The News and Observer. VOL.XLVI. NO. TO. LEADS ILL Him CAROUNA DAIUEB 1 NEWS IIP 0110111111. A MEMORIAL. TO DR, CRAVEN •f • , The Big Brained Founder of Trinity College. A GIFT TO EDUCATION BEST WAV A 111 Oil MAX CAN IN VEST lIIS MONEY. IGNORANCE IS AN INCUBUS ON PROGRESS All Advocates of Education Rejoice in Every Gift to Education, All New Texes and Increased Appro priations. Durham, X. 11, .Juno I).—(Editorial Correspondence.)—-Everybody wlm at tended Trinity .comeneeiucut was greatly pleased with the new Cra ven Memorial Ilia'll which was used for the first time as an auditorium. It will seat 1,500 people, and architectur ally it is the most incasing buiiluiing to the eye on the campus. It is ii model auditorium and -was erected by the alumni aiul l'riends of the college as a fitting memorial of Trinity's great round er. It is a worthy monument of the lug brained man who made Trinity Colliege, for Braxton Craven made Trinity Col lege. The church helped tii'in, lmt it was born in his brain and grew through his learning and self-denying zeal. During the coming year a tine oil portrait of l)r. Craven will be painted and will be per manently placed in the most prominent position in the hall erected by loving hands to his memory. The Craven auditorium has been erect ed at a cost of about $14,000, and is ele gantly and tastefully furnished with modern opera chairs and every other lie cessary adjunct at a cost of something like $2,500. The interior furnishing was the gift of Col. .Julian S. Carr, who has been a generous friend to Trinity, giving help of a substantial character to the great Craven when the college was lo cated in Randolph county, when friends with money were few and far between, as well as haying donated the splendid site in Durham upon which Trinity Col lege is located. The trustees have not completed any plans, so far as 1 could learn, for making the magnificent auditorium also a 11101110 riai of all who helped the college in its early strugges and who are now helping it in its new home. It would be a tine idea to associate tin* names of all of them with that of Craven by having marble tablets placed in the Craven Auditorium. It would not he well to thus honor any of Trinity’s living instructors and friends, but to con tine those memorial tablets-to such men as Jesse A. Cuimiiig gim, Marcus L. Wood, W. H. Branson, John 11. 'Force and others who had min gled their prayers, efforts and gifts in loving service to the college, and to leave room for a tablet to the living friends and benefactors when they have gone to the great university in the skies. Speaking of this method by which the names of ail those friends of the college who had done something great or noble for its advancement could be perpetuated at tin* college, puts me in mind to com mend the Angler Gymnasium as one of the best gifts yet made to Trinity. It is a model gymnasium with swimming pool, and with a competent instructor (Presi dent Southgate says Prof. Whit chouse is the best in 'America), the physical! in struction and development keeps pace with the moral and mental. It is the best phase oif our new education that tile college authorities provide for the care and development of the body as well as the education of the mind. It was not always so. The time was when pale faces marked the collegian who lead his class. By wisely dividing his time, the graduate now conics to receive his di ploma with a sound mind in a sound body, and many of them look more like vigorous youths who do manual 'labor than youths .who burn the midnight oil. No education is worth getting that is obtained at a sacrifice of health, and it is because the public As appreciating that fact that the first class colleges art' giv ing heed to physical culture. * * Trinity is coming to boa rich college. When I read a few days ago that Mrs. Leland Stanford bud deeded projierty worth thirty-eight million dollars as an endowment to the Lola ml Stanford Jr. University, and that a preacher in Con necticut had willed SI,OOO to El on Col lege each giving all that they had to lielp educate the youth. I could hut con trast such bones act ions with such lavish waste of money as the Bradley-Martin's dinners and balls. The late Governor Holt, who was noted for his practical wisdom, speaking to men of wealth gave them this advice, “Invest your money in immortal mind.” It is an investment that cannot he dissipated, but goes on giving larger dividends as five years go by. When the announcement was made at Trinity commencement this week that Mr. B. X. Duke had given an additional fifty thousand dollars to Trinity 1 re joiced that in his large wealth he had the wisdom and generosity to invest much of it in “immortal mind." lie lias given more largely to Trinity than is generally known, and his gifts are always made with the view of laying deep and broad the foundations of the college to which he is a devoted friend. I Jove to see a man give while he lives. He is then certain that it will go to the objects that meet his approval, and besides men of practical judgment like Mr. Washington Duke and Mr. B. X. Duke can increase the value of their .money gifts by helping to direct the ways of using it. * * * The man who said that the best col lege in the world was "a log with Mark Hopkins at one end and a boy at the other” truly understood that the best in struction a boy could get was coming in contact with a great teacher. For the individual boy there can be no college so good for mental training. But the need of the colleges and the universities of to day is more teachers like Mark Hopkins with every modern appliance and equip ment to assist in better fitting the college graduate for the duties of life. The high er institutions of learning in North Caro lina have all been cramped for the lack of money to secure such equipment as is in keeping with the demands of this day. When 1 think how many great teachers at Chapel Hill, 'Trinity, Davidson and Wake Forest have wrought mighty deeds 011 meagre salary and next to no equipment outside of their own brains, I also reflect that many of them were martyrs to their calling. It will not do to say they did a great work wit heat fine laboratories and release from fin ancial worry, and therefore the profes sors of to-day can do it. Many of those old heroes sacrificed their best years try ing to work with dull tools who would have lived longer and wrought twice as well if tiie colleges had been properly en dowed and equipped. * * * I rejoice in every dollar given by a generous man, in every dollar appro priated by tlii> Legislature, and in every dollar of taxation for schools voted by 'the people for the cause of education. 1 do not stop to ask whether it is to teach the three It’s, the Fkissics, pedagogics, agricultural science, and what not. I's it is to lie spent to make a longer term and better facili ties for the public schools in every town ships 1 rejoice most of all, for the great majority of the children of the State will get no education except that which is furnished' in the public schools near their doors. Whether ii is given to he used by denominational colleges or at the State universities and (State supported colleges is relatively a matter of small import ance. The time will not come in this generation when all the institutions we have can reach all tln- Imys and girls who need education. There is no room among those who believe the education of the people tin* matter of paramount importance in North Carotin to turn aside from the great work to speculate as to whether this way or that is the best. Let every man who would remove the incubus of 'ignorance and prejudice work in whatever way seemeth to him best to educate the Iwiys and girls, and entourage larger gifts, larger endow ments. larger appropriations, larger tax es. and larger unity and liberality in the groat work to which they are called. When they have done all they can, they will still be oppressed, with the thought that the har vest is great 'and the laborers few. But every new gift, every increased ap propriation. every fresh vote for larger taxes for schools makes all who are lighting ignorance feel “to thank (lod and take courage.” J. D. AS A MAX SEES dIER. (From the Atchison Globe.) Another Atchison girl who gets S4O a month for sitting in an office will re sign in a few wee as to wash dishes and cook for love and her board. When a girl has a new engagement ring she finds many occasions for feeling if her hack hair is in good order. Mean people say that the man a wid ow selects to support her at her hus band's funeral is the one she usually marries afterward. "Well. 1 see Mrs. Blank is breaking in,” is tlic women’s comment when they read in the paper that Mrs. Blank will give a reception. By the time a man has save up enough 111111 ''.v lo have a palm and a brusscls carpet in his parlor Iris gill has reach ed. the “company” age and he is not allowed to sit there. Several years ago an Atchison man married a slender, modest little d'aliing, and everybody said it was a case of hawk and dove. Now the wife weighs twice as much as her husband, has whiskers and talks bass. Win 11 a wotuiaai is old and bilious she explains it in a poetical way by saying she is fading away like a 'lsl y. W hen a woman begins to admire a man she begins to persecute him. 1 here comes a time to every married woman when dm lias to use a sort of tail'll cure on her belief in tier husband's affections. It is a pitiful truth that women trust Ilnur daughters with men whom their husbands wouldn't trust to open an ac count. -V certain Atchison woman is always invited to serve the brick ice cream at parties, for the reason that she cuts it in such thin slices. Would something terrible happen if a girl forgot to tie up those terrible but tons on the back of lieu* skirt, and is it |H»ssible iinler present fashion conditions for a girl to dress without the assist ance of the neighbors? A POINT THAT ILLUSTRATES. (Irish World.) If France, after aiding Washington and his coinput riot s to drive the English out of America, bad proceeded to make the Fnited States French territory she would have simply anticipated the base betrayal we have been guilty of in try ing to annex the Philippines. In the case of France, which at tile time was a monarchy, the betrayal would not have been of so base a character as ours. She at least in attempting to sub jugate the Americans would not have given tin* lit* to professions aiwmt the inalienable right of men to self-gov ernment. * A household journal says that kero sene will remove rust from stoves. The j objectionable feature about it is that in removing rust it incidentally removes the stove and the domestic sometimes. RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 11, 1899. A KINSTON ROY AT MANILA “The Heat of the Sun in its Direct Rays is Awful.’! AGUINALDO IS ELOQUENT KEEPS UP THE .SIMHITS OF iiiS TROOPS 'EY ORATORY. THE PRODUCTS OF THE ISLANDS ll Has Been Said that Pice is the Corn of the Philippine Islands. Men, Women and Chi’dren Smoke Cigarettes. Mr. Frank 0. Lewis, the youngest son of Dr. Richard 11. Lewis, of Kinston, not yet twenty-one years old, is in Ma nilit, a member of the 20th U. S. In fantry. We are permitted today to lay before our readers, ii is last letter to his mother. It will give the best idea of conditions in the Philippine islands that earn be obtained from any source. It is as follows: Station Santa Cruz, Manila, I*. 1. My Dear Mother: Your most welcome letters came in Hie mail of last week, via. Hong Kong. The one from 1 >r. P. was much enjoy ed. We get mail regularly, al intervals of (generally) nine days. Most of it comes byway of Hong Kong, on regu lar mail steamers; but some of it is brought over on tin* Government trans ports from San Francisco. 1 wish 1 could write to you oftener, but life is an almost continuous round of military duty, hence my neglect, which you may have thought wilful. Our duty is to patrol the district known as Santa Cruz. Four patrols, each composed of a non-com missioned officer and three privates, walk the streets day and night, in addition to that, there are three posts at the quarters. No. 1 has Ins beat in front of the guard house, Nos. 2 and o walk on the right and on the left Hanks of the barracks respectively. As you probably know, martial law is strictly enforced in Manila, now; and these extra heavy guards and numerous patrols are put on to prevent an upris ing of the natives within the city limits. There are, naturally, a great •many insurgent sympathizers in the city; and, if left to themsu were the specially inspired mentor for the A. and M. College, and tin* appoint ed denouncer of the wicked fellow who writes this. It was perhaps a serious error in the faculty of our college to at tempt to attend to their own business without first asking the advice and con sent of the wise and venerable editor of the Recorder. But the fact is that we were totally unaware that, a man who never sets foot inside the precincts of the college, and who knows nothing what ever about tiie work of any man con nected therewith, could'have intuitively such an accurate knowledge of what we should do. We were blindly of the opinion that a tree is known by its fruits, and fondly imagined that tiie crowd of out* graduates occupying posi tions of trust and honor in various parts of tin* country, and the fact that tile wisest business men of the State eagerly take our graduates as soon as they leave the college, was proof at once that the training and education given here will compare favorably with that given in any other college. it is not our fault that you have seen only tin* full dress side and have never seen the men who may wear kid gloves at times, and have earned a right to wear what they please, spending the greater part of their time with blue overalls and leather aprons. There are none so blind, sir, as those who will not see, and the fact is that you do not de sire to see anything good in our college or any of its officers, and have never made yourself in any way familiar with its workings. But it is more especially on a matter of personal importance that I wisli to speak to you now. You have for years lost no opportunity to sling innuendoes and insults at me in your paper. I for a time, attributed them to the fact that you were young and ignorant. But the persistency with which you keep up these attacks shows a spirit that can only be called malicious. I have been told that in this week’s issue of your paper you make sundry charges against me. I am sorry that 1 have not a copy of yous paper at hand. 1 have been told that you charge me with writing scurrilous articles anonymously for the press. Will you kind if/ reproduce any thing that 1 have ever written, signed or unsigned, that contains a word of scurrility, or that in tin* remotest de gree approaches the mendacious scur rility which you have time and again printed about me? I am told that you charge me with compassing the dismissal of two asso ciates who were iheoniparably my su periors. While I do not concede your ability to distinguish between the quali fications of professional teachers, whose work you are profoundly ignorant of, I w ill lie glad if you will name the two gentlemen, or any one. superior or infe rior, whom I have ever tried to get dis missed. Will you also name one gentle man on any of the boards under which i have served who will testify that I ever said to him a word with the pur pose of getting any one dismissed, or who will say that I ever tried to get any place under the board except '! •* one 1 have so long occupied, and wiiieL for nearly ten years I have tred to till faithfully, though begged to go else where at a higher salary? You have also charged that I write articles for pay advising the use of potash. It is true that 1, in advising farmers in regard to the use of fertili zers. do advise the use of potash where potash is important for the crop or the land. It is true also that I advise tin* use of phosphoric acid and nitrogen, and advise the use of phosporic acid to a far larger extent than 1 ever advise the use of potash. I know that the fer tilizer manufacturers rarely use a suffi cient percentage of iwdash for many crops in their mixtures, because it is eelipaer for them to make the phos phates larger in proportion. I have earnestly advised the farmers to mix their own fertilizers, because 1 know that they can save money in doing it. I have been working for the uplifting of tin* agriculture of the South for more years than you can number, and to-day my name is held in thankful re membrance in ten thousand homes all over this broad land for the help I have been able to give them. Yes, I am paid for tin* work I do in this fine, and publishers all over the land are eager to get whatever 1 have time to write. Is not this helping of one’s fellowmeu to better inethos and a wiser use of the gifts of the Great Creator in the soil a w ork just as well *worth pay as the writ ing of falsehoods in a religious paper about your fellow men for an editorial salary? 1 have never written a line in regard to the use of fertilizers or any thing else that was not just what 1 be lieved to be for the best interests of the farmers of our land. I have tried might and main to stop the injudicious way in which commercial fertilizers have been used in the South, and to show our farmers that what they need is ilu* feeding of more stock and the raising of more home-made manure. And I have received the thanks of thousands for tin* help I have given them. Only last week a gentleman from an other State, whose official duties re quired bis attendance here on the United States Court, came to my house and introduced himself, saying that he wished to make the acquaintance of the man who had enabled him to make (Continued on Second Page.)