AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. bhb 



RELIGIOUS SERVICES. 



Cliapcl exorcises cvoiy morning :it a quarter after eight o'clock. 

 On Sundays the students attend niorninu- service in tlie ciiaixd^ 

 unless, b}' request of their parents, arrangements are made to attend 

 church elsewhere. On Sabbath afternoons, or immediateh- follow- 

 ing the morning service, there is opportunit}' for every student to 

 study the Bible in a Bible class. 



The Young Men's Christian Association holds weekly meetings. 

 The Sabbath evening services in churches about one mile distant, 

 •A\\(\ meetings conducted by the students, furnish additional oppor- 

 tunities for religious culture. 



CONDUCT. 



Students are expected to co-operate with their instructors and 

 with each other in promoting the welfare of the college, in order 

 that every student maj' receive the best possible results of the 

 course of stud}' and training. Whenever it is evident that it is not 

 for the good of a student to remain in the college, or that the wel- 

 fare of the college requires that he should not remain, he will be 

 dismissed. 



LOCATION. 



Amherst is on the New London & Northern R R., connecting 

 at Palmer with the Boston & Albany R.R., and at Miller's Falls 

 with the Fitchburg R.R. A stage route of seven miles connects 

 Amherst at Northampton with the Connecticut River R.R., and 

 with the New Haven & Northampton R.R. The college buildings 

 are on a healthful site commanding one of the finest views in New 

 England. The large farm of three hundred and eighty-three acres, 

 with its varied surface and native forests, gives the student the free- 

 dom and the quiet of a country home. The surrounding country 

 is very helpful to the student of natural science. The location of 

 the buildings prevents the student from the interruptions to stud}- 

 incident on residence in a town or city, and helps to secure all the 

 moral as well as the intellectual advantages of a college in the 

 country. 



