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The Albany Law School has a proud rec ord. It has done a useful work, and thanks to the unselfish members of our city bar who are willing to bestow their time and talents in its service for very small pay, in spite of a cloud of competitors in States where admission to the bar is easier than in ours and which have rich endowments or large

colleges as feeders, it seems likely to con tinue to do so for many years. I do not doubt that if Macaulay's New Zealander shall ever take his seat on a broken arch of the Hudson River Railroad bridge to sketch the ruins of the Capitol, the Albany Law School will still be "' in full vigor and prosperity."