THE NEW YORK JOURNAL OF PHARMACY 



21 



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Edited by Leo Roon, Ph. Ch. 

 STUDENT BOARD : 



L. N. Brown, '14. 

 V. Fletcher, '14. 



B. E. Graystone, '15. 



Miss. M. O'Connor, '16. 

 J. J. Rampulla, '15. 



A. ZiPEROWlTZ, '14. 



EDITORIALETTE. 



Spiritus Collegii is a rare and com- 

 plex substance found, strang-e to say. 

 even in the N. Y. Collej^e of 

 Pharmacy. 



True^ — there is nut an over-abun- 

 dance of it, and whatever there is of 

 it, is not strong. Repeated rectifica- 

 tions, however, will fortify it until it 

 is of such power that if imbibed even 

 in traces by. any collegian with real 

 red blood, coursing in his veins, 

 marvelous things will result. 



So wonderful is this substance that 

 it sends vigor, vim and energy throb- 

 bing through your veins. It intoxi- 

 cates 5^ou so that you do things for 

 the general good that you never 

 dreamt of doing before. It is habit- 

 forming. If it once gets into your 

 system you can't get rid of it ! You 

 will want to do things ; you will do 

 them, and you will continue doing 

 them ! 



Take this spirit ad libitum, you can't 

 get-too much of it — it -will be a moral 

 uplift and not a degradation. 



Let's have a round of spiritus col- 

 legii, boys, we need it badly! 



COLLEGE SPIRIT . 



I'M PATIENT, and I've listened to 



innumerable orations 

 I've spirit and so I obey the speakers' 



exhortations 

 Put a habit very firmly fixed appeals 



^to me as funny — 

 At the start they want but Spirit — at 



the end they ask for money ! 



Thev tell us that our spirit's bad. far 



less than e'er before 

 They urge us on with ringing words 



to get a little more 

 They utter mournful prophecies — rour 



spirit's gone to smash, 

 They wail and rail a little — and then 



they ask for cash. 



Still, a love that leaves the purse- 

 strings tied cannot be very 

 strong, 



.\nd all who turn away unmoved must 

 feel they're doing wrong; 



As for me, at every crisis I will do as 

 each one ought ter — • 



When they ask me foi- another dime 

 ■ I'll hand them out a quarter! 



Columbia Jester. 



