THE HESPEKIAN amendment to the constitution was secretly One thing I can never quite understand proposed admitting the girls to membership, and that is why the country girl when (I was about to say ladies but for the sake transplanted to the city adapts herself to her of historic accuracy am compelled to con- new surroundings so much more easily than tout myself with the )co3 ambitious torm.) I her brother. Hitherto he has been her think it was at the last meeting of the fall guide and protector and she has been term of that year that this amendment pleased to loan upon his strong arm, but was adopted and a score of young ladies in this now life ho instinctively turns to her elected members of the Adelphian. This for instruction. Thanks, however, to the number now seems insignificent but when noble impulses and tender sympathies of wo recall that the total enrollment of the young ladies of. the early societies, the students of both sexes was only about metamorphosis was made as little painful seventy-five at that time wo can understand and humiliating as possible. And some of the importance of our victory. "When at us are still enjoying the civilizing influences the beginning of the next term the Palla- so charitably begun in these literary dians were aroused from their lethargy and societies many years ago. attempted to retrieve their fortunes by In the fall of 1876, for the purpose of adopting a like amendment, they captured forming a society composed exclusively of but a few stragglers and campfollowers, the the college classes, the present Union main army having already surrendered to us. society was formed, drawing most of its Now that we had the girls, dear things, members from tho Adelphian but embrac- what wore wo to do with them! We had ing also nearly all of tho eligible members among our number just three young gentle- of tho Palladian. This now candidate for men, dandies as wo spitefully called them, honors, without leave or licence appro- that had boon somewhat licked into shape priatod to its own use the hajl, fixtures and and having grown up in tho city had had furniture of tho old Adelphian, but cast some of tho rough corners knocked off. its constitution and records into tho waste They oven wore tailor made suits and basket. Some of us who, (whether wisely actually seemed to have some other use for or not I have never quite settled) considered their hands than twisting their coat frocks, a trip to tho Centennial at Philadelphia should they chance to speak to one of our more valuable than tho half term at the newly acquired members. How we envied, university, returned in the early part of hated, execrated, these city favorites! As 1877 to find ourselves orphans. The for the rest of us wo have at least one thing Adelphian had ceased to exist, nearly all of to bo thankful for. there are but few of its members being eligible had become j our photographs cf that period extant, it I wore gifted with descriptive powers I would give you a pen picture of some who aro now congressmen, judges, lawyers, doctors, ministers, and other more or less useful members of tho new Union. Tho Union however failed to fulfil its promise of a society composed exclusively of college classes. Could oil and water bo mixed 1 Could members of societv, as they appeared fresh tho. former Palladians and Adolphians oyer from tho all engrossing pursuits of the tarm. Suffice it to say that our hemod-me-down pantaloons strove in vain to reach the tops of our cowhide shoes and wo wore "long" 'on nothing ro much as superfluous hands, hitherto so useful, but now so embarrassing the attempt to establish a strictly college and in the way. 30cioty- fraternize! Not so. The Palladians with ono or two exceptions soon returned to their first love and tho constitution of the Union was amended so as to admit sub freshmen to membership. And thus failed