best interests as to expend large sums for punishing and reforming men, rather than in so educating them that punishment and reform would be unnecessary. Since then, the State has had an awakening. Then the annual appro priation to normal and common schools was $1,100,000; now the magnificient sum of $5,500,000 is annually appropriated and wisely expended. Then the influence of State College was limited. Now you reach out into practically every county in the Commonwealth. Your influence is widespread and you stand for all that is vigorous and progressive in this great and mighty Commonwealth. Nor is this accidental. Your trus tees in 1882 builded better than they knew. They saw the field, they measured the possibilities and in the selection of a president they secured to the College and the Commonwealth the services of one who has wrought an influence upon education through out the State second to none. In congratulating you upon your rapid growth and splendid develop ment, as well as upon the creditable showing and successful work of your students who have entered upon the activities of life, let me ex press the hope that the success which you have achieved, may be but the forerunner of greater success, and that your beloved Doctor Ath erton may long be with you. (Ap plause ) It is eminently fitting that a free people should set apart memorial days upon which tc remind itself of the lives and characters and guiding principles of the men who have rep resented great crises in the history of their development. It is pre-eminently fitting that young men who are just looking forward to the great responsibility of participa ting in guiding that development, should nerve their purpose and in spire their patriotism by the con templation of heroic examples of life and duty. We have met to-day to draw in spiration from the life and charac ter of one of the most impiessive the most commanding, the most widely acknowledged and the most beloved figures in the nation’s his tory. Four years from yesterday will occur the hundredth anniversary of his birth. ' Already the press, al ways active and alert to catch the trend of pub.ic thought is suggest ing a proper commemoration or the event. Mo thing could be more ap propriate. While such a celebration would probably and properly be under the direction of ttie Govern ment, it should be upon such broad and popular lines as to call out the spontaneous activities of all those who love their country, regardless of color, race or creed. Such a celebration would give an impetus to the things he stood for and would tend to deepen and intensify the regard in which he is held by a grateful people, but such an event, as well as me gathering this day ot the thousands upon thousands throughout the length and breadth of Hie land would oe purpose-ess in deed, un.ess m it were caught some v.tal, some upiitting thought which might build up and strengthen and renovate the nation he did so much to save. To dwell upon his greatness, or to tell ot his services would be need less m this pamoac presence ; to re count the b.essings which have come to the naticn ihiough him would up on this occasion be impracticable if not indeed impossible. Ihere tore it you will peunit me I shall, in the tew words 1 have to say, ad dress myself not to the great and mighty events in which he was such an acave and important factor, nor to the detai.s ot the great conflict which tried nis own and all men’s souls but ra.her to the little things which titled and equipped him tor tne unpieceaented burdens, the awful conflicts and the great victor ies which weie his lot. By little things I mean the things which in uns busy, bustling and material age, aie thought by some to be lithe, but which when viewed in iinal aiialj s.s are among the greatest m the wond. Une of the little things of which I speak was his reverence for his mother. Of a.l the things he ever said or did, none struck a truer note, none came more directly from the innermost receses of his gieat and lender heart than when he said, ‘ ‘ All that I am or hope to be, I owe to my aged molher. " The world owes the memory of that mother a debt of lasting gratitude that in the nine short years she was spared to him she impressed upon his heart and soul, the large trustfulness, the loving unselfishness, the firm faith in Divine Providence with which she herself was so giaciousiy endowed. In accounting tor the greatness of the man, his mother and things she taught him must not be left out of the reckoning. Then, too, in his humble environ ment he was not handicapped by wealth. Wealth to any young man is a menace and to many an utter ruin. Statistics show that only one young man in seventeen knows enough to use wisely money that is inherited. Very few men, young or old, do things unless impelled by necessity —and necessity is not bom ot luxury. Lincoln little dreamed of the great part he was to p.ay in human aitairs and m the wond’s history. But he knew that he needed to be properly equipped for life’s duties and baities, whatever the battles might be and wherever the duties might lead. tie knew that to be thus equipped, knowledge and mental discipline must be gained and that knowledge and pow er couid not be separate and apart fiom righteousness —God’s law iiom whence it alone can come. He knew that God’s law must be written upon the heart and slamped upon the toiehead. He thoroughly believed in the Fatherhood of God and the brotheihoodof man. Truth and candor in every phase of his life stood out in bold relief. J.iis love of justice and fair play, in which he is so closely followed by our present chief executive,formed a conspicuous part in his mighty make up. He be.ieved in the simple li.e, and 1m was untainted by the degrading pas sions of envy, malice or hatred. He well knew that some things which were legally right, were moiaily wrong and he was morally great enough to say so, though m uomg so he should star.d a'or.e. His rnagr.ar.in.i.y—his soberness and tempeiance are known and read of ah men. His heroic devotion to duty and .principle, stamped him and sated him from many a tall. But it i were to point out ihe one most striking feature in the life oi Lincoln, the one which seems to in clude a.l the lest and the one which is the sure lesult of the spirit’s power, it would be his great usefulness. It is an ennobling trait and it is this alone that develops true greatness. There