2 NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, SUNDAY. AUGUST fc 1903. — aim to make fta students clear and logical notice bicycles and bicycle riders, automobiles, reasoners. makers, records, chess, their patterns, riders and "Idesire that opportunities checker?, bridge whist, spelling 'reform and for psychical re- search shall be afforded along every oth^r crank reform, amateur photography the llr.e3 of **„ Psychical Research Society, of England, nnd SO on and on to anything and everything nac-ely* experiments for ihe illustrations of new that may under the . In fact, psyclu>' b» found phenomena am! the collection (he great American daily has become a good of facts anlnce the first daily with a view fludir.g a explanation was printed did they give so much for the rational th«— and of demonstrating:, if possible, the money, ard never were they so much sought continuity of ii> after communion after. Everybody reads them- and nearly death and of the between th* mortal realm spirit everybody, among the more educated classes at and the realm. Such r^ search, how r, least, abuses them. \u25a0 must not be compulsory.** After going over a long list of , We startling changes of the last subjects o have teen the which he desires that special twenty years. you expect and pre- attention shall fee What are to given, including "allbranches of pare for in the next twenty? instruction arv* training having special reference to troiran« ItIs f-afe to predict that the belter class of physical development and health.' Mr -TmsTbii Sally newspapers and their readers may come college constitution recommends "a ' lectures open to all students, preferablycourat«s to a mutual understanding that less quantity by con petent women lecturers, upon the uW3 relatin* and better quality would be mutually advan- to maternity and to pre-natal culture, • the aum tageous. Tb. Saturday Review" once called ON CASTLE HEIGHTS, THE SITE OF GENEVA'S NEW COLLEGE FOR WOMEN. and tratnlnsr of childhood, and upon prar * tical of borne making th« Macaulay the father picturesque reporters, \u25a0William Smith'r borne at the extrrme right, and home of Mr. Smith"* astronomer. Professor Brooks, at the extreme left. art3 and home k«ptT?sr~ \u25a0 of asks the trustees to keep He constantly tn nnd Dickens has often been called their prince. view •'th" bringing of all student 3into models; nature, dl**^ " No doubt these are. ambitious but the Ing day, but I'm getting pretty well along—al- study of the volume of into sympathy nerve? or his passions run away with his ice ith expressions VTfss that cent MacGahan to a European war most eighty-five." all fornw and of life, ar- came to America Th^- people of Geneva lon~ bef> n of every study, the entry to '\u25a0very family, the when i regardins aged curlor* above the present wordy and tedious level twenty-five years old th° millionaire's opinions e.ar of every citizen when at ease and in his with his mother and two women. They are- set out at length p' of telling the news whenever the editors and — They and document, in the r most receptive powers of approach and brothers. settled in Geneva went into markable and are hftt given to ''t*. their readers agree that it Is desirable. In that moods nursery public first of persuasion beyond those cf the Protestant the business. He. has lived h^re ever for the time: direction lies one of the best hopes for the future "Ibelieve that the development, H«-> is by no since. cuitur- and of the best newspapers. Fewer words, shorter pastor or th^ confessor. tiaining of womanhood 1<« the most imporaiM but, said, he "Iam going to call the college after myself. educational work of the age. \u25a0Imlrs. better told; fewer (18 a week reporters, means a prophet, reverently be it The ideal Lj_ is a voice in tho wilderness preparing the way. and can think of no better monument to leave."' and society of the future n.u?t b« built uooa who only write by main strength and awkward- an enlarged, strengthened and priest, he continued. "Our women know loss about ennoble woroan. r*«, learned the Ho is by no means a but his words hood. The most efficient power and and more men who have themselves than the men— that is why T found lnßu«n« capacities of the English tongue; fewer men carry wider and farther than the priest's, and in elevatlngr humanity to <* higher plane ot that h<-. preaches the gospel of humanity. He is not a college for women. Too many colleges already! life and enjoyment is a pure and wisely v hose chief idea is to rake in all the rubbish woman, woman, edu- a king, but he nurtures and trams the. king, and You can never have too many colleges for cated and that awakened tn they can and label it with startling headlines, the consciousness of her by public opinion he women. They have to be the mothers of the wonderful nature an»l end more men who know what is worth telling the land Is rul^d the evokes divine mission and adorned with anf rubbish; fewer mere photographers in non- Lord moting in this marvellous civilization and a liftingpower and act either builds up or tears down. Higher human weal." pareil whose s-ol* idea is to set down In fine typo These are hardly the viewi on- would expect (or humanity, look well tht nurtun education does build up. and so Iwant to help everything they see, and more artists v.h> know to and from a bachelor who has for ;ears lived a. training of your build up American womanhood. lonely life with a single servant and a T.hat to see and how to make, in words, a kin?:. faithful "Our marriage system is all wrong."' Itwas cat. There was never a hint as to why hi of it—that the line of progress for married, it hardly Htctui'c Is hardly a surprising remark to come from a man never and was a quest "an intelligent press, worthy of an intelligent one could ask point blank. THE COROXATIOX. has remained single lor eighty-five years, have asked, community. But first of all, the public must who To neighbors who the answer ha* though most of the time a rich man. "The been: "That is neither here nor there." They up its mind that the merit of a paper, its make Church cannot marry a man and a woman. cannot solve the mjstery aad his love story will •enterprise, its resources and its importance are Ceremony X to remain for Pirn Similar SMITH OBSERVATORY, GENEVA, N. T. Only Nature can really marry. anJ how many unwritten. aiot determined by th^ number of its pages— There are many stories current in Geneva Dr.William R. Brooks, director. of matches of to-day do you suppose Nature show the sort of man he is. Last that paper is made out of cordwood and costs That His Predecessor. the which wiatßf for desired? When the feelings of a man and he was knocked down by a sleigh and remained Jwo cents a pound, that type is set by steam, Papal Many coronations differ from those of tem- coronation, woman there Is no marriage unconscious for a number of hours. tend that white sheets can be run through print- ceremony of and which until the of the globe, that Is to say, Europe, Asia and cannot harmonize thought that the en Iof the old pioneer na.i poral sovereigns, and inasmuch as more than a invariably given from about it. ilng in any number you want In any reign of Leo XIIIwas the Africa. come, but in three days he was up and around machine? quarter of a century has passed since Leo XIII American to stop marry- of 100,000 sn hour. Ifthe external balcony of St. Peter's to the faithful There are several tiaras in the Papal treas- "I want the woman again. "bigoffice at the rate Some one protested that he should leave his quantity, they cer- in the a ast square below. ury, the one piven by Napoleon I 1805 to people continue to want as assembled Jn money to his relatives. "They are well to do." tiara, like the cross-surmounted Pius covered jewels tainly f-etm to do now, the quantity will no The crozier YIT. with and sur- he is said to have replied. "Besides. Idr> not printed— though above described, is an attribute, which belongs mounted by the largest existence, that father owes the son anytt Woubt continue to be Sherldan'B emerald in believe the nephew. easy Pope exclusively. It is, like so many is so heavy that it cannot be worn, much less the uncle owes the The debt *hoet fchould hiss in every editor's ear that to the and the two way round; the son owes symbols of religion and royalty, of that were urually used by Leo is rather the other (printing, even more than easy writing, makes other of XIIIhave been the father." origin, for Herodotus describes the tiara made for Gregory XVI, many •v'uret hard reading. Oriental the" adorned with Among: the properties which Mr. Smith crown of the rulers of Persia as a "tiara. some two hundred precious stones, and owns is the Opera House." in which the Geneva ; far these suggestions may have seemed the Thus I, who was tho first Pope to be one presented by of Spain postoffice will be located until the erection of Hn partake more aching than of prophecy, Nicholas Queen Isabella to new buildingis complete. Out of crowned, and who occupied the chair of St. Pius IX. weighing three pounds, the government is for the public, quite as much as for the and adorned of this grew one of the funniest Incldent3 i:v fit Peter from A. D. SSO to SOD, was crowned with with no less than nineteen thousand precious career of the college builder. 'Tvwspapers or for the young men who are now the which, an ordinary episcopal surrounded by a stones, of which eighteen thousand are dia- He was building the house in he B*w \u25a0coming forward to make them, to determine lives, when was nearly completed he cut single crown. In 1290 Popo Boniface VIIadded monds. The , instead of being di- and it Vhether. when grouped, they portray at all the the wages of the union men who were at work. a second crown to tho mitre in order to vided in the centre, as is tho episcopal mitre, be dor.?, they re- [newspaper of the next quarter or half century. Indicate is There was little more to but his sovereignty over things temporal as well closed. fused to do that little. Finally they struck and We shall hay. fewer sensational papers, and is wait upon ai; spiritual. This gave much offence to the The mitre a survival from the Jewish faith, sent a committee to him. get the news told more as a landscape Is painted, « and was worn, long prior to the foundation of "You are not treating U3 fairly," said th» Emperor of Germany and to the rulers of France , you cut wages below ns "with sout sense of perspective and some artistic by the Jewish hlsh priests. spokesman, "when and Kngland, and it was partly in consequence The re-fcm of a Pope, it n.ay be union scale." tcmiEeion of offensive or worthless objects, when- clusion, added in con- offered, of this that Pope Clement V added the third dates from his coronation, instead of "I'llnot pay a cent more than I de- rv*r and as far as the public taste is well from his election, although he is fully Mr. Smith determinedly. crown to indicate the spiritual supremacy of qualified clared enough educated to prefer a correct and vlva- to enjoy all the prerogative- cf Pontiff prior •We'll boycott you, that's what we'll do.* the Papacy over the thon three quarters cious Style thunder" written and known to his coronation. was the threat. lo "blood and "You'll boycott me? You'll boycott me? Boy- ;printed as if with a paint brush. We Khali cott me? How in the dickens can you boycott mrejy have shorter reports of many things, if rue?" sirp( also smaller papers. The that Sun- "None of us will go t«« your opera house." notion BACHELOR FOUNDS A COLLEGE FOR right. Very thing. Opera as big as WOMEN. "That's Just best dajr** paper must be ten times Mon- house is no place for a working man, any way. dajr*« will be mitigated. Tho first class daily Stay away. Boycott me." paper of the future is not likelyto come in the WILLIAM //. SMITH'S The proposed college is by n> means the first form of a book, or even a pamphlet. PLANS FOR THE GENTLER thing Mr. Smith has done for the cause of edu- Whatever always in contents, cation. He has been interested th<* Jts form or quality or the people that SEX— OF study astronomy. Fift- ytars ago he de- WILLIAM SMITH. SOME HIS OTHER GOOD WORKS. of read it willpay for it—it willnot be an eleemosy- [ PROFESSOR TV. R- BROOKS. cided to found an observatory at Geneva, ami nary Institution, chiefly conducted by the adver- Founder rAa new college for women at Geneva, N.Y. he built one to which he gave hi* name. As its Who Is said to have more comets than tising "untry for Geneva, V., Aug. S (Special).— feet, discovered astronomer he selected Dr. William R. Brooks. business of the the benefit N. The thirteen 21G with 165 foot wings on each end. The any astronomer. charge of the Red crowned, other \»ho was theiT^n House Ob- of anybody that willread. Its wealth and pros- was a brief description of the cere- thousand people of Geneva worAnever more sur- central portion will be known as the adminis- servatory at Phelps. eight miles from Gem perity willbe vr-leomed as a gain and security mony which takes place to-day at may be prised in their lives, perhaps, thAn they were the tration section, while one wing He built a handsome brick house for the pro- will be known ing for living, for position, for,. T want mansion, for the whole community. It will indulge in of timely interest. other day. when William Smith, the millionaire as the educational pavilion, other, a fessor near his own and has since and the th» her to be just as independent in choosing a life paid him a regular safciry. iio sham about being independent of business There seems to be a general impression that nurseryman, and for eighty-tivc years a bach- residential pavilion. The will Observatory latter have quar- partner us is a man." There is