. NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, JANUARY 27. 1000. a"d b "* envies, for hulMlngs *qulpment. The first these will. lam sure, under wise TO-DAY And it.has no mean or any college no 1400000 and all protection day *hlt,h£h fth *ood READY while to Jealousies "re- other in the world. We have kick necessity Is for an academic hall, which may be American hasten the I, £, hi, it does not want be misrepresented, ana' Rail t>r Alumni Hall, expected and desired by our Pres _ \u25a0 _ eomlnr and we believe that on the water we known either aa Webster as results- wIT be aae sents the patronizing air of antiquity. — purpose tn part for the ad- our people generally I»«J«kad2 And so Irejoice in the youth of Cornell Univer- are which will answer the Cabinet and 0 glorious it." ministration of the college and lv part for all manifest not only to the whole ?hl, sity. The institution is now in the state occasions; building large. Nothing P^?'*'n will CENTURY to for at FEBRUARY of becoming; its lifeis plastic, not frozen by custom The Sllcer was the next academic and next this a the world »'»"£ will._Ju Ifeefeel think, public appre- Rev. Thoman R. social headquarters for alumni and students. The satisfy our hopes and defies, and these cHumber. or fixed by ruts. I too. the speaker, and aubject "Good apprised at an early date of the sure, very soon realized. cMidwinter ciate the university. Ina i\u25a0 üblic must his was Citizen- alumni will be be institutionsin trie carrying this project Into effect. In the long run stand in their merits. ship." plans for MINISTER APPLAUDED. O'MEARA,author ofthe long run only those whlci. serve genuine human " President Tucker said the alumni would get no CHINESE "HR- famotavobm^ seed* will survive, and those which serve them best "Good Citizenship." said, Is the highest to respond to the sub- V -Napoleon at St. circum- he peace till the practical work on the academic and Wu Ting-Fans In rising NAPOLEONNAPOLbUIN Helena." left a joSS will be the most prosperous. Fortunate duty of I why a man Potential Market d2l] stMoes may modify the operation of this law; but man. cannot understand alumni halls T>egan to rise, stone upon stone. ject of "China; the Greatest MCI his yintercourse with Napoleon in will- Introducing H»-wl Cohen A T CT PNIA exile fa the long run the law Itself willhold. Iam should put religion before this. The church Is In .\u25a0x-Spwik-r <*x-.lu;(jre of the World." was received with the utmost AI ncLrEINA. less than halfof which was drawn upon - ing to have Cornell University judged by the public a mere referred to him as "he of the Atlantean shoulders wore a tunic 51. Appreciation and 'patronage of it. . , sequent out of the great wheel of so- and childlike face so strangely reminiscent of cordiality. The Chinese Minister published work. The original journal a£ President Eliot of Harvard has recently said: ciety, and. although Iam a minister, Isay Raphael's cherub looktng out In baby wonder upon silk, Jacket, and the man- -on- go rapidly In the that of green with the red taining upwards words, "Cornell Is going to ahead of Yale citizenship highest a strange and unknown world." was affixed The Original Record made of 180.000 number of students. Ithink the increase of stu- is the function." darin's hat, upon the front of which to Was^ year larger any MR. REED'S SPEECH. English queathed by Dr. OMeara a friend, by what* dents this has been than that of Mr. Coler came into the room at this point a large diamond. He spoke In excellent by Napoleon's Physician, ,«* other university in the country. Proportionately, The ex-Speaker In reply said: easily under- heirs it has been p!aced in the q certainly so. They are taxing the energies of our and Mr. Sllcer gracefully provided an outlet for and every word he uttered was hands space very you receiving kindly /acuities to care for them. Our for class- the applause every Iam grateful to for so his hearers. His address lasted over Dr. O'Meara. Editors of The Century, and extracts [& rooms and laboratories Is exhausted, so that every which one wished to give the Judge Cohen's compliment to my past. While I stood by from building Is now from attic to basement. Controller, but was out President Tucker I but feel an hour, and among other things he said: pages will appear, beginning in the present crowded old which restrained of listened to couldn't help half Directly or indirectly, Ithink our alumni and courtesy to keenly that 1 came here unprepared. If Icause population of over 000 - The journal abounds in of the greatest interest, as may In way or be able help the speaker, by referring to the continuity of thought, you may China possesses a -d a.ml number. passages bearing On th- students one another to any break In the population to be fed and -loth*fCO- 0^: \u25a0 Mater, that a latter as "a singular my This has . including matter their Alma for they must remember example of a man who un- charge the blame to Judge Cohen. Iheld back wants for her people the wheat character and opinions of Napoleon, which was suppressed by new institution to. commend Itself by its merits acceptance of his kind Invitation In order to mc- therefore China Carolina, the Iron Dr -has large-num- dersands his duty and does \t well." The ap- finally of Dakota; the cotton of and at time of the publication of his book in 1812. It details to public'support, an does not have a creaps hi« obligation to me when I yielded, Pennsylvania, your good* and manu- O'Meara the the life an ber of benefactors. plause which greeted tribute to Mr. Coler lie got Mr. Hornblower and myself to come here, steel of and field for to less this factures generally. Therein lies a great conversation at Longwood without reserve. Cornell University owes its endowments was perhaps because we are on opposite sides of a legal It is for you to take advantage than a dozen men; but have all been men who loud and long continued. pending the courts. Judge Cohen Is you Americans. they action now In China you have the most abundant op- of a most entertaining of knew well what the university was accomplishing In closing. Mr. Sllcer not only able to killtwo birds with two stones, but of It In manufacturing first series ****-*PADIC An and felt that could made of their referred to the man who ability portunities for your industrial and THP mi no better use be does It Is possible that he will demonstrate his enterprise* If you don't that advantage It THEarticles. The author of "No.5 Ur surplus wealth. And there is no better example of not bother to register or vote, and is in to two lawyers barrels. Iwas going • take John Street" benefaction, the kill with two your own fault. this general statement than the last best sense not. a citizen. In such scathing to say I,too. came from a small college, but when Is mountain, will not come to Ma- is thoroughly familiar with the life of the ' Payne, and like the \u25a0which has come to us from Colonel who has Ilearn that Dartmouth's freshman class numbers China you. Mahomet, go to \u25a0 the TO-riAVI• already furnished a building which, with Its equip- original terms that his hearers clapped with de- hundred Idon't feel so sure that the term ap- homet 'but like must French capital, and Mr. Andre Castaigne,. who \J~\Jc\ two mountain. You must be alert. If you don't look ment, will cost nearly $1,000,000, and whose inten- light and hailed with laughter each new plies to Dartmouth. Ibelieve that a large part of go. forward, and If you lose the is making the pictures, a tion Itis to furnish whatever Is necessary for rais- sally. New-England done— and she has out others will himself Frenchman. very "This man is like what has what opportunity the fault will be yours. ing our Medical College to a position of the a sponge," said the speaker, done Is almost boundless In Its influence— has risen necessary for you to is thoroughly at home in Paris. By Richard Whiteinj, highest rank. • "In that from her small colleges, where her students went Ifyou want our trade Itis you ' . he saturates every opportunity. He study our requirements. It will not do for to article Paris, „« „ to become educated men. In my day It cost the surplus Irrespective of Its The first describes official and Author... ,4VNo«* .5 John?«». ANSWERS PRESIDENT HADLEV. lives for his business; he lives to make a living student very serious to get through dump your upon China of discomfort quality. If you do that, then you will rue the the illustrations include scenes in the Chamber *»•*." Ihad -thought that our conception of education and has time for nothing else. He declares divi- college. The young man then used up all he Palace, and method of teaching, young as the university Is, earned on his education, and when he returned to may propriety give of Deputies, a ball in the tlysec the Illustrated by CASTaiglne. had understood. But dends even out of his fears, and he draws on college after a vacation spent in hard work, he was There Is another hint I with by this' lime been pretty well to you. That Is to be a little civil and polite in crowning ofa Cardinal, night view of the Hotel Igrip»c to find myself mistaken. My friend Presi- the very that bind him. He the determined to get the worth of his money. Iwish your us. that our notions " dent Hadley recently paid respects bonds is like you The of your past Is assured, dealings with Remember ball, Paris, ofthe of Yale has his crab, success. success of etiquette, and. in fact, of everything else, are deVille during a municipal etc. Industrial or Paris Faubourgs,"" to 'Cornell in a way that rather surprised me. He Bhelless which is the most pitiful object and Ican only wish you a future equal to it. yours. goes a long way: •ad: William B. Hornblower, Princeton, '71. said that different from Civility be the subject of the second article, withpictures of wine trucks at the winsmarket, in nature. He sits between high and low tide, country Is a and also remember In dealing with Chinese that .' "I believe It is possible to bring them (the pro- the function of a small college In this saying of President Lincoln, that you cannot at barrier, girls leaving etc. fessional' schools) Into' closer connection with the pulpy and helpless, ready to be gobbled up by grand one, and he knew of no college, unless it great collecting customs a a factory, Four other papers will life of the teaching might be Bowdoln, which had more great fool all the people all the time. country, not by the so-called the first hungry animal that comes along. He is produced Moreover, if you want to secure a large share or complete the series, and they willbe followed by an article on the Paris Exposition, •of practical things, for, admirable as are some of men in proportion to its numbers than Dartmouth. depend upon the arrangements at Cornell, great doubt like you body of the China trade, a great deal Will of the Chicago Ihave the beetle which find on a rock or the Hamilton W. Mable defined lawyers as "a your treatment of my countrymen, not only in with pictures by Castaigne. The latter's illustrations Fair remain \u25a0whether the best way to make a man a mechanical learned gentlemen who prevent your estate from acquired engineer bark of a tree the spring, wanders falling this country, but especially In your newly the most artistic pictorial cf those is to teach him to hammer out a link of in which into the hands of your enemies In order to you that your record beautiful scenes. a. chain with his own hands. foolishly about does know the divide it among themselves." He said Dartmouth's colonies. It Is my duty to warn If this and not even that efforts to get our trade will be frustrated by un- means anything, it means that In Cornell finest endowment to-day was Its president. either here or In First Chapters of a Novelette by Henry B. Fuller, Xiniversity engineers are made by manual training. split in its back let out a winged thing." The oldest graduate present last night v.-as Edwin just treatment of the Chinese, by alone, the Philippines. I am not going to say that ray Author of "The of Vani," etc. shop work or that the larger part of the T. Rice, of the class of '45, and he received the measures for any Chevalier Pensieri course at least consists of such mechanical exer- OX FRANCHISES. college cheer from '99. Government will take retallative cises. Hartley's COLES such treatment, but Ido say that if you "MIDWINTER IN NEW YORK." "SAILING ALONE AROUND THE President position makes it neces- Following are the new officers of the association: unfair you fair to sary for me to state the actual facts. And the Mr. Slicer was heartily applauded, and the President, William N. Cohen, '79; vice-presidents, want to secure our patronage must be By Jacob A. RHs. WORLD." facts are that not Slbley '79, my countrymen. By Captain Joshua Slocum. a student is admitted to Hiram U. King. '73; Charles M. Hough, and not Illustrated by Hambidge. College of Engineering or to the Col- chairman then Introduced Controller Bird S. Benjamin Harmon, secretary. Jordan J. Rol- Voi must give and take. You must take Mechanical S. '82; nothing. you expect us to "We have to * ta Marryat for anything lege of Civil Engineering without a preparatory Coler to speak on "Municipal Government." The lins, '92: corresponding secretary, Albert A. Wheat. everything and give If COMPLETE STORIES.STOKIES. ,, ? it you custom you should not preclude the FOUR aII ke it »_v. V Evening/ training as complete as that required for admission '{&; treasurer. John French, '86; musical director, give our It, Pok to the academic department either of Cornell or Controller received an outburst af applause Herbert R. Thurston, '94; Executive Committee, Chinese from coming here. Ido not anticipate ..Tale, year '74; but It is within the range of possibility that some "OLIVER CROnWELL." "THE WEST AND CERTAIN LITERARY and that in his first the engineering which lasted several minutes and was taken Henry M. Silver, '72; Charles O. Gates. Charles enforce- By John Morley. TENDENCIES; OR, HOW student takes higher mathematics than were ever A. Rich, '75; John J. Hopper. Omyn P. Conant, of my countrymen, in view of the severe FICTION HAY prescribed for graduation any New-Eng- part in by every man in the room. He paid in '79; TB7;T87; '77: ment of the Chinese Exclusion law. may boycott Richly Illustrated. Bh THAN at of the Albert E. Hadlock. Arthur L. Llvermore. will never STRANGER TRUTH." land colleges, and throughout the entire course part: •88, and Harold H. Gibson, '97. American goods, but Ihope that this B> the au*ho*of \u25a0 • _ he devotes the part to occur. Itrust that the good sense of the members „ larger of his time mathe- . . and "THE HOOSIER YOUNGSTER." " , . matics, physics, chemistry and fun- that the of this society will urge the Administration by The stor> of the Cowboy- other sciences Without being an alarmist, Iwish to say to modify existing Six Poems damental to the practice of engineering, and only cltv of New-York started its life as the property of Congress enact new laws and Engraving by Timothy 1T» per cent of his to shop work or VVUTING FANG'S WARNING. laws as will be just and fair to the Chinese. James Whitcomb Riley. An Cole. -• whole time a Dutch corporation, and unless the city reverses manual training. the policy of giving away public rights to private You may Judge from this how much truth there JAPANESE is, then, corporations we may again see the day when our MINISTER'S RESPONSE. ILLUSTRATIONS in the statement that we make an engineer vast puhli<- Interests may be In the hands of that Continued from Flrmt I'ngr. Loeb, Pennell, Jay Hambidge, Henry McCarter, Mary Hj'lockFoote, Hrry by teaching him 'to hammer out a link of a chain light hypnotizes any Introducing Jotura Komura. the Japanese By Andre Castaigne, Louis Joseph his own hands." No, one private concern whose oily In Fenn, Malcolm Frazer, George Thomas Fogarty, Frederic Dorr Steele, Florence Scove! Shim, and othsn. with the method of Instruc- public business or franchises with which it comes Minister, the next speaker, the chair- tion in Sibley College, in the College of CivilEngi- ln Asia In should given to who was $4.00 neering-; the rest in contact. State, city or National which any preference be Price 35 Cents. a Year. -is precisely same as that in the The credit of the city of New-York to-day—the the commerce of another nation. man proposed a toast to Japan, which was drunk «f the university. We do not believe in mere - - - any in largely based, fcookwork. nor do we believe In pure science with- highest of city the world—ls A CONSULAR CIVIL SERVICE SYSTKM. standing. Mr. Komura responded to the toast THE CENTURY CO., NEW YORK. out its applications. In physics and chemistry strange as itmay seem, upon municipal ownership. Progress." It is because of the fact that we own our great It enter any "Japan, the Pioneer of Asiatic He students are pent to the laboratories to perform docks. would not be proper for me to into their own system of waterworks and. one-third of our detailed advice as to the treatment of commercial said in part: experiments. In economics and philoso- etc., that turned Into the speeches at the phy they required to our markets, the' revenue questions in the Far East. Many members of this so brevity Is the toasts, and" the few made were are write on subjects which Sinking Fund amounts to about $15,600.0(>0. To my Ihave not prepared a speech, /rive deflniteness and concreteness to their thoughts, audience know a great deal more about these ques- only Ican claim in responding to this toast. call of the chair. . mind, the city should retain as its own property tions think however, merit All the speakers confined themselves to college in law. while they are taught contracts and torts control, than 1 do. I it Important, Ialways feel that it is a great pleasure to be in and like, the franchises that still remain within its that all possible inn topics. President Buckham, speaking of some re- the they are also. required to draft papers that when the others expire that contain options steps should be taken to the company of representative Americans. That Harvard, said the \u25a0which shall render them conversant with practice our manufactured goods into the Far Blast. These to-night Iknow that cent bequests to Yale and that medicine, for renewal a far different arrangement should be the pleasure is enhanced because money would do more good to the country at large and procedure. In while student? are made than those which exist at present. Gentle- goods should be packed in a manner suitable to you take an active and intelligent interest in the of taught the sciences of life, they are also required market. The Chinese are very critical, ami are East, your been instrumental ifutilized to strengthen the smaller institutions apply that knowledge men, it is not alone the labor element, but con- the pack- .Far and efforts have learning. to. in clinics in the dispensa- merchants, coming to be con- often attracted by the fine appearance of in helping the trade of Japan and China. ries and hospitals. In forestry, while" they learn servative that are ages the goods. Young Americans position of isola- Congressman Powers took the same view. and. botany, cerned in the way in which most corporations that containliiK The transition or Japan from a referring projected Washington University. geology and kindred studies, they spend a The should be sent to China and made to -tudy the lan- tion to one of free intercourse with the other na- to the considerable portion of every year work enjoy public rights resist fair taxation. whole guage. A so as consuls most strik- -expressed the opinion that such an Institution in practical history of our city In regard to such concerns has Civil Service system, far tions of the world has been one of the good, and said he In our Adirondack domain. and For are concerned, should be adopted for the, Far Ea.^t. ing things In her history. While her position la im- would do more harm than would been one of litigation compromise. my sys- rather see the money it would require from the THINKINGAND ACTING. part, Iwish to say to you and to them that unless We cannot do better than copy the English pregnable tc foreign aggression she is ready to wel- col- tem. Peking every year to com- National Treasury divided among the small they meet the city and State on a fair ground There arrive at ei«ht come Americans in the work of industrial and country. And so throughout the entire university. And serious trouble will ensue when our citizens realize, ten young Englishmen, selected by competitive ex- mercial improvement. The messages of the Presi- leges of the the principle is a perfectly sound one because how much they have been deprived of from private amination and intended for the consular service. dent of your country, all of the utterances or the thinking and acting are inseparable In human life, greed. Instead of a conservative readjustment, They are required to study Chinese aa well as press and the actions of your Ministers in Japan because we never k v w a thing until we can apply which can be brought atoout now or in the near technical consular studies for at least two or three have so impressed our people that you can find, in THINKS TRUSTS NECESSARI it in practice, and the mere application of it. be- future, the populace in a mad fury will some time years. Having been taught for that length of your widening sphere of activity no more sincere sides testing our knowledge and givingaccuracy to attack even our vested rights. time by competent teachers, these young men are well wisher than the Japanese people i;. suggests They . of its own account new problems for You can readily s^e wnv the city Is fought fo detailed as clerks in the various consulates. JOHN R AIU'HBOLD ADPRF.SSIX THE the theoretical inquiry. In fact Cornell's insistence hard in Its collection of franchise taxes and rentals. go from one consulate to another, until they have SOUTH AND EXPANSION. «in both learning and applying what you learn in Every $100,000 that a railroad or gas company can served In every part of China. As they become ALUMNI. practice may be regarded as an anticipation of deprive the city of means a 5 per cent dividend proficient they are advanced step by step until they Senator McLaurin. responding to the theme of SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY one of the greatest discoveries of modern China, and it psy- on $2,000,000 of watered stock: but it means more to become consuls. They never leave "The South the Open Door In the Far East," Interesting chology. Imean the interdependence of the men- the city. That amount would pay the Interest at goes without saying- that they are perfectly :m fall and "Trusts" was the subject of an talk tal with the physical, and especially with the motor 3 per cent on J3,00).000 of city bonds, ami leav- in all the duties of their places and bare complete said in part: last evening at the ninth annual dinner and re- mechanism of the human being. Itis in this sense enough for a sinking fund that would retire them knowledge of all the business conditions, Tht- pffQsnezttj of a people are Association of Alumni of that Cornell. University is both theoretical and administrations, and hai'iT union of the New-York practical. within a reasonable time. 1 was in China under four largely measured by the increase or decrease of St. Denis, by And if President Hadley will think of The city of New-York Is a corporation, and ItIs practically all tho consuls were changed under their material Interests. If be true, then In Syracuse University, at the Hotel It, I he agree this r>f believe will with me that theory the duty of Its efficets to administer Its affairs for each administration. I not say for them that in Ught of the last t wenty-tivc years what a John I>. Archbold. president of the Board Trus- without practice is empty. just practice without the • • as and on account of the people who are the stock- the main they were earnest, intelligent, industrious glorious futur awaits the South. The. magnificent tees and vice-president of the Standard >il Com- theory is blind. And Igreatly regret that he holders. The Finance Department is making an men, always the spectre possibilities commerce eagerly awaiting de- should weight but they had before them of a pany. Following an address on "University Ideals" have lent the of his nama to the attempt to reverse the policy of the past. This of dismissal from office; ami they could not look velopment is a .'rizr worthy to be solved. The statement that Cornell University in any of Its policy wouli seem to try to find some excuse for out any matured plans, South cannot stand conservatively oppose by Dean Alb«rt Leonard, of the College of Liberal professional has unpardon- forward to the carrying of slill and schools committed the letting go of public rights— this policy, the most and it was perfectly useless to contemplate mr a commercial expansion. To do so means to go Arts, who received ;i cordial welcome, Mr. Arch- able pedagogical mistake of insisting on practice most example language. alone. On the recent and audacious of which was moment the idea of learning the Chinese backward towurd the ruinous conditions of thirty bold said: contrary, it is the happy blending the attempt to turn over to a private company the say regard to thtj y< ara ago. of the theoretical the practical, of the While Ihave nothing to with a/id oH watsr supply of the city. But In order to find a establishment of a permanent Diplomatic Corps, I The unexpected and unintentional acquisition of The discussion of trusts, as the term Is popu- and the new, which. has commended It to one of way to obtain to defeat such schemes we Ser- history becoming the greatest of Oxford scholars, who mean? do honestly believe that we should have Civil the Philippines Is to mark an epoch In the larly used is really somewhat hackneyed. - id: must also find a way to obtain means to go «head vice as applied to our consuls, at least in the East. of this ountry. The worlds conflict in the East All kinds of people, and especially that very con- "Cornell is an example of a university adapted by our bonded indebted- Shang- at is reality outgrowth else to than dii- to the soil, bravely modern and industrial, ourselves. Ibelieve that It would be desirable also to establish at this time in the of com- siderable class who have little do with- ness should be divided into two classes, the one hai a museum or exhibition room, in which could mercial competition. It is a question of markets cuss the popular subjects of the hour, are pre- out ceasing to be ancient and classical or philo- consisting of bonds Issued to acquire property and senting- views ad lnflnltum and almost ad sophical and historical.** be shown specimens of the various goods manu- und market places. their rights, such as water, docks, rapid transit, etc., factured in America. It is In the East, where civilization had Its birth. nauseam. Most of them know very little regard- A GIFT which pay for themselves and are no burden upon that the final struggle for commercial supremacy ing this subject, but the leas they know th* more ANNOUNCED. the taxpayers, and the other for such permanent THE PHILIPPINE is destined to OecttT. The very name of your so- loudly they talk. ' revenue, QUESTION. Association, fact, trusts, or, President of Cornell was improvements that bring lv no but which you ciety, the American Asiatic is an evi- As a matter of to speak correct- Schurman's defence are Just as esoential, such aa schools, new streets Speaking of spheres of Influence, will permit dence of the intelligent appreciation of our business ly, large corporations, are a necessary evolution xreatly enjoyed by the alumni, as their frequent the like. me, gentlemen, in conclusion to allude for a few men, and Indication of a commercial movement the We are adopting them as a matter and one recently acquired? 1 an of times. and hearty applause showed, but they broke Into minutes to that we have ami spirit thai w.U dot the broad Pacific with ships of necessity to our growing commerce. They repre- WOULD HAVE CITY BT'T WATERFRONT. know that Imust not touch on political duesuons, and overlap the fringes of Asia. The plac« of the sent a tremendous step of progress. The year 1900 \u25a0cheers when he made the following announce- or on those on which our people are divided. I United States in this great contest for commercial will be marked in the history of our country for of the Philippines, for Those of you who desire to study the mimt not discuss the fututre supremacy depend* upon the intelligent acceptance Its great events In many ways affecting- our Na- ment: question by Treaty Congress is to settle the by pro- can do so by getting: the reports of the National the of Paris Islands, < oui merchants and manufacturers of the oppor- tional life, but In no one respect with more Ihave said that new Institutions must live by Municipal League. Ibelieve a system can be de- status of the Inhabitants of those and di- tunities of the hour. nounced importance than in this commercial or cor- merit, at Still, which, not yet From the President down striving progress, porate Investor, as they have first few benefactors. vised by for Instance, we can purchase the gress has acted. Commis- in for commercial commercial evolution. consumer and laborer every now and then we receive gifts at Cornell. to the humblest member of the Philippine expansion and commercial supremacy. Iwould not will alike be benefl.ed by them. The Investor, by entire water front that we do not now own for acquiesced it The splendid gift of Colonel Oliver Payne for our about $100,000,000 and pay for It within thirty year?, sion the decision will be In. because favor the incorporation into our body politic any the better security which arises through amplitudes tcedical department in New-York, which willreach and at the same time not take ore dollar from the will be the law of the land. But history at least semi-barbarous races, totally unable to appreciate of capital and the combination of talent in the vari- nearly $1,000,000. has given a great stimulus to people by taxation. As soon as the rapid transit belongs to us. Without offending any American our system of government; but Ido favor the policy ous departments of administration; the consumer, physiology and anatomy in Ithaca, and wp have contract Is slgnad and that problem settled. we can recall the great deeds of our soldiers and of expansion. 1 will vote for the retention of those through Improved processes resulting in better not known how to find laboratory accommodations Charles Stewart Smith will bring this question be- sailors of whom Iam tempted to say but Iwill islands In some constitutional way. so as to control products at lower prices and rrore efficient distribu- there for the greatly lncreas- d number of students. fore the Chamber of Commerce, and Ibelieve they not say it. that they are the bravest of the brave. new markets and nfw commercial advantages. Nor tion; the laborer, by steadier employment at better A. man who desires to reman anonymous, though way to accomplish municipal say they as brave as the am Ito be deterred by the spectre of imperialism, wages, opportunity for Improvement will find a the own- 1 will only that are Dewey by designing and a better Imay Bay he l'ves neither In New-York nor Ithaca, ership of these vast properties that will not only bravest. Iam not going to talk to you of invoked sentimentalists or politicians In condition. if special talent Is shown. has just come to our relief with a gift of $80,000 for acceptable to people, May, all about the to frighten the weak and timid. Ifthis De Imperial- outcry against developments does not be the but also receive the and the first of UM. We all know ism, them It. The these a building for physiology and anatomy. Nothing indorsement of the leading banks of the Invest- naval battle which, whether we will or no. changed let make the most of come from the great busy. Industrial classes, but could be more timely or more helpful to the uni- ment world. history the world. After it was fought we Hailing from the South aa Ido, Isay let all sec- from unpractical sentimentalists and political versity. As the gift <-ame without solicitation, the of our tions join hands tn seizing this grand opportuilty latter, so leaped to our feet, a world Power We took demagogues— from the perhaps, more than •we are required to receive it without ostentation. among of the world. A of extending our commerce. Influence and civilisa- any It Is Impossible to imagine in our Na- thought feeling you proper place th.- nations opening Nicaragua other. But in and will. Iknow, all place, non-boasting place, but a tlrm and tion. With the of the Canal and life any more pitiful object than that pre- 1 WWWWW»»Wy»¥W¥^¥»¥¥WW join upon generous modest a deep water tional me In "benediction? this sup- DARTMOUTH'S NEW SCHOOL. strong and the eagle became the aqua! of the the construction of harbors along th« sented in the conceded representative head of one porter of your Alma Mater. Long may she prosper! one. not Gulf, Ibelieve the South will be able to political parties finding principal may Russian bear and the British Hon. We did be- underbid of the great the And her friends multiply! of subversive doctrines hut we the world In supplying Asia with raw and manu- topic for his demagogic harangues in attacks on come a proselyter factured cotton, and that one of the of continued to be a self-poised republic, and we will marvels our National thrift and financial stability. ; Briarcliff DR. POLK ON THE MEDICAL SCHOOL. ANNOUNCEMENT AT ALUMNI DINNER- submit to the ne v born century will be the great tide of The remedy for th« unrest on this question un- Farms ask only what Is right, and we will Southern products sweeping across the The chairman introduced nothing that is wrong. broad Pa- doubtedly lies In the direction of National or Fed- as the next speaker over we will discuss cific to millions of consumers In the Orient. eral corporations. Ifsuch corporations should be !; announce that their Bulletin Dr. William M. Polk, dean THOMAS B. REED A SPEAKER. When the insurrection Is of the Cornell Medical what to do with the Philippines. Meantime, gentle- made possible under such fair restrictions and me, give to Filipinos as free SENATOR FOSTER'S SPEECH READ. provisions should rightfullyattach to them, any I; No. 1 on "The Ravages of School in this city, who spoke on "Cornell In men, trust we will the 1 as The Rev. Dr. William J. Tucker, president of government sun shines on. We will edu- branch of business could be freely entered upon by Greater New- York." Dr. Polk spoke briefly s as the State, An address prepared by Foster, I comers, talk of monopoly would be done i; Tuberculosis'* is now read. for on Dartmouth College, at the thirty-sixth annual din- cate the children, divorce the Church and Senator of all and the the hopes aspirations abuses, free municipal and pro- Washington, subject away with. and of the school, and paid ner reform establish an., upon the of "The Pacific ! distribution and will be fur- of the Dartmouth College Association at Del- governments, enfranchise the press I Our present system of State corporations, almost | a generous tribute to its benefactor, vincial and the Asiatic Trade," 1 Oliver H. monlco's last night, said that the gift of $300,000 by make personal freedom the Inalienable birthright 01 Slope was read by the as varied in their provisions as the number of ;'. gratuitously on applica- Payne. Edward Tuck, of Paris, class of '62, would be util- all the people. And. gentlemen. 1 hope that soon secretary of the association, in States, is vexatious alike to the business com- nished and that nobody will have and part was as munity to the authorities of the several States*. • "Our aim in this school," he ized at once and that the Amos Tuck of the insurrection willend follows: and away ; tion to said. "Is to turn School occasion to raise any question as to the consent of Such Federal action need not take from the out good, all-around doctors, we to Administration and Finance would open at Dart- 'What. then, will follow those I.iJO supplying for State Its right to taxation ox police regulation, but Aye.. and this seek the K'