PPEWOTaHWWWS-M !tX-,? jS ?v ,& . .,&, Tf" it " ?n j 1 1 r 5 - " V 1 - t. ' in ' S " t.) THE SORAOTON TRIBUNE-SATUKDAV, DECEMBER. 20, 1902. 13 ANNUAL NEW ENGLAND DINNER V GOOD Concluded from Page E.) Bo tucrcd Is tho caimo of man here, that making tlio Now EnslamlPurltnn, and ii .. i. .wi,i ,,iii,r. rrntti ill nan who lin hns been luisrVi nvc.r.. slnCO 'tonltlff Mllm misrepresent imd thoe who Ignoio It. down. Tho oM negro, minister selected Tlio "Jury tlmo empanels," undaunted by as tho most Important text In tho biblii. tho threats of envy or tho tnlbca of giccd, i "They pot ,a-gobig, and j thoy coman,t will attend to all the evidence, and nmko ItH vcidlct, and tho will of tho wliciie peo ple, lust unci steadfast, will ho donol Theso nliilu ttutlm I havo said, innlnly upon one aide, mid I will bo ns putltnnly philn ns to tho other. Submitting his ciiho to that piddle JudB jnent to which wo must nil at lust defer, .lohn Mitchell, In his latest statement, as icmnrknbto for Hm lcstnilnt and good temper as for Its clean Ungllsh, h.is nuld this: "It labor makes umeasonabto clc mnnds; It It attempts to dominate through lolenco and Intimidation: If It MMikH to maintain monopoly tliiotiRli sup pression of tho rlBht of others to woik when they nio wlllhiB to work, labor loses Its case. If capital Is unicusonable: it it refuses to nmko any effort towaid adjustment of grievances; If it claims to bo tho solo Judge of wages and conditions, tend, above all, If while itself seeming tho ndvnntnges of combination, It deelnies labor shall not lima tho same advan tages, capital loses Its case." To tills wo must all nBrco. For one, I will grant that ho uttus this in Kood faith. Thero nro piuogiaphs I do not iiBreo to, and silences which I l caret; but this ami motion Is ciltlcal and ccuttnl. at Is right. I think It Is slnceic. If Its ilBhtness is Inslnccio, so much tlio wmsc lor his cause. If it Is slnceic, and those ho speaks for accept It, and do their hu man best to hold weak, or wicked cxtiem ists within its restialnt, then tho woisc for thoso who deny its slnccilty. Have Come to Stay. Unions of labor have conio to stay. Combination and "community of inlet -cst" aio their Inherent right, also. They ato a fact and a factor. They must bo ictognized. They aro recognized, en In ticking them lecognltion. A condition must bo leckoned with. "Docs tho gen tleman," Said tho matter of loct Speaker Heed to ono who violently piotcsted to tho countinc of tho actual ciuoium, "Does tho gentleman deny that ho is present?" Fingers in one's ears Is an ultimatum that two can play at. To hide under tho bedclothes may comfoit tho child, but will not stop tho thunderstorm. Even to n criminal tho law docs not deny tho light to choose his own attorney. Tho ncdcntlals of any spokesman aio fiom thoso who send him, not fiom those to whom ho is sent. Tho principal accred its his agent. Oiganlzed capital speaks thiough its delegate; organized labor has tho same right. If a given envoy is elif llcult, austeic, or offensive, .so much the worse for thoso who commission him. Either party may request a diffcicnt leg ate; but to piescribo how he shall bo chosen, or to refuse all, is to break oft diplomatic rotations. Tho right not to deal through self-sent meddlers does not modify tho duty to recognize thoso who aio properly endorsed. Only fatuity chal lenges tho right of men to act and to .speak collectively and by whom they will. Obviously ono hundred thousand vvoik men cannot btato their cause scpai.Uely to ten executive boards. The question, gentlemen, as to Mr. Bacr, or as to Mr. Mitchell, is not whether ho is in tho cm ploy of tho.so to whom ho goes, but whether ho is authorized by those from whom ho comet.. Tho contention of tho operatois that they may dlctato Just how their men .shall approach them cannot hold its ground beforo American common sense and fair play. It will fall, It falls al icadv; for that public which does not qulbblo knows that practically the United Mine Woikeis ns such, and in the person ot John Mitchell, are bofoio the commis sion and tho country. The uibltrary pie cept Issues, so far, only in mutual exas perations, and furnishes the prollllc op portunities of marplots. Any genuine of lort to agree must listen to all puitles claiming to be such. They Cannot Enjoin. As to tho alleged non-rcsponslbillty ot tho mlneis, because they are not incor porated, lemembor that since they can not be enjoined they cannot enjoin. It is men. ruithor remember that their ad hesion to their woid given is their whole capital. They know thut tho countiy watches thcra in this to see if they be men. Under immense temptation they havo this summer past kept their woid. It is much. It is enough. Incoipoiatlon may be a wise device: but It Is not the Hist and great commandment. As to "compulsory aibltratlon," who wants it? It is a contradiction in terms. 'I ho essenco of aibltratlon is voluntary onsent to take advice. If its obiter dicta me amicably accepted It Is excellent. It it can compel It Is but a new com I, and we aro vvheio wo staited. Agieement find litigation aie two opposite wnjs. It aihl tiatlon could bo cumptiboty It would be superfluous. "Does 'business' mean 'Dlo ion, Hvo I." Then 'Trade is trade' hut sings a lie; 'Tls only war gtown miserly!" Hut, and moi cover, not only must cor porations give tho freedom they take, not treating equity as a thing to bo settled by an cxparto dictum; they must also ad mit and rectify their eriois. Tho public ut present behoves that thero has been evasion of law, that wages have been ia many case3 (not in all) inadequate, that 1ho hireling has been oppressed by com pulsory trade, that ovoi weight tons have been exacted, that little boss have been cheated of Hfo'a blessings by picmatmo labor, that not coal, nlono but tho hcaita of children have gone into the "hieak is," that sacied human lite lies among tho slate and tlio culm. Is it truo? End it! Is It fahoV 1'op Ood's sako provo it so. Tho people de mand to know, and when thoy know they will somehow compel substantial justice, before tho vast, law-abiding, conseivatlvo opinion, which, just because Puritanism is so tremendously oxtnnt and potent, will get itself regaidcd and obeyed! An insertion that ceituln men nio tho "tius. Ke3 of God" can bo wninintcd only by tin equitable and pod-feaiiug admluls tuition ot tho tiust. Is this "nil a sermon? Mnke it a sons! Good men hi a good Innd, and peace to them all: this is the' doctrine and tho zeal of tlio Modern Puiltan, cntcilng into tlio labors of his fatheis, Man! God! Conscience! And tho law tho law of Christ! Dr. Stryker spoke lu a deliberate, strenuous, serious style. His declara tions anent the philosophy of tho btilke question wore provocative of applause, which betokened admiration if not Wi lli o assent. No speaker tho society hits hud in yeais commanded more rapt at tention. "Itoli a Wver AVIdu and Strong," a Hamilton college song, was rendered out of compliment to JJr, Btrvker, The singing vvaa led by "vy. J. Toney, PROP. TILER'S ADDRESS. "The Evolution of the I'ilgilm" was most learnedly and entcitalnngly dis cussed by Prof, John M, Tyler, of Am herst college. He was Introduced by Pi esident 'Welles as a prominent lep lcsentatlve of the New England edu cator, his grandfather .and father having been (college presidents. Pi of, Tyler prefaced his address' with, a few V'ood arid uppioprlate stories, and punctuated it with many ' witticisms and laughable1 anecdotes, He spoke as follows: , ;i)r. Holmes once said that tho education of a child ought to begin at least one hundred and lift) years beforo his birth. Tho good Lord spent over 1,000 icurs in stop." ' Tho Purltun did not always know when to stop. " " ' "' l'nrltnn blood was a marvellous Mend. It was a mixtures ot tenacious, conserva tive Ilicilan: brilliant, quick, versatile, wnrllko, ndaptlblo, proud, Celtic; and of dour Saxon. With nil this thero was mingled a dash of Scandinavian: the hardest, tlorcest, most independent and In dividualistic, of nil tho races of Euiope. Look at an English map of place-names. Notlco the "bjs;" Denby, Derby, Scroo by, etc. Thoso nre nil Scandinavian. So are one-fourth of nil the nnmes of places In Llncohishhe. Somewhat tho fmuo Is truo of adjoining counties. "Where tho Scandinavian nnmes am thickest, the reformation took Its deepest loot, and calvlnlsm flourished. It was tlio homo of tho round-head; while southern Saxon England was cavoller, for church nnd king. You may not like Calvinism, hut It could always "set up a lino of bat tle." Said a Scotchman to one who had promised him a thrashing: "I have no ob jection in tho world to your thrashing me, but, before you begin, I wish to ex press tho hope that you nro In perfect health." A Britlsh-Saxon-Scandlnavlnn cnlvlnlst Is an excellent man to let alone. This Rupert's cavaliers discovered when they met Cromwell's Ironsides. When tho new variety had been pro duced, It was Isolated in a host of farms and villages dotting tho foiests of New England. Ileio a rurltnn laco was de veloped. Natural conditions favored cconomv, sclf-contiol, endurance, rugged ness, independence, self-reliance, and equality of oportunltv for all nllkc. Tho son of tho poorest lnborcr might become squlro or minister, tho ruler of tho com munity. Hero tho "village Hampden" be camo tho statesman of the revolution. Hero tho Purltnn learned to found God fearing, self-governing, states and cities. Early In tho last centiny camo tho great westward migration, which do Tocquevillo described in 1S",0 as a. "deluge ot men, rising unnbatcdly. nnd dailv driven onward by the hand of God." Then Hie Puritan took nossession of tho land, everywhere laving deep and broad foun dations for future Institutions. After him came tho Hood of immigrants from every country ot Europe. The new-comers saw the foundations so wisely marked out and so deeply laid that they could not change them, if tliev would; and would not, it the could. Tho Puritan had fashioned the mold. They could onlv pour in and fill It, nnd take Its form. This is ono of our finest grounds of hope to-day. Tho Puritan had marked virtues, and was admirably fitted for his time and work. If we once lose tho old Putitnn conception of a free, individual, human soul, responsible directly nnd solely to the overliving Jehovah: If we sink in tho Baal-worshlp of a materialistic Philistin ism, it will surely go veiy haid with us The Puritan at his best was not alvvajs agreeable, and when bad, was outrageous. "Pathcr," said one of our best young c It lzens to his farmer sire, who persisted in appearing on the village street In clothes which looked as if thoy had been resur rected behind the barn, "rather, I wl-h you would put on some decent clothe, when vou como Into town. T saw u tho other day, and you looked like the devil " "Now, Asn," said tho old gentleman re provingly, "I didn't look quite as bad as that, did I?" "Yes. you did, sir," re sponded the son. "Well," answered the father, "it I did look like the devil, I want you to understand I calculate to some times." Not Infrequently tlio Puritan seemed to "calculate to." Revolutionary Days. John Jay and Gouverneur Morris were talking ono evening of revolutionary days. Said ono of them: "Did jou ever see such a pack of scoundrels ns theie w as in that second continental congress "No," leplied tho other, "I do not think I ever did." These were somo of our l ev olutionary sires, whose widows until veiy lately drew pensions from a grateful le public, and whose daughters aro tho eieam of society to-day. It tempts somo of us to form a more select association of the descendants of Shay's lebelliou. Tim Puiltan did his work, and did It well. Our work Is very different, but just as difllcult; demanding no less strength and wisdom, and far more tact, hope, wisdom and patience. Wo must assim ilate thoso whom Puiltan institutions and Puritan prosperity has attracted. Wo must not merely govern, we must educ.ito and elevate, or they will drag us down. This is a truism. In a iielghboilng town a woman had made tho round of tho churches stajlng In each one as long as it listened sympa thetically to all her complaints, and sup ported her liberally. When she np pioached tho leading man In tho hist church and informed him that his chrtieli lepresented tho onlv tine faith nnd doc trine, lie said to her: "Madam, I'm very glad that you have seen tho eiror of jour wajs, but as to your Joining our chrucli, just at present we'vo done talcing in." I often wish thai wo could bo "done taking in" heio In America, but that seems Im possible. Tho woik of tho Titan Elilah was cu rled on by tho humane Ellslia. Compaied with the earthquake and lire of Elijah's life, that of his successor was as un obtrusive nnd noiseless as the still small oleo. Yet tlio quiet, shrewd, lovable successor probably accomplished greater positive results than nil his nvistei's power. So we, reeognlzlng the defeotH ns well as the ginndeur of the Puiltan, may well pray: "Lot a doublo poitlou of thy sphlt be upon me." In introducing the next uud lliial speaker, Rev. Joseph II, Odell, of this city, Pi esident Welles said: However much we may voneiato thoso who camo fiom Old England to estnblMi a now civilization, wo cannot overlook the fact that England of the pieseut Is sending to us somo of her best blood, Tho question of assimilating In tho state and nation thoso coming fiom tho south of Emopo gives us much concern lor tho liiture. That fear does not enter our winds with refeieuco to thoso coming fiom England for they nro flesh of our flesh and blood of our blood unci nio lulu eotnors fiom tho land of tho Pllgilms nnd Puiltaus. Wo welcome them and thuy slmio with us the task of pcipctuattug that which is best in our land. They, too, infuse new life into our fieo Institutions and will aid and stiengthen our faith In tho peipetuatlng of our civil and lellgicms llbeitles. The Anglo-Saxon ineo and tho English speaking pcoplo nro destined lo lule tho w oi Id. I tnko ploisuio in In troducing to you one who Ins lectmly made Seinntou his homo uud Held qf la bor, linv, Joseph TI, Odell, who will now nddi ess us on "Now England and Old Eugluud." It was nev. Mr. OdeU's flibt time to be licaid, at length, outside of his pul pit. Ho at once pioved himself no less an after dinner speaker than lie is a pulpiteer, and as the latter lie is ie gaided us one of the lendeis among jounger clergymen of the duy, His In tel uiptions vveio fiequcnt and long by leuson of uppluuse and laughter, It is said that when an Englishman cle shes a better country ho goes to New England, but that when a New England cr desires a better country ho has to go to heaven. This throws somo light on tho question, why the northern colonies were called New England. It was on tho same pi lnciplo as led St! John to cull heaven tho New Jerusalem as being such nn Improvement on tho old Jeiusalem. But lest any descendant of the Pilgrims should be unduly putted up by theso compliments, I would udd thut never hav ing been In Now England you must not consider this uu exact statement or u llnul verdict. THINGS TO DRINK AND WHAT THEY COST. Being thelargest dealers In Pennsylvania, we naturally secure for our patrons tho lowest figures on high-class Wines Whiskies and all other Liquors. Adulterated goods una no place in our une. wo sen oniy inai ' ... ii which is good enough for us to guarantee, it must be understood tnat tne ngures quoted are in no sense bargains, but the greatest measure of real value that money can ouy. GIVE AWAY :WE :NOTHING American WhisKies. Green Valley Pure, liquid velvet. A full quart bot- C Maryland Rye A rye whis key par excellence. B ttled under our direct supervision. I Crt Per bottle l.tJU Bottln. Monogram, C. B. Bottling, 4s $1.00 Sam Thompson 1.0JJ Mount Vernon Distillery Bottling 1.50 Guckcnhelmer Rye, 7 jcais old 1.15 Hollywood Rye 1-25 Kentucky Belle, 4 5 yeais old 1 Q0 Jas. E. Pepper & Co. Coupon Bottling.. 1.00 Antediluvian l-f Meadville Rye 1-10 Duffy's Malt Whiskey SO Tilumph Brand Malt 7C Triumph Brand Rock and Rye x 75 Triumph Brand Rock and Rye x x 1.00 Scotch Whiskies. IMPORTED. Cnse. Dottle. King William IV, V. O. P. Scotch.. ;i9.00 J1.75 Roderick Dhu 15.00 1.50 Usher's O. V. Q. Gold Cup 1l.3o 1 00 Usher'a Special Reserve 12.25 1.25 De War's Old Highland Scotch .... 13 00 1.25 Glenllvet Old Blended, Burke's ... 13.00 1.25 Ramsay's Scotch 12.60 1.25 Hill. Thompson & Co 14.00 1..5 John Robertson's 1300 1.25 John Robertson's Three Star 16 00 1.50 Ramsay's Scotch, C. B. Bottling.. 10.50 1.00 IrisH Whiskies. IMPORTED. Case. Bottle. John Jameson's Heptagon $12.75 $1.15 John Jameson's Three Star 16.00 1.50 John Jameson's One Star 13.75 1.25 Old Bushmills 14.75 1.25 Klnahan's L. L. Irish 13.00 1.25 Buike's Four Star Imported Quarts Round 2050 200 Burke's Four Star Imperial Flasks 20.50 2.00 Buike's Three Star 12.10 1.25 Imported Brandies. JAS. HENNESSY & CO. ( Bottle. One Star J-2" Tlnce Star !" MARTELL BRANDY. One Star .. Thtee Star One Star .. Tluee Star Bottle. ...$1.40 ... 1.C5 OTARD BRANDY. Bottle. ...$130 ... 1.60 The above Brandies, In bulk, from $3.65 to $15.00 per gallon. Domestic Brandies. Bottle. Blackberry Brandy, x $ -50 Blackberry Brandy, xx .5 Blackberry Brandy, x x x 1.00 Cider Brandy, No. 1 1-00 Cider Brandy, No. 2 .7o Peach Brandy 1-00 California Brandy, No. 3 SO California Brandy, No. 3 1.00 California Brandy; very superior, old.... 1.25 Cherry Brandy l-0 Cooking Brandy; superior quality 1.00 R.ums. Bottle. Now England $ .50 Medford co Medfoid, AA 100 St. Croix 1-00 Burke's Jamaica 1.25 London Dock Jamaica 1.25 Jamaica; very old 1.75 Gins. Case. Bottle Burnett's Old Tom $ 9 75 $1.00 Booth's Old Tom 1000 1.00 Burke's Diy Gin 10 00 100 Coates & Co.'s Plymouth 10.73 1.00 Double Palm Tree Case of 15 lai ge bottles 1S.75 1.50 Burke's Dry Sloe Uln 15 00 150 Diamond Gin, Old Tom S 00 .75 Graham & Co.'s Old Tom 7.60 .70 Field, Son & Co.'s Sloe Gin 15.10 155 A full line of Imported Gins from $1.25 to $6.50 per gallon. Tritimph Brand. Bottle Manhattan Martini Whiskey Ready tosPtve $100 Holland Gin Vermouth J California Wines. That at least half the wine con sumed in this country Is the product of the Golden State, is pietty good evidence of their vorth. We handle only the reliable goods. Cabrt Qlfc. Laubenhelmer $ 3.75 Nierstelner 4 00 Hochhelmer 4 25 Premier Bi and Hoch C 50 Riesling 4.25 Burgundy 5 00 Angelica, C. B. Bottling 4 00 Angelica, Premier Biand ... 7.30 Zinfandel, C. B. Bottling.... 1.00 Sauternes Bordeau 5 00 Sauteincs. Premier Biand.. 7.50 Maderia Wine, C. B. Bot tling -too Muscatel Wine. C. B. Bot tling 100 Premier Brand Tokay 10 00 Tokay. C. B. Bottling 7.50 Swet Catawba Wine, x 5 00 Sweet Catawba Wine, x x x. 7.30 Cf-o Per Pts. Bottle. .40 45 ro $7.30 .75 5 25 .50 0 On .50 5.00 .M) S 50 .75 5 00 .60 COO .'il 6 50 .75 5 00 .50 5 00 .60 fl 00 ."u .50 .75 TRIUMPH BRAND PORTS. Gallon. Case. Bottle. Port, x $1.00 $400 .40 Port, xx 1.25 4.75 .50 Port, xxx 150 6.00 .60 Poit Special, xx xx 1.75 5 50 .70 TRIUMPH BRAND SHERRY. Gallon. Case. Bottle. ...$ 100 $4 00 .40 ... 1.23 4.75 .50 ... 1.50 5 00 .60 ... 1.75 5 50 .70 Sherrv, x Sheiry, x x Sherry, xx Sherry Special, x x x x TEMPERATURES AT WHICH WINES SHOULD BE SERVED. Degrees. Rich Champagnes very cold 33 Dry Chuinpignes warmer 40 Rhine WlneH slightly cold 45 Sauternes cool; about 50 Ports moderately cool; about .... 60 Moselle Wines about 15 Sherries and Maderias about 60 Claiets and Burgundies waim. 70 to75 Xhine Wines. IMPORTED. From C. Lnutern & Sohn. Cnse Crio Per Qti 1'ts. Dottle. Laubenhelmer $7.00 $8 00 .70 Nleistelner S 50 I.50 .SO Deideiheimer 8.30 H.50 .SO Hochhelmer 11.23 12.23 $110 JohannisbeigprCabinct,18S4 3130 32.50 2 SO From Henkel & Co. Case Caw Tor Qts Pts. Bottle. Laubeuhclmer $7.00 $8.00 .75 Xleisteiner 7.75 8.7 .SO Deldesheimer 7.75 S.75 .80 Hochhelmer 10 25 11.23 $100 Rudesheimer Beig 16 00 17.00 1.67 Schloss Johannisbciger .... 26 25 27.25 2 35 Moselle Wines. IMPORTED. From Carl Acker. Case Case Tor Qts Pts Bottle. Zeltillger $9 00 $10 00 .115 Braunneheigei 11.00 12 00 $1.15 Jobephshofei 11 50 12 30 1.15 Giancher AUblese 13 30 14 50 1.J0 Imported Clarets. From J. Calvct & Co. Case Case Per Qts Ptb Bottle. St. Kmilioii $6.75 $7.75 .80 St. Estephe 7 40 b 40 .7.i St. Jullen S00 U0O .80 Burgundy Wines. From Jules Regnier & Co. Cnso Caso Per ts. Pts Bottle. lieaujolals- $10 r.O $11.50 $1.00 Macon Vieu 13 00 1400 125 Beaune 15 23 16 23 l.uO From J. Calvet & Co. Case. Quarts. Pints. Beaujolals $ 7.50 $ 8.50 .85 Macon S.OO !) 00 .90 Macon Vieux 900 3000 .90 Beaune, 1889 9.75 10.76 $1.00 Chablls 800 9.00 .90 Chablls, 18S9 13 25 14.25 1.30 Madeira Wines. Gallon. Case. Bottls. Ordinal y, Pale $225 $8.50 .90 Good Medium Color 2.75 10.00 1.10 Old Special. Selected, Old and Dry 4.00 13.00 1.50 Imperial Reserve. Fine Dessert Wine 7.00 19.00 2.00 Imported and Domestic Beers, Ales and Porter. j. Mcmullen & co. White Label. N Dor.on Single In Dozen Original Packages. v Bass' Alp, case ot 4 dozen quarts. .$3.25 $3.40 Bass' Ale, case of 8 dozen pints.... 2.10 2.25 Bass' Ale, case of 8 dozen half-pints 1.35 Guinness' Stout, case of 4 dozen quarts 2.75 3.00 Guinness' Stout, case of 8 dozen -pints 1-00 2.00 Guinness' Stout, case of S dozen half-pints 1.20 1.25 ROBERT SMITH'S PHILA. Dozen Single In Doien Original Taojcagev India Pale Ale, case of 10 do.en $1.25 $1.8.? Blown Stout, case of 10 dozen 1.25 1.35 C. H. EVANS, HUDSON, N. Y. Dozen Single in Dozen Original Packages. India Pale Ale, case of 10 dozen. ...$1.30 $1.45 Porter, cafao of 10 dozen. 1.30 1.45 Imported Beers. Single Uotcu. Culmbaeher, Havaiia $2.00 Wurzbuiger Hofbrau, Munich 2.00 Muncher, Munich 2.00 Frankenbrau, Munich 2 00 Domestic Beers. ANHAEUSER-BUSCH. .tTfd Blngle Eozon, Budweiser, 2 doen pints $3.00 Rebate for empty bottles, $1.00, Budwelber, 2 do?en quaits .,.$4.45 Rebate for empty bottles, $1.20. CASEY BROS.' BOTTLING. Munster Beer, pints, 2 dozen $1.00 Bohemian Beer, pints, 2 dozen 1.00 Portei, pints, 2 dozen ,. 1.00 Potter, one-half pints, 2 dozen 50 THE PLACING OF . i EARLY ORDERS IS ADVISED. -s2? jS? eyBroM 4 r Sales DebartmehtI 2i6 Lackawanna Ave:.. Scran-ton Every Telephone Is Ai Entrance To Our Store. Old 'Phone 2162. New 'Phone 2974. I cannot but think It a misfortune, that my .incestois could not book a passago cm tho Miotlowci; I think that whin they applied at tho Puritan shipping of Iko they found tho esscl bo loaded with spinning wheels, nun chnlis and coats of urms (lor tho p.ihsengei.s had to supply foity odd states and territories with theso gimiantees of tuniily rchpeetubllltj) that there was not mum left even lo swing a hammock. So wo had to stay in old RnMand until the clnjs of tho ciih torn hmiso-a. light nllllctlon which did not work out an oceedlng weight of glory for tho Pllgilm fntliets. That was nn liroparublo loss which they mibtulned, for to lme your peibiiiml effects thiown out onto a dlity duck Is the Uliuleigniton for making good citizens. Do not nllow these liroveronces and li roloviincles to cll jour ojes to my hoi I cms nclmhntloii for Now Unglnnd and her liillueueo. Pniltnnism has been too piolllle in tho past and Is too picgiiaut towaid tho future to bo dlsmUsed with u few teutonics of banter. In fact, If I might biiggest my conception ut the lilting atti tude tow mil this subject, I would fiuor a holemn boivlce, in which, upon our Knees, wo thanked the Almighty for tlio splendid heiolsin uud IntcHtlmablo sacil lieo nnd Immeasurable influeiico of tho men who becutno tho chief ciuneistoncs of tho tcmplo ot llbeuy In tho western woild The least Understood. discover Its picionco earlier, not geneial ly leeognlzed or defined but still there. Tlio BeniiHbancci unconsciously contained Puritanism. Tlio Itennlssauco found its chief souico of inspiration In Oieece. Hut tho classlo levival has not been pmp erly analyzed. At ihbt wo nio naturally Impressed by tho Hellenic power of ex presslon. No stuto of mind or heart Is denied nn ndenunto symbol. Gieek beems to bo the language of self-exposition and of natural ieeIatlon. But this Is not all. Ilepiesslnn Is ns truly a ehumcterlatlo of Hellenism ns CNpiesslon. The Stolo lb ns indigenous ns tho cplcmenn. Law is ns reol as art, Solon as Pel Ides. AVhen tho Itenalbsanco illbcovorod tho epiiblon It did not oveilook tho reptcbblau Tho iiiehltcc turn of tho Itennlj-suiuo (and iiichlteeturo Is a Miy ii liable cilteiion) In embodying Its new found luspltutlon adopted simple foinis tho stately sim plicity of the Check models AVhciovcr tho Bonnlssanoo was opeiatln jou find u letuin to tho studied seciity of tho single pillar as opposed to th" ilusteml columns., ou seo the stem slmplleltv of tho mabslo poitleo aupelbcdlng tlio llani boyant and fanciful tiaceries of tho aoihto. It was tlio ohniuoterlHllo upon which I'm Itanium belzed, but IlellenlHin was not sulllclent iiuthoilly for ptactlc nl r.ngllbhmen and they tinned wth un erring Instinct to Hebinism and fusteind their eyes on tho biicied piophets of iHiae, Theio they found spliltual eot robouitlon of tho pilnelplo and the pi a per bphero for Its application. Not Opposed to Ait, No ono must Imnglnp tlint Puiltaiilsm wns opposed to ait as tut It was only opposed to art as religion, emu wnu huh loml his Hilton cniefully finds nil thu his command, "and send tlum about do ing good as their Master did." Puiltaii lsm was opposed to lellglous hjmbollsni and liuageiy, not as ait, but as a Um tatlcm to idolatry a hludwineo to pmo spltltiMl life. This was how Hebraism mingled with and collected Hellenism, liming gi.isp ed tho piophetlcnl Idea they Immediately put it Into pi.ictlee, Tho menu was luidy nnd no gic.ttor, guilder diumu was oor en.icted in so brief a poilod. It wfis this Ideal of uetlo UghtcousncH that unsheathed tho swotds of tho gieat ibt boldleis England ever know: it was this that eieated the conception of tho nininniiucalth: It was this self samo of tho Puillan sphlt. The lakes of that llfo are In New Ihiglanil, but innumciablo streams flow thence to fertilize faith and thought thioughiiut the land. A consid erable ohnno si cms to How through Seranton, but ocn hi distant states and teultorles, tho biimo spirit distills in gen tle dew to eiieouiagi) htuo and worth. I htio dobcrlbcd Piuitanlsin as clisslc ally sltnplo and practically ilghteous. piodiiclng thu gieat wind, Duty. And my ejes lest upon Its fruit wheioer they turn. When I seo men slnndlng tor ptulty In polltlcnl life, opposing themselves to nil pinilcrois, parasites and cplolteis of tho people: contending that only tho best spirit that dlieeied the i'ilgilm fntheiH I men aio lit to gowin their reiiow men uciosh the sen to people- a continent and and that lc buy oi sell a uito Is niiaie hj, 1,1.11,1 .. nation and Hindu tho men of tho. because It Is chiving n hulio Ils'ht to tho Pm itanlsm the most abused of wolds and tho least uudei stood of movements Is not a theological dogma or an ecclesi astical polity, but an interpretation of llfo. To appieclato its sphlt we must follow Its course through history to Its imitlnir whoio it is checked awhile and best of tho Oreck bplrlt; Colonel Hutch forms milet lakes, standing In admlra- Inson was a connoisseur In aitj X c-ter tlon where it breaks Into spray, angiy Hterry, tlio chaplain of the commcin jet sublime, ns it encounters barriers, ' wealth, was a lover of Titian nnd Mm then tracing, with laboilous steps, ltslDyko; OHcr Cromwell sued llaphael s tortuous way through tho uplands to its cartoons which Chailes II was anxious fountnln In tho far distant hills.. I to bell to provide further means of do- Puiltuulsm was u respectable stream ' buuclieiy nncl nisi; mo classic: mueiicn, in when we flist met It in Bnglaud in the sixteenth century und wo feel tho sur prise of a mun who sees a subterranean river buist out to view where ho least expected it. That tho icigii of Bllzubcth should produce Puritanism Is beyond be lief. If wo uio willing to explore) we may bionzo and marble, weio preberved ocu in tho chaos of tho civil wur. Tlio nttl tudo of tho Puritan towurd urt Is best seem in tho story of Cromwell. Ono duy hi a chuich ho saw twelve silver statins aiul upon lmiuiiy found them to bo the twelve lpostlca. "Melt them down," was Mayllower begin to govern a cnuniry no lino they uaila-il It while thoy weio mill tossing on tho ocean In bilif, it gnvo to tlio Anglo-Saxons tho most con spicuous and potent wend In their c cabuluiy tho won! diit. This was what eieated n r.ico nl gieat mini: men who dined to think what nthi-is unly diestnieil, men who did what others only tlmtighl In Kngliinil the) e-rfoit at formal nUanl zntlon of this idea In tlio stalei fulled be cause reaction was lin-Utiihle'. Yet tho splilt ol PiiiltaiiHni ellel not pc-ilsh, It mingled with llfo In eeiy illu-etliin, and wtiat it could not do In involution it in lomplHhcd by evolution John Hii-haid Orecn, tho least biased of nil hlstoilaiiD, acknowledges that whatever is best lu llngllsh inoi. U uud civil life Is tho pio duet of Pniltiinl-.ni. lu llugliinil, tho two most piofound intellects of tho ceutuiy weio steeped in tho thought of I'liiltiiii Ism. C'uiljle. whose monumental labor has made Ciomwell live again and Iliawnlng, brought up In an Independent Chupel, has its mental and moral traits woven Into tho waip and woof of hU poetrj , " Had Ample Scope. UutX In New England Puritanism had ample copo to developo Itself without tho reaction coubciuent upon overturning an old legimc, 1 need not retell thu story of its experiment. It has justified tho most sanguine) hopes of its pioneers. It Is not only tiuo of Ihiglaud, but of America also, that whaUer Js bebt in moral und civic llfo b tlio embodiment heart uf tho constitution: when I find men insisting that tiuth, Justleo unci hoii estv aio nioio impoilant to the stability and ptogiess or tho nation than wealth, armies und ollltcn. I know that I am lu tho preseueo of the nun ot Now Bm: laiid or of nieii who havo e. night the I'niltiiu sphlt. "When I conio to tho city of Sii.uiton nnd find that hoi ei best citizens, men of bialn and wealth and ptesslug busi ness engage mtnts-inen to whom ovcij nilnntn is valuable, aro, tiovoitheles, un willing to shlik their clvlo duty nnd leady to bene) nn jilliinen to uphold Justice und jneseivo the dignity of law, I honor them, for 1 know that 1 am again lu touch with New nngl-incl-wlth men of tho Puiltan sphlt And when again I notlco that ono of our latest nnd Iniscst and finest edlllces lepresents tho geneioslty of men who bo. llovo Hint to build Into tlio voting men of the city tho diiUtlnn piluclntcs of tiuth, puiity and lovo and hiotheihood, for which tho V" M. C A. stands, is the veiy best niunlelpil patriotism, I feel the strong Influence ol tho Puiltan ieiual call lug foith within mo the btavest and bold est optimism Puxitnn Ideal Still Potent. And finthcr, when at tho call of our pie-uideut, and in obecllencu to the need of tho hour, I seo men of national uumo and funio leaving their homes, sucilllclng their piivuto Intel ests and bitting week after week in a stuffy couit room lu ol der to lnvebtlsutu tho causes of iudub- tilal dlstuib.tiiio and obviate such ig amities in the inline 1 saline) mom sav "All hail,' lor whether thej suj or'fall I nm eoiisclinis tint thu hlghl linn hi, . mi is nun indent in tho nntiol uv miiiii-it is "Now IhiRland and nn.i-i.mil und r must add that thu heiT of ttlil Knglaiid biats lino to tho hunt of New Kngland. Now i.iigiuiiu una mm a gic.iter inllnonco unm old Bnglnnel than shu knows, in Biml unl. llawthoiu.) H leeognlzed as the gli.iti'st Aiueilcim novelist. Longfellow us the tiuest Ahieii uin poet, Ilcucher as tho piluct of Amei Icnn pieiitlu.it. Jhneison ns tho leader ot Aini'ilcnn philosopher. Webstei ns tho Ihbt of Anieilt.iu oi.itois and LdwaieH as Uio piemler ot Ameilcaii theologians. Tint Is not tho lull evteut of her ioco.5 nitlon ami U Unite, but It is plough te show that lhwhiiiil hiib net failed tq up pi 11 into New ihiglaud To hiinio ol jou, wlio hive known only ono laud lib home-, uiv position must bo dlllleult to imiKistnnd IhiBland K my mothei: whin I 1 cached tho estutp of manhood I cam.) Illth; r. not ill I ven by tlio ncecs-ltlcs eit life hut of fieo choice, iittineted bv om aeeoiiiplibhiueiitu and Ideals; and as Uiighiud Is my inothci, Amcilca is my wife. Anil I seo nil iouhiii why I should te.isei to lovo mv mother be cause I lovo my wlte-auei vv ii.it is nio.e.i eoiitiuiy to all piovoibial wit, I dq uutl epect any tioiioln uciwcxu iiicuiict iiueii Bngland nnd Aineika have loo maul ii,i 1,, rnnimon ever to meet ilgaill il i.io.ii. cnmiiut. our loots nio In till biimo soil, our poems, songs and piuvoil .... 1,. tiw, s.ime tongue and wo aio" bot i stiugglhib- towaid tho samo high and loll destiny elishilned lu tho lMiitau IdcJ of Duty. It is slid that th Koli-l-uool tho rolejiratid nl dlainond, Is 1011II half a stciiii) 111" oiuur 111111 iwihk umei ij somo iialivo piinco of I11UU. And Jtj finther uveired thut cadi 'Jewel is i,.,,,i unit 110 btono lu tli 'woilit rJ beuitch It-only tho 0110 half ftm (niJ tho other. Liigiauu unei vunvwe-.e urn believe, ono In two paUs, fapab'l inn ting each tlio other, nut togemei fling nil thu wot Id bcsldo even to gel them. It was 11 few minutes after miti when the banquet was brought close without founulltles, "f.i-