THE JOURNAL OP PHARMACOLOGY. 49 



Did you hear those red ties? 



Our methyl quartette is becoming more famous every day. No college 

 function is a success without them. C. P. E. 



'99 NOTES. 

 Section II. can boast of some musical talent. Ward has composed some 

 tuneful melodies for the piano, and is himself a good pianist; Brown handles 

 the ivories with skill, and Jackson is instructor and director of a mandolin and 

 guitar club in the Borough of Brooklyn. There may be more, but it has not, so 

 far, come to the surface. 



Brother students of Frank Schreiber, Section III., extend their 

 heartiest sympathy in Lis recent bereavement in the loss of his sister 

 Marie. 



Yal. Berndt is now located in Mr. Tappenden's store, Sixty-fourth street 

 and Columbus avenue. 



Berndt and Schreiber are now after all indoor, outdoor and century records 

 on vi Warwick tandem. The gear of their wheel is 94 (where?). 



Vice-President Geo. Jackson was serving on the jury week ending January 

 15th, in Brooklyn, Borough of the Bronx. (How many did you send up, Jacky?) 



Section II. has quite a number of devotees of the wheel. Messrs. Keefer, 

 Hunger, Oates, Berndt, Taddiken, O. N. Frankfurter, Ward, Schreiber, Moore, 

 are among the more enthusiastic wheelman, O. N. Frankfurter being the color 

 bearer of the New York College of Pharmacy Bicycle Club (N. Y. C. P. C. C). 



Our section also holds the record in that no cover glasses were broken on 

 the tirst day of using the compound microscope and mounted specimens. 



Fred S. Frankfurter accepted a position with Messrs. Casswell, Massey 

 & Co., corner Seventy-seventh street and Columbus avenue. He is succeeding 

 Mr. Hoffstadter. also a student of our class (Sec. III.), who is now devoting 

 himself entirely to his studies at the college. Clara F. Ehlin. 



This quizzical class composed of juniors meets every day at noon for quiz, 

 and consists of Walter F. Keating, Grandin V. Johnston, D. Wettling, F. Mc- 

 Guigan, S. E. Moore, J. Kessler, J. Hart Michael and Jackson, and Sullivan. 

 Keating generally amuses the gentlemen for five minutes with a very good 

 jig, or a good imitation of a clog dance. Mr. Whettling is very good at telling 

 stories. The last one, about "Chauncy and his friend," scored quite a hit. We 

 stopped at Petty's, in Newark, the other night, and were informed that 

 Chauncy had been spending all his loose change for soda of late. We know 

 that he does not drink soda. Perhaps his fair companions do. 



So much for the quizzical students. 



The Section III. men have been so busy attending the frequent (?) '99 class 

 meetings and sociables that they have not had time to do much else, so there 

 is little news for this number. 



Perhaps the same reason accounts for the brilliant recitations in "quiz," of 

 which the following are examples: 



One gentleman, with his thoughts deep in mathematics, informed the section 

 that the most abundant kind of electricity was "fractional." 



