- t I I M A 5 - t BRYAN TO 1 Hti NATION t Speech of the Democratic Candidate at Madi 1 son Square Garden New York p w CHAIRMAN gentlemen of the committee and fellow citizens I shall at a future day and in a formal letter accept the nomination which is now tendered by the Notification Committee and I shall at that time touch upon the Is sues presented by the platform It Is fitting however that at this time In the presence of those here assembled I speak at some length In regard to the campaign upon which we are now entering We do not underestimate the forces arrayed against us neither are we unmindful of the importance of the struggle In which we are engaged but relying for success upon the righteousness of our cause we shall defend with all possible vigor the positions taken by our party We are not eurprlsed that some of our opponents in the absence of better argument resort to abus ive epithets but they may rest assured that no language however violent no invectives however vehement will lead us to depart a single hairs breadth from the course marked -out by the National Convention The citi zen either public or private who assails the character and questions the patriotism of the delegates assembled In the Chicago con Tentlon assails the character and questions the patriotism of the millions who have ar xayed themselves under the banners there raised It has been charged by men standing high In business and political circles that our jplatfonn Is a menace to private security and public safety and it has been asserted that those whom I have the honor for the time being to represent not only meditate an attack upon the rights of property but are the foes of social order and national honor Those who stand upon the Chicago platform are prepared to make known and to defend -every motion which influences them every purpose which animates them and every hope which Inspires them They understand the genius of our institutions they are stanch supporters of tho form of government under which we live and they build their laith upon foundations laid by the fathers Andrew Jackson has stated with admirable clearness and with an emphasis which can not be surpassed both the duty and the sphere of government He said Distinc tions in society will always exist under every just government Equality of talents -of education or of wealth cannot be produced by human Institutions In the full enjoy ment of the gifts of heaven and the fruits of superior industry economy and virtue every man is equally entitled to protection by law We yield to none In our devotion to the doctrine just enunciated Object of the Campaign Our campaign has not for Its object the j econtructlon of society We do not propose to transfer the rewards of industry to the lap of indolence Property Is and will remain the stimulus to endeavor and the compensa tion for toll We believe as asserted in the declaration of Independence that all men are created equal nut that uoes not mean that all men are or can be equal In posses sions In ability or In merit It simply means that all shall stand equal before the law and that Government officials shall not in making construing or enforcing the law discriminate between citizens I assert that property rights a8 well as the rights of per sons are safe In the hands of the common people Let them beware of surrendering a political power which they already possess nd which power If surrendered will surely be used to close the doors of advancement against such as they and to fix new disabili ties and burdens upon them till all of liberty shall be lost We are not surprised to find arrayed against tis those who are the beneficiaries of Gov ernment favoritism they have read our platform Nor are we surprised to learn that we must in this campaign face the hostility of those who find a pecuniary ad Tantage in advocating the doctrine of non interference when great aggregations of wealth are trespassing upon the rights of Individuals We welcome such opposition It Is the highest indorsement which could be bestowed upon us We are content to have the co operation of those who desire to have the government administered without fear or favor It Is not the wish of the general public that trusts should spring into exist ence and override the weaker members of society it is not the wish of the general public that these trusts should destroy com petition and then collect such tax as they will from those who are at their mercy nor Is It the fault of the general public that the Instrumentalities of government have been so often prostituted to purposes of private gain Those who stand upon the Chicago platform believe that the Government should not only avoid wrong doing but that it should also prevent wrong doing and they believe that the law should be enforced alike against all enemies of the public weal It follows as a necessary conclusion that vicious legislation must be remedied by the people who suffer from the effects of such legislation and not by those who enjoy Its benefits The Income Tax Law Tho Chicago platform has been condemned hv some because It dissents from an opinion given by the Supreme Court declaring the s income tax law unconstitutional Our critics even go so far as to apply the name to those who stand upon that plank -of the platform It must be remembered that we expressly recognize the binding force of that decision so long as it stands as a part of the law of the land There is In the plat form no suggestion of an attempt to dispute the authority of the Supreme Court The party Is simply pledged to use all the con stitutional power which remains after that decision or which may come from its re versal hy the court as it may nerearter oe fconstltuted Is there any disloyalty In that pledge For a hundred years the Supreme Oourt of the United States has sustained the principle which underlies the income tax I shall offer no apology for the Income tax plank of the Chicago platform The last income tax law sought to apportion the bur dens of government more equitably among those who enjoy the protection of the gov ernment At present the expenses of the Federal Government collected through In ternal revenue taxes and Import duties are especially burdensome upon the poor classes of society A law which collects from some citizens more than their share of the taxes md collects from other citizens less than their share is simply an Indirect means of transferring one mans prop erty to another mans pocket and while the process may be quite satisfactory to the men who escape just taxation it can never be satisfactory to those who are overbur dened Not only shall I refuse to apologize for the advocacy of an income tax law by the National Convention but I shall also re fuse to apologize for the exercise by it of the right to dissent from a decision of the Supreme Court In a government like ours every public official Is a public servant whether he holds office by election or by ap pointment whether he serves for a term of years or during good behavor and the people have a right to criticise his official acts The Itfoney Problem The paramount issuein this campaign Is the money quesfcfon It Is scarcely necessary to defend the principle of bimetallism No national party during the entire history of the United States has ever declared against it and no party in this campaign has had the temerity to oppose it Three parties the Democratic Populist and Silver have not only declared for bimetallism but have outlined the specific legislation necessary to restore silver to Its ancient position by the side of gold The Republican platform ex pressly declares that bimetallism Is desirable when it pledges the Republican party to aid In securing It as soon as the assistance of certain foreign nations can be obtained When they asserted that the efforts of the Government should be steadily directed to ward the establishment of International bi metallism they condemned monometallism There can be no sympathy or co operation between the advocates of a universal gold standard and the advocates of bimetallism Between bimetallism whether Independent or International and the gold standard there Is an impassable gulf Is this quadrennial agitation In favor of international bimetal lism conducted In good faith or do our op ponents really desire to maintain the gold standard permanently If they are bending uielr energies toward the permanent estab lishment of a gold standard under cover of a declaration in favor of international bi metallism I am justified In suggesting that honest money cannot be expected at the bands of those who deal dishonestly with the American people What Is the test of honesty In money It must certainly be found In the purchasing power of the dollar An absolutely honest dollar would not vary In its general purchas ing power It would be absolutely stable when measured by average prices A dollar which increases in purchasing power Is just as dishonest as a dollar which decreases In purchasing power It cannot be successfully claimed that monometallism or bimetallism or any other system gives an absolutely just standard of value Under both monomet allism and bimetallism the Government fixes the weight and fineness of the dollar Invests It with legal tender qualities and then opens the mints to its unrestricted -coinage leaving the purchasing power of the dollar to be determined by the number of dollars Bimetallism is better than monometallism not because it gives us a perfect dollar that Is a dollar absolutely unvarying In Its general purchasing power but because It makes a nearer approach to stability to honesty to justice than a irold standard possibly can Any legislation which lessens the worlds stock of standard money in creases the exchangeable value of the dollar therefore the crusade against silver must Inevitably raise the purchasing power of money and lower the money value of all other forms of property Farmers Opposed to Gold Our opponents sometimes admit that it was a mistake to demonetize sliver but insist that we should submit to present conditions rather than return to the bimetallic system They err in supposing that we have reached the end of the evil results of a gold stand ard we have not reached the end So long as tho scramble for gold continues prices must fall and a general fall in prices is but another definition of hard times The farm ers are opposed to the gold standard because they have felt Its effects Since they sell at wholesale and buy at retail they have lost more than they have gained by falling prices and besides this they have found that certain fixed charges have not fallen at all Taxes have not been perceptibly de creased although It requires more of farm products now than formerly to secure the money with which to pay taxes Debts have not fallen The farmer who owed 1000 is stui compelled to pay 1000 although it may be twice as difficult as formerly to obtain the dollar with which to pay the debt The wage earners have been injured by a gold standard and have expressed themselves upon tho subject with great emphasis In February 1S95 a petition asking for the Immediate restoration of the free and un limited coinage of gold and silver at 10 to 1 was signed by the representatives of all or nearly all the leading labor organizations and presented to Congress The farmers and wage earners together constitute a consid erable majority of the people of the coun try Why should their Interests be Ignored In considering financial legislation Our opponents have made a special appeal to those who hold fire and life Insurance poli cies but these policy holders know that since the total premiums received exceed the total losses paid a rising standard must be of more benefit to the companies than to the policy holders Much solicitude has been ex pressed by our opponents for the depositors in savings banks but these appeals will be In vain because savings banks depositors know that under a gold standard there Is increasing danger that they will lose their deposits because of the Inability of the banks to collect their assets and they still further know that if the gold standard Is to continue Indefinitely they may be compelled to withdraw their deposits In order to Dav living expenses It Is only necessary to note the Increasing number of failures In order to know that a gold standard is ruinous to merchants and manufacturers These business men do not make their profits from the people from whom they borrow money but from the people to whom they sell their goods If the people cannot buy retailers cannot sell and If the retailers cannot sell wholesale merchants and manufacturers must go Into bankruptcy Salaries In business occupations depend upon business conditions and the gold standard both lessens the amount and threatens the permanency of such salaries The professional classes in the main receive their support from the producing classes and can only enjoy prosperity when there Is prosperity among those who create wealth Its Effect Upon All Classes I have not attempted to describe the effect of the gold standard upon all classes in fact I have only had time to mention a few but each person will be able to apply the principles according to his own occupation It must also be remembered that It is the desire of people generally to convert their earnings Into real or personal property This being true in considering any tem porary advantage which may come from a system under which the dollar rises In Its purchasing power It must not bo forgotten that the dollar cannot buy more than for merly unless property sells for less than formerly Hence It will be seen that a large portion of those who may find some pecuni ary advantage in a gold standard will dis cover that their losses exceed thelr gains Jefferson has said that one of the main duties of government i3 to prevent men from In juring one another and never was that duty more Important than it is to day It is not strange that those who have made a profit by furnishing gold to the Government In -the hour of its extremity favor a financial policy which will keep the Government de pendent upon them In 1SG9 Senator Sherman said The con traction of the currency Is a far more dis tressing operation than Senators suppose Our own and other nations have gone through that operation before It is not pos sible to take that voyage without the sorest distress To every person except a capital ist out of debt or a salaried officer or annui tant it Is a period of loss danger lassitude of trade fall of wages suspension of enter prise bankruptcy and disaster It means ruin to all dealers whose debts are twice their business capital though one third less than their actual property It means the fall of all agricultural production without any great reduction of taxes What prudent man would dare to build a house a railroad a factory or a barn with this certain fact before him When Mr Sherman describes contraction of the currency as disastrous to all the peo ple except the capitalist out of debt and those who stand in a position similar to his he is stating a truth which must be apparent to every person who will give the matter careful consideration Mr Sherman was at that time speaking of the contraction of the volume of the paper currency but the prin ciple which he set forth applies if there is a contraction of the volume of the standard money of the world Mr Blaine discussed the same principle in connection with the demonetization of silver Speaking In the House of Representatives on Feb 7 1S7S he said I believe the struggle now going on In this country and other countries for a sin gle gold standard would If successful pro duce widespread disaster in and throughout the commercial world The destruction of silver as money and the establishing of gold as the sole unit of value must have a ruinous effect on all forms of property ex cept those Invested which yield a fixed re turn In money These would be enormously enhanced in value and would gain a dispro portionate and unfair advantage over every other species of property Is it strange that the holders of invest ments which yield a fixed return In money can regard the destruction of silver with complacency We may not expect the hold ers of other forms of property to protest against giving to money a disproportionate and unfair advantage over every other spe cies of property If the relatively few whose wealth consists largoly In fixed in vestments have a right to use the ballot to enhance the value of their Investments have not tho rest of the people the right to use the ballot to protect themselves from tho disastrous consequences of a rising standard The people who must purchase money with tho products of toll stand In a position entirely different from tho position of thOBe who own money or receive a fixed income The well being of tho nation ay of civilization itself depends upon the pros perity of theimasses What shall It profit us to have a dollar which growB more valuable every day If such a dollar lowers the stand ard of civilization and brings distress to the people What shall it profit us if trying to ralBe our credit by Increasing the pur chasing power of our dollar we destroy our ability to pay the debts already contracted by lowering the purchasing power of the products with which these debts must be paid If it is asserted as it constantly is asserted that the gold standard will enable us to borrow more money from ahroad I reply that the restoration of bimetallism will restore tho parity between money and property and thus permit an era of prosperity which will enable the American people to become loaners of money Instead of perpetual bor rowers Even If we desire to borrow how long can we continue borrowing under a system which by lowering the value of property weakens the foundation upon which credit rests If the holders of fixed Investments will not listen to arguments based upon justice and equity I appeal to them to consider the Interests of posterity Not a New Experiment As against the maintenance of a gold standard either permanently or until other nations can be united for its overthrow the Chicago platform presents a clear and em phatic demand for the immediate restora tion of free and unlimited coinage of silver and gold at the present legal ratio of 16 to 1 without waiting for the aid or consent of any other nation We are not asking that a new experiment be tried we are insisting upon a return to a financial policy approved by the experience of history and supported by all the prominent statesmen of our nation from the days of the first President down to 1873 When we ask that our mints be opened to the free and unlimited coinage of silver Into full legal tender money we are simply asking that the same mint privileges he ac corded to silver that are now accorded to gold When we ask that this coinage be at the ratio of 10 to 1 we simply ask that our gold coins and the standard silver dollar which be It remembered contains the same amount of pure silver as the first silver dol lar coined at our mints retain their present weight and fineness The theoretical advantage of the bimetallic system is best stated by a European writer on political economy who suggests the fol lowing Illustration A river fed from two sources Is more uniform In volume than a river fed from one source the reason being that when one of the feeders is swollen the other may be low whereas a river which has but one feeder must rise or fall with that feeder So In the case of bimetallism the volume of metallic money receives con tributions from both the gold mines and the silver mines and therefore varies less and the dollar resting upon the two metals Is less changeable In Its purchasing power than the dollar which rests on one metal only If there are two kinds of money the option must rest either with tho debtor or with the creditor Assuming that their rights arc equal we must look at the Interests of soci ety in general in order to determine to which side the option should be given So ciety is interested in having the option exercised by the debtor Indeed there can be no such thing as real bimetallism unless the option is exercised by the debtor The exercise of the option by the debtor compels the creditor classes whether domestic or foreign to exert themselves to maintain the parity between gold and silver at the legal ratio whereas they might find a profit In driving one of the metals to a premium If they could then demand tho dearer metal Rijrhts of the Debtor The right of the debtor to choose the coin In which payment shall be made extends to obligations due from the Government as well as to contracts between Individuals A Government obligation Is simply a debt due from all the people to one of the people and it is Impossible to justify a policy which makes the Interests of the one person who holds the obligation superior to the rights of the many who must be taxed to pay It When prior to 1873 silver was at a prem ium it was never contended that national honor required the payment of Government obligations in silver and the Matthews reso lution adopted by Congress In 1878 express ly asserted the right of the United States to redeem coin obligations In standard silver dollars as well as In gold coin Upon this subject the Chicago platform reads We are opposed to the policy and prac tice of surrendering to the holders of the ob ligations of the United States the option re served by law to the Government of redeem ing such obligations in either sliver or gold coin It Is constantly assumed by some that the United States notes commonly called green backs and the treasury notes issued under the act of 1890 are responsible for the recent drain upon tho gold reserve but this as sumption Is entirely without foundation Tho fault does not He with the greenbacks and treasury notes but rather with the executive officers who have seen fit to sur render a right which should have been exer cised for the protection of interests of the people This executive action has already been made the excuse for the Issue of more than S250000000 in bonds and it is impos sible to estimate the amount of bonds which may hereafter be issued If this policy Is continued We are told that any attempt upon the part of the Government to redeem Its obligations In silver would put a premium upon gold but why should It The Bank of France exer cises the right to redeem all bank paper In either gold or silver and yet France main tains the parity between gold and silver at the ratio of 15 to 1 and retains in circula tion more silver per capita than we do In the United States It may be further an swered that our opponents have suggested no feasible plan for avoiding the dangers which they fear The retirement of the greenbacks and treasury notes would not protect the treasury because the same policy which now leads the Secretary of the Treas ury to redeem all Government paper in gold when gold Is demanded will require the re demption of all silver dollars and silver cer tificates in gold if the greenbacks and treas ury notes are withdrawn from circulation More than this if the Government should retire its paper and throw upon the banks the necessity of furnishing coin redemption the banks would exercise the right to fur nish either gold or silver In other words they would exercise the option just as the Government ought to exercise it now The Government must either exercise the right to redeem its obligations In silver when sll j verbis more convenient or it must retire all the sllyer and silver certificates from circu lation and leave nothing but gold as legal tender money Are our opponents willing to outline a financlal system which will carry out their policy to Its legitimate conclusion or will they continue to cloak their designs In ambiguous phrases Necessity for Bimetallism There is an actual necessity for bimetal lism During the last twenty three years legislation has been creating an additional demand for gold and this law created de mand has resulted In Increasing the purchas ing power of each ounce of gold The res toration of bimetallism in the United States will take away from gold just so much of Its purchasing power as was added to It by the demonetization of silver by the United States The sliver dollar Is now held up to the gold dollar by legal tender laws and not by redemption In gold We contend that free and unlimited coinage by the United States alone will raise the bullion value of silver to Its coinage value and thus make silver bullion worth 129 per ounce In gold throughout the world The best known lmr of commerce Is the law of supply and de mand A reduction In the volume of money will raise the purchasing power of the dollar a new demand for silver created by law will raise the price of silver bullion Internation al bimetallists must rest their opposition upon one ground only namely That the supply of silver available for coinage Is too large to be utilized by the United States In discussing this we must consider the ca pacity of our people to use silver and the quantity of silver which can come to our mints We live in a country only partlallly developed our people far surpass any equal number of people in the world In their power to consume and produce Now how much silver can come here Not the coined silver of the world because all of it is more valu able at this time In other lands than it will be at our mints under free coinage We will be required to coin only that which Is not heeded elsewhere but if we stand ready to take and utilize all of It othe na tions will be compelled to buy at the nrlcp I which we fix It is folly to refuse te the people the money which they now need for fear they may hereafter have more than they need By opening our mints to free and unlimited coinage at the present ratio we can create a demand for silver which will keep the price of sliver bullion at 129 per ounce measured by gold Some of our opponents attribute the fall In the value of silver when measured by gold to the fact that during the last quarter of a century the worlds supply of silver has Increased more rapidly than the worlds supply or gold This argument la entirely answered by the fact that during the laBt five years tho annual production of gold has Increased more rapidly than the annual pro duction of silver Our opponents cannot Ig nore the fact that gold Is now going abroad In spite of all legislation intended to pre vent It and no silver Is being coined to take Its place Gold must continue to go abroad as long as the preBont financial policy is adhered to unless we continue to borrow and even then we simply postpone the evll because the amount borrowed with Interest must be repaid In appreciating dollars There Is only one way to stop the increasing flow of gold from our shores and that Is to Btop falling prices Bimetallism will Btop falling prices and will to some extent restore prices by reducing the demand for gold Will Be No Fifty Cent Dollars Perhaps the most persistent misrepresenta tion that we have to meet Is the charge that we are advocating the payment of debts In 50 cent dollars Under present laws a silver dollar when melted loses nearly half Its value but that will not be true when we es tablish a mint price for Bllver and leave no surplus silver to drag down the price ofi bullion Under bimetallism silver bullion will be worth as much as sliver coin justj as gold bullion is now worth ad much as gold coin and we believe that a sliver dollar will be worth as much as a gold dollar t The charge of repudiation comes with poos grace from those who are Beeklng to add to the weight of existlncr debts bv leelslatlon which makes money dearer and who con- ceal their designs against the general welJ fare under the euphonious pretense thati they are upholding public credit and national honor In answer to the charge that gold will go abroad It muBt be remembered that no gold can leave this country until the owner of the gold receives something in re i turn for it which we would rather have In other words when gold leaves the country those who formerly owned it will be bene j flted There Is no process by which we can be compelled to part with our gold against our will nor Is there any process by which silver can be forced upon us without our consent Tho one thing necessary in order to maintain the parity is to furnish a de mand great enough to utilize all the silver which will come to the mints That Mexico has failed to do this is no proof that the United States would also fail It is often objected that the prices of gold and silver cannot be fixed In relation to each other because of the variation in the relative production of the metals This argument also overlooks the fact that If the demand for both metals at a fixed price Is greater than the supply of both relative production becomes immaterial If as Is asserted by our opponents the free coinage of sliver p Intended only for the benefit of the mine owners it must be remembered that free coinage cannot restore to the mine owners any more than demonetization took away The restoration of silver will bring to the people generally many times as much ad vantage aB the mine owners can obtain from it While It is not the purpose of free coinage to especially aid any particular class yet those who believe that the restora tion of silver is needed by the whole people should not be deterred because an Incidental benefit will come to the mine owner Projects for Change of Ratio The argument that a silver dollar Is heavier than a gold dollar and that there fore silver Is less convenient to carry in large quantities is completely answered by the silver certificate which Is as easily car ried as the gold certificate There are some who while admitting the benefits of bimetal lism object to coinage at the present ratio Those who have advised a change in the ratio have usually suggested that the silver dollar be doubled If this change were made it would necessitate the recolnage ot 4000000000 of silver Into 2000000000 of dollars There would be an Immediate loss of 2000000000 but this would be the leasi of the injury A shrinkage of one half In tho sliver money of the world would mean a shrinkage of one fourth in the total voluma of metallic money The people of the United States would be injured by a change in the ratio not because they produce silver but because they own property and owe debts and they cannot afford to thus decrease tho value of their property or increase the bur den of their debts In 1878 Mr Carlisle said Mankind will be fortunate Indeed If the annual production of gold and silver coin shall keep pace with the annual Increase of population and Industry A change In the ratio Is not necessary Hostile legislation has decreased the demand for silver and low ered its price and by increasing the demand for gold has raised the value of gold when measured by other forms of property We are told that the restoration of bi metallism would be a hardship upon those who have entered Into contracts payable in gold coin but this is a mistake It will be easier to obtain the gold with which to meet a gold contract when most of the people can use silver than It Is now when every one Is trying to secure gold The money which Is by law made a legal tender must In the course of ordinary business be accept ed by ninety nine out of every 100 persons Why should the one hundredth man be per mitted to exempt himself from the general rule Special contracts have a tendency to Increase the demand for a particular kind of money and thus force it to a premium Have not the people a right to say that a comparatively few individuals shall not be permitted to derange the financial system of the nation in order to collect a premium in case they succeed in forcing one kind of money to a premium Wait for No Other Nation In conclusion permit me to say a word in regard to international bimetallism We are not opposed to an international agree ment looking to the restoration of bimetal lism throughout the world The advocates of free coinage have on all occasions shown their willingness to co operate with other nations in the reinstatement of silver but they are not willing to await the pleasure of other governments when immediate relief is needed by the people of the United States We shall not offend other nations when we declare the right of the American people to govern themselves and without let or hin drance from without decide upon every question presented for their consideration In taking this position we simply maintain the dignity of 70000000 citizens who are second to none In their capacity for self government The gold standard has com pelled the American people to pay an ever Increasing tribute to the creditor nations of the world a tribute Jhich no one dares to defend I assert that national honor re quires the United States to secure justice for all Its citizens as well as do justice to all its creditors Honest differences of opinion have always existed and ever will exist as to the legislation best calculated to promote the public weal but when it is seriously asserted that this nation must bow to the will of other nations and accept the policies which they Insist upon the right of self government is assailed nnd until that ques tion is settled all other questions are Insig nificant Citizens of New York I have traveled from the center of the continent to the sea board that I might In the very beginning of the campaign bring you greeting from the people out West and South and assure you that their desire is not to destroy but to build up I ask I expect your co-operation It is true that a few of your financiers would fashion a new figure a figure rep resenting Columbia her hands bound fast with fetters of gold and her face turned to ward the East appealing for assistance to those who live beyond the sea but this figure can never express your idea of this nation With a government which derives Its powers from the consent of the governed secures to the people freedom of conscience freedom of thought and freedom of speech guarantees equal rights to all and promises special privileges to none the United States should be an example in all that is good and the leading spirit in every movement which has for its object the uplifting of the human race The Advance in Machine Work Some idea of the great changes tak ing place in machine work can be ob tained from the fact that when the first monitor was built the tapered bolts used in fastening the turret plates to gether were turned in a common lathe each one separately centered and turn ed in the usual way Now there are machines by which one can turn oiii 1200 tapered bolts in ten hours NOTES ON EDUCATION MATTERS OF INTEREST TO PU PIL AND TEACHER Sir Edwin Arnold on Corporal Pun ishmentNew Dean of Women of Knox College The End of Hazing Seems Near Incompetent Principals The Teacher Taught Sir Edwin Arnold in the volume of autobiography which he has just pub lished tells the unique story of how as master of the Birmingham grammar 3chool he was caned by one of the boys The class was engaged on Cicero Some disordedr occurred near the mas ters chair and seizing the cane he gave a nasty cut upon the too tempt ing back of one youth who seemed to be the offender If you please sir said the boy squirming I did noth ing It was Scudmore that kicked me In the stomach underneath the desk The statement was true Scudmore had demanded from his neighbor quite Illegitimately the explanation of an obscure passage and not being attend ed to had taken this much too emphatic means of enforcing attention Having called the class up Arnold said to the doubly wronged boy who was still rub bing the place It is I who am most to blame for having dealt you an unde served blow Take that cane and give It back to me as hard as you got it No sir the lad answered I cant do that The whole schoolroom was now listening master and all Arnold in sisted Jones you must obey me and If you disobey I am sorry to say I shall make you write out that page of Cicero three times staying to do it Whether it was desperation at this dreadful alternative or the sparkling eyes of his class fellows evidently longing to have the good luck them selves of licking a master that sud denly inspired Jones I know not What I do know is that he reached forth his hand took the cane and dealt me no sham stroke but the severest and most telling cut over my shoulder I had no idea that the ridiculous instrument could sting as it did like a scorpion Rubbing the place in my own turn I managed to thank Jones for his oblig ing compliance and then said to him Break that detestable weapon across your knee and throw it out of the win dow Never will W2 have- anything to do with such methods here Sir Edwin Arnold adds that corporal punlsmment is in his view a cowardly and clumsy expedient and that he who can not teach without the stick had better get some other business Dean of Women Knox College has been most fortu nate in securing Miss Katherine L Courtright of Chicago to be its dean of women In Miss Courtright the young women of Knox will have an ideal example of refined womanliness Her kind and sympathetic disposition is linked with a rare grace and charm of manner Furthermore she is beau tiful with an experssive and attractive face She never attended college but since leaving the high school her KATHEKIXE L COTTnTKIGHT vate study has made her conversant with most college subjects while her wide experience has given her more than a university course offers During her seven years of residence in Chicago she has been very active in educational affairs The first two years she taught in a private fashionable school for girls But wishing to work on a broader scale she established a private school of her own in which studies from kin dergarten to college preparatory were taught Prior to going to Chicago Miss Courtright spent five years in Philadel phia as a teacher in the Wellesley preparatory school After leaving her home in McConnellsville Ohio Miss Courtright had been in the kindergar ten work a year in Lancaster Ohio and a year in Columbus Ohio before oing to Philadelphia Blazing At West Point recently a cadet of the third class who was caught in the act of hazing a plebe was ordered into confinement for one year stripped of all his privileges for the same period including his three months furlough sfor the summer and commanded to do guard duty every Saturday after the return of the other students in the fall The sentence is said to be the most severe that was ever inflicted upon any hazer in the United States but it wilL be sustaiued by public sentiment The chief reason why the authorities of American colleges have not been able to stop the fiendish custom of haz ing was because of their lenient treat ment of offenders In many instances the latter had far exceeded in brutality the acts for which this West Point stu dent is thus made to do penance but the punishment was so light that it bad- no deterrent effect whatever ana tne fun still went on Upon the theory that boys will be boys boys were allowed to become fiends and exercise their most brutal Instincts to the suffer ings of their associates Every proper feeling revolted at much of what they did but still their conduct was con doned or the punishment made only nominal Had the press of the country not taken up the subject it is probable that the custom would still flourish in all Its brutality If the sentence of the West Point offender is carried out it will mark the end of hazing In that institution Let other prominent institutions follow the example If educational institutions tolerate rowdyism and vandalism and thus lay the foundation for bad citizen ship and ignore the very object for which they have been established z were better that their doors should be closed A college ought to make young men better not worse Data Is Wanted The Biographical Committee of the Emma Wlllard Association of Troy Fe- mala Seminary have undertaken the preparation of a biographical record of the 10000 pupils of that school from its founding by Mrs Emma Wlllard In 1821 to the retirement of Mr and Mrsr John N Wlllard In 1872 It Is a colos sal undertaking which has occupied four years and after this month no more data will be sought yet the com mittee wish none to be omitted At their annual banquet next October they hope to have cause for great rejoicing trusting their success will enable them to bring most of the names from the mists of the past to the light of this end of the century Friends or relatives who can give one item of Information in regard to names are earnestly re quested to do so without delay Among the names yet untraced are the follow ing Elizabeth S Adams 1859 Chicago Mary H Bunks 1857 Peru 111 Jane M Bassett 1869 Minneapolis Sarah E Bates 1854 Chicago Mary A Boyd 1847 Calumet Wis Cora Cheever 1868 Ottawa 111 Katrine B Cobb 1859 Waukegan Angie B Conkey 1859 Chicago j Mary H Connick Dubuque Iowa Margaret E Dixon 1860 Dixon III Susan L Dodge 1858 Shawano Wis Stella F Earll 1S68 Chicago III Sarah M Graham 1S50 Dixon 111 Harriet L Grant 1866 Chicago Juliette E Gridley 1855 Bioomington 111 Anna S Hackney 1855 Aurora 111 Nancy R Hall 1S51 Rochester Wis Adele Holbrooke 1852Michigan City Ind Sarah S Jones 1862 Milwaukee Caroline Lee 1S62 Davenport Iowa Anna C Marsh 1869 Chicago Clara B McClintock Alton 111 Charlotte M McKenzie 1S4S Palmyra Wis Isabella W Merrill 1807 Beloit Wis Catherine A Riittle 1801 Chicago f Frances A Sanford 18G1 Chicago Anna P Saunders 1S66 Columbus Ark Caroline B Shaw 1863 Cedar Falls Iowa Theresa Shuler 1866 Dixon III Cornelia A Thompson 1S67 Geneva1 Wis Margaret E Wilson 1869 Denver Colo Isabella Weston 1S61 Davenport la Sarah J Waterman 1865 Sycamore 111 Any information with regard to these or any other unreported pupils of the Troy Female Seminary will be gladly received by the Western secretary SARAH F HOPKINS Kalamazoo Mich Iead Pencils Very often we hear complaints re garding the use of lead pencils in prim ary classes The children are con stantly losing them and much time is wasted in discovering who are without and distributing to them This is the case only when the children are allow ed to have charge of their own pencils A better plan is to have them collected at the end of the day and given out in the morning before nine oclock Of course the pencil should be marked so that every child receives his own A good method of marking consists in pasting securely toward the end of the pencil a small piece of paper on which the name may be written A special set of pencils should be kept for the draw ing lesson Once a week the points should be examined and sharpened where necessary If there are no pupils in the room old enough to do this two or three boys from one of the higher classed will be delighted to attend to it Educational Journal Incompetent Principals The most awful experiment Is to put a girl fresh from the high school on a cram examination without a scintilla of the art of taching or a faint suspi cion cf it in charge of fifty immortal souls and next to that even more aw ful if possible to put a college graduate chock -full of conceit and of little else at the head of a school Thousands of schools are now in charge of principals who have not the faintest idea how to direct and teach teachers Col F W Parker Aided a Composer A curious story is told of the manner in which the Rothschilds aided a fa mous composer The latter was far f roi i rich and his principal income was derived from a snuffbox And this in the way of it The snffbox was given to the composer by Baron James DeJ Rothschild as a token of esteem The impecunious man of music sold it twenty-four hours later for 50 to the same jeweler from whom it had been bought This became known to RothschilcL who gave it again to the musician in the lowing year The next day it returned to the jewelers The traffic continued till the death of the banker and longer still for his sons kept up the tradition to the great satisfaction of the com t poser Nicola Tesla began his career as u electrical inventor when about - r -3 i 4