No. I. Editou's Tahi.k. S8i can give. Their st3le of lociils.ure such as to give one an excellent idea of the manner in which the school is conducted. Wo offer congratulation to the young la dies on the restoration of the cushions in chapel. The literary department evinces that delicate fancy, fine intuition and grace of expression which stamps upon it the character of the writers. Wo welcome to our exchange list the Ariel one of the latest, ventures in the field of college journalism. It hails from the Minnesota University and promises to become one of the best of our exchanges, doming from a state that has had similar experiences with our own and similar dif ficulties to contend with, the Student desires a better acquaintance with the Ariel, in view of this common sympathy. The Athcneum, devoted to "the good, the true, and the beautiful " and making a speciality of literary productions adapt ed to reading or speaking, is a grand suc cess. The selections possess the highest, literary merit, since they are culled from the vast field of English literature with great care, and by recourse to high liter ary culture. The Athcneum will bo ever welcome at the "sanctum of the, Stu dknt. " Tlm'Imililulo is a very modest plain ap pearing quarterly; but between the covers we find high flights of eloquonro, lolly soarings of the poet's muse, and the mod esty is all forgotten. Historical articles seem to be in favor with the Inttitutv there being three in this number. The one on Simon De Montfort is an example of that rare ability which is necessary to weave from dry facts a pleasing and at tractive article. A poem "The Chrysalis" is a weak and overdone effusion covering two pages. The Inxtitutc has changed from monthly to quarterly, which seems retrograding rather than progressing. A line compliment is paid to woman in the article entitled " Woman and Science" which we find in the columns of the " Wittcnbarycr" After giving many ex amples of the ability of women in thoab strtisc sciences and paying a beautiful tribute to the memory of Mrs. Mary Som erville he closes by saving "These exam pies abundantly show that it is reasonable to expect to find a woman not only fitted for the higher exercises of literature, but capable also of grasping the refinements and unraveling the intricacies of abstract science." The cditoiial department of the W itlenbergcr shows energy and abil ity among the editors. Four pages of in teresting editorials arranged in an unusu ally line and attractive manner places this paper among the best of our exchanges. The other departments are each in keep ing with the one mentioned. The Wittcn berycr possesses that sprighllincss and vi vacity characteristic of the western col lege paper, forming a marked contrast to the sedate and dignified aspect of our eastern brethren. CLIPPINGS. All the girls are vegetarians. They wear turn-up hats. They have dime savings banks in Chic ago they save the depositor a dime out of every dollar. It is a final test of brotherly alfection for a girl to lend her brother's silk umbrella to her beau and not be jawed clean out of her gaiters. For an inlinilc delight, even as for an infinite sorrow there is no expression but perfect silence silence, that is the voice of waiting. A clergyman said, the other day, that the modern young ladies were not descend ants of Shem and Ham, but daughters of Hem and Sham. Ad old bachelor explains the courage of the Turks by the fact that a man with more than one wife ought to be ready to face death at any time The lady whom Stanley was to marry has wedded iiiothcr. What shall it profit a man if he finds fifteen million heathens and loses his best girl. E.