500 invited quests assembled in Hie Armory for luncheon. At 2 o'clock in the afternoon Hie quests assem bled in the new Library building, the body of students, Faculty, Trus tees and speakers, with the Gov ernor and Major-General Miller ,oc cupying* the main floor, and others, as lar as space allowed, the galleries. President Atherton, introducing the proceedings of the attemoon. said: ‘•I have great happiness in this day. It is not my pirt to speak, because speaking is, in a sense, superficial, while feeling is deep, and, in the limes of deepest fe.eling, speech isinadequate. No speech could express tlie sense of deep and abiding gratitude that I leel today, and have long left toward the doner of this beautiful and useful building. I teel a '-till deeper sense ol gr.ititue, if he will not think it un appreciative, for the times in which we live which make all this possible and for the light of civilization hand ed down from geuei.ition to goner i tio*i which is pieservod to a greater extent in bonks than : .u any oilier single institution. “Just as some men litre up into a bright 1 ight auddisappenr, as snm»‘ m<*n shoot liken meteor across t ho skies .mil are hen rd of no more, w Idle <>t hoi s burn on steadily like the planets, so the g rea t in tellect ua I a ud .spiritual forces that move the wot Id run in tue deep and silent, the loreeful and all com pelling streams which draw together tile best in humanity that we call civ ilization. .There are book*- evanesceii’, books Unit, have tile r biief day, perhaps cause a smile or a tear or a blush to pass across the fire of lium.milv, and th-n are forgotten; but the great honks which embody the gre.it soul of humanity, arc preset ved and handed down in Libianes; and, Ihere.fore, our guest and benefactor <»l to-day may well be happy that the in spiration came to him in due lime (<> identity himself for all time with that great stream of human thought and human itillticiicc that not omv pro serves the best of what the world has done, but furnishes the guiding model and the guiding authority, a.s it weio. for the gener »lions to come. 11 ere the young men who are very soon to join the ranks of those who arc bearing t lie 1 mi dons <<| lip* m.iy p i r ticipate in this heneiii ami lie biought into contact with that great Hood of life of which we form a part. “It was at first thought that the sum of $lOO,OOO would be adequate for the erection of this building; but, later, on finding from a very slight inquiry the growth of the institution and its prom ise for tlie future, Mr. Carnegie volun tarily added another $50,000 without condition, saying that he would hold the College responsible for the right expenditure and use of it, and I should like, if time permitted, to show you how all this interior lias been adapted to use without any sacri fice of beauty and how we have tried to- equip this as the great work mg Liboralory of the living soul of the Institution. We hope that it will be a laboratm v in the truest and and highest sense, and I now have the greatest plea.su.re and honor in pi e* sotiUug Mi. Andrew Carnegie, llie donor of the building.** (Great ap piai/se ) Mr. Carnegie said: “Mr. President,yourlCxcellency, La dies and Gentlemen—and last but not least the students of State College: Permit me to indulge in a few words, giving- you my impressions, betoie we proceed to this other matter. “it i.s twenty veins since I was here uid I feel like Rip Van Winkle nfiei lie had slept twenty wars, (laughter) (applause) to come and see what we M.tve seen to-day winch has impressed Mis. Carnegie and m\self so deeply. This is a gieat evolution. This High l*;x G(A f . J AM. A. HEAVER t’ubhsm-d by Uouriosy ot tv.insylyama (M School ior Fannors*—Karmei.s* Hig!i School —(laugli ter) (appiause) i liml has now nineteen courses, embiacmg all simjects ol human know lege. Twemy yonisugo I loimd 170 .students Imre Mill mm i hud between 700 a ml 800 and Hie cry is ••suit they come.” (Luigh 'ter) (applause.) I lcjoice amidst the great changes we see, that one thing na.s not changed and that is this gen tlctncu here (pointing to Dr. Atherton.) (Applause) iiejoiceto see him sup ported by my litelong iriend, General iienve**. (Applause). “One word to the students. I wish you would takedown the Encyclopedia Oritnnuica, if you choose, and read up Universities. I come iioio just crammed with knowledge on the subject. (Laughter) I could speak lo you for an hour and you would say, ‘What a man that Carnegie is!* (Laughter) I know all about them. The evolution which education has undergone is very strik ing. You gentlemen of the caps and gowns know all about that. The pagan sellouts were swept away and the monastic ami cathedral schools arose in their place. Tne one taught how to be monks and the other taught how to be priests and that was about ail that civilization thought worthy ut teaching in thuse clay s. That passed away. Tnen came tue era ot the universities. They got into trouble. Metaphysics and logic you know set the universi ties i*>t the world lighting; there was au active wartaie between them for two centuries; tue realists held sway in Paris and the nominalists in Heidcl burg, and so on. Then came the Ital ian Universities;—Gentlemen, that is alt encyclopedia (laughter) (applause). Don’t forget to read tn.it encyclopedia andgelitolt you know. Tue result of it w i*, h i.vever, tu it they got into quarrels on metaphysics and that was the one tiling then; all Paris was simply mad in the twelfth century on that new idea. Very well, you liud traces ot that to-day. Tntre are two gentlemen that I know in Britain, one of them is the prime minister, Balfour, and the other is Mr. Haldane, both high up in metaphysics. One of them wasted his time in preparing lec tures lor St. Andrew’s Umvci-ity ot which I have the honor to be Ford Kec tor and, of course, he wound up in a mass of words and ielt the subject just whoie he began. Mr. Baliuiir nas tolcl us that we know nothing- and what we do know we don’t know that we know’. (Laughter) (applause). “Gentlemen, you get a good thing from a Scotchman now amt lhei>. (Uaughlei) Here is a dehuiiion of metaphysics. ‘Edwin,’ tile young sheplieid said to the cldet, •Edwin, wliat is liieta leesics?’ ‘Saundy, nictafeesics is when ye man is trying to tell ither men all aoouc a subject he caniia* know ouytliiiig* about himself.’ “Now, gentlemen, we ha ve gotten out of metaptiysics, we have relegated that lo the proper place blit let Us pay a tribute to the ancient classics, be cause, if it hadn't been fur the ancient classics vrn could never have gotten into the earlier Universities anything but tlieuiogv atm metaphysics. That was the medium through which our knowledge of literature was out.lined. Ol course llh.v have been elevated away beyond their desei Is, because we had nothing else. “Now I want to sav how proud I am, standing heie today, to hail tlie State Cuhege of Pennsylvania as one of the pioneers in the reform of educa tion. Your President tells us that the English course is unusually complete and thorough and that tiiat may be taken as tlie general character of the educational work of tiiis institution, and he says lo us, wc teacli the American literature first. That is right, to teach American history first (applause) and it is proper to follow that with the literature that your own race has produced wherever the Eng lish tongue is spoken. But what is