOLTZ & GO., DEALERS IN PIANOS, OP.GAJiS, IWTJSIC, STfWlGS, Ete. 12 BALTIMORE ST., GETTYSBURG, PA. SAJWUELi FABEP,, ~&Fine Cigars & Smokers' Mieles**- CHAMBERSBURG ST., GETTYSBURG. J. H. MYERS, Fashionable Tailor, Clothier1 —AND— [fenf^' Fufnighbi1. You alutays find the liatest Styles tov Gents' OUardrobes. No. 11 BALTIMORE STREET, GETTYSBURG, PA. ADVERTISEMENTS. in College pvises Society Babges fliri3e flfoebals Stationery The most successful designers of College and University Badges in the Country Estimates Designs on Applieation BAILEY BANKS BIDDLE Chestnut and Twelfth Streets Philadelphia, "Pa. ,Hary had a Little Lamb, (Stam? your Memory.) It's wool was all the go— We make it up in BUSINESS SUITS for SI 5.00 you know. These Cuitorn-Made Suits are popular throughout America— because they represent the very Quintessence of Nobby Dress, and are essential to every business man who cares one lota for economy and APPEAR-ANCE. Send us 6 cents in stamps, staling kind of gar-ment or suit desired, and we will forward you SAMPLES of Cheviots, Cassimeres, etc., Self-measurement rules and fashion plate. YOU DO THIS and we do the rest. Ealti more cheapest market. KEELER the largest custom producer. Full Dress Suits Trousers, - - Frock Suits, - Overcoats, - > JOnN M. KEELER, 5 N. Calvert St. Baltimore, Hd. "Suffer no longer the extortions of loc*-l tailors ' $25.00 Up. S4.00 Up. $18.00 Up $18.00 Up. Correspondence Solicited With Responsible Parties Desiring to Act as Agents. THUTH WEflflS JO ]HSK Because it needs none. It bows at no human shrine, seeks neither place nor applause; it only asks a hearing, and so, too, do we. Our immense Fall and Winter stock is full of rare and choice bargains. Stylish Men's Suits and Overcoats at $IO, $12, $15, $20. We'll buy them back if you don't like them. Sole agents for Youman Silk and Derby Hats. Oehm's Acme Hall, CLOTHIERS, HATTERS, FURNISHERS BALTO AND CHARLES STS., Baltimore, Md. WILLIAM SMALL, DLM D0OK tlnHEK AND DOORMm 6 WEST MARKET STREET, YORK, PENNA. IV ADVERTISEMENTS. F. D. SCHRIVER, Draper, Importer, • A^D JVterehant Tailor, 23 Baltimore Street GETTYSBURG, PA. GETTYSBURG COLLEGE FOOT-BALL TEAM, SEASON OF 1893. k The College Mercury. Vol. I. Gettysburg, Pa., January, 1894. No. 9. THE COLLEGE MERCURY, Published each month during the college year by the Students of Pennsylvania (Gettysburg) College. STAFF. Editor : FRED H. BLOOMHARDT, '94. Associate Editors : FRANK E. FICKINGER,'94. ORVILLE L. SIGAFOOS,'94. HENRY E. CLARE, 95. WALDO D. MAYNARD, '95. PAUL W. KOLLER, '94. ROSCOE C. WRIGHT, '95. WILMER A. HARTMAN, '95. Alumni Association Editor: D. FRANK GARLAND, Baltimore, Md. Business Manager ; BENJAMIN R. LANTZ, '94. Assistant Business Manager: CHARLES F. KLOSS, '94. TERMS • /One volume (ten months), . . . . $1.00 ' \ Single copies, 15 Payable in Advance. All Students are requested to hand us matter for publication. The Alumni and ex-members of the College will favor us by send-ing information concerning their whereabouts, or any items they may think would be interesting for publication. All subscriptions and business matters should be addressed to the Business Manager. Matter intended for publication should be addressed to the Editor. Address, THE COLLEGE MERCURY, Gettysburg, Pa. eOMTE/STS. EDITORIALS, ; 139 GRADUATE LIFE AT JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY, . 140 CONVERSATION, '. . 142 THE MUSICAL CLUB'S TRIP, 144 THE TRUSTEES MEET, 145 COLLEGE LOCALS, 146 ALUMNI, 149 FRATERNITY NOTES, 151 ATHLETICS, 152 TOWN AND SEMINARY, 153 LITERARY SOCIETIES 154 EBITO-RIAL. A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL. \I7ITH this issue, THE MERCURY appears with two changes in its Board of Edi-tors. It is, indeed, very unfortunate that the efficient Editor was compelled to resign on ac-count of ill-health and pressure of work. But since such is the case, it will be the purpose of the reconstructed Staff to do their utmost to make the " Students' Paper " as attractive and entertaining as possible. These, of course, are not the only essentials of a good journal, but they help to secure attention for the weightier material. The supplement to this number is an engraving of the victorious foot-ball team of the season of '93, which doubtless will be highly prized by THE MERCURY readers. * * * /"^HRISTMAS vacation, the happiest time ^-^ in a college man's life, is over, and work has taken the place of two weeks' enjoyment. In view of the " good time " that most of the students have had, it is not surprising that many of the recitations are wearing a kind of holiday attire. In a few days, however, things will have drifted back to their accustomed channels. * JUDGING from our exchanges, it would be ^ supposed that the " proverbial waste-basket" of the editors has not been filled to overflowing by productions of the students. College men should consider it an honor to have their thoughts find place in their journals. There should be an active competition for the space given to these articles. Then the standard of the paper would be raised and his 140 THE COLLEGE MERCURY. own powers would receive such benefit as he cannot receive from any other branch of college work. * * T/ NOWING well that an attractive Annual A^- is of much benefit and credit to our col-lege, The Spectrum Staff have decided to en-large their book. This will make the cost much more than formerly. In order to make it a financial success, it must have the support of the students and Alumni. It is hoped that any one who desires to aid in this work, either by subscription or by an advertisement, will communicate with the business manager, Mr. H. M. Witman, Gettysburg, Pa. * * COOT-BALL, CHANGE IN RULES.—It is now proposed by three of the larger college teams to change the rules of foot-ball. The proposition is to make a decided change, so as to eliminate some of the features which have proved themselves dangerous to the safety of the players and prevent such " acci-dents " as have recently occurred. Yale, Har-vard, and Princeton are announced to begin the work, and it is supposed that this move-ment will meet with approval everywhere. If " rough play " and " interference " could be eliminated, the game would certainly be very much improved, and there would be no need for Synodical or Conference objection to the game. We trust it will be done speedily, so that the almost brutalizing methods employed, which lead to death in many cases, will be entirely forbidden. We hail this movement with joy. We are thoroughly in sympathy with inter-collegiate games, and think they are helpful to the institutions and the students, but deplore the present methods employed, which certainly do endanger life and limb. The Alumni of the college rejoice in the many victories gained for our Alma Mater in the re-cent campaign, and are delighted with the gentlemanly deportment of the team in the contests. '"TO THE ALUMNI.—This paper is for you as * well as for the students of the college. It comes to you in the interests of the institu-tion you love. It is, therefore, in a sense your' paper, devoted to the advancement and growth .of Pennsylvania College, which is your col-lege above all others. Rally to its support. It is not published to make money for its edi-tors and managers. The accumulating gains, if there should be any, will accrue to the liter-ary societies in the. college. It is for them alone. They must be fostered and encour-aged in every way possible. Subscribing, therefore, for THE MERCURY will aid the two societies in a substantial way, and will bring to you every month the news of your college, fresh, interesting, helpful. Send in your sub-scriptions at once. We speak here as an Alumnus to the Alumni. G. GRADUATE LIFE AT JOHNS HOPKINS UNI-VERSITY. TN the busy round of undergraduate life in an American college, the student is often apt, in the struggle for a higher plane of men-tal activity, to forget the existence of a great sphere of thought and action far above and beyond his own little world. It is the world of workers, thinkers, revolu-tionizers, and the student fresh from the neces-sarily narrow fields of college work stands almost dismayed at the widening vistas which everywhere meet his view. Nor can one who has not dwelt in such a world and come under the thrilling influence of its great men and great thoughts altogether realize its peculiar charm. It is an arena of tireless activity, and once in the circle the student seldom looks behind with regretful longings for the easy life of col-lege days. To be sure such conditions are not frequently met with, but even in our own country there are a few institutions which present them in their entirety. Among such schools of ad- THE COLLEGE MERCURY. 141 V vanced work in America, perhaps none stands in a more conspicuous position or exerts a broader influence than the Johns Hopkins University. It approaches nearest to our ideal, the German Universities. Its Faculty contains some of the most prominent and inspiring men on this side of the Atlantic, and the men sent forth from its walls are exerting an influence worthy of their institution throughout our halls of learning. Surrounded by such influences and aroused by such examples of successful work, it will be interesting perhaps to look into the life of a graduate student and see wherein lies the secret of his success. It might be answered in a word—in hard work. He has ceased to deal with glittering generalities and beautiful theories, and is brought face to face with hard facts. He soon loses much of the inter-est he formerly took in non-pertinent subjects amid the engrossment of his life work and de-votes his best efforts to it alone. This may help to explain the sudden metamorphosis of the loiterer along the more flowery paths of learning into . the preoccupied thoughtful worker who is ready to face any obstacle, be it ever so rough and hard to surmount. It is his life work, and all else must fall aside and leave him ready for the struggle. It has ever been the aim of this university to send out fin-ished men, and in this the student is a willing co-worker, and, as,has been repeatedly said by those acquainted with the facts, American students of this class are harder students than the Germans themselves. Most especially is this true in those studies requiring laborious laboratory work. There are at present in the university more than two hundred and fifty post-graduate stu-dents who are divided among these subjects— Languages, History, and Politics, Physics, Mathemathics, and Astronomy, Chemistry and the Biological Sciences. These students may further be divided by the character of their work into the laboratory workers, which in-cludes all students of Pure Science, and into reading students, into which class those fol-lowing Languages and Historical subjects naturally fall, though it must not be understood that those engaged in laboratory work are not readers. Far from it. Their lamps burn the midnight oil most frequently. When the student enters the university he selects a principal subject or major and two allied subordinate subjects known as First and Second Minors. The Minor subjects occupy him, all told, about eight hours a week each for one year. The principal subjects under which the student is classified occupies him in general three years, and one of these must be devoted to original investigation in some new field of work, or old one it may be, whose bounds need widening. This work forms the subject of his thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. In some departments, there is a growing tendency to lengthen the course to four years. Should this be the final result the university will stand second to none in the excellence of its work. As I have said, in such work as this one begins to look at things as they are and not as they may appear at a casual glance. He goes to the fountain-head for his inspiration, and soon learns how others have worked, and to imitate their example. Each department has its own appropriate laboratory—using the word in the original sense—and its own library, where all the works of importance are collected, and all the journals and scientific magazines are constantly received. The chemical department alone receives about 15 publications, of which several come weekly and the rest monthly. Of these probably three are in our mother tongue, while the rest range through French, German, Italian, and Russian, with an occa-sional waif from the land of Japan, which, however, usually " blooms to blush unseen." Such a course of work is necessarily special-izing in its tendency, and, I had almost said, isolating. The student in Sciences begins lab-oratory work on Monday morning and never lays aside his apparatus till Friday night. 142 THE COLLEGE MERCURY. Of course he fags a little now and then, when the natural perversity of inanimate objects begins to assert itself, but the Doctor's de-gree, at the end of the race is a never-failing spur. Perhaps I have left the reader under the impression that a graduate student's life is all one weary grind. However, it has a few bright spots. There is a Graduate Students' Association, which holds monthly social gath-erings, where one can brush away the cobwebs from the neglected corners of his brain and learn what his fellow-workers are doing. There are, too, several clubs in the various departments, which, though actuated by the thirst for knowledge primarily, yet have a spice of good fellowship and sociability. Besides, there are the Journal Meetings and Semina-ries, where students can occasionally air their views in original papers. The Journal Meeting especially is an excel-lent factor in keeping us in touch with our own sphere of work. To read all the journals and sift out the wheat from the chaff which finds its way even into scientific papers—cut and dried as they may seem—is evidently a Herculean task, but by the Journal Meeting we have the important- papers presented in compact and generally interesting form, and are entertained and profited at once. An ideal method, surely. Of course we miss the jolly life of college clays, and probably we feel a little sick of the grind at first; but, like the Lotos Eaters, we soon forget the scene of our earlier efforts, when fed on the strong meat of higher thought. With us Time flies on rapid wings, and, though it seems but yesterday that we knocked timidly at the portals, already we are talking of our work with ill-concealed pride in having found another clue to the great labyrinth of Knowledge. We have tasted the waters of the Pierian spring and are ready to drink deeply. R. N. H.,'91. CONVERSATION. T F there is one thing to learn at college, it is to do critical, independent study and think-ing. "A man kens just as much as he's taught himsel', and na mair." A man's mind should become inquiring, desirous of knowing the reason for everything, accepting statements after diligent inquiry only. Yet, although we recommend independent thought, it must be remembered to examine a subject from every standpoint. No man has concentrated within himself all thought upon any question. No matter how learned he may be, there is always room to acquire more, and he can always obtain something from others. There is a want felt by a number of our students who are eager in the pursuit of knowledge, viz.: the need of conversation, as distinguished from talk. Conversation turns upon affairs of higher interest, is more serious, more intellectual, and brings forth and de-velops one's innate powers and acquirements. It is often complained that we have too much serious matter in our studies to converse with interest upon topics of worth. But the true student is always interested in his work, and one finds no trouble in conversing upon a subject interesting to him. But, outside of his studies, there is always something in which one delights, and which would be profitable and pleasing to others; certainly we could relish conversation upon some worthy topic much better than this fragmentary talk upon matters so trivial that it becomes a burden to listen. Life is a race. In the business world men are earnestly active, pursuing their plans with unceasing energy. It is true that our school days are our happy days, the days of pleasure, yet pleasure is not incompatible with diligent study. All men of power have been earnest students. At school their thoughts were high and noble, due to the purposed career before them for which they prepared themselves with unswerving fidelity. In youth are laid the THE COLLEGE MERCURY. H3 foundations of the future life. Ruskin objects to hearing the' follies of youth talked of " indulgently." " Then," he says, " must the habits of thought be begun." Therefore, we find the ambitious student sincere and earnest in his work. He is here to learn, he feels that he needs every moment to add to his development, his mind is ever open to the reception of truth and eagerly seeking it. He profits by everything of value that he hears; trivial matters do not interest him, nor those who deal in them. " Talkers," says Bacon, " are commonly vain and credu-lous withal ; for he that talkctli what he knoweth, will also talk what he knoweth not." He will choose companions with the same high aims as himself, for he receives little sympathy or encouragement from others. The selection of friends is a duty of the most important interest to us. We all need friends, those whom we know intimately, and who know us, and who can be mutual aids to each other. Before we can admit any one into our life as a friend, we must know something of him, his disposition, in what he is interested. He must be made to know us, and this can be done by our life and conversation only. It is strange how often we are acquainted with persons for years, sometimes even live with them, and yet know little of them, often look upon them as inferior, till some extended conversation reveals hidden thoughts and beauties of which we never dreamed. At college, particularly, should such friendships be formed, for they are generally the most enduring. We are told repeatedly to cultivate the ac-quaintance of men superior to ourselves, to be filled with their thoughts, to catch their spirit, to receive the benefit of their molding power upon our lives. A man grows stronger in proportion as he grapples with questions and strives for objects just a little in ad-vance of him. So the acquaintance of men superior to ourselves elevates our standard of excellence and instills the ambition to attain to it. Young men go to our universities to come into contact with the great minds of the age, but better yet is it to cultivate the friendship of fellow-students superior to ourselves. The greatest of Greek philosophers said that there are ideas in every man, thoughts latent, of which he himself is absolutely ignorant, and that he who can draw these forth confers an inestimable benefit, and is profited himself. No one can do this so well as a companion with kindred ideas and filled with the same desire to learn. The human mind is closed to most truths, and remains in total ignorance of them till opened by some agency. We are aiming at the fullest development and widest expansion of the mind; for this a plentiful introduction of ideas is necessary. Study and reading partly supply these, but what and how to study and read ? And even then we do not sap a subject thoroughly. Everything looks a little different when passed through the prism of other minds, and the suggestions of others are continually opening to us new fields of thought and inquiry. It is impossible to travel over the entire field of human knowledge; all that a man can do to-day is to specialize, yet considerable can be learned in almost every department if properly sought. He is wise who in his daily contact with his fellows extracts from each the gist of what he has learned, perhaps, by severe study. Much ground must be traversed to acquire a few truths which can be learned in a short conversation. How often in our classes a student is asked his opinion upon a certain point, and cannot give any. True, to give an intelligent opinion upon any subject requires a thoughtful and dili-gent study of it, yet, with our limited knowl-edge, if before recitations the points in the lessons were discussed and conclusions drawn, we feel sure that not only when asked for an opinion would it be forthcoming, but a good habit also would be formed. Wherever we may go among young men, it 144 THE COLLEGE MERCURY. seems necessary to become acquainted with the slang expressions in use among them. Fortunately, we need not form friendships with them. We believe that all lovers of good English concur in the wish that the aesthetic nature of man be cultivated. Slang is so habitual with a great many of our young men that it is difficult for them to find expression in good English. Conversation upon interest-ing and important topics, we believe, would accomplish this if entered upon for the pur-pose of mutual benefit. Do not fear, either, to use big words if they express the thought exactly. Men with little ideas may use little words habitually. " Conversation maketh a ready man." No power is of any value unless it can be used. We are not disciplining our minds to make them mere reservoirs for the reception of knowledge, but we want to use them. The ability upon occasion to call to mind whatever we may have learned, and which is possessed by few, is well worth striving after. Telling something we know, too, makes it sink still more deeply in our memories. Good manners, it is claimed, will serve as an introduction to the best society everywhere. This is certainly to be desired. But the kernel of good manners is a good heart, and their adornment, a cultivated mind united with en-gaging conversation. Brilliant conversation of itself, no matter how unprepossessing may be one's appearance will attract and make friends. " People used to say that they never knew what conversation could be till they had heard Carlyle, seated at his table with his pipe." Mirabeau, although rough and brutish in ap-pearance, charmed every one with his brilliant conversation and was passionately admired, particularly by the women. We have spoken only of the value of con-versation to ourselves ; its influence upon oth-ers is without limit. For these and many other reasons which might be given, we think that the art of conversation should be culti-vated. A. F. G. '97. THE MUSICAL CLUB'S TRIP. /^N Friday, December 8th, the Glee, Banjo, ^^ and Mandolin Clubs of the College filled their first engagement outside of Gettys-burg at Westminster, Md. The Club left the Western Maryland depot on Friday morning in a special car gayly decorated with college colors and banners. Although crippled to some extent by the absence and sickness of some of their members, they felt not the slightest hesitation after the success of their entertainment given in Brua Chapel the week previous. The programme, although not rendered in the style in which the boys could have de-sired, was nevertheless received with high favor by the delighted audience. Odd Fel-lows' Hall, the only building of the kind in the town, although small, was packed with Westminster's wealthiest people and hand-somest girls and with the students of Western Maryland College. After the entertainment, a surprise of a most agreeable nature awaited the boys in the shape of a reception tendered the Clubs by Mr. H. M. C. Claybaugh, Esq., and wife. When the boys arrived at the residence of their warm-hearted host and hostess they were met by a bevy of twenty-five of Maryland's fairest daughters. Here a most enjoyable evening was spent, which came to an end only too soon, and at 12 o'clock the boys left, filled with praise for the hospitality of Westminster's citizens and its attractive ladies. Early next morning the boys assembled at the train, bid-ding good-bye to their genial host and newly-formed friends, and as the train pulled out of the station and the last looks were taken at the receding town many a staunch Pennsylva-nian was heard softly singing, " Maryland, my Maryland," and all agree that the trip to Westminster was by far the most enjoyable ever taken by the Clubs. One week later, on Friday, December 15th, the Banjo and Mandolin Clubs gave an enter- THE COLLEGE MERCURY. 145 tainment in Zion Lutheran Church, of Harris-burg, under the auspices of the Luther Union. The large Sunday-school room was decorated with orange and blue, and was crowded with an inspiring audience, whose enthusiasm for the college and appreciation for the music was evidenced in many ways. Although, on account of death, the reception that had been planned was not given, yet the boys spent a very enjoyable time in the city noted for its beautiful women. This trip to Harrisburg has revealed the fact that we have legions of friends there, and it is quite sure that when the entire organization takes its trip to Harrisburg in January a warm reception will be given them. The concert which was scheduled for Han-over, December 19th, was postponed until a later date. THE TRUSTEES MEET. A. SPECIAL meeting of the Board of Trus-tees of Pennsylvania College was called for last Thursday evening. There was a full attendance. The meeting was called for the purpose of receiving and acting upon the report of,the Special Committee (Graff, Albert, Baum, Dun-bar, and McPherson), appointed at the annual meeting upon the action of certain Synods which criticised the resolutions of the Board passed in June, 1892, when establishing the Strong Professorship of English Bible and Chaplain, and which asked for Synodical representation in the Board of Trustees. The report of the Committee was fully considered in detail, amended, and adopted as follows with entire unanimity: Resolved, 1st. That the Board most earnestly repudiates the construction placed upon its action, when establishing the Strong professorship, as an entire misconception of the intent thereof, and the Board deeply deplores the fact that the misconception has caused misunderstanding, and has given wholly unnecessary alarm as to the status of our Col-lege. 2d. That the Board maintains the principle involved in its action, viz.: No denominational teaching in the class work required of all students of the College, with ample provision for the teaching of Lutheran doctrine by the Chap-lain to all students who may be willing to receive it, as the proper policy for the administration of our College, as in ac-cord with the policy pursued by all our Colleges and by this College from its beginning, and as entirely consistent with the Lutheran status of this College. 3d. That with a desire to remove all occas'on for uncer-tainty, we add the following statement to Item III of former action : " It is to be u iderstood that this action shall in no way be regarded as affecting the status of the College as a Lutheran Institution." In regard to the Synods who have requested representation by Synods in the Board of Trustee's of the College, and have asked for such modifications of its Charter as will enable them to secure in that form definite Synodical representation with rotary membership, the following resolutions were adopted: Resolved, 1st. That while we cannot see our way clear to grant the request of the Synods referred to, in the precise form in which it is made, we direct, in order to allay all un-easiness in regard to the Lutheran control of the Institution, and to give assurance thereof, the officers of the Board to apply to the Court of Adams County, and to ask the inser-tion in Section 6 of the Charter, after the words " Board of Trustees," where they first occur, the words " of whom not less than three-fourths shall always be members of the Lutheran Church." 2d. That the Board in filling vacancies as they from time to time occur, will, by the election of new Trustees, secure as far as possible a ratable representation to all Synods in its territory, especially to such as give to the College their undivided support. All the above action was adopted by the Board with unanimity, and having been sub-mitted to the Faculty, it was concurred in by them, who each and all agreed to accept this action in its entirety as a final settlement of these questions, to frown upon all agitation to unsettle it, and to use their best endeavors to overcome existing discontent and to restore confidence in the College. The meeting of the Board was looked for-ward to with anxiety, owing to the feeling which had been aroused, and the happy and unanimous solution of all the difficulties which confronted the Board led to general congratu-lation upon the result. Rev. Dr. McKnight, President of the Col- 146 THE COLLEGE MERCURY. lege, presented to the Board, on meeting, his resignation of the Presidency, to take effect on April 1st, 1894, in order to enable him to ac-cept the call to become pastor of St. Paul's Evangelical Church at Easton. This matter was duly considered in all its aspects, where-upon the Board unanimously declined to ac-cept it and requested its withdrawal. To this request Dr. McKnight on Friday morning as-sented. On motion the Board expressed its satisfac-tion at the pleasure and profit afforded the students last year by Rev. Dr. Huber's course of lectures on Luther's Shorter Catechisms, and requested a repetition of them this year, and that they may be made a feature in his course of instruction. Adjourned.—Star and Sentinel. eOLLEGE LOCALS. ORVILLE L. SIGAFOOS and WILMER A. HARTMAN, Editors. TPIE Preparatory department closed on the 15th ult. The verdancy of the Freshmen is only surpassed by their originality. This was shown by their holding their last class meeting on the steps in Recitation Hall. A midwinter athletic contest will be held in the Gymnasium. Some of the students are already practicing for the event. Fassold, '95, and Brosius, '95, were called home before the close of last term because of the deaths of relatives. Dr. Baugher attended the meeting of the International Sunday-school Committee last month at Boston. The College Banjo and Mandolin Clubs furnished music at a concert in Zion's Lutheran Church, Harrisburg, on Friday evening, Dec. 15th. Owing to the illness of Physical Director Aukerman, Weist, '95, conducted the class drills during the closing weeks of last term. Dr. Menges has fully recovered from his illness and is again about his duties. Mrs. DeYoe, of Harrisburg, and Miss Mc- Knight, of Brazil, are the guests of Dr. and Mrs. McKnight. The musical organizations have several tours in prospect during the present term. Sickness prevailed to a larger extent in col-lege during the closing weeks of last term than for a number of years. Owing to a num-ber of students being confined to their rooms and several returning home because of sick-ness,, the opinion became prevalent that ex-aminations would probably be omitted. This hope of the students was partly realized by the action of the Faculty, in that only two exami-nations would be required of each.class. Those two subjects were chosen which came on Monday and Tuesday mornings in the sched-ule of recitations. The following were the branches: Seniors, Astronomy and Political Economy; Juniors, English and Latin ; Sophomores, Greek and Latin; Freshmen, Greek and Latin. A large audience gathered in Brua-Chapel on Friday evening, Nov. 24th, to listen to the initial concert of the College Glee, Banjo and Mandolin Clubs. The reputation which the Clubs had established during past years added to the faithful practice since the opening of college, united in stimulating interest in the occasion and in arousing the expectation of the auditors for the rendering of a musical programme of a high order. Neither were they disappointed. Ample evidence was given of the enjoyment of the programme by liberal applause and repeated encores. The following is the programme in full : PART FIRST. 1. The Water Mill, Macy. GLEE CLUB. 2. Newport Galop, Jennings. BANJO CLOT. 3. Danube Waves Waltzes, Arr. by Maxcy. MANDOLIN CLUB. 4. Down by the Riverside, Shepard. MR. KLINE AND GLEE CLUB. 5. Virginia Bells, Lansing. BANJO CLUB. 6. Medley, . GLEE CLUB. PART SECOND. 1. Gettysburg College Medley, Arr. by Baum. MANDOLIN CLUB. 2. Minstrels' Carnival, Grover. MESSRS. ECKELS, HERSH, BIKLE, IIERR. THE COLLEGE MERCURY. 147 3. A Southern Zephyr, Arr. by Hersh. BANJO CLUB. 4. My Old Kentucky Home, Foster. MR. W. H. NICHOLAS AND GLEE CLUB. 5. Flash Galop, Lansing. BANJO CLUB. 6. Evening Bells, Sheard. GLEE CLUB. The rumor of Dr. McKnight's possible resig-nation of the Presidency has been received with universal regret by all connected with the institution. A mass meeting of the students was held Thursday afternoon, December 14th, in Brua Chapel, for the purpose of inducing him to remain. Strong resolutions were unani-mously passed asking the Board of Trustees not to accept it, should it be presented. The Proctor wishes to announce to all the students that, with the beginning of this term, all absences from the required services must be accounted for within two weeks after the time. All excuses presented after the stated time will be refused. Some excuses that have hitherto been considered valid will not be ac-cepted hereafter. The lecture course tickets will be on sale in a day or two. Have your order and money ready when the Committee comes around, and patronize the Y. M. C. A. to the best of your ability. Dr. S. to M., '94—" What characterizes mountain air ?" Mr. M.—" It is very embracing." Dr. S.—" How does it effect the heart ?" Mr. M.—" It produces lung disease." Dr. N., in Freshman Class, Mathematics— " Is there a man that don't see that proof?" Co-ed.—"/don't, Doctor." R., '95, to W., '95 (in laboratory)—"Say, Werty, do you have to dilute the distilled water before using it ?" A " Prep." has signified his intention to join the " Philo. Debating Fraternity." We were in hopes that higher critics would ever stand aloof from the Lutheran Church, but were surprised to find H., '94, in a recent recitation, asserting himself in that direction. He expounded at considerable length in " Evi-dences " on Saul of " Tyrus." Dr. N. (in astronomy, on Monday morning) —" I was reading up a lunar theory last night " —(quickly correcting himself)—" Oh ! no, not last night! It was night before last." Prof. H. to M., '94—" Is this law which we are speaking of universal ?" Mr. M.—" Well, yes, sir, it's universal to some extent." The cause of the frequent tardiness of K., '94, has ever been a problem beyond the solu-tion of the students. This is Dr. N.'s expla-nation, which he gave to the Seniors recently: " Mr. K., having charge of the Observatory, goes on Observatory time, and Observatory time is slower than college time." That trip of the musical organizations to Westminster last month was one conspicuous for jokes at the expense of the boys, if nothing more. One of the young ladies asked " why they carried a Jew along ?" Another declared that those cheeks of S., '97, were painted. Two of the members who had been assigned lodg-ings at a distinguished townsman's house were met by the Senator himself when they rang for admittance. After a survey of the duet, his majesty remarked that he did not have any marriageable daughters, and then sent them to the hotel. The effect, according to their own statement, was so appalling they " couldn't eat any dinner." A certain lady asked the manager to send two of the finest gentlemen in the clubs to her house. Ask the manager who was there, and then ask one of the other fellows what the lady afterward remarked concerning her guest. Dr. S. to Mr. V., '94—" How would you test for hard water?" Mr. V.—" Dissolve a little of it in alcohol, and then use a viscid filter." " Our Pearlie " wishes to find some facts in the Life of Luther. Picking up Grote's History of Greece, he remarks, triumphantly: " That is just what I want." Failing in this, he ex-plores Geike's Hours with the Bible. He is now perusing Skeat's Etymological Dictionary. Dr. H. speaks about the strangeness of the fact that there were no Smiths among the Israelites. Strange community! Y. M. C. A. NOTES. The Y. M. C. A., on December 14th, held its last business meeting of the term. Owing to the absence of quite a number of the mem- 148 THE COLLEGE MERCURY. bers of the different Committees, the reports of committee work usually given at that time were deferred, and may be expected early next term. The funds belonging to the Association were ordered to be invested in such a manner as to yield an increased amount of interest. We hope, during the coming year, to make addition to these funds, which will be eventu-ally appropriated to the erection of a suitable Y. M. C. A. building. A hearty and liberal patronage of our lecture course will help, we trust, to accomplish this. The Association deplores the possible inter-ference with its lecture course by a prior entertainment in the chapel, and trusts that there will be no conflicting of interests. With the beginning of a new year and a new term, let us anew exert our efforts in winning young men for Christ, as that is our mission in college. A retrospect of the past term shows much for our encouragement, and Gettysburg College is far better with than she would be without this organization. GENERAL COLLEGE NEWS. The November number of the Ohio State Inter-Colegiate Record contains a full-page cut of Recitation Hall of Gettysburg College.' That co-education is making a wonderful advance is shown by the fact that 500 women are in attendance at the University of Michigan. Lehigh University has in prospect one of the finest Laboratories in the world. It will cost $200,000. The large colleges of the country as to the number of students stand in the following order: Harvard, Johns Hopkins, Cornell, Columbia, and Yale.—Ex.' Yale recitations have been changed from one hour to 50 minutes.—Ex. There are 430 colleges in the United States, with 122,523 students.—Ex. Dartmouth has turned out 40 College Presi-dents, 200 College Professors, 60 members of Congress, and 24 Governors.—Ex. The college yell is a purely American inven-tion, and is unknown in other countries. In England the students simply cheer or scream the name of the college or university. No attempt is made at a rhythmical, measured yell as in tliis country.—Depauw Weekly. Improvements of the near future at Yale are a covered base-ball ground and a campus lighted by electricity. " Young gentlemen," said a Professor to his class in Evolution, " when I am endeavoring to explain to you the peculiarities of a monkey I want you to look straight at me."—Ex. Caps and gowns have been adopted by this year's Senior classes at Amherst, Dartmouth, Harvard, Lafayette, Princeton, Williams, and Yale. German boys are said to be the strongest intellectually in the world, Irish boys the wittiest, French boys the cleverest, and American boys the brightest.—Ex. The New University of Chicago already has over 1,000 students.—Ex. THE MERCURY is pleased to add to its list of exchanges The Radiator, published by the A A 2, fraternity of the Hillhouse High School of New Haven, Conn., and the Echo of the Illinois Wesleyan University, both of which are excellent journals, published in an attrac-tive form and full of interesting college news. Muhlenberg College is agitating a move-ment which will do away with the afternoon recitation and transfer it to the morning. The Bucknell Mirror is now issued semi-monthly. In the past 25 years 19 college buildings have been added to the Princeton campus. In the last seven years Yale has scored 886 points to her opponents' 88 on the foot-ball field. James Kitchens, of the class of 1819, of the U. of Pa., is the oldest living college graduate. Miss S.—" When 1 was a child I spake as a child, but now that I am a man, or very nearly one, I act as a man."—Ex. The largest salary which any college pro-fessor receives is $20,000, the annual income of Prof. Turner, of Edinburgh. THE COLLEGE MERCURY. 149 Governor Pattison of Pennsylvania deliv-ered an address on the " Higher Education of Women" at the recent dedication of the " Latin School" of the Woman's College of Baltimore. " Where are you going, my pretty maid?" " I am going to college, sir," she said, " For I am an ambitious gay co-ed, And I am going to college, sir," she said. " And what is your fortune, my pretty maid ?" "To be independent, sir," she said, " And able to earn my butter and bread By what I learn in college," she said. " I believe I will marry you, my pretty maid." " Oh ! no thank you, no thank you, sir," she said, " You are wealthy and worldly, but not well-bred, Not manly as college boys, sir," she said. S. M. G. in The Occident. The registering of the Freshman classes at Yale has been completed, and the lists show 380 students in the academic and 222 in the scientific department. Over 9,000 students attend the University of Paris. The Class of '93, University of Michigan, numbered 731, the largest ever graduated from an American college. Yale, Harvard, Brown, Princeton, Leland Stanford, Cornell, University of Wisconsin, and University of Michigan now publish daily papers, and the University of Pennsylvania will begin the publication of one soon. Man wants but little here below, Is a sentiment we love, And, judging by his conduct here, He won't get much above. ALUM/SI. FRANK E. FICKINGER, Editor. '41. Rev. Henry Baker, D. D., one of the oldest living Alumni, who was stricken with paralysis about two weeks ago, is gradually passing away at his home in Altoona, Pa. '46. The Philadelphia Ledger, of Friday, December 1st, contained a portrait engraving of Rev. W. M. Baum, D. D., pastor of St. Mat-thew's, together with a very full report of his Thanksgiving sermon. '55. Revs. O. G. Klinger, '86, and Eli Huber, D. D., '55, addressed the Christian Endeavor Convention of Adams County, Pa., at Arendts-ville, Pa., lately. '56. Rev. G. W. Leisher, of Duncannon, Pa., has accepted a call to the Boalsburg charge in Centre County, Pa., lately served by Rev. Wm. A. Trostle. '56. Rev. J. W. Schwartz, D. D., of Worth-ington, Pa., informs us that at a meeting of his Synod action was taken to organize a Western Alumni Association, and that a meeting will soon be called for that purpose at Trinity Lutheran Church, Allegheny, Pa. '57. Dr. H. L. Baugher will preach in St. Mark's Lutheran Church, the one formerly served by Dr. C. S. Albert, on the first Sunday of the new year, January 7th. '57. The committee on the Revision of the Hymnal portion of the Book of Worship of the General Synod met recently in Dr. D. M. Gilbert's church in Harrisburg, Pa. The com-mittee consists of Drs. Gilbert, H. L. Baugher, '57 ; W. E. Parson, '67 ; Rev. H. B. Wile, '77, and Rev. E. H. Delk. The next meeting will be held some time in February, probably in Gettysburg. '59. Rev. J. G. Goettman, D. D., of Alle-gheny City, Pa., attended the December meet-ing of the Board of Church Extension, in the interests of several missions in the Pittsburgh Synod. On Sunday, November 26th, 1893, he celebrated his 30th anniversary as pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church of Allegheny. '61. Rev. M. L. Kunkleman, of Norcatur, Kan., has accepted a call to Wayne, Neb., and will,take charge there in the near future. '61. On Tuesday evening, December 5th, Dr. J. B. Reimensnyder, of New York, deliv-ered an address in the " Morgan Lecture Course" before the faculty and students of Auburn Theological Seminary on " The Sig-nificance of the Lutheran Church for Chris-trianity." '62. Hon. F. E. Beltzhoover has lately in-troduced a bill into the House of Representa-tives for the transferring of the Pension Bureau from the Interior to the War Department. '63. Dr. Enders, of York, being sick with the grippe, Dr. E. J. Wolf filled his pulpit on the 10th inst, preaching and holding communion in the morning in German, and at night preach-ing in English and conducting a large English communion. ISO THE COLLEGE MERCURY. '65. Dr. J. C. Roller's congregation, Han-over, Pa., celebrated its 150th anniversary by-appropriate services during the entire week of November I9th-26th. Quiteanumberaidedthe pastor in the jubilee services, prominent among whom were Drs. H. L. Baugher, L. E. Albert, E. J. Wolf, Charles E. Hay, and Rev. J. J. Al-bert. The history of the church is varied, but of continued prosperity, and the congregation is a glory to the denomination to which it belongs. '66. A. J. Riley, Esq., who declined the ap-pointment as President Judge of Blair County, is now Solicitor of the Pennsylvania Railroad Co. '67. Rev. Dr. Charles S. Albert was pre-sented with a purse containing $250 in gold by the congregation of St. Mark's Lutheran Church, of Baltimore, at the reception tendered himself and family before leaving for Phila-delphia. '69. The new Lutheran Church at Daven-port, Neb., was dedicated on November 12th, Rev. J. A. Clutz, D. D., president of Midland College, preaching the sermon. '73. Rev. J. F. Hartman, of Altoona, Pa., has been appointed to and accepted the editor-ship of the Keystone Christian Endeavor Herald. '73. Rev. T. J. Yost, of Altamont, N. Y., has received a call to the Lutheran Church at Montoursville, Lycoming Co., Pa. '73. Rev. VV. S. Freas, D. D., has been elected pastor of St. Mark's Lutheran Church, Baltimore, to succeed Dr. Charles S. Albert, but has declined the call. Dr. Freas is presi-dent of the Board of Church Extension, and secretary of the General Synod, and has had a highly successful pastorate at St. Paul's, York, Pa. Dr. Freas recently celebrated the eighth anniversary of his ministry in York, Pa. '75. Rev. E. D. Weigle, of the First Luth-eran Church, of Altoona, Pa., preached the annual Thanksgiving sermon before Pride of Mountain City Council, No. 472, and Coun-cil No. 152, Junior Order United American Mechanics. '78. Rev. Albert E. Bell, of Boiling Springs, Pa., has been unanimously elected pastor of St. Mark's, York, Pa., recently made vacant by the resignation of Rev. Mr. Bowers. It is hoped that Mr. Bell will accept the call. Un-til a pastor arrives upon the territory, Rev. Wm. C. Bare, '93, will be in charge. '79. Rev. Luther Kuhlman's congregation at Frederick, Md., are improving the parson-age by having another story added to it. '80. Rev. George S. Bowers, late of St. Luke's, York, Pa., preached his opening ser-mon at St. Mark's, Hagerstown, Md., on Sun-day, December 3d. '82. Rev. J.E. Zerger, of St. Paul's Church, Leetonia, O., has resigned, to take effect Feb-ruary 1st, 1894, and accepted a unanimous call to the Lutheran Church at Mt. Holly Springs, Pa., this change having become nec-essary on account of the health of Rev. Zerger's family. '83. Rev. George W. Baughman, of Everett, Pa., has accepted a call to the Uniontown charge in Maryland. '83. L. A. Brewer has been elected treas-urer, and is one-sixth owner of the Republican Printing Company, of Cedar Rapids, la. '84. Rev. Andrew S. Fichthorn, a few weeks since, resigned as secretary of the P. R. R. branch of the Y. M. C. A. at Tyrone, Pa. The following week he was unanimously elected secretary of the Association at Washington, Pa., at an annual salary of $1,000. This call he declined, preferring the work of the active ministry. His health is now fully restored, and he is well qualified in every way to do good work in any field. '85. Rev. G. G. M. Brown has removed from Union Bridge, Md., to Everett, Bedford County, Pa. '88. The members and many kind friends of Grace Lutheran Church, Canal Dover, O., tendered their new pastor and wife, Rev. John J. Hill, a very fitting reception on Thurs-day evening, November 16th. '89. Rev. C. B. Etter, of the Second (St. Paul's) Church, Akron, O., has been tendered a call to the pastorate of the Sharon Charge, near Wads-worth, O., and will probably accept. '90. Rev. F. S. Geesey, ofthe Trinity charge, York Co., Pa., was installed on last Sunday, December 10th. '90. Rev. G. H. Reen, pastor of St. Luke's at Mansfield, was installed on Sunday, Novem- THE COLLEGE MERCURY. I5i ber 26th. Dr. L. A. Gotwald, '57, delivering the charge to the pastor in the morning, and that to the people in the evening. '91. Schmucker Duncan, now pursuing a course in Philosophy at Yale, spent the Christmas holidays with his mother at home in Gettysburg. '91. Rev. A. Pohlmann, recently appointed missionary for the Lutheran Church to Africa, has been making a tour through the churches of Eastern Pennsylvania, talking in the interest of missions. He recently addressed large crowds of students at the Clarion State Nor-mal School. '91. Frank Swartz, at present a student in Hartford Theological Seminary, spent Thanks-giving week with his parents in Gettysburg. '91. Rev. A. C. Stup is to be addressed at Asheville, N. C. '93. Honor Luffer Wilhelm is the editor of an interesting college paper and one that should be in the hands of every student.— T/ie Inter- Collegiate Record. Little grains of sand, Drops of H20, Make the mighty sugar trust, And the broker's dough. F-RTVTE-RNITy /NOTES. PAUL W. KOLLER, Editor. PHI KAPPA PSI. Bro. Lutz, '94, spent his holiday vacation " doing " Baltimore, Washington, Philadelphia, and New York. Bro. Keffer, '95, visited friends in Pittsburgh during most of the Christmas holidays. Bros. Carty, '96, and Graff, '97, are about again after a brief illness. Bro. Claybaugh, 'yj, gave a reception to the musical clubs at his home in Westminster, Md. PHI GAMMA DELTA. Bros. Rietz, '95, and Aukerman, '97, were compelled to leave college before the close of the term on account of sickness. Bro. Herr, '97, also went home with an attack of the grip, but returned for the examinations. Bro. D. F. Garland, '88, spent a short time in our midst recently. His church is growing wonderfully and the entire section of the city in the neighborhood is being built up. We are represented on the musical clubs this year by the following men : On the Glee Club—Bro. Fickinger; on the Banjo Club— Bros. Baum and Fickinger; on the Mandolin Club—Bros. Wert, Herr, Baum, and Fickin-ger. Bro. E. E. Blint, '90, pastor of the First Lutheran Church of Littlestown, Pa., paid a visit to Gettysburg with his wife a short time ago. Bro. S. B. Martin, '90, spent his Christmas vacation with his parents in Gettysburg. Bro. D. A. Buehler, '91, is at present at home, having severed his connection with the firm in which he has been employed for the last two years. SIGMA CHI. A chapter of Sigma Chi is being organized at the University of Chicago. Sigma is one of the five Greek-letter societies which have thus far taken possession of this new fraternity territory. Bro. McPherson, '83, spent several days last month visiting friends in Baltimore. Bro. Hersh, '91, has removed his law office to the rooms in the Star and Sentinel Build-ing on Baltimore Street. Bro. Damuth, '92, spent part of his vaca-tion as the guest of friends in Harrisburg. Bro. Olewine, '97, was called home on busi-ness before the close of last term. Bro. Trowbridge, '82, who was compelled to relinquish his duties for a season as pastor of St Paul's Church, Baltimore, because of ill-ness, has returned to his pastorate after a rest, much improved in health. ALPHA TAU OMEGA. Bro. Lewis Gehrhart, '85, of Martinsburg, West Va., spent Thanksgiving in Gettysburg. Bro. Gehrhart, in connection with his law prac-tice, is editing the Martinsburg Independent. Bros. Hutton, Cable, and Menges spent Thanksgiving at home. Bro. G. G. M. Brown resigned his charge at Union Bridge to accept a call from the con-gregation at Everett, Pa. 152 THE COLLEGE MERCURY. Bros. H. G. Mentzer, '87, and J. C. Clug-ston, '89, have formed a partnership, having purchased a drug store in Waynesboro, Pa., where they will do business under the firm name, Mentzer & Clugston. Bro. Mentzer is a graduate of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, Bro. Clugston a graduate of the Baltimore Pharmaceutical College. Chapters have recently been established at the Polytechnic Institute, Terre Haute, Ind., and at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. ATHLETICS. HENRY E. CLARE, Editor. THURSDAY, November 30th, our team closed the foot-ball' season with a very creditable game with York Collegiate Institute at York, Pa. The game proved an easy vic-tory for our team. After a few ineffectual on-slaughts the York men despaired of making any impression on our line or of running the ends. Punting was then resorted to, with veiy little effect, although the York full-back, Van Baman, did some fine work. In this way only couldtheyput the ball on our territory, and then only momentarily. Our men had no difficulty in breaking through their line or running the ends. Emmert made some veiy long runs, as did Mottern. The bucking of Apple was very effective. Manifold did the great playing for York. The teams lined up as follows : GETTYSBURG. POSITIONS. YORK. McCartney, left end, Manifold. Byers, left tackle, Williams. Tholan, left guard, Polack. Rank, centre, Anderson. Becker, right guard, Randolph. Minges, right tackle, Crider. Earnest, right end. Diehl. Emmert, left half-back, Jessop. Mottern, right half-back, Crider. Nicklas, quarter-back, Keyworth (McEall) Apple, full-back, Van Baman. Score : Gettysburg, 24; Y. C. I., o. In this game only five of the regular players participated. The other positions were filled by those who had never played in a regular game. The score shows that they filled their places with credit. This season, which opened so creditably in a game with Cornell' University at Ithaca, N. Y., has proved to be probably the best in the history of foot-ball at this college. With unprecedented difficulties and obstacles in the way of success, the team has made a record that is a credit to themselves and the college. Several times the team played in a condition that hardly justified their playing, but a defeat was considered more honorable than the cancelling of a game. The team played eight games. Three of the opposing teams were university teams, and two of them rank among the best in the land. The games won were two from Dickinson, one from Washing-ton and Jefferson College, one from York Col-legiate Institute. One tie game was played with F. & M. Those lost were with University of Pennsylvania, Cornell University, and Buck-nell University. From the pecuniary standpoint, the season has not been so profitable. As matters now stand, we are considerably in debt. The cause has not been patronized as it should have been by the students. But the principal cause of our indebtedness is the lack of an athletic field. Money was lost on every home game, not be-cause we failed to draw large crowds, but because we could not get them to pay when they could see the game for nothing. This is our great drawback. It is necessary now to work earnestly. All subscriptions should be paid at once, as well as term dues. Our debts must be met, and the fact that not a cent has-been added to the Athletic Field Fund for an age shows us conclusively that no one takes enough interest in us or our noble cause to help us out of the difficulty. We must do it ourselves. It would be unfair to allow this number of THE MERCURY to go to press without saying a word about Manager Kloss. All who have watched our varying fortunes this season could not help seeing that a great part of our success was due to his indefatigable efforts and un-abating interest. He deserves the thanks of all for his labors. Twenty-six players participated in the differ-ent games of the season. To give an account of the playing of each one would require more space than can be allowed, and probably would not be interesting to the majority of the readers. On the other hand, to make mention of a few and leave unnoticed others who equally deserve praise for the faithfulness and zeal with which they performed their duties would be unfair. THE COLLEGE MERCURY. 153 In order to avoid this, only the touch-downs and the players who made them will be men-tioned. During the season 15 touch-downs were made, giving us 80 points : First game with Dickinson—Aukerman, 3 ; Keefer, 1. Bucknell—Aukerman, 1. Washington and Jefferson—Keefer, 3. Franklin and Marshall—Aukerman, 1. Second game with Dickinson—Keefer, 1. York Collegiate Institute—Mottern, 3 ; By-ers, 1 ; Emmert, 1. Total, 15—Aukerman, 5 ; Keefer, 5 ; Mot-tern, 3 ; Byers, 1 ; Emmert, 1. Gymnasium work has begun in earnest. All seem to be pleased with the work of Director Aukerman. It is to be hoped that this very important part of athletic training be not neglected, and that good and well-trained ma-terial may be developed for our coming seasons. At a recent meeting of the Athletic Associ-ation, the advisability .of chartering the body was referred to the Advisory Committee. There was a young man from Ky., Who at gambling thought he was a dy., But he altered his mind, After trying to find, The ace, with a monte-man ly. TOW/S 7VND SEMI/NTVRy. ROSCOE C. WRIGHT, Editor. TOWN. BY the will of the late Mrs. Sarah Eichel-berger, of Gettysburg, the college, with the " College " Church, is made residuary legatee. It is supposed that each of these will realize about $1,500. Her husband's will adds $2,000 to the funds of the college, and about $22,000 to the endowment of the seminary. These bequests from citizens of the town are very gratifying to the friends of the institution, and it is to be hoped that others will follow this good example, and so arrange their wills that these noble institutions will be helped to much needed equipment and teaching force. Postmaster Kitzmiller's commission expires on January 27th. Ex-County Treasurer Rufus E. Culp, R. M. Elliot, and ex-Prothon-otary George L. H. Grammer are the appli-cants for the position. Murderer Heist, who was to have been hanged here on December 14th, has made a statement in which he places the guilt on a man named Reese. His attorney has secured a reprieve from Governor Pattison un-til January 17th, during which time he will make an effort to secure a commutation of the sentence to life imprisonment. The Sunday-schools of the town held ap-propriate Christmas services. Those con-ducted by the students in the country held theirs before vacation. Dr. Breidenbaugh made an analysis of the stomach of Associate Judge Donohue, who died so mysteriously a short time ago, and found strychnia in sufficient quantity to cause death. The coroner's jury rendered a verdict that he had come to his death at the hands of an unknown person. The County Commis-sioners offer a reward for the arrest of the person. The schedule on the Phila. & Reading road is even more inconvenient than that of the old Gettysburg & Harrisburg railroad. The college musical clubs furnished the music for the evening sessions of the Institute. This was the most successful Institute ever held in Adams County. No services were held in the College Church on Sunday, December 17th, on account of diphtheria in the family of the sexton who occupies a portion of the building. Mr. Chas. Young, Gettysburg's talented young artist, has received liberal praise from the Art Editor of the Pldladelphia Inquirer. Mr. William B. Duncan, of Arkansas, has returned to his home after a pleasant visit to relatives and friends here. Miss Richards, daughter of Rev. Dr. Rich-ards, of Muhlenberg College, visited her aunts, the Misses McClean, the latter part of the term. Prof, and Mrs. Huber G. Buehler, of Lake-ville, Connecticut, are visiting Mrs. Buehler's parents, Dr. and Mrs. E. J. Wolf. Mr. Chas. Shapley, father of Mr. J. S. Shap-ley, of the Class of '90, died in Carlisle, De-cember 18th. 154 THE COLLEGE MERCURY. SEMINARY. The Seminary closed Monday, December 4th. Two cases of fever caused much anxiety among the Theologues. As a result the Faculty thought it best to close the term im-mediately. It is reported that a Harrisburg paper has published a letter from John C. Grimes, of the Junior Class, who disappeared so mysteriously last term. The letter is written to his father from Chicago. Rev. Dr. E. J. Wolf has an article on the " New Doctrine " in the New York Independent of December 14th. Mr. W. S. Oberholtzer and Mr. Edgar Suth-erland recovered from their sickness in time to spend Christmas at their homes. The work on the foundation of the new building progresses rapidly when the weather permits. Mr. E. E. Parsons, of the Junior Class, supplied the pulpit of Fourth Lutheran Church of Altoona during vacation. Rev. M. L. Tate, of the Senior Class, preached in the Lutheran Church of Bellwood during vacation. Mr. N. F. Bare, of the Junior Class, will preach in the Lutheran Church of Boiling Springs until a pastor has been secured. Bishop Daniel Payne, at one time a student in Seminary, and the oldest Methodist Bishop in the world, died at Wilberforce, Ohio, recently, aged 72 years. LITE-RTVRy SOCIETIES. WALDO D. MAYNARD, Editor. OF the many advangages which the literary societies afford to the students, those gained from the reading-rooms are of no little consideration. Here are to be found the leading newspapers, such as the Philadelphia Press, New York World, and many others of equal importance, together with the best magazines published. These rooms are main-tained for the convenience of the students at a considerable expense. Most of the students appreciate these privileges. There are, how-ever, some who are not only unappreciative of them, but even abuse them. It is next to an impossibility to keep Puck and Judge or the illustrated papers in the reading-rooms for any length of time. The Christmas number of Judge was not in Phrena. reading-rooms long enough to permit one-quarter of the members of that society to read it. Then, again, many men have an idea that this is a place for smok-ing and lounging. Men of this class make a nuisance of themselves, to the annoyance of those who wish to read. Isn't it about time that there is better decorum in the reading-room ? Many of us have only a few minutes to spend in reading the papers, and our time is too valuable to be wasted on account of the interruption of carelessness and indifference on the part of certain individuals. Again, it is unjust to expect the societies to furnish read-ing material for the monopoly of a few. We are now about to enter upon another term of work in the literary societies as well as in the other departments. The last term was considerably broken up, so that there were not many evenings for regular work. There-fore, we should tiy to make our work as interesting and profitable as possible. We hope to see some good men developed for the coming oratorial contest in June. Now is the time and the societies the place to train for the contest. There are still many men who have not as yet connected themselves with either of the societies. We would call attention to the fact that all non-society men are required to pay one dollar for the use of the reading-rooms after the first term, so from a financial stand-point it is about as cheap to be a member of a society as not to be. The two societies will continue the special meetings which have been found to be so profitable. Miss Lillie Tipton had charge of Philo. library during the holiday vacation. Messrs. Maynard, Barndt, Bell, Burger, and Clare are on the Committee to prepare special programmes for Phrena. Philo. has elected Mr. O. L. Sigafoos, '94, to fill the vacancy on Staff of THE MERCURY. ADVERTISEMENTS. Wanamaker's. What makes Wanamaker's so dis-tinctively Wanamaker's is the spirit that actuates the merchandising—all the time striving: to serve our customers better and better, shortening the road from producer to consumer and saving to patrons every possible penny of cost. How well we have done it is a matter of history, how well we shall do is what concerns us. The look is always ahead. Every part of the store shows points of unusual interest. Sporting Goods. Things for wear. Things for home helping. And there are lower-than-ever prices on many of them. JOHN WANAMAKER. SEND FOR CATALOGUE OF you^s L^D^S, NEAR. BALTIMORE, MD. This widely known, thoroughly equipped, and extensively patronized School will open its 41st Annual Session, Sept. 13th, 1893. All the Departments of a High Grade Seminary. Address, Rev. J. H. TURNER, A. M.,Principal, LUTHERVILLE, MD. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. CHJl^IiES S. DU^CA^i, '82, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW, Baltinxoi-e Street, GETTYSBURG, PA. CHAS. E. STffltfkE, '87, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Baltimore Street, GETTYSBURG, PA. DR. CHAS, B, STOUFFER, OFFICE, STAR AND SENTINEL BUILDING, GETTYSBURG. PA. fj tiber's Dr^2 Store, Baltimore Street, GETTYSBURG, PA. Prescriptions Carefully Compounded. atest Styles \r\ IS Hats, Shoes, AND Gents' Furnishings, R. M. ELLIOTT'S. N. B.—Stiff Hats made to Fit the Head in two minutes A. D. BUEHLER&CO., Headquarters for Stationery and Blank Books. LOWEST CASH PRICES. VI ADVERTISEMENTS. DECKER BROTHERS' PIANOS. Absolute Evenness of Touch, Richness and Brilliancy of Tone, Extraordinary Singing Quality, Unequaled Workmanship, Power of Standing in Tune longer than any other Piano made, are among the characteristic qualities of DECKER BROS. PIANOS, 33 Union Square, fieux Yot*k. Used in Philo. Hall at Gettysburg College. GO TO C.A.BLOCHER'S Jecxielfy Store for Souvenir * Spoons, i Sword Pins, &c. Post Office Corner, Centre Square. COLLEGE EMBLEMS EMIL ZOTHE, Engraver, Designer; and fllanafaetufing Jerjuelep, 19 SOUTH NINTH STREET, Opp. Post Office, PHILADELPHIA. Specialties: Masonic Marks, Society Badges, College Buttons, Pins, Scarf Pins, and Stick Pins. Athletic Prizes. ALL GOODS ORDERED THROUGH G. Z. STUP. ADVERTISEMENTS. VI1 R. H. REININGER, fl]V[OS EC^EHT, Merchant * * *■■*'•■* Tailor. DEALER IN Hats, Shirts, Shoes, Ties, Umbrellas, Gloves, Satchels, Hose, THE BEST WORK AT THE LOWEST PRICES. Suits from $12.00 to $40.00. Pants from $4.00 to $12.00. Pocket Books, Trunks, Telescopes, Rubbers, NEXT DOOR TO POST OFFICE, Etc., Etc. UP-STAIRS. CENTRAL SQUARE. AMOS ECKERT. PETE THORNE, Shaving $ Hair Cutting SPECIAIi TO STUDENTS. pine Tailoring. Parlors JOSEPH JACOBS, 1 LXl l\J 1 0» Merchant Tailor, FmST CLASS 7VRT1STS. Chambersburg Street, (Below Eagle Hotel) CENTRAL SQUARE. GETTYSBURG, PA. FLEMMING & TROXEL, Red Front Cigar Store Billiard R. H. RUPP, Proprietor. fio. 8 Baltimore St., Gettysbufg. ANt> The place for a fine Cigar or a good Pool 'Rooms. chew. Solid Havana filler, 5 for 25c. An elegant article. BALTIMORE STREET. A FINE ASSORTMENT OF PIPES AND SMOKING MIXTURES. Vlll ADVERTISEMENTS. ESTABLISHED 1876. PE/NKOSE MgEKS, AY/dTcnndKER ™ JEWELER. Iiafge Stoek of LCiatehes, Clocks, Jexxielvy, etc., on Hand. GETTYSBURG SOUVENIR SPOONS. COLLEGE SOUVENIR SPOONS. 10 BALTIMORE STREET, GETTYSBURG, PA. Students' Headquarters IS AT J. R. STINE S. SON'S CLOTHING STORE The Cheapest Clothing and Gents' Furnishings in Gettysburg. MERCHANT TAILORING A SPECIALTY. COME AND SEE US. J. R. STINE & SON, THE LEADING CLOTHIERS, MAIN STREET, GETTYSBURG, RA. A. G. SPALDING & BROS. MANUFACTURERS OF .Athletic $> ^porting Goods OF EVERY DESCRIPTION THE NATIONAL LEAGUE BALL, BATS, CATCHERS' GLOVES AND MITTS. MASKS. BODY PROTECTORS, ETC. ETC THE SPALDING TOURNAMENT TENNIS BALL, THE SLOCUM RACKETS. RACKET COVERS, PRESSES AND NETS, COURT MEASURES, MARKERS, POLES. FORKS. ETC., ETC. Uniforms and Clothing for all Sports, Outing and Gymnasium use- The finest imported Serges and flannels. Newest Styles and Patterns. SEND FOR OUR NUW CATALOGUE'S CHICAt.O, NEW YORK. PHILADELPHIA, 10S Madison St. 243 Broadway, lojz Chestnut St. DMTLLTIELD LIVEKT. Rear of Washington House, Opposite W. M. R. R. Depot. GETTYSBURG, PA. ^W& All Kinds of Teams. Good Riding Horses. -:o:- The Battlefield a Specialty, With First-Class Guides. DAVID McCLEARY, Prop.
GETTYSBURG "NEWf " PRINT. CATS 1 i '|pnm VIMBHimwiw IV/fl1 «'.!.# J tilT* VM :, HELP THOSE WHO HELP US. The Intereollejiate finreaa or Academic Eostume. Chartered 1902. Cottrell & Leonard Albany, N. Y. v»rywwvwwwvwvww^v Makers of Caps, Gowns, Hoods I? WANTED. > College students during their vacation can easily make $20 to $30 per week. Write for par-ticulars. THE UNIVERSAL MFG CO, Pittsburg, Pa. Come and Have a Good Shave. or HAIR-CUT at Harry B. Seta's New Tonsorial Parlors, 35 Baltimore St. BARBERS' SUPPLIES A SPECIALTY. Also, choice line of fine Cigars. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, A, L, Menbeck, AgEnt. COLLEGE. IF YOU CALL ON C. fl. Bloehei*, Jeuuelef, Centre Square, He can serve you in anything you may want in REPAIRING or JEWELRY. ■ ■WiiJAlJtl mJ\m I II: WJE RECOMMEND THESE FIRMS. The Pleased Customer is not kJ> SONGS OF ALL THE COLLEGES. frn Price, $1.jo, postpaid. m Oopji !«»'.n ^ HINDS & NOBLE, Publishers, New York City. W IT Schoolbeoks of all publishers at one store, ff^ff 2 XK- ^* 3.*= ^V =t*= =\* A* =Vt :\V **- *t m lEMIUJaMUBUUi nniHMn PATRONIZE OUR • ADVERTISERS. mm WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE Of Novelties for the Fall Season, including Latest Suiting, Coating, Trousering and Vesting. Our Prices are Right. SPECIAL CARE TAKEN TO MAKE WORK STYLISH AND* EXACTLY TO YOUR ORDER. Cllill (XI. Seligman, Taiio*. 7 Chambecsbapg St., Gettysburg, Pa. R.A. WONDERS Corner Cigar Parlors. A full line of Cigars, Tobacco, Pipes, etc. Scott's Corner, opp. Eagle Hotel GETTYSBURG, PA. Pool Parlors in Connection. D. J. Swartz Dealer in Country Produce Groceries Cigars and Tooacco GETTYSBURG. Established 1867 by A/Inn Walton. Allen K. Walton, Prea. and Treaa. Root. J. Walton, Superintendent. ItllQllStOWB BrowQ Stone ConpaDj, and Manufacturers of BUILDING STONE, SAWED FLAGGING, and TILE, WALTONVILLE, DAUFHIN COUNTY, PENNA. Contractors for all kinds of cut stone work. Telegraph and Express Address, BROWNSTONE, PA. Parties visiting quarries will leave cars at Brownstone Station, on the P. & R. R. R. ■HMUHI Mf\\ 1 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS. l Mioo«te»o»«o»««««to«>«t>» «»ooo»oo>tc Weaver Pianos and Organs : Essentially the instruments for critical and discriminating buyers. Superior in every detail of construction and superb instruments for the production of a great variety of musical effects and the finest shades of expression. ClsM Pricw. 'Eiir Ten:. Old tutnmeati Zzchasged. WEAVER ORGAN AND PIANO CO. MANUFACTURERS, YORK. PA., U. S. A. ttiGipft Latest Styles in HATS, SHOES AND GENT'S FURNISHING .Our specialty. WALK-OVER SHOE M. K. ECKERT Prices always right The Lutheran publigfjing ponge.- No. 1424 Arch Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. Acknowledged Headquarters for anything and everything in the way of Books for Churches, Col-leges, Families and Schools, and literature for Sunday Schools. PLEASE REMEMBER That by sending your orders to us you help build up and devel-op one of the church institutions with pecuniary advantage to yourself. Address H. S. BONER, Supt. 1 The CClevQUpy. The Literary Journal of Gettysburg College. Vol. XIII. GETTYSBURG, PA., FEBRUARY, 1905. No. 8 CONTENTS 'WHERE PROVIDENCE PREVAILED," , . . 246 BY MISS HARRIET MCGILL, '06. THE NOVEL OF SENTIMENT,* 25.0 "IMBEM." THE LOUISIANA PURCHASE, . . . 259 BY H. F. SMITH, '07. RELIGION AND SOLITUDE, . 265 BY SAMUEL E. SMITH, '07. THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF A MILLIONAIRE,*' . . 268 "NOMEN." EDITORIALS, . • . 274 EXCHANGES, ". .276 ♦Contributed for Pea and Sword Prijze Essay Conteat. LiUlMUflMfti i \| 246 THE MERCURY. WHERE PROVIDENCE PREVAILED. Bv Miss HARRIET MCGIU., '06. THE woman waited; as in the lulls of the moaning, De-cember night wind, she heard the sound of sleigh bells mingled with the laughter of happy lovers, who sped swiftly by, she smiled, then gave a little sob, and smiled straight away again. "For what," she said, " if the waiting is long, one has always the past as a companion." Yes, "as a companion" and as such, Time had been kind to the woman. True, he had streaked the black hair with grey, and hardened the strong large hands with marks of toiling, but these things mattered little, for had he not left the great dark eyes undimmed? Just as twenty years ago, when they had look-ed frankly up into the face of the man whom their mistress call-ed ''husband," and smiling through their tears, spoke more plain-ly than any language the great word "courage," even so had they looked ever since into the face of Old Father Time, and looking smiled; no wonder then that he could not dim them. And the man : he also was waiting; the woman waited in a room bare and cheerless, the room of a servant in a great city, that of the man was equally bare and cheerless, it was the pris-on cell of one whom the world called "criminal." Now comes the strange part of our prelude, in the fact that neither of these people knew, how that for which they waited would come to them. Those who had placed the man in his present position, knew well how to make arrangements, by which his wife should not be permitted to see him. He was "in for life," and it was granted, even by the faithful few who remained true to the conviction of his innocence, that his case was hopeless. Yet throughout the twenty years, firmly, as upon the day of their parting, had these two believed in the hope of deliverance, and trusted, as it is the lot of few to trust. The night wind also sighed and moaned around a rude log cabin, that lay a tiny speck upon the broad stretches of the great western prairie. Lonely, sequestered, isolated, truly might ^HHHH THE MERCURY. 247 * * this humble home have been called the " Lodge of some vast wilderness," so far was it removed from the haunts of men, so little did its inhabitants know about the lives of their fellows, in the great outside world. ■ Here, upon this winter night of which we W rite, the good wife of the house, a plain, simple, country woman, who had, up to this time, lived her even, uneventful life, in a spirit of honest contentment, lay down to rest, worn with the day's work. This woman knew nothing of our convict or his wife, the story of the crime whose tragic consequences had involved him in ruin, and blasted the life of the girl whose eyes said "courage," had never even reached these humble prairie dwellers, and when Marie Cor-douy closed her eyes that night, she expected nothing but the "sleep of the just," the usual reward of her hard labor. Instead —well let us hear the story of her dream; she says, "I was there, and yet not there; for somehow I know that the girl I saw was alone, after she bade her sister good-bye, saying that she would go through the wood to the farm of a neighbor who lived about two miles away. I can see her now as she walked along, she was a pretty girl, with hair like gold, and eyes like the "bluets,". which grew all around her in the forest, as she walked among them barefoot, her shoes in her hand, for she took them off to save them, when she came to the wood. So she walked on for sometime until she came to a large rock that stood out on the bank of a stream, and here she sat down to rest, for the day was warm, and she tired. Suddenly two men crept out from the trees behind the girl. One was tall with a scar 0.11 bis face, he seem-ed to be middle aged, the other was smaller, and from his looks could have been a son of the first. Just as she sat there, with-out any thought of harm, those men rushed on the girl, and throttled her, then they carried the poor tiling, into the bed of the stream, and foully murdered her there, while the water washed away the signs of their bloody work. When it was done, they went back to the rock and tried to move it. At last they got space enough to dig a kind of a grave underneath, where they buried the girl, her shoes beside her, and the knives with which ■^^■HnuAfl-fi 248 THE MERCURY. they had stabbed her. When I saw them sneak away, through the trees, the horror of the thing awakened me." So great was this horror, that Marie awoke her husband, and told him of the dream, but, saying that it was nothing, told her to try to sleep once more. Yet again came the dream, as viv-idly as before, and then again, three times, did she have it be-fore morning came to deliver her. Still John Cordouy said that it contained no portent, and advised her to forget it, this how-ever was easier said than done, and from that nig*ht Marie was a changed woman. The dream never seemed to leave her mind, its weight oppressed her, and finding no sympathy in John, she yet persisted in telling her gruesome tale, not only to him, but to any chance traveller whom she could persuade to listen.— Finally, for the world is a small place, after all, the news of the dream reached the ears of the woman who waited. Teresa Jardain, wife of the supposed murderer, whose life imprisonment instead of death because of inability to find the body of the girl, had been secured by the man who accused him ; a man high in power, a tall man, with a scar on his face. .This man's son had once loved the dark eyed beauty of Teresa, who had refused his offer of marriage, and had afterwards been spurned by the girl, whose strange disappearance had so affect-ed the life of the Jardains, the neighbors, to whose farm she was last seen starting out. Now into Teresa's life, since her brave fight against the world began, had entered much wisdom ; it was as the " wisdom of the serpent," and with it she determined to save her husband, and see his face once more. As has been said, there were some few friends remaining who believed him innocent; to these men Teresa went, with the strange story of the dream, implor-ing their aid. At last this plan was agreed upon. Two of these men, who were fortunately wealthy and influential, went secretly to the prairie home of Cordouy, disguised as travellers. As usual Marie, eager for listeners, related the story of her dream, she seemed to find relief in telling it as often as possible. They then took Cordouy into their confidence, and proposed to him a trip through the East to the place where the tragedy occurred. BBlnflftFi THE MERCURY. 249 Marie would of course accompany them, and should she recog-nize the surroundings, identify the men, and find the body of the girl, the murderers might be forced into a revelation of the truth. In the meantime the story was to be kept secret so that they might be taken off their guard. Their plans were strangely successful, when Marie, in the course of their journey, reached the neighborhood where the murder took place, she seemed to grow more and more excited, at last she could stand it no longer, and told the others that this was the place of her dreams. Eagerly leading them into the wood, (a. strange place remember, where she had never been before,) she hurried on until she reached the rock by the streamlet, and began in her haste to dig away the earth beneath it, with her own hands. She was however persuaded to give place to work-men, who arrived with suitable tools, and soon dug from their resting place of twenty years or more, the skeleton of the girl, the knives and even the remainder of the shoes, which lay by themselves, near her head, showing that she had worn them. The story now spread far and wide, and the real murderers, fail-ing in an attempt to flee the country, confessed their guilt, and met the punishment which had been for so long a time delayed. The night winds no longer moaned around the prairie cabin, with a story of duty left undone, its sound bears rather comfort to the woman within, her mission is fulfilled, Marie Cordouy is satisfied. No longer does a captive, Paul Jardain, stretch im-ploring hands, behind his prison bars and implore it to bear the message of his innocence to the world. The weary watch of Teresa, the woman who waited, is over, for Providence worked a miracle with the passing of the night wind. [D1^B^HHHHHEthere are many novel readers who might express the bitterness -of their experience in the lines of Thompson— " Ah from real happiness we stray, By vice bewildered, vice which always leads However fair at first to wilds woe." Every man has a model for his life, an ideal, and how much -does a man's welfare depend on the ideal which is enshrined in ihis heart of hearts ! Any force which has the power of chang-ing ideals should be (both) helped and hindered in its opera-tion, aided that it may effect the greatest good and hindered Jest it accomplish the most of evil. Fiction has shaped ideals and it is moulding ideals today and in many cases this is being ■done with great injury to humanity. Too many of our novelists picture woman as an angel or a fiend. At one time they por-tray woman, as the flatterer, the seducer, the destroyer, and as-sociate her with such deadening villianies that she appears as .a veritable Medusa petrifying all that is noble in the nature of man; while at another time, under the spell of their pens she ■■■■■■■^■■■■H ■: , ' '\U- U --- v - -^ 256 THE MERCURY. stands forth as semi-divine a creature too wondrous for daily contact with the world. From a social standpoint, it is truly alarming to observe the opinions which are held by thousands-of the male sex concerning women, and not a few of these de-praved ideas can be traced to the popular novel. While wo-man can fall lower and can also attain greater heights than* man, yet the vast majority of women occupy a middle plane where virtue is a companion and the ordinary duties of life keep the angelic qualities in the background. It can safely be said that the average work of fiction is too radical in depicting the characters of women. Somewhat allied to the above topic is the illusive idea so-prominent in current fiction that it is an absolute fault to be commonplace. All real life is commonplace. It is a round of duty and service and only once in a great length of time does a man spring forth who rises above his fellows. Anything that derides the homely toil of the private citizen or makes men* dissatisfied with their station in life by infatuating them with visions of power selfishly attained, must be characterized as-pernicious, because it places false ideals before the eyes of men. There is also an influence at work today of the same nature,, that makes the securing of wealth the one thing for which men should strive, and many novels of the twentieth century are strongly imbued with this spirit. After an examination of many popular books, it is found in numerous instances that wealth is regarded as the greatest thing in the world. This is-not done in a direct way, but is brought by a hint here and a* suggestion there, benumbing reason and calling into action all that is sordid in the soul of man. Thus there are novels which speak of millions with an air of studied carelessness, while others recount the struggles of a hero who begins life as a poor boy and finally becomes the possessor of hundreds of thousands and even millions. Such ideas held out before the young peo-ple of today are most harmful. While wealth is- desirable, it is of secondary importance. It does not bring character nor happiness to its possessor, and is often a hindrance to noble endeavor. How refreshing it is when some novelist deigns to> m WIUHMWJIlllWi THE MERCURY. 257 give to the public a story of the poor, of people in ordinary-circumstances, showing to mankind that riches are not the passport to happiness. Let our writers take Thackeray for their pattern. That the ideals in our current literature may be truer and nobler, let our talented authors acknowledge Dickens their patron saint and tell to humanity the strange story of the toil-ing world. When the character of the novel of sentiment has been re-viewed, the mind naturally becomes alert to observe the effects of reading popular fiction. The results are only obvious when, after the reading of books, an investigation is made among one's friends, and every man looks into his own soul, with a view of discerning their exact measure ot influence. Many surprises await one making such an investigation, but probably the most astonishing is the fact that the opinion of many people can be known if one is familiar with the last book which they have read. In other words, too many men and women accept the statements of books without applying the test of common sense and reason. Thus, through the frailty of humanity, the novel of sentiment is efficacious for much of good and evil. The greatest fault, perhaps, of the twentieth century novel is the depraved condition of the mind which it produces. By its stimulating power the novel gives an unnatural tone to the mind and brings it into such a condition that there can be no true appreciation for the more noble works of literature. The public libraries and the ones in many colleges testify to the pre-vailing order of affairs, since it is stated on good authority that nine-tenths of all the books which are taken from their shelves are fiction. A doctor of divinity of the Presbyterian Church confessed not long ago, that while he was visiting a neighbor-ing minister and helping to conduct evangelistic services, he found a set of historical novels in the library of his friend, and having become interested, he did not rest until he had read the entire series. " During that week," he said, " I read three of those novels and I had such a feverish interest in them that I purchased the entire set as soon as I returned home." In- 258 THE MERCURY. stances of such fascination are numerous among all classes, and they are destructive to true mental development. Again, the novel of sentiment, within whose pages vice and unnatural affections are so vividly portrayed, debases ten while it is helpful to one. By many it is argued that the immoral book is the most severely moral because it shows to the reader the blackness of evil. This is a fallacy which has always been urged concerning sin; it is the siren voice of the tempter. Such arguments have destroyed the virtues of a multitude. How shall their falsity be shown ? The philosophy of the poet in the lines so frequently quoted reveals the truth— " Vice is a monster of such frightful mien, As to be hated, needs but to be seen ; But seen too oft—familiar grows her face, We first endure; then pity ; then embrace." Throughout the body of this essay a spirit of criticism has been manifested toward the novel of of the last twenty years. In view of the facts such criticism is needed. But praise should be given to authors like Ralph Connor, who has written books with a definite purpose. However, it is very difficult to select really good novels from the great mass of fiction. An inquiry, with the purpose of obtaining a basis for the discrimination be-tween the good and bad in fiction, makes a most fitting con-clusion to our observations on this subject. Under what cir-cumstances is the novel of sentiment a safe agent ? Only when some noble purpose fires the writer; only when the author has some real message for humanity in his book. Sentiment con-nected with the fickle things of life becomes a demoralizing power. The average novel is dangerous from its lack of prin-ciple and purpose. Thus it must be said that this lack of prin-ciple in most of our sentimental novels characterizes them as unfit for a place in our libraries. THE MERCURY. 259 THE LOUISIANA PURCHASE. BY. H. F. SMITH, '07. ■** their greatness to the long struggle between France and England," says Thiers in his History of the Consulate and Empire, in speaking of the sale of Louisiana by Bonaparte to the United States. This statement contains two views in them-selves somewhat debatable: First, Whether the United States is indebted for its birth to France. Some think in all proba-bility we would have gained our independence without the aid of France. This could be so and yet the indebtedness not be lessened, for France did help us by the revival of spirits and by material means in the battle of Yorktown. Second, that we are indebted for our greatness to the long struggle between France and England, and not so much to ourselves, we shall en-deavor to establish. In so doing let us look at matters from the French side instead of the American side, and it is proper to do this, since it came to us through French statesmanship with little agency of our own. ' Except the Floridas, the thirteen original colonies with their western claims extended to the Mississippi. Colonization was for France a question of life or death. The French were es-pecially active in this line. As colonizers they far exceeded the English in brilliancy. They were more energetic, persis-tent and courageous; but when an eminent Frenchman had achieved anything great, he was so v?in or ambitious as to wish no other Frenchman to share his glory and would even in some cases war against a rival; furthermore he was not sus-tained by the home government. But the primary cause of lack of results was internal dissention, a constant warring among themselves. Had the energy which they directed toward one another been applied to the obstacles to be overcome, " they would have been consumed as a pathway through the Alps was eaten by the vinegar of Hannibal." The noble Champlain, the indefatigable La Salle, Cartier, Jberville, and Bienville, all figured in the establishment of set- 26o THE MERCURY. tlements in Louisiana. Men were kidnapped and sent over by the thousands. Women became so scarce that cargoes of marriageable girls, filles a la cassette, so-called from the little trunks in which each prospective bride carried the trosseau pro-vided for her by the government, were sent over and on arrival at the levee, were speedily and happily mated. But in a series of wars culminating in the defeat of Montcalm by Pitt and Wolfe combined, all of what were before known as the Colonies Western Claims, were lost and France had only New Orleans and the unexplored area west of the Mississippi. On account of these misfortunes France thought it best to-give up her scheme of colonization and develop home interests. So, desiring an ally in her weakness, she secretly ceded Louis-iana to Spain. This treaty was long kept secret and was much lamented. When the news was broken to the Creoles, the con-sternation was similar to that of the Acadians when they were entrapped. This stripping of France of her American posses-sions created a craving for revenge which was fully satisfied when she helped to tear the thirteen colonies from England, The Louisiana subjects remained true to the French in their hearts, although Spain ruled them generously. Napoleon now became almost absolute ruler with the title of First Consul. He had marvelous schemes of colonization and immediately set about to regain Louisiana. Godoy, who was the power behind the throne in Spain, fearing a probable attack by England, negotiated a treaty very advantageous to us, satis-factorily establishing boundaries, and the " right of deposit " at New Orleans. But when Spain became hopelessly dependent on France, Godoy resigned in despair. A treaty was then negotiated with Berthier, Bonaparte's agent, by which France was to have Louisiana and also the two Floridas while Spain was to have a kingdom of at least one million subjects taken from the French conquests in the northern half of Italy, over which was to be set the Duke of Parma, husband of the infanta, the daughter of Carlos IV. This treaty was negotiated Oct. I, 1800, and was considered by Mr. Adams the source of our title to Louisiana. The king of Spain did ■■nCMBlnMIMrlBwHtHMHMMIIl THE MERCURY. 26 r not as yet sign the treaty. All subsequent treaties were but modifications of this. After some time Napoleon sent his brother Lucien to Madrid to finish the treaty, but he did not succeed in obtaining the king's signature because Godoy who was recalled to power suc-ceeded in bribing him and thus baffling Napoleon. France then prepared to take Louisiana by force and would probably have succeeded if the San Domingo Revolution had not occur-red and blocked all the schemes. But on Oct. 15, 1802, Na-poleon through his agent secured the king's signature but only under most exacting conditions. The United States now comes upon the scene. A new Presi-dent, Jefferson, sat in the presidential chair. " Peace is our passion," was one of his favorite sayings. When it became known that France was dealing secretly with Spain for the retrocession of Louisiana, the West and South, who hated the Spaniards, became wild lest the French getting New Orleans would close the lower Mississippi to commerce and thus ruin them. Accordingly a new minister,' Robert R. Livingston, was sent by us in August, 1801. He was set against the supercilious, deceitful, and arch dissimulator, Talleyrand, who denied every-thing, with some truth, for as yet the king of Spain had not given his signature. But we received definite information from our minister in England. Jefferson thought that trouble was imminent. In 1802 Morales, the civil officer of New Orleans, abrogated the right of deposit, closing absolutely the Mississippi to the United States. This right had been enjoyed since the treaty of 1795. By that treaty it was to last for three years; but at the end of that time, the right was suffered to continue. Now that the right was taken away, the alarm in the West made war seem inevitable. But matters were somewhat calmed by the Spanish minister at Washington and the Governor of Louisiana disclaiming the action of Morales. Jefferson now hit upon a scheme to allay the turbulent ill-humor of the settlers; but in this plan he 262 THE MERCURY. builded far wiser than he knew. He sent a special envoyv James Monroe, to buy outright New Orleans and Florida, with #2,000,000 in hand. The French envoy at this point used his influence to get Napoleon to do away with the interdict of Morales. Monroe had definite instructions : I. He was to purchase, if possible, New Orleans and the Floridas, and he might expend up to #10,000,000 rather than lose the chance. 2. Should France refuse to sell even the site for a town, the old right of deposit as granted in 1795 was to be tried for. Should that fail, further instructions were to be awaited. Jefferson was de-termined to have peace, and showed great moral courage and strength of character in maintaining so steadfastly, in that war-like age, his noble attitude. But if Napoleon would not have wanted to sell Louisiana, no statesmanship or money on our part could have bought it. After they had first sold it to Spain, there was nothing but re-gret, which was not satisfied until negotiations for its retroces-sion were begun. We have seen with what zeal these were pushed. Now that it was in his grasp again could anything tear it from him ? We have said that Napoleon had marvellous schemes of col-onization. The building of a New France in Louisiana was one of them. But his plans were doomed to failure. His own campaign in Egypt and the project for the great invasion of India by Massena had first come to naught; now his schemes in the Occident were meeting with disaster. In San Domingo,, general and army had perished under the weapons of the blacks and the stroke of pestilence. The gloom of a mighty European struggle was ominously looming up on the national horizon. At this time occurred the incident in the drawing room of Josephine, when Napoleon, without any ceremony,, went up to the British ambassador and after an insulting con-versation said that he would have Malta or war. Joseph, Napoleon's other brother, first became apprised of Napoleon's intentions and then informed Lucien. Their cha-grin and astonishment were unequaled. Napoleon had deter- ' Pe.2±fj:#uvaiatf#IHwlBIMR^KHAB[lafl THE MERCURY. 263 mined to get funds to carry on his war with England, to dis-pose of the whole of Louisiana, quite independently of any de-sires or wishes on our part. We see now, as we said in the beginning, our acquisition of Louisiana, and hence our great-ness, depends on the- long struggle between England and France. Napoleon had determined to do this without in the least consulting the Chambers or people of France. In so doing he was risking exile or even his life. His brothers, therefore, were greatly concerned and determined to prevent him from doing this. They formed a plan by which Lucien was to see Napoleon first, and if possible break the ice or lead the conver-sation to Louisiana, and then Joseph was to appear; in this way Napoleon would not suspect their collusion. Lucien found Napoleon in his perfumed bath. He tried to broach the Loui-siana topic, but Napoleon always talked about something else. Finally it was time for Napoleon to leave his bath and they had not reached the Louisiana subject. At this point Joseph knocked for admittance. Napoleon said he would stay in his bath a quarter of an hour longer and had him admitted. Lu-cien whispered to him that he had not yet broached the sub-ject. A stormy interview followed, only Napoleon's shaggy locks and gleaming eyes were above water. Their tones reached a very excited pitch and Joseph rushed at Napoleon. And here occurred the wonderful bath-room incident. Napoleon was so angered that he raised himself from the water and then suddenly fell back, giving Joseph a good ducking. Lucien then followed with a quotation from the Aeneid, which drew the electricity from the cloud and discharged it harmlessly. Then when Joseph had withdrawn, followed an almost equally stormy interview with Lucien. But this only hastened the matter, Na-poleon being anxious to commence his war with England. Words cannot describe the labor and extent oi the work which Livingston accomplished. He won the admiration and respect of Napoleon and Talleyrand. One of his duties was to obtain payment of the spoiliation claims. He wrote a series of papers elaborately setting forth the expediency for France to 264 THE MERCURY. dispose of New Orleans and the Floridas to us. These, per-haps, won him the respect of Napoleon. Far in advance of other statesmen he even showed that it would be best for France to sell us that part of Louisiana north of the Arkansas River, which turned out to be the best part of the bargain, in order to separate Canada or the British'from her province. Then, too, he had to deal with Napoleon, who would accept no counsel, and the wily Talleyrand. Furthermore, he did not have very definite instructions. But, as said in the beginning, we would never have gotten Louisiana by any efforts of Livingston or anybody else, had not Napoleon desired to dispose of it. Now when Livingston had all but accomplished his task, Napoleon offered the whole of Louisiana, and Monroe came in over Livingston. Napoleon had another object in selling Louisiana. If he should retain it, England might, through her all-powerful navy, wrest it from him ; while .in selling it to America, he would make a power which one day would humble England. Marbois, the French agent, and Livingston and Monroe were on very friendly terms, which greatly facilitated matters. Of course our commissioners never dreamed of the whole of Lou-isiana, but Livingston agreed to take it, and three treaties were made: 1. As to the cession; 2. As to the price, and 3. As to the spoiliation claims. It cost us #1 5,000,000, minus the spoli-ation claims. As Jefferson was a strict constructionist, he really overstepped his power in his own opinion. A storm of opposition arose which was gradually overcome. We have not time to discuss this opposition or the results, but will merely state a few of the results: (l) it secured to us the port of New Orleans, the entire control of the Mississippi, and it doubled the area of the United States ; (2) it strengthened the bond of Union in the Southwest; (3) it gave new force to arguments for internal improvements; (4) finally, it weakened strict con-struction and encouraged the interpretation of the Constitution according to the spirit and not the letter. - THE MERCURV. 265 RELIGION AND SOLITUDE. SAMUBI. E. SMITH, '07. WHEN these terms are considered in the sense in which they are ordinarily used, there seems to be a certain impropriety in using them together. The average man thinks of religion as something tangible. Not infrequently is the re-mark made concerning someone that he has very little religion; •which statement would point to the fact that religion is often considered as a kind of veneer, which can be placed over the lives of men for the instruction and helping of those about them. How then can solitude, which implies a separation from men have any relation to religion ? The preceding idea of religion is a very superficial one, although it is widely accepted. Religion has a deeper significance ; it is as its root meaning implies "a thinking again;" it is potential rather than kinetic •energy; it is z;«planted and never /m«jplanted into an indi-vidual. Such is the quality that is to be considered in connec-tion with solitude. All religions have had their origin in solitude. Ab'ram was sent by God into the eastern wilderness ; Moses was alone with Jehovah on Sinai; David had much time for reflection while tending his flock; the prophets were children of the desert; John Baptist was a son of the wilderness; and the Saviour of the world had his forty days, and very often during his active ministry he felt the loneliness of the midnight hour. Thus, in •solitude, there sprang forth from the souls of these men the principles which are the foundation stones of Christianity. Mohammedanism had its beginning in a cave a few miles from Mecca. Mohammed left the busy city and retired to that lonely spot for days at a time. He said that it was there the angel Gabriel appeared to him and told him of heavenly things which he should make known to his fellow-men. The new faith spread over many a mile of sea and land until it reached the rock of Gibraltar, and the Moslem hordes were dreaded in the great cities of Europe. Such was the power of the religion which was conceived of in the lonely cave near Mecca. As 266 THE MERCURY. the beginnings of great religions are studied it is found that all burst forth in solitude. Solitude has been the conserving force of every religion. The lonely vigil, the contemplations on divine things, has done more than the preacher and sword in keeping alive the great religions of the world. The monk in his gloomy cell, who-spent almost countless hours in meditation and fervent devotion,, gave the impetus which made the Roman Church the mighty agent which it has been. Even the savage races of mankinJ can be called upon to furnish examples. Without a doubt the crude religion of the American Indian was kept up by the in-fluence of solitude. In his solitary journey through the forest he saw his religions in the rocks and trees and streams. Where the Indians were deprived of their solitude by the advent of the white man, almost immediately they lost their faith in the Great Spirit. Christianity, today, shows the relation between" religion and solitude. The greatest preachers are those who-spend the most time apart from the rush of the world; the most truly religious are those who have spent many an hour in solitude. When the lives of the great ministers of our country-are considered, it is found that nearly all of them were brought up in the country, where the youth is compelled to spend a great portion of his time with nothing to keep him company but the voices of nature. Indeed, it can be said that every re-ligion enjoins its devotees to spend a part of each day in soli-tude. -Thus religion and solitude are very closely'related, and one is inclined to speculate as to the grounds on which this relation) exists. There must be solitude before religion can manifest itself. To understand how this can be true it is imperative that religion should be defined with the greatest precision. Al-ready it has been shown that it is not a tangible thing. But the definition must not stop with this statement. Religion is intuitive; it is a divine essence rising up in the sub-conscious-mind ; it is a spark which shows unmistakably that man is in-deed a son of the Infinite. Thus the religious impulse of the lowest savage is just as strong as is the desire of the civilized 1.1,. ,11. THE MERCURY. 267 man to worship a supreme being. Religion, lying as it does in the sub-conscious mind of man, how can it manifest itself unless there is solitude during which it can lise up? But this spark of the Infinite, religion, which abides in the darkest chamber of the soul, is a peculiar thing. If it is continually-forced back by the authority of the conscious mind, it at length goes out forever, and man is left destitute of the greatest power of his existence. Such a state of affairs does not often come to pass, but it can happen. But how can one conceive of this infinite spark as perishing? It is merely a small part of the great Infinity, which may have a million finite parts lost, as it were by atrophy, and yet remain the same. If, on the other hand, the divine spark is allowed to rise into the conscious mind, it fires the imagination and intensifies every purpose of the man. In the light of this reasoning one can easily see that solitude is of vital importance to religion. Thus, as religion is considered in its true nature, it is seen that religion and solitude are supplementary to each other. Re-ligions have sprung forth in solitude and have been kept alive through its influence. To those accepting the superficial view of religion, many ot the inner workings are inexplicable. For example, they cannot account for the fact that many a man turns to religion on a sick bed, or when he is suddenly removed from the walks of men into the solitude of a wilderness. But those who appreciate its hidden meaning understand that such conduct is due to the divine element which has sprung up dur-ing the solitary hours. Such is the relation of these two terms made plain, which seem at the first glance to be so foreign to each other. 268 THE MERCURY. THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF A MILLIONAIRE. [Contributed for the Pen and Sword Ptize Essay contest.'] WHEN Columbus discovered this new world, he little knew that he was opening to the known world the greatest discovery of that or any other age. When three centur-ies later George Washington fought for the freedom of the colonies and, having succeeded in that, helped organize and guide the thirteen colonies on the road of progress, even he with his almost prophetic insight could not foresee what a won-derful future was in store for them. Now this lusty young giant stands with his feet firmly planted on the Isthmus of Panama, his bulk reaching from Ocean to Ocean, from Canada to the Gulf, a hand reached eastward in the Philippines, another extending into the frozen north, Alaska. Covered with farms and forests, factories and cities, honeycombed with mines, bound in the bonds of fraternal friendship by almost two hundred thousand miles of railroad, inhabited by a people the most pro-gressive and civilized of any living; is it any wonder that with all these advantages, natural and artificial, he has rapidly forged to the front in riches also. The natural advantages sur-pass those of all Europe. Now in the midst of this amazing national growth there has been a wonderful growth in private riches. When the country was young and poor the people were also poor. With the rapid settling of the West, the opening of coal and iron mines, the invention of the locomotive and the steamboat, the wealth of individuals rapidly increased. Yet up until the Civil War huge private fortunes might be counted on the fingers of one hand. But after the Civil War begins the period of inventive and industrial advancement, the age of the millionaire. Now a millionaire is a man who by inheritance, in-dustry and economy or by other means too numerous to men-tion, has become possessed of a million dollars or its equivalent. He may have come by this sum honestly or dishonestly but it is the responsibility which comes with this sum of money of which we will take notice. iPIMMIfBm^MW THE MERCURY. 269 Let us take the millionaire from boyhood. He is probably no brighter, no different in outside appearance than the average run of boys, yet by saving a dollar where the other man spends two, by judicious investment where money will the most surely and rapidly increase, these by the time he has reached manhood have made him a comparatively wealthy man. Of course no matter what his morals, his ability to earn money has been held up as a model to other struggling youths, his past has been re-hearsed by the Oldest Inhabitant, boyhood chums are proud to call him by name, so by his example many are willing to jise or fall. Here his responsibility as a moral factor begins. All the while his fortune is increasing until some day when he "takes stock" he finds he is a millionaire. If he is not vastly different from the majority of us, he begins to get a little more exclusive and distant. His old acquaintances gradually fall away and he seeks new friendships among men of his own business standing. If he is selfmade there are no doubt a few rough corners to be smoothed down and polished up in order that he may not appear at a disadvantage among his fellows. This process is usually one of marriage. All this time he is looming larger and larger in the public eye and more and more do newspapers devote space to his goings and comings. Indeed he has no privacy, his every act is under the scrutiny of a lynx eyed public. Now let us glance at a few calamities for which the million-aires of this country may be justly held responsible. There was a time when ability was the measure of success. The time also was when thrift was considered a virtue. Once our poli-tics were pure and uncorrupted. Equality between men as spoken of in the Constitution was not a joke. Honesty in business was a maxim. Human life was regarded as precious not many decades since. Divorce was synonymous with dis-grace. In a word the American people have seen the day when virtue, not money, was the goal of every honest man's ambition. Now all this is changed. Why ? Who are respon-sible for the change? When men like Webster, Clay, Calhoun, Seward, Lincoln, , I : , 27o THE MERCURY. Douglass and others thundered in our legislative halls, there was no thought of their money. The taste of the people had not been debauched by a bribed press, which by skillfully ad-vertising the merits of their customer and belittling the ability of his opponent render it almost impossible for a poor man to secure high office. For example look at our Senate. No men of tremendous personality and ability sit in seats made famous by their predecessors. No orators arise and hold their hearers spellbound by the power of their oratory. No indeed. Instead there sit in our once glorious Senate a body of men whose money has been the open sesame to halls to which their brains would have been found an insurmountable barrier. This ignoble condition is laid at the doors of the millionaires. Again, what has changed a people from a race thrifty and economical, always striving (and usually succeeding) to live within their income, into a people rushing, with a frenzy that amounts to madness almost, in pursuit of the Almighty Dollar? Isn't it the extravagance of the rich from whom the people model their deportment? Million-dollar homes, yachts, autos, balls, operas and the like have such an irresistible attraction for the majority ot people that it is only a man of the most in-flexible will power who can live his life undisturbed by the glitter of much gold. So overwhelming is the desire to possess the fixtures enumerated above that men throw all virtues and vices aside, in order-to secure them. Robbery, embezzlement, fraud and even murder are the agents used in extreme cases. The ostentation of the millionaire is responsible for this. In the magazines of the past year there have been a number of articles pro and con as to whether we have an American Aristocracy. Our Constitution says all men are created free and equal and for almost one hundred years this doctrine was held sacred and we prospered. But with the coming of the millionaire all that was changed. Believing that because they owned more valuable real estate and more gilt-edged bonds than their poor neighbor, they were of superior clay, our mil-lionaires began to ape the degenerate though genteel aristo-cracy of Europe. And those who have occasion and oppor- THE MERCURY. 271 tunity to observe say that they have aped not too wisely but too well. Forgetting that a cad is not a gentleman, that cul-ture, education and brains, not money, give grace and elegance in speech and deportment, some of our would be Aristocrats pose and strut with an affectation of superiority that would be insufferable, were it not so ridiculous. So many owners of >much money gladly take the responsibility for opening the breach of class between man and man. Joseph Folk, swept into the Governor's Chair by a tidal wave ■of reform votes, reached his position by the conviction of bood-lers in the city of St. Louis. When Folk began his now famous •investigation, whom did he find were the bribers, lawbreakers and corruptors of public morality ? They were rich men, the ■financial backbone of St. Louis. It is the same everywhere. The wealthy, the millionaires, have bought outright whole ■city councils, legislatures, judges and have even carried their infamous designs into the nation's lawmakers themselves. In-deed the venal character of our judges have caused the poor to give up all hope of justice when combatted by a man of wealth. And in business men eminently respectable, men above re-proach, lend their names and influence to schemes which, if attempted by an ordinary gold-brick speculator or bunco steerer, would result in that worthy rusticating behind the bars of some penal institution. But because there are millions in it, it is considered high finance to unload Lake Superior, U. S. Ship-building, Amalgamated Copper and Bay State Gas, on a public dazzled by the prospect of sure dividends which never come; and rendered trustful by an eminently respectable directorate. Year by year the man of the monster death has been feeding thousands of victims through the negligence and greed of corpor-ations. This number has increased so rapidly that the President thought it worthy of mention in his last message to Congress. It was high time; men in mills have been burned, maimed, crushed, torn and mutilated; either because the price of their work was so low that they had to constantly work under the •shadow of violent death, or because the owner, squeezing every last cent, refused to place safeguards around death-traps. So : 272 THE MERCURY. long as a mill, railroad or factory pays dividends, what matters it how many poor wretches are ground to fragments, providing: their death does not entail any extra expense on the firm P This criminal disregard of human life does not confine itself to-a purely impersonal matter like a mill or factory. It takes a form of amusement when reckless men crazed with the mad-ness of much money hurl giant automobiles through crowded city streets, at express-train speed. The desire to make a dol-lar was never better illustrated than in the case of a Western) railroad which, by removing a switch-light to save the oilr caused a wreck which hurled scores of human beings into eter-nity. Last but not least, look at the responsibility which million-aires bear to the gravest danger which threatens us at the pres-ent day. We will consider divorce, because the divorce evil1 had its inception among the moneyed class in this country. The home is the bulwark of all lands and all peoples. Where the home is sacred there courage, fidelity and all kindred vir-tues flourish. There also are found the brightest ideals. Ir* this country in the last ten years there has been a flood of divorces so overwhelming that almost all churches have taken* steps to check the evil. On the most trifling charges the bondr which should bind men and women for life, has been rudely snapped asunder, and all over the land we see the distressing; sight of homes desolated and families scattered. Beyond any doubt the millionaires must be held accountable for this. In> New York the so called Four Hundred has more divorces to-the square inch than any similar body of people in this country. Since New York sets the fashions and the rest of the country sheepishly follows, this fashion soon became the reigning fad" in Smart (?) Sets. Other States anxious to keep in the proces-sion enacted lax divorce laws until South Dakota made six-months residence equivalent to divorce. This is the greatest responsibility which rests on the shoulders of our millionaires. Now for a summing up of the misdeeds for which our moneyed men must some day suffer. Overlooking the fact that in our belief no man is fit for heaven who selfishly spends- .MM _ . THE MERCURV. 273 forty thousand dollars a year on himself, what have millionaires individually and collectively done ? They have corrupted our politics, made bare money the criterion of success, destroyed the desire for thrift and economy by lavish expenditure, en-couraged dishonesty directly and indirectly, made a joke of equality between man and man, have made divorce so common that it excites almost no comment, have encouraged race sui-cide and have by gifts of money, dishonestly earned, pauperized ■a portion of our people. They have lowered the ideals which made this republic possible. In a word, if the people have not degenerated under the paralyzing influence of huge fortunes, it is because the heart of the people beats time, in spite of all inducements to the contrary. If they have degenerated it is because of the examples cited above. And weighing all these facts, taking into consideration the good done by much money, we are led to believe, half unwillingly, that it would have been better to have held fast to the conservative principles which ruled in the days of our grand-fathers. A more contented, happy people we should certainly be in place of a nation of vulgar money-grabbers. We would not, of course, have been a world power, with a navy to sweep the seas; but we would have been more respected and feared than we are now. And last and most important, we would have been consistent to the high ideals of which we gave promise in our National Youth. But it is done, our course is changed, time alone can tell what the future has in store for us. As a body our millionaires have much to answer for. Yet setting our faces to the right, let us all in a simple, unassuming way do what destiny has marked for us and all will yet be well with the grandest republic on «arth. ■■■■■■Hi THE MERCURY Entered at the Postoffice at Gettysburg as second-class Matter VOL. XIII GETTYSBURG, PA., FEBRUARY, 1905 No. 8 Editor-in-chief C. EDWIN BUTLER, '05 Exchange Editor CHARLES GAUGER, '05 Business Manager A. L. DILLENBECK, '05 Asst. Business Manager JOHN M. VAN DOREN, '06 Associate Editors H. C. BRILLHART, '06 ALBERT BILLHEIMER, '06 H. BRUA CAMPBELL, '06 Advisory Board PROF. J. A. HIMES, LITT.D. PROF. G. D. STAHLEY, M.D. PROF. J. W. RICHARD, D.D. Published each month, from October to June inclusive, by the joint literary societies of Pennsylvania (Gettysburg) College. Subscription price, one dollar a year in advance; single copies 15 cents. Notice to discontinue sending the MERCURY to any address must be accompanied by all arrearages. Students, Professors and Alumni are cordially invited to contribute. All subscriptions and business matter should be addressed to the Busi-ness Manager. Articles for publication should be addressed to the Editor. Address THE MERCURY, GETTYSBURG, PA. EDITORIALS. How swiftly the months pass ! One after another in endless succession they come and go, yea even with this issue the MERCURY adds another year to its history and closes forever the pages of another volume. If it has been any improvement over its predecessor, if it records with any reasonable precision the literary attainments of the student body, and if it is worthy of preservation in the archives of the College, then our labor has not been bought without a price and the high mark, to which we have been endeavoring to approach, has not been entirely missed. As the last line and the last word is written and the time for our departure is come, we go, but not until our faithful contri-butors, our patrons and loyal friends, than which there are none more loyal, are assured of our sincere gratitude and apprecia-tion. THE MERCURY. I 275 Without you our existence would have been impossible, with you the most happy relation has been enjoyed. If we have merited commendation the glory is to you, if censure, we are the chief offenders, and by the much importunity we invite all criticism to be placed to our credit. We bequeath not un-willingly to the associate and assistant staff a very generous portion of this rich legacy—if it may not improperly be so termed. That the termination of the close relation as a staff and as friends of the staff has inevitably come we regret but at the same time remember the sweet incense which the memory of the past year will send so often floating through our minds. This alone is reward enough and for our efforts a princely re-compense. Not even the trained minds of philosophers would be able to divine the origination of the .mysterious ideas and current rumors which are frequently promulgated without authority or xredence. For the benefit of those who may not know it, we announce that a few philosophic prodigies have been secured and are really matriculated with the student body, though the MERCURY has been unfortunate enough not to have had the honor to publish any of their esoteric cogitations, and even they would not perhaps venture a solution. The hypothesis nevertheless is agitated and really believed by some that the MERCURY will cease to be the organ of the College Literary Societies ; will cease to be a medium for the publication of the Literature of merit in the College; will cease to print the different prize essays and preserve them for future reference; in fine will cease to exist after this issue. We have said, just where such incongruous fancies first originated seems to be somewhat of a mystery. The claims are unfounded from the start but from some inexplicable cause they have seized many of the students. As our college publica-tions, unfortunately, are wholly student papers their existence of course depends on the pleasure of said body. The position we presume to maintain with regard to the continuance, dis-continuance or uniting with our weekly we will not define here 276 THE MERCURY. for obvious reasons. The decision of such a grave problem should receive the careful, thoughtful and deliberate attention of the members of our literary societies. In any event the staff deems it advisible to lay down here the present status of affairs for the benefit of those who are in-tensely interested and not now of the student body. Financially the Journal is by no means embarrassed. If there be an en-cumbrance at all, it will be insignificant. Generally a surplus over and above current expenses has been handed down from manager to manager, if this indicates anything. Relerring to the numbers of the magazine now on file, this volume is not believed to be inferior to its antecedents, yet we are not pre-sumptuous enough to flatter ourselves with its superiority. Who have "fought and bled" for it in the years past have writ-ten us very encouraging letters which have been voluntary contributions on their part. Generally speaking, we do know the students of the College have not supported the magazine by liberal literary contribu-tions but we believe since many other interests which formerly slumbered are now throbbing with life and activity, the MER-CURY will also within a comparatively short time receive its due apportionment of interest and enthusiasm. EXCHANGES. With this issue of THE MERCURY the "Ex-man's" qurll will be handed down to his successor. We desire to take this our last opportunity to extend our farewell greeting to all of our exchanges. Realizing that criticism, to be essential to good work, must be both appreciative and corrective, it need not necessarily be PERFECT criticism—we have endeavored to make this the cri-terion for our criticisms. If we have given offense by any un-just remarks, we ask pardon; if not and you have profited by our suggestions, give us the praise. If we have praised you and done it honestly, yours is the satisfaction, ours is the ap-preciation. In either case, believe us to have done it in a kindly spirit of helpfulness. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS. FURNITURE Mattresses, Bed Springs, Iron Beds, Picture Frames. Repair Work done promptly. Under-taking a specialty. * Telephone No. 97. I3C. 23. H3en.a.er 37 Baltimore St., Gettysburg, Pa. THE STEWART & STEEN CO. College Engravers cund (Printers 1034 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa. MAKERS AND PUBLISHERS OF Commencement, Class Day Invitations and Programs, Class Pins and Buttons in Gold and Other Metals, Wedding Invitations and Announcements, At Home Cards, Reception Cards and Visiting Cards, Visiting Cards—Plate and 50 cards, 75 cents. Special Discount to Students. A Complete Encyclopedia of Amateur Sport Spal&ing's Official Athletic Almanac FOR 1905. EDITED BY J. E. SULLIVAN (Chief of Department of Physical Culture, Louisiana Purchase Exposition)- Should be read by every college student, as it contains the records of all college athletics and all amateur events in this country and abroad. It also contains a complete review of Olympic Games for the official report of Director Sullivan and a resume of the two days devoted to sports in which savages were the only contestants, in which it is proved conclusively that savages are not the natural born athletics we have heretofore supposed them to be. This is the first time in which the athletic performances of savages have ever been systematically recorded. This is the largest Athletic Almanac ever published, containing 320 pages. Numerous illustrations of prominent athletes and track teams. Price 10 Cents. For sale by all newsdealers and A. G. SPALDING 6 BROS. New York, Chicago, Denver, Kansas City, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Minneapolis, Boston, Buffalo, St. Louis, San Francisco, Montreal, Canada ; London. England. Send for a copy of Spalding's Athletic Goods Catalogue. It's free. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS. BEGKER & GOUINS CHAMBEBSBUBG ST., Dealers in Beef, Veal, Lamb, Pork, Sausage, Pudding, Bologna, Hams, Sides, Shoulders, Lard, Prime Corned Beef. SEFTON & FLEMMINGS LIVERY Baltimore Street, First Square, Gettysburg, Pa. Competent Guides for all parts of the Battlefield. Arrangements by-telegram or letter. Lock Box 257. J. I. MUMPER. 41 Baltimore St., Gettysburg, Pa. 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MUNN & Co.361Broadway- New York Branch Office. 625 F St., Washington, D. C. Shoes Repaired —BY— J. H- BR^E^, 115 Baltimore St., near Court House. Good Work Guaranteed. J. W. BUMBAUGH'S City Cafe and Dining Room Meals and lunches served at short notice. Fresh pies and sandwiches-always on hand. Oysters furnished! al year. 53 Chambersburg- St. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS. EAGLE HOTEL Rates $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00 per day. MAS A CAPACITY OF 400 GUESTS —-^ GEO. F. EBERHART, PROPR. s.s. Dealer in Picture Frames of All Sorts. Repair work done promptly. will also buy or exchange any second-hand furniture 4 Ohambersburg St., GETTYSBURG, PA. Alumni, Students, and Friends Your Subscription is Needed SEUD IT X3ST. If You are in arrears with your subscription kindly cor-respond with the Business Manager. Our Microscopes, Microtomes, Laboratory Glass-ware, Chemical Apparatus, Chemicals, Photo I Lenses and Shutters, Field Glasses, Projection I Apparatus, Photo-Micro Cameras are used by 1 the lcaiiingLab-__^__ oratories and I Govor'nt Dep'ts» IKS Round the World | SCOPES Catalogs ' Free Bausch & Lomb Opt. Co. ROCHESTER, N. Y. [New York Chicago Boston Frankfurt, C'yJ i PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS. Geo. E. Spacer, PIANOS, ORGANS, MUSICAL MERCHANDISE Music Booms, - York St. Telephone 181 GETTYSBXJBG C. B. KITZMILLE,R DEALER IN HATS, CAPS, BOOTS AND DOUGLAS SHOE.S. MeB^o^^.ing' Gettysburg Pa. h. M. AWJTEMAN, Manufacturer's Agent and Jobber of Hardware, Oils, paints and (jueeqsware Gettysburg, Pa. THE ONLY JOBBING HOUSE IN ADAMS COUNTY W. F. Codori,. -^DEALER \N<*r Beet Ftork, limb, tul writ §m&®$& ePC#MAi RATES TO CLUBS — York Street, Gettysburg, Pa. -■ft fI Bill