The Present issue of the Advocate contains the same general kind of work as heretofore. The editorials are timely and neatly told. In "In the Fine Arts Lecture," by G.L.K., we have a simple bit of student rumination, clever, but not over-skillful. "The Leisure that Makes Men," is evidently a new departure into the light essay field long ago made agreeably famous. "The Story of the Man who Sat in the Stocks," by Ezra Kidd, is perhaps as powerful and well told a sketch as needs be expected from an undergraduate pen. By far the best story in the number is "George: the Second Ghost," by E.R. Little. This glimpse of true humor, seems to us to be rather near to an ideal Advocate story.
"A Piece of Undergraduate Heresy," is perhaps of more local interest in the Advocate Sanctum than for the general reader.
"Alas," by C.G.L., is well named; it is a series of meaningless and trivial words, and an unfortunate blot on an otherwise good number.
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