SANTA BAKBAKA COLLEGK. 237 



Tti If armts. 



The Rules and Regulations have been inserted that 

 parents may know just what is expected of their chil- 

 dren. 



The college curriculum is laid down on a plan that 

 will not overwork pupils ; but in order to maintain a 

 good standing in any grade it will require application, 

 industry, and study. Idle boys, indifferent to their 

 recitations, will not be tolerated, but excused from 

 the school. Irregular attendance or absence, unless 

 caused by sickness, cannot be permitted. The object 

 of the school is to make students, to teach children 

 how to apply themselves, that they may become 

 scholar-s, and that their conduct may be unexception- 

 al. Too many are of the opinion that school work 

 tends to weaken the constitution of children ; the ef- 

 fect is quite to the contrary ; at least nine out of every 

 ten whose parents are able to give a good education 

 at private schools, will be benefited by strict school 

 discipline. We do not mean overwork — but work. 

 It refines the mind and strengthens the body. Noth- 

 ing is so dangerous as idleness, and parents who do 

 not wish their children to study or to come under the 

 Rules and Regulations had better not send them. 



A course of ten lectures will be delivered in the 

 College Hall upon various subjects during the Fall 

 and Winter. Proceeds for the benefit of the College 

 Library. (Free to the pupils. ) 



