Scientific American Supplement, No. 530, February 27, 1886 by Various
page 12 of 145 (08%)
page 12 of 145 (08%)
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students. Sibley Hall, costing more than $100,000, is his contribution
for a public library, and for the use of the University of Rochester for its library and cabinets; it is a magnificent fire-proof structure of brownstone trimmed with white, and enriched with appropriate statuary. Mrs. Sibley has also made large donations to the hospitals and other charitable institutions in Rochester and elsewhere. She erected, at a cost of $25,000, St. John's Episcopal Church, in North Adams, Mass., her native village. Mr. Sibley has one son and one daughter living--Hiram W. Sibley, who married the only child of Fletcher Harper, Jr., and resides in New York, and Emily Sibley Averell, who resides in Rochester. He has lost two children--Louise Sibley Atkinson and Giles B. Sibley. A quotation from Mr. Sibley's address to the students of Sibley College, during a recent visit to Ithaca, is illustrative of his practical thought and expression, and a fitting close to this brief sketch of his practical life: "There are two most valuable possessions which no search warrant can get at, which no execution can take away, and which no reverse of fortune can destroy; they are what a man puts into his head--_knowledge_; and in to his hands--_skill_."--_Encyclopædia of Contemporary Biography_. * * * * * HYDRASTIS IN DYSPEPSIA.--Several correspondents in _The Lancet_ have lauded hydrastis as a most useful drug in dyspepsia. * * * * * |
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