should have due regard for that great Commonwealth in which the most of, you .have been born and where all of you are now receiving' that training' which is to fit you for the work of your future lives. Every man must have his feet planted on the ground; every career and especially every successful career, begins at home. “Now some of you no doubt will enter upon a study -of statecraft. If you will look at the institutions, at the principles which are em bodied in the Constitution of the United States, you can readily un derstand that they never arose from the teaching of any narrow thought anywhere and you will find that those principles which have been embodied in that important docu ment an'd which have come to be ac cepted by all the States of this great union were those which were pro mulg'ated by William Penn when he founded'the province ot Pennsyl vania: (applause) and, if you look at the success which attends the development of our commercial life to-ilay and our manufactures—that success of which Mr. Carnegie is tile representative—you will learn that the thought which has con trolled American politics fiom the dale of the Inundation of the Gov ernment down to this lime has al ways been regarded as the Penn sylvania idea. ■•Some ol you, no doubt, will en ter the held ot literature. The first American literateur, the first man to devote Ins life to letters, whose work had a broad influence upon English thought, upon Shelley and Coleridge and the men ot his day, was Charles Brockton Brown, ol Philadelphia. You may perhaps not know, but it is a lact, that the first time that the Bible, the first tune that Mdton and Shakespeare and Blackstone and the Vicar of Wakefield and Homer and the Ara bian Nights appeared belore the American people they were printed in that stale in which you were born. Thackeray is recognized by all Englishmen as the leader in the field of literature to which he was devoted. You may not know, but you ought to know, that the first time a work of Thackeray was ever given to the world, it was printed in the city of Philadelphia. “Some of you may enter the field of war. I saw last evening an ex hibition of the skill of you young men in your drill and your training. In the war of the Revolution,Massu chusetts and Virginia stood side by side with Pennsylvania but in the war of 1812 Pennsylvania was de serted by Massachusetts and in the warol the Rebellion Pennsylvania was left by Virginia. In 1776 the Continental Army had fallen down to the small number of 3,000 men. George Washington was almost in despair. I-lis thought was to leave the front and seek shelter upon the Allegheny mountains, thereto con duct a guerrilla warfare. At this time, when the country was in dis tress, fifteen hundred men came to the rescue. With that addition to lus force, giving him half of whaL he had belore in his army, he louglit the battles of Trenton and Prince ton and the tide was turned. It is your pride, as it is mine, that everyone of those 1500 men was a Pennsylvanian. (Applause) In the war of the Rebellion, as some of us who are old enough to remember after the first battle had been MR. t HAS, M SCHWAB fought iiiimiccc'-sI u'ly and (lie rebels had won upon the field ol Bull Run, Abraham Lincoln stood in the capi tal of Washington, expecting every moment that the successlul Con ledorates \\ould capllire Unit capi tal. Inside ol two days 17.000 men came to the rescue and that diffi culty disappeared. Again it is your pride, as it is mine, that every one of those 17,000 men was a Pennsyl vanian. (Applause) “It may be that you will enter in to the lield ol mechanics. The greatest of the sons nl New Eng land—l refer to Benjamin Frank -1 iii—when he started out upon his career, came south ward. The great est of the sous of Virginia—l mean George Washing ton—when lie start ed upon his career, came north ward, and they both met on the soil of Pennsylvania. Now then that example has been followed by oth ers. Voltaire, the great French philosopher, when ii occurred to him to abandon the throes which were then threatening France, thought of coming to this State. Joseph Priestly, the discoverer of oxygen, the great chemist of his day, when fanaticism had driven him from England, came to these valleys and these hilltops and lived near you in the town of Northum berland; and today, let me point this out to you, if your career is to be in the material world devoted to xiechanics and construction, that in the later day it is enough to sav that to the same State came Andrew Carnegie and here was born his successor, your other philanthropic helper, Charles M. Schwab. (Great applause). “Now it only remains for me to say to you that I am pleased to be with you, to see the wonderful suc cess of your institution here, and to say lurther that this great Com monwealth, which has always treat ed you with kindliness and generosi ty. will not forget in the future the liberal treatment which your mer its deserve. ” (Great applause). Immediately following the close of the Governor's address, Presi dent Atherton introduced Mr. Charles M. Schwab, as follow PRESIDENT ATHERTON'S INTRODUC TION OF MR. SCI! WAD “Two years ago, Air. Charles M. Schwab accepted an invitation to deliver the annua! Commencement Address belore this College, partly on account ol his deep interest m every form ot education as a means of promoting the intellectual and moral, as well as the material ad vancement of the community, and parLly because it offered him a suita ble opportunity to correct an errone ous report that he had expiessed himself as opposed to College edu cation in particular. It was his lirsl visit to the College, and he spent several hours in examining' the met hods and results ol work in different departments, and in inter com-e with students and members ol the Faculty. ll.s Address was deliveied m what we now call the Old Chapel, and those of you who were then presenL can well i ecu 11 the scene --the chapel crowded to its lullest capacity on the floor and in the galleries, all students exclud ed except the graduating class, and