10 Conservative. view of the importance of agriculture iu the ecouoinic life of the country adequate measures for the efficient agricultural education of our people , nearly one-half of whom are engaged in agriculture , are lacking. He refers to the impossibility of securing , on demand from the civil service commission , per sons qualified to servo as assistants in the scientific divisions of the department. The training of the necessary exports has to bo done in the department itself , and then when their full measure of usefulness is attained wealthy insti tutions take them from the service by offering much higher salaries than the department is authorized to pay. Arrangements have been made with the civil service commission to make a register of the graduates of the land- grant colleges. From this register young men will be selected to assist in the scientific divisions at very small pay but with special opportunities for post graduate study such as no university in the land supplies. By this means it is hoped that the department will have a force from which to not only fill vacan cies when wealthy institutions take away the department's trained men , but possibly , also , to supply agricultural stations and other scientific institutions with men of superior scientific attain ments. This is a step intended to com plete the educational system provided in the endowment of agricultural ex periment stations and agricultural colleges. The work so proposed will entail but moderate expense , and the secretary expresses the hope that it will meet with the approval of congress. Reference is made to the gratifying evidence of growing interest in the sub ject of elementary instruction in sciences relating to agriculture , and to the progress made in this regard since the secretary presented his last annual report. CLEVELAND ON "SUCCESS. " Former President Cleveland , in dis cussing the question , "How to Make the Most of One's Self , " has written the following : "The merit of the successful man , who has struggled with difficulties and disadvantages , must bo judged by the kind of success he has achieved , by the use he makes of it , and by its effect up on his character and life. If his success is clean and wholesome , if he uses it to make his fellows better and happier , and if he faithfully responds in all the obligations of a liberal , public-spirited , useful citizen , his struggles should add immensely to the honor and considera tion he deserves. "If , on the other hand , his success is of the grasping , sordid kind , if he clutches it closely for his selfish gratifi cation , and if with success he is bank rupt in character , sordidly mean , use less as a citizen , or of evil influence in his relations with his fellowmen , his struggles should not save him from con tempt. Those included in either of these classes may in the ordinary accep tation bo termed self-made men , but it is quite evident that there are so called self-made men not worth the making. "The men who fit themselves to benefit and improve human conditions according to their environments , who , if they fulfill their mission , learn that the fruits they gather are sweetest when shared by others and who cheerfully yield in benefactions to their fellowmen - men self-imposed tithes in kind from their accumulations of hand , mind , or heart these are the self-made men because they can only bo the products of self-endeavor and struggle , often to overcome external difficulties and dis advantages , and always to improve whatever opportunities are within their reach , to subdue the selfishness of human nature , and to stimulate its noblest aspirations. "Tho construction of such men re quires fit material and the use of proper tools. Some grades of material may be capable of better finish and finer form than others , but all will yield sufficient ly to treatment to become strong , durable , and useful. "Among the tools to be used in the construction of the best quality of self- made men , education is of vital im portance. Its share of the work con sists in so strengthening and fashioning the grain and fiber of the material as to develop its greatest power and fit it for the most extensive and varied service. ' This process cannot bo neglected with the expectation of satisfactory results , and its thoroughness and effectiveness must depend upon the excellence - cellenco aud condition of the tool em ployed and the skill andcaro with which it is used. ' 'Tho extension of our school system ought to stimulate the desire of pupils to enjoy larger opportunities. The old superstition concerning the close rela tions between the greatness of the self- made man and meager educational ad vantages is fast disappearing. Parents are more general convinced that the time and money invested in a college course for their children are not wasted. "Young men don't fully realise the great benefit they as individuals would derive from a liberal education. But even if oblivious to this it would seem that the obligation resting upon them to do their share toward furnishing to our country the kind of self-made men it so much needs at this momentous period in our history ought to incite them to outer upon this duty in the surest and most effective manner. "Wo need the right kind of educated self-mado men in our business circles , on our farms , and everywhere. "We need them for the good they may do by raising the standard of in telligence within their field of influence ; we need them for the evidence they may furnish that education is a profit able factor in all vocations and in all the ordinary affairs of a community , and wo especially and sorely need such men abundantly distributed among our people for what they may do in pa triotically steadying the currents of political sentiment and action. In a country like ours , where the people are its rulers , it is exceedingly unfortunate that there be so many blind followers of the lying partisan and the flattering demagogue. "Tho mass of our American citizen ship can be and ought to be greatly im proved and made a better and safer de pository of our trust in the perpetuity and beneficence of a free government. I believe this can be accomplished by adding to our citizenship more of the leaven of genuine , well-constructed , and well equipped self-made men. "They must be not only well con structed and well equipped , but they should be in sincere sympathy with all that concerns the betterment of the con ditions surrounding them. In other words , they should bo actively useful. "Of all useless men , the most culpably useless are those who , having educa tional acquirements and fitness for beneficial work , , do no more than exploit their acquirements in the false and unhealthy sociability of habitual club life , or only utilize them as aids to the selfish pleasure of constantly restless foreign travel or accessories to other profitless enjoyment. Such a waste of qualifications for valuable service is especially blameworthy in a country like ours , where so many national prob lems remain unsolved and where vast development awaits the most strenuous and intelligent effort. "There should be no cause for de pression in recalling the fact that suc cess will not always bring to our self- made men either riches or fame. Though these rewards would be lavishly distributed , he to whom they may not be forthcoming , if he endures to the end and remains true to himself and his mission , will have in his own keeping a more valuable reward in the con sciousness of duty well and faithfully performed. Popular applause is , of course , gratifying , but there are times when a man's own satisfaction with his conduct is a better criterion of real merit. " In conclusion Mr. Cleveland says the obligations of wealth and education are equally binding ; the rich man should restrain himself from purse-proud super iority and the educated one from super stitious loftiness. Now when partisan ship , he says , assumes to lead and hosts follow without reason , it is time when intelligence and education should hear a cell to duty. New York World. Tk