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THE JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY. 



Steinach, Edwin C, New York, N. Y. 

 Stowe, Walter P., Milford, Conn. 

 Strauss, Moses M., Newark, N. J. 

 Thompson, Charles A., Chester, N. Y. 

 Unbehaun, Albert P., Morristown, N. J. 

 Veeder, Albert F., Lyons, N. Y. 

 "Walter, Bernhard, New York, N. Y. 

 Weidenhamer, Samuel J., Bayonne, N. J. 

 Werner, Georgre R., Harrisville, N Y. 

 Wertheini, Alfred, New York, N. Y. 

 Wilson, William H., Wilkesbarre, Pa. 

 Winne, Harry B., Kingston, N. Y. 

 Wolodarsky, Clara, New Haven, Conn. 

 Zahn, Rudolph H., New York, N. Y. 

 Zinn, Walter, New York, N. Y. 



Conferring of the degree, Ph.G. 

 President Edward Kemp, Esq. 

 President Edward Kemp : 



By virtue of the power vested in 

 me by the Charter of the College 

 Pharmacy of the City of New York, 

 and by direction of the Board of 

 Trustees of this College, I, Edward 

 Kemp, President of the College of 

 Pharmacy of the City of New York, 

 hereby declare you to be Graduates 

 in Pharmac3^ 



Selection, "Huguenots," Meyer- 

 beer. 

 President Edward Kemp: 



It is my great pleasure this even- 

 ing to introduce to you the Rev- 

 erend Doctor E. Walpole Warren, 

 who will make the address to the 

 graduating class. 



Address to the graduating class. 

 Rev. E. Walpole Warren, D.D.: 



Mr. President, Members of the 

 Faculty, and Ladies and Gentle- 

 men, Members of the Graduating 

 Class of 1900 : I think it is impos- 

 sible for us to look into the faces of 

 so large an assemblage as that I see 

 before me to-night, crowding not 

 only the body of the hall, but even 

 to the extreme top of the extremest 

 gallery in the hall, without recog- 

 nizing how wide awake this great 

 cosmopolitan city of New York is to 



anything and to everything which 

 tends to foster and to develop any 

 branch and every branch of liberal 

 education, even as far as such de- 

 velopment is possible. 



To one who has resided only 

 twelve years in this great city most 

 remarkable are the changes which 

 my eyes have witnessed and of 

 which you yourselves are equally 

 conscious. I mean not only to 

 apply the thought to architectural 

 structures, which have so vastly in- 

 creased in size in the last few years, 

 and in beauty, nor to the facilities 

 for transportation, nor to the im- 

 provement of our docks, nor to the 

 numerous parks that are growing 

 up in every part of the city, nor to 

 any other of the great improve- 

 ments which you yourself can 

 easily recognize ; but I think more 

 marvelous still, and much more im- 

 portant, is the splendid develop- 

 ment of the educational establish- 

 ments of New York ; developments 

 so startling that it is hard to be- 

 lieve that I am speaking the truth 

 when I say those alterations and 

 developments have taken place 

 within the last ten or twelve 

 years. Consider for yourselves, 

 ladies and gentlemen, the Univer- 

 sity of the City of New York. 

 When I first came to this city it 

 was hidden away somewhere down 

 in Washington Square, in a small 

 kind of a building, in a kind of a 

 back street, and with very cramped 

 facilities for educational purposes, 

 and with very small resources. 

 Eook at it now as it dominates 

 College Heights, with its magnifi- 



