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Page 28 text:
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ADVERTISEMENTS. FRIENDS of the QUINCY HIGH should encourage THE GOLDEN-ROD by subscribing. Only 50 Cents. AT THE want shot swe can be found the most Reliable School Shoes FOR ALL AGES. Call and see the 2 Shoe with double sole and a good sensible heel. All sizes and widths in button and lace. G-H EE1TLEAF BLOCK. H. A. FELTIS, Manager. Leach, Shewell Sanborn, PUBLISHERS OF BOOKS- 202 Devonshire St., Boston. OFFICIAL ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE AWARD ON GILLOTT’S PENS AT TIIE CHICAGO EXPOSITION. AWARD : “For excellence of steel used in their manufacture, it being fine grained and clastic ; superior workmanship, especially shown by the careful grinding which leaves the pens free from defects. The tempering is excellent and the action of the finished pens perfect.” (Signed) FRANZ VOGT, (U. I. Kimball, Individual Judoe. Approved: ■ Pres't Departmental Com. (John Boyd Thacher, Chairman Exec. Com. on Awards. 601 E. F., 303, 404, 604 E. F., and others. Apply to your dealer for them. Secure Teachers and Places to Teach THROUGH FRANK B. SPAULDING, Manager Teachers’ Co-operative Asso. of N. E. 36 Brom field St., Boston. Eight years established. Writs for Manual, 2,052 places filled.
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Page 27 text:
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ADVERTISEMENTS. should keep at hand a box of MEAD=EASE for HEAD=ACHE. HEARN, Druggist, Quincy. NOW READY. Fall Styles in Men’s, Boys and Children’s CLOTHING. RELIABLE GOODS AND LOWEST PRICES. You are invited to call and inspect our immense line. GRANITE CLOTHING CO., Durgin Merrill’s Block. N ILLUSTRATION of the welcome given from highest sources to the new edition of . GILDERS LEE VFS LATIN GRAMMAR: “ Gildersleeve’s Latin Grammar.” Third edition. By B. L. Gildersleeve and Gonzalez Lodge. (New York: University Pub- lishing Co.) This book, showing the results of many years of experi- ence, the marks of the highest and ripest scholarship, and a wonderful appreciation of the needs of student and teacher alike, takes its place among the great Latin Grammars of our age. It is a book not set forth “to endure for a season” and then be relegated to the top shelf of the library, but a masterly and scientific exposition of the Latin etymology and of the laws of the Latin syntax. The arrange- ment, especially of the syntax, is at once sensible and logical; the rules are stated with terseness and precision; the quotations illustrat- ing the laws of the language are translated in the happy style belong- ing peculiarly to Dr. Gildersleeve. This Grammar, taken up by students preparing for college, will be their guide throughout their whole college course; and if, after graduation, they become teachers, a book of reference of inestimable value. It is, in short, a grand contribution to Latin philology. We shall be pleased to send you our descriptive catalogue. University JPizblisthing Coirypcuny, 43-47 E. Tenth Street, New York. NEW ENGLAND DEPT., 352 Washington St., Boston. T. Li. WILLIAMS, Practical Optician. Member of the New England Association of Opticians. Consultation, Advice and Scientific Test Free. If you suffer from headache consult us. It is often remedied by PROPERLY FITTED GLASSES. 126 COPELAND STREET, WEST Q TJUNTC T-
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Page 29 text:
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Vol. IV. QUINCY, MA.SS., NOVEMBER, 1895. No. 2. Sk WILL BE PUBLISHED MONTHLY DURING THE SCHOOL YEAR IN THE INTEREST OF THE QUINGY HIQH SCHOOL. Subscription Rates. For the year, 50 cents | Single Copies, 5 cents For sale at E. B. Souther’s, Quincy, and W. D. Rots’s, Wollaston. Address all communications to Rose Coyle, ’96, Louis N. Chapman, ’96, William C. Wales, ’98, BUSINESS EDITORS. Entered at the Quincy. (Mass.,) Post-Office as Second-Class Matter. S ditoricil. General 1 Jacob Warshaw, ’96, Editors, | Beatrice H. Rotiiwell, ’96. O, this balmy, beautiful Indian Summer ! with its merry sunbeams and gentle zephyrs. How our young blood bounds in our veins as we trip away to school light-hearted and free, with Dame Nature, laying aside her usual regal stateliness, dancing attendance as merrily as any fairy elf. One almost fancies oneself far from the cold, cold north, and trans- ported to some mellow southern clime amid sunny vales and fruitful vineyards, with purple-capped peaks in the distance, where every winged songster is an Orpheus, thrilling live things and lifeless, as they fly to Heaven's blue, forgetful for the time being of wicked Jack Frost, the herald of King Winter, who follows in the train of our most lovely season—Indian Summer. R. It is very strange to note how an act done at the wrong time, a word spoken at a critical moment will change the most affectionate friend- ship to the greatest antagonism. And it is greatly to be regretted that such should be the case between our two foremost colleges,—Harvard and Yale. All athletic connection has been severed, and the only remain- ing bond between them is the annual debate, which many people fear will also be dropped, because Yale will not make the first advances, as she thinks it would be equivalent to acknowledging her fault, nor will Harvard, since, as she is convinced that she is in the right, she believes that Yale should admit herself to be in the wrong. Still this separation may be productive of good results. The two institutions will now get along without a great deal of their athletic excitement, and the students will apply them- selves more closely to their educa-- tion. jr. w. The earthly career of Mr. Eu- gene Field, the popular American author, ended Monday, the fourth of this month. Mr. Field, who was born forty-five years ago in St. Louis, Missouri, was of old Puritan stock. His early life was the ordi- nary one of an American boy of the
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