THE JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY. 177 



Steinheuer said he was going in the navy. Did he ? Ask him, if you can find the 

 hoy, I don't know but I would like to. Would like to know'that we could boast of 

 one '95 man. 



I am sensitive to the fact that this column has been sadly neglected — partially my 

 fault and partially everybody's. What can you do when you don't hear from a soul ? 

 '95 seems to be very diffident about their whereabouts. Very few of them come 

 around, or attend Alumni meetings and in fact very few are members. You ought to 

 be ! Why can't you be ? " Oh, I don't get any benefit from it." What can you ex- 

 pect? A twenty year "tontine " policy for a mint ! What do you buy candy and 

 flowers for ? Not for the " benefit " you get from them I imagine. If you do you may 

 get fooled. 



Join the Association and subscribe for the Journal. Hey ! O. F). D. 



'96 Notes. 



Sergt. Chas H. Lowe, class '96, is serving as Hospital Steward with the 9th Regiment 

 N. G. S. N. Y. The last letter received from him was dated Camp Townsend, N. Y., 

 but since that time has been in the far South. His brother, Francis A. Lowe, class 

 '92, and lately of the firm of Lowe Bros., is managing the store at Arverne, L. I. '96 

 shows a man in the army ; glad to hear it ! If there are any more let them follow by 

 sending us word of their whereabouts. 



*97 Notes. 



William F. Young, class '97, is with Dr. Richard Douglas, Nashville, Tenn. In his 

 letter he gives Meinecke a dig. Give the D his due, Young. 



The Wizard McKellar, " now you see him, now you don't," is still keeping on his 

 game. Now one hears of him, then one don't. He is said to be in business in the 

 old south state, " Carolina." 



Has anyone heard from the highly distinguished lady, Miss Moith, from Fiskill-on- 

 the-Hudson, N. Y., if you please? — Ed. She is in Penn. 



She with much " dignity," Miss Fellows, is said to be teaching school in a private 

 institution in that city of the much "learned" Boston. You know our class all re- 

 side here, that's why we prefer to live here. 



Morey, the "infallible," is in the Hoosier State husking corn, I presume. It pays 

 better than pharmacy, you know. 



Philips is keeping shop on 8th Avenue near 52d Street. 



Walling, our "Beau Brummel " from Jersey, is still in his much beloved Keyport. 

 He's such a "nice manly fellow," some one used to say. I say " he is one of the best 

 that ever happened to '97." 



Palmer, of the Sunny South, has enlisted with one of the Georgia State Volunteers 

 as Hospital Steward. Noble boy ! 



Rutherford is said to be hustling in his native city, Utica, that star city from which 

 all our brights originated. You remember there are exceptions to every rule. 



Oswald Ingham is still sighing to think he got the bronze medal. He is in business 

 at Providence, R. I. 



Wooten 6ays I ought to have more regard for the fellows' feelings and not write 

 some of the items I do. How pleasant it is to think we are not all so serious as our 

 dear boy from the Turpentine state, North Carolina. He is in business with his brother 

 at Greenville, N. C. 



If Sloss were here now, what a harvest Guggenheimer and his law would have. 



Such a nice boy, but he knew how to say ( ) so nice that it was a pleasure to hear 



him. He had such a " way with him." 



