ndrew Dickson White Papers , , Reel 53., March 1890July1890 ,.James - Morgan t s return to the Cornell faculty. was discussed in:a C. K. Adams ;1t ter on March 15 and in April"Henry T. Eddy wrote in detail abo Hart's character and ability. Herbert Baxter Adams wrote in'March f the offer he had received from the University of Chicago. ' The orrill education bill before Congress was the subject-of many , e*ters. in July from George:W:.'Atherton and Others ::: The distr4.bution OfPhotograPhs'Of the memorial statue. of Mit: White and of:White' 1 My Reminiscences of Ezra Cornell' inspired maw letters of thanks. Gilman, William Lecky, and Frederick York Powell were partidaarly charmed with the Cornell biography. • Following the U. S. Supreme Court decision on the McGraw-Fiske case in May White wrO•te insistent letters to Fiske, suggesting he set „• up a trust SQ that funds for the university would not be subject to . further: litigation: - ;Pha As White app; oached his second marriage the changes-1in domestic /./ -- arrangentswere'peplexing. Business / relations • with his brOtber'shOwed d".strain in,-6,tterT-of-JulY T3and-on-Jtbe - 26th Horace wrote thateach,14 them woUld-b represented by his lawyer son in settling •A real estate _ •• • • • . dispute... There were letters from Francis Wayland as well as Frank B.. -. '50,hbornotti'behalf-of the',Americdn Social Science Association, and . note-- ,Worthy letters trOmiludolPh:BrUnnoW,- John M. Francis, Howard -and .Stuart Weld. , REEL 53 Segment March 3.890 Aprit 1890 Segmen May 1890 • June 0 Segment 3 J une 1 =18-9-0 y 189 , " he AndrewDiçkson White a, Oine • . Univ.ersi .4 . f.t.! , MICROFILM by PHOTO SCIENCE 047474 •;` . • • -. H. B. RIODAWAY, D. D. M, RAYMOND, D. D., LL.D. O. F. BRADLEY, B. D. ,. M. S. TERRY, D. D. 0. W. BENNETT,. O. D.', LL.D., , R. M. , pumNabK, A. M. .INSTItUTE4 / /7C 1 'IA. (7 47. - 11 ' i ,-,., ',),- c.e...,,,-:-;;;..., , „ "_-,-.4: •,:. _2 i/:; „. , , N ." kt,144,-'17,s-- 6.....„. „4i1e1ra7.4.--4.- — e ::,--.`'L., 4-re - . 1 AL ,,I ri t I Z-le•-• Ceorl.."44-,t,C....8.,e-44,=.12PAV', s °A.1"r- 44......" .4.....e.•°,4 L'...,Z4:11 - s/ii / /71 s 0, 454_j 41 4C.,7411,:•) !.„<,;'61',., -.. THIS PAPER HAS THE LARGEST CIRCULATION OF ANY DAILY IN THE STATE W.. H. MATHEWS,. 'PrinlliaNT,. .WARD' N. P. POND, - TRLAliURER,. cei• ONE, A PENNY ._ OFFICE OF THE HAS CONNECTED. WITH THE PRINTINO ,, . DEPARTMENT THE LARGEST DOON'AND JOB ' ESTABLISHMENT IN'ROOHEST,E11. PUBLISHERS. • 6, / f/ 6 4 A '11 • aA0 °D.'""t0:42 , 7( , 4,"471.4-...-..-... .•,:::,/' ..,:,"/or.f,<(;,,'';1.4,5-,4'"4',-1'-"..7";i':-.,-,-,......... h. ,.... .• .....", ,ff : .4 . ,•;-•-. ....----- (..,,,%-.1---4:A-c---c,:,..-4..-1,. / J. ,..;....;;; . •......,....4,4:C..],i0-0,, ,z:4 - f'-- , • 6'''' . ? --7 :'..‘ ..!•:,•..,f".!,,,.. , .P...-.-.. ' f ...,..., ..,•=- :AA:A....,4,- hi • " , -7,, 6/. .1' (......--.,:ii- , r( v•e • eg--/ e‘-I2 AA- Wet--14--•-- ' cei_1( , 04 .F•AM instance done, .41aSSed kit enomena to null4‘ y, irrao•i!punaane here" .s liki ultuiate the exa1 generally classed asmeteor sel.enceilpay somewaht as the false xxxk'xxxxxx*xxxicxxxxXxxxxxxx.xxxr k1*Jit adept et,pp:liant result mayno Le as physically of thcle weather b ureau who managed to give-,;a leas t two eoreet --certain.:forees: erit*ely what 'caUs es . n liti-on or en caprice. The Andrew Dickson White 'equate:1y' are subjective eetlye cannot supernorrna l experiences sualy more or less painful, and almost Inevi , a:U o S: ' C. ,.Unp1daSant7 o theworthy officers of•••:th.04 . *eat.1*.r. , ureau who have , •believe .a recent 'month Ma;naged.:. two.: ._correc. ... forecasts. Now 1 I boldly . affirm that the u tima e of certain :farce's sometimes modifying What we call the weather is hot : entirely what is :. usually considered Material r or blind fort e but A to causes or fact- . ors partaking 11 . ti what we usually call ,volition or even caprice. n The Storm Cloud. of' the Nineteenth Centur John Ritskin pres n s intutional Onclusions as to this stuPerid,91:i8 fact. There is v, • 3 ed s hsb senges •and. ,Maybe. ere 12.#:re ..,13.r9.9f' ..agaiht! ..- em. e knoviT t a. .an-imals.:'both pel an suffer frOm caus es ••• o not note and are- safe against: or instance h. . no •question among Many intelligent Observers who have studied cer alp barbarian tribes but that the Obi rain.maker, is not alwaY.s a. humbug. Doubtless it will : Seem monstrous to you that the stories : of nd.ine and the:,,Fairy Morgana have a' sub-Stratut of ac e-interbl.ending o the subjective with the obect1ve cannot be adequately realized, except through supernormal experiences which are de, ato , usually more or less painful and• almost tnevit- ably decidedly afrightitg to the -inheren traven animal soul. Nous even among the h.ardi'et- a mere ' physical power, Out of your far great e reading rou may supp 'many insta.nces f the yp e o .f the • — Zulu warriors whose reckless rushL1i$jabito obliterate with mere cutt ing hardware the sate 'bullets sp itting British lines that sufficed to stop the serritd Russians in the Crimean wrncL y these same warl]ke blacks would cower(' where a delicate :Aritercan scholar. endowed with the h.uman. soul or• Rkgx.x psych r what •the Hindoo -wiseipan sal he fifth principle and the western.mysti.cs he anima divina would be proof a,ga —fit all supr oue errars. No Weanyou b6tipti"tti -a , "-t-h'e—'`,Elava;ge—rnan to .certain influences o math.er, nature with whom he is So closely .en aport.may render him so much the more awake andsuSdeptib&e t o Ighat has t,4..e. costly and inept burlesque taught in institUtions. asc biologSave the Mark As a:.Spiende of life 1• it seems : e' no uSe to it s alleged exper s o say concerning th auric diff rencew between what .are. ' ,.vaguely known as the t emp.erientr. Ho* ca the immUriity of tile red—headed, sanuine 1 d rufous 'person . agai et . the Yriyt,hical n'a1ia be otherwise explained ? How Can. the si3gular Potenc certain dark-eyed ..,tempernlants be y the allege wherewith time as. wast ed. • Yale )/ rvar and Cornell.The ethnologists are hump _col or is zmzo- re than skOn.deep and Darwins observations thereon a zh, er1itary an sexual selection are as misleading as a warped comp as5-wh.en app lied to the human family being raversed._ by luny wholly outside his ken. But this is too vague and disl.Uri3ive meant to say -that, • -:.'the,.:a.ut,34 .rie::piC..tUres. - Where a face ; i. defined—by ro ck or, o_ila„e_ e...land.scap e :unp er_c eit ed_b casual observation is_a very crude ustzttion of the interblendin g of he .0 ect , ve re.a ms• reats monograph n Beeth oven hard _Wagner. takes •t4. die mo -and T. u:ciT: effort . that - .h.as c oine under :: eye to. formulat e "in - thinkable t<,rms tho e various phase of ilisansailesnassx conscieusnes that elude de. 2414-1.-e definite exposition ,even by thse whp attain ;:iherti.; and no more'•'fox exist for ordinary mankind than the twelfth mass certain -Phybica.1 , wkich the more obdurat e white man neither for a dear mut e. But to' return to the Aspha3.titS n our zeal for the neglected ptlys,co- pyhsi,ca. 44..4.4,1L-ed • e of extstance '.Apropo oTf . the Dead sea I prithee. The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University •1, 047479 \ as come. -under m •..e forFauia, e thinkable trms those Various phases of gensgOtriEszx conScieusness - • that elude de,141,1146 definite .expo ition even by thse whp attain them;" and no more 16ex exist for ordinary mankind than the twelfth litass But to return to the Asphalt it in our . zeal for the neglected, . p ysco-- pyhsical side of extbsta.nce, • Apropos f the Dead .sea I prithee /1 lIp ID the •Siddimin cient,if- 1 ligion; if you have leisure and inclination favor lae with your /- view,' thereon, It is the highest compliment I can pay to any man to express confiden0e that he witu apniprekvad that inanL do not recall wheteher I mentioned in previous note that both the science of acoutics. and ,1--1..fra_as expounded- by Tyndal,and accepted hi) institutions of learning of both continent app ears to be challen replete with rank fal].acies. Irowever I venture. no p-ersolia): çpin- ion on any points ouiside of the living organis* .111- speaking 01 P-ro -e•--d-str-Wilder---as--azoere anat01111=g- monumental reasearch,es or exprilflr other than the most distinguished - consideilt ion .for nOble p ex' sonadit y . Very respectfully yours ;s,;;;wouft '.. The Andrew Dickson White Papers,'Cornell University 04748 0 , lie :1011404i bnttr".illfeelc I001004*s. /. Antintitfittli j•oe?iPl.k.0i..:0..':1, :0••0T;1•4: 1b•o,7w17(11Ail 'ile"*.je*.ef the r.: .tvidOpt#44., itbent .”-. ";*0.1;:t.lirft"petititit:geit'pe11t Otititiible •f'F,ifflqiFiIi:itii•i!nToionoeuTiihtoet.i...c.iO!iiI*1,U0:A'n.ioi-ftht.Fhtei.. .tolili':.(iFiFF,e: tbe.:.'ilinnette;. !bet• -•L'Ailri Pp] i i1l.110. 11'dht nbnut. by 010,., inn:flees!' nitzt;iitie ei el nett iteti'..pi 4entinti i (tan thetiNv.ee.wiiiit3 414, lien' of an iticilizitie et. • leC all ty.'i.,.brinle 104. etrelit-4,0;.lie7telteettitjlte„ yti an,..Avbe There • if v 1IFt4/.4I 0% 1IXle*e.*f01-#:.1f1i.eqit1te0t#te,n'7t1(t)7n4n5f,-oKrifniiPi,t4'Lfrlfti,4:iitlTiltr'(e1n,7k01e*:,,' !,i's1.Iit,itin.I,l1iiTiIt4•..0t.'rtl'.1.i914''4'21,'a1P'.pl0'l3lr•.ig.if,r„'k1eliF"elen1..".i1'l'e1t-.f`i.,t.4T*r.,.4°"ii)1-.:.'1e1-;-,.,'.'".n17'.6'1,.AtF.ti.,i7.e1..i.....1'.-a41.;l'.,(b4ii,.i1,i,,id4r,,tldf.ie7r.twi.4,i1."inP1Ai-ts1.rs4:1!r,i"p:1oi.,1}'.,A.igt:-i1eo.f;..e.1f-:-j,11isi-liidr:nlti6i. 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Iiiid.iiii0kiiiilbii.ls.,;Aliti .-.,:liitie4., eleitt.':, ten tbouiind;Teeple, in :... 1;i.o$ii1itjiiiobi;io1,14.itt0iiiifl'..i....,.:.a,','•i'i.'ts1"0b'.4'•;'#'o.4'c't.:;n„!e.t0.'1Ai.t1iiit.t!i,ti„iioti.lr*.i.q.t.I.otilttiiifoi..!i';i,t..i'4iiii.':tt:tipido-r'4.4t0i$i0lii60ei.0t,'.l.,.. ittineqn i*t4.tsILtig*i.ku..o, t, ii hung tub I . 16, "' (lAtentereii : . the ineter.;. lion",t11.4f liefte,Itie:,1(b044',14,'gOpzio•had f4r Lo 4.400 t ilid nut exist siiiiiIsrI'inttie : He*fo...that .!..e046#00 ..;;.4,00ty., :iii.ioAtio.i, 0 case:) .this : but. the inaludy in this country wija. tteiittk i1 et tt t i IIf1ilIdZI.• • 047481 g,t4 R9 U T E 14Ew :16 Ft< ICAG9 LIMITED ‘PE.1111SY ISA 14 IA 1.11 NES , F'dLLAAAN vEsTil3ULE Zbe PennovOania gfate Coffey, PRESIDENT'S OFFICE. gifafe toffig entre Co., e.f 5 O'Olook, Lectures, by HON. ANDREW WHITE, Late U. 'S .. Minister Itis propo -ed to invite - Mr'White to deliver, at some central public say three times a weekduring April his course of w ye lectures lecture to begin promptly at five_ and._ end. at 'six P. Mr. White l. s researches in knownintellectual and. literary abilltyi structive series of readings: J.• Havey-' ,e3.rce, Wirt tekti(r /. /5 711 ' N. K;2 FaiAanki>.1 1 /ift'All Jos8egp8h/op•era 6.1 P use LJO, .g I ,•.% 1 ' (4' Etg8 Operay,,, , IA,' ,i i]s , 1,2 '/.' /,,,,,,Ohicagoi March,34-41890. q i . ,' ., r) V) / pr'"taose to 0iget ,143 a ,O.r„Oular, substarAl.alIy /, 4 hi , (fri . ii''''' /2 • fqi:41, and address it tolii11%-prsdias "ely to subs • cr). .L4 o ti4 ".1 al 0: 0; 0-44,11 — "b •-s , Li) 4,D ti •0 0.3 • cj E • OFFICE Or SPENCER % NEWBURY, ACTING,PROPESSOR OF . GENERAL, °ROAMS AND'APPLIED CHEMISTRY. . - DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY; . CORNELL UNIVERSIT, Ithaca; N. Y., 047 4 88 _ es'APA0400 My dear friend, - Your _letter- came -to' me - this morning, and I hasten to reply that I shall attend to the matter of the got all the threads into my hands. - The statement in regard o Henderson Will be put On file; halis.-)0(Lelm:A,A0 regretted not seeing you at Lakewood as there were_ '1#41ZlZ 1,1 cA",‘,1 several people there whom you would have been very -glad to foLcAtp. , IL_ • and who would have been very much pleased to see you; e-ifik)0At TiCti -eiwA1/4As se . among others a very charming lady of Chicago, a sister of Elisha Mulford, Mrs. Connell. The Commencem-ent at Cornell is on the 19th of Jun, the University of Mi cbigan on the 26th. interested : to know, that the Univefsit y- Senate s-been floundering along having ,,yet7d-one noth-ing . :except- ....___Ing_to.--recommend-th at-Pr o-fessor-Tuttlb -e tranSt,e'r-r-e'd-tbmtlie—. 472AAA., Chair of Modern European History. The committee of the Senate having the matter of the Histpry and political - Scieziice .in\ charge recommended that Mr. Albert Shaw be appointed to the loft vacant,by the transfer of Professor Tuttle. also were inclined to recommend, and would lieve . recommended,' if they had not „supposed it without their jurisdiction, that Professor Burr . be transferred to the department of Ancient and Mediaeval History with the rank of Assistant Professor. The report` of the committee to the Senate consisted then of these' three things and the first one was adopted, but the second one stuck, owing to the •doubt whether the Chair that Professor ,Tuttle now hold 8 is worth keeping up. I was not present during the discussion, but there seems to have been a good deal of windy talk. The whole matter is a very curious episode in also in a good deal o_f doubt as to what ommendation of the Senate will be concerning. the Piofessor of Rhetoric and Comparative Philology. I had a man innthind whom teacher, and a glorious fellow in every way but_ he seems not -.vac ommend. Jamas Morgan Hart of Ci ii c inn at-i ; -formerly -her e_ You of course will remember about him. The testimony con- mine whose opini,on I esteem 'Very highlY, has written that_ ev.ery one “of the questions I asked ; in regard to him rust be answered' adversely, but, per contra, the letters written bymembert Of, the - c ornrni.tt ee have al-1--ba-en an-swered----in you have any positive impression regarding .Hart and his work as at-teacher I wish You would send that impression,immediately Arfn the receipt of this. I am very truly Yours '267- 4-6-e 2-er-‘-a-- Ow- STE 1191Pill •S•i"tt.hTr sEaLewWnnodrIisnsgoca:artnhnko,eIibrIrre'1hidte5goya1uls7iataVErNndPeeeOr.Ed.y.A.r.a.o.igX.OfaEUnuDsnrot.r.sen1-pTl.1yed1nbiEtcye9ar.4le),ptGreiEaxet;vsInsakagnAgdaegtImiYs;.:.ebd4.s.ee'.s4y.la.ol5.gv.n-4eed-0r'beitah*ttce•nkb4iitk1.o;4ift0rfee4q'1esu4-eOenOsndt.di;notttgfoIoltslhnstaeept•iesholaidnnn,.tdihtfeIoenrrrie:1cuo5onnm-y1dtfepiaorabrrt&iil.neiifbnfaiinlTadyynitdcieaeitsnhteh4ee;wcnnvohaemeabrnpeeeaedtnnh:yaaesb•e.1sel.a0reet.nt1,nt'e1:d,in.7stocn7bebteilpTdrt.ebisteseleniRetent_dbleiinraboWlfer.itinfogrWerirtohirns rnage .soixrty days:, :.• ..xo4yrpt • REVD. Er • • OREcR • •Received at <4-e • 5- .12 P A- ik,-e‘ter ' SIP" oc-e- / V • 7_ _ _ March 5th, C/7, z iewkez?; .a ewio'gewpy -' 1(("/2IP Seel' e,/. /14 g orA.. N , I telegraphed you-my acceptance of your very kind invitation to attend the dinner to our late Ministers in Turkey and Greece at the Union League Club on next Monday evening March 10th at 7 30 o t clock. I beg to send this by way of verification. Very: trtily Yaw° leeS .V.Ate ,eleAra.la CUM( aw-0,74;slei/ • , 9 apt 16 r,! ' PRA,AP'e-i4 .4; .11,if,r141.4 The Andrew. Dickson Whit •Pipers Cornell Im serial Photograph Galleries, 712 ARCH STREET. J. P. HARDESON, MANAGER. EJiCOBI,SUPERINTENDENT. HIGHEST PRIZES EVER AWARDED FOR Photographs and Fhgioyftes. F. GUTEKUNST, * Phototype * Department N. E. COR, NINTH AND GIRARD AVE. TERMS : ONE HALF WHEN ORDER 18 t GIVEN. BALANCE ON DELIVERY. ___ ThildAelphia, Ite.newer to yours of e7,44 , --e. e.A/ //17 Ark-th---- Ar,Ler_4. ó /4- a, h AZa 4.64 v Xlec.741 .tr:lo 1,7 .v.artmtrir OFFICt OF POPULAR SCIENCE MO 1, 3 & 5 BOND ST V THE TWENTIETH CENTURY CLUB CHICAGO. The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell Universi MfIr21.1C1Inrr.T.MTP.4T1TIm'finMInx ,meIVIV, LIA-t .40 iteet'}e /Al ozed-&- ez /1/ + bt1-1-ei -d-e/711/bC t1;( 4 / T A/ iffdlt 11110.' 0-eu/14-( _ Id orthern ChYistian Actv REV. Ô. H. w REN, D. D., EDITOR. J. P. EMI N, AoRNT. 31TABLISEIED 1840. ' TERMS, $2.00 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. /8 /14 4--4/'-1 lie • .&e-f---(_ kee---c-7-r" - at_e a e oleX.0-e Pr 1-z--e---e-t /-c=e-"W Kd_ee -4- evli>, a K7e-t erz- -c,t-er; c .10, - e 4--) 4111vav (7(-) ‘‘ k „- 76 - I /c7 / ,21k Ace..d 6frt The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell University ta 047506 • L.3 I °.1 Northern C ristian Advocate. REV. 0. H. WARREN, D. D., Epriiit. J. P. GRIFFIN, AGENT. • ESTABLISHED 1840. jAyta./c4.4.5./r--, Time, $2.00 A YEAR, IN ADVANOE. 8/ 12/2.-72 a ,e-z dcz e&-Z- c le,4 0 Or re(Ze/-Z,ee ••"s s••• s•ss aee:d-11-4-4/ 4C1-e--e e / -Ae-e e...a-ti-ig _,7 4,-V ---- / , 1a e-- e ‘--- c>.&(--c,---- / ,:-< c- e-7 7/-6- ->. rigx-r-Nc , 0.6--/-,/- e_,- ,e-,i,_------- krr-Vg19=1.7..A.V.T=t10.1mmiran. ‘71-"(.. C /L-12 a-,e a_ • e(./-r t-c-// a cha..-6" —et 44 7-t.), 077 7P--c z,• • t-r-__e. ---e -.. ad 24--(- je7 (s16 h, 644_,t,,/ 0- 4z -e- -e 07-e ) 0-e-{•J-1/ Alc--177:771-7 eei( ,tz 4/-/./4-t .:D-f-----•- e-t c...--e, (///-'4 1 0 e7/1--- ile/•2-eti-e--((,-d'a5(,;:i,eL----,, f/ . .."11,2-i 4:2E 4,- ore-L4 •1 • ..! 4 a i"C't-A- C-c.-t TzrZrZga',F '41UailagiatZigIat =VIVI e _ (7- cC/ Zcz,t) ce(2-4--1.. • d14 - The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell University o e --ttroos=kta•xt •,. • pz,t, 4.5Th ,oL Co. ‘-4/e4 Zcz-Lz - oar,•s Air 4-L-(r7 7,t-t-4-z4z.04 zgrA.-e 14 / Iz ctr 4.(.4t-57c4 eet-t_ • M.- 4i g / /S. rv )e4--L-c._ zuf' 44.-; r/ 2- c. 1/3' ) ‘;7- a.7/.07, 6-z CjA---4-A"`e Cevt- -2-e-4.-e C://- 7/2 g•-e-4%1 • it /2-ia. /// 4-70 71ztri It47 4(/v-t-v(c/Gt477 421- e_e 2. 5-rj J stc," "1--&-e/k c.e.4. 4 / ST rcr7i The Andrew Dickson White apers, Cornell University 04750 • ,., It? 'TaTmtgamtml 2". 7 z.azam-amea1511,ZT.ww, 04477 5 0 9 Imperial Photograph Galleries, 712 ARCH STREET. • J.' P. ,HARBE8I MANAGER. Et JAGGER, RU RINTENGENT. TEL ONE 4070. HIGHEST PRIZES EVER AWARDED FOR: Photographs' and PhotoOfies. TERMS ONE-HALF WHEN ORDER IS GIVEN, BALANOE ON DELIVERY. -2 hi lacley-ti a, c., ;4.--a/ (2. kc° \(J- \&_k_L \.sv& TkA)`C -kNyv“)s( k31.72As k)b-tQ "t-tV 4. As\1s44\f 4sA NLJZ13-iRrNq Irtvv•hal 't)3•14t_b_stls rsTsL,R„_ , c)a_L ' uvs ) , 11,4„1 N,4-,44A71 CS 5.. \IC\ \\--k -Lk e,v ev= kl:kUv; Nrr tS3. V34,_ °\r"3"' cz.ku;..„ Vvb.roh.- The Andrew ,77 • OFFICE Ikentarl * (hwi tcanal ontgatig. NORFOLK, VA. z?e,I Arfr z/tezipoi 2../ 1-4 Z-Z-&!_e_t_egA " y.,--- -e,rzt ce -rkel.tezteir • '174Y 1 4° {-13 -L (--eXif 4)1-44eti7 _ / sezz,Atke tiiezite fte, .1/2-2'-t-c. ske-.14-;/- Z /Id' 72ez4J 4-°--16 . gl,'. l-tc_ ) ci:Zett/-/ii , tZ,/ ... ,s, 6i ' ; . A,•. s -1 7/' ., t . f, t, ' 04752 4 • 1 EDITORIADDEPARMENT Tkiii CENTURY-MAGAZIN Et UNION1QUAREVEWIORIte who 4alitiot•torciari. &fare* taa -- to ex- pre-es to you vour-,:intsrest th it-he Ve1011eiffitiin or et natSbna1 univer- , and in ivitat.,Is a&b Preoldat 41040, atkek in Mrs Gilder Is upfrier the iperlas, 1!,k,14.1st it is the object of the Johns HopkinspeopIe-to_Avp4-initett-a -4%thiik0614,14 , Old that .a11 facilities are of.ffered to Abair 04.0-,oVviden*Iirlicr-4014Y GevernInont collections at 'Washington. It, Atitt p*OViiatteitil extends beyond the present educational tabilititetti M.til.agi• 461i1it kike to know IS you would Mt to -,2,ivetereateti t *rite •ati *et tAter fine 7hiti'tentur.y• on the sabjeet, which, i.iithout'layilly to,o-cmgch stress upon the question of a ItativIne.. ,stibat4yis/01414 Ahow the Ay4.9,4 54' 4trouttortiom, *Itch 401414 e149.#0 The Andrew Dickson White Papers Come /Tzal-1,14:aez 4 a-te aCe..x , "at. 442" 7 71.4— de,c. G761-.L, 1 ( t ‘01 7 'r ‘‘. zz,44°- p/, /c41,- C.0 eYr—.7 te•- 4-7 - ‘ A, (-zr,.%77— • 0-7 The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell Universi 04751 c-- 7,77"--• 4-79 6-e) 41(2074slz.z, z"re-e, 4"7 Lc-4-4c. 4,42Z4Z ./ - Arr-z4...(1 11- a/C.7 _ 4 _ I 7 The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell Universi 4TVIVIMISAMVITOIVVAtteg. 741.4,r 2- e ,rit9fV111,517621.94,5,02,11MsCrcsatcrater Eg - erj 4 Zrx lerh-gEr — Gt/I, C1f.e.%1 a/ti- Cv-r"L.c.s() ‘e.4t,t 4r,c4. e4X4i, 2-04-v/IA--/) /a4- 1-4-e,>•Jk- - ZZcce essz2Z,i /za-vi (4/77-1 iZ 424.4. a--(4. a 7a AA.-L acrud •ze-a_ zt. /f c_v. 7Le_ .4.cr„r,;11, ‘e.a. AI C1.211.4.. , p-a-D L L44 e The Psrit:itew Dickson .White :PapLeri,'Cornel .1 04 7. 5 1 8 gr,Arkt, F'tL3ee . 7. J - 2',4 C2gte eV GtotA g AsA14-1. 4‘e'e4 4,e4-tr '' . ,;,...1.„,,;,4yleilfAfritrATEVOMMITIMVZIMMIMPr., s0s s•s• ••s•MOW AMMO 7,M4111101111 111.1011.11011 l'OM n dos it alacon,DAtticA6 &Nee e CownAeecrr,o law, t tliecZeze3a.cor t. taws ervto ;taus 3 i.-3.31:e rte,J. Dietated. -- March 8th, 1890. Frederick Davies White, dear sir. - hope-yo-u paTrdon-mY de-lay of more than a Mofith , irOelling -you wha,t I think about your father's property and. the pretended c1a4,ms , against it. You know, however , that I have more or less to do every day ) and may guess that the things about Which I am urgently pressedieither by the Courts in session or by the clients who are on the spot,. are the things that get earliest att,ended"to'. 'I now return- you all the papers submitted to me and with them a memorandpip which I intended at first to b e only an 'arrangement) for my Own better Understanding of the ca , of the facts appearing from the Onondaga records. It_turned out at last , however the most Cony eni_ent_Way of , sa -3; ink' what litt le I havb. to say after I had a,-`cOmplete amprehensi.on of the records A - , 11 • 114 ia.11611B1._LihaIL.Lthatei9.±f W be a sUfficient statement of the opinion vouldeSired of me and I give it without citation of authorities; for yobr own very studious and , careful research dispenses me from that - necessity. ' You will see that I do not find. the slightest hesitancy in concurring with your view , arriving at it however , by my oWn , a3a.covvpDA.1..:iws ec.,,Z)Aecreferti, Co. i.vitt.'ef.0.6 ;.) t, neda'cu Dlacen. toASenms Svatti,94. ;jam DZ.:Nee flees. • ( F• .,•D. Wh1te-2 ) method;after * Thaving'suffered .the'recollectiOn o -f---your di-scus-s' tf-to pas retty completely from rq. recollection. As tO t Iater question sented. in your letter written after your sit here, have ::tá say that provision of the Revised Statutes in regard to the twenty-five_ years o trint does not seem to me to affect tkie case one way or the other. , it has any effect, it is this: the trust- estate reverts to Voorhees as the trust had riot been • -created. This , howe‘er cann ot divest t it given by Voorhees prior t the trust; and you will remeimber that y father holdS not by virtue 9f 414( , deed i but by virtue, of the mortga given years before, and foreclosed in an apon in which the conveyan of the referee is )Itade„ by statute equivoPlent• to a jSint aonyeyanee bath of the mortgagpr and the mortgagee. That is not a sort of est-ate-t-ht _t„ri-inint,ts by-statute under any ercmstnees. It can only- defeated by a paramoinit title. S9 I trust you will tell everybody who thinks he has an interest tO take such proceedings as he may be advised; will enforce it, and I 'hop, * that :Our father's insomnia will not be permitted to gain five minutes upon its ordinary deal- ings, with him on aceoUnt Qf the 'questions that have just been su Mitted to me. if there is anything more. I cando for,you, ither in The Andrew D c*s. owi:whiteL.• popoo -Cornell Univers! t--- citan,,Nticjcp 8:, Nec Ce , eatoozeox6 ccr ache,evrerc:Dt f1S. eac•e altat.sen,s04'0,Ki993, Pam Ive Dictat-ed. ardon-my-delay of more than a month in telling you what I th* 0k about Your father' . property and the pretended* ci ms against i You know, however, that I have more or les 0 do every' day,and may that the things -about -Which .m urgently presseditither by the who are on the now return you all the papers submitted . and with them-a meMorandgm which I intended at first to be n y an arrangement ) for -my own better understanding • of the facts appearing from the Onondaga recOrdS. It turned out at *last, however, to be the-most convenient way of sayirig what little . hat, to say after I had a-Omplete 4,rprehension of the records , fnr e be a spfficient statement of the opinion Tou desired of me, and_4areful reSeareh dispenses me from that neceSsity. You will sr- 'that I do not find the slightest.hesitandy in concurring with your view, Arriving' at it hOweVer, by my own Nato Avi196 8,-,Ne.erc.ferg, ouirtae ecru, ccr ataorteaxeit,,'Dt . zr,e(Po:te acon • ;Zntauservu6Siatlivg3. , , ;Jogin keel!. . method l after having suffered the recollection of your discussion - to- -- .pass pretty completely from m recollection. As to the later question presented in your letter written after your visit here have to say that the provision of the Revised Statutes in regard, to the twenty-five years of a, trUst does not seem to me to affect the case one way or the other. lf At_ ha.s any effect it is this the trust estate reverts to Voorhees as-if the trust had not- been created -..- This however, cannot diveat 'title given by Voorhees' , prior to the trust, and you will remember that Our fathtr -holds, not by virtue of 4414 deed, but by virtue of the mortgage given yea a beforeiand foreclosed in*an apon in which the conveyance of the re tree is made : by statute eqUivaRent'to a Soint conveyance the . mor agor and the mortgagee. 'That is not a sort of eitate that terminatg y statute under any , circumstr ces. 114a -only deftated by' a para he has an interest to take Such proceedings aslie..may be advised will enforce it and I'hol591" *reaver, that your father's insomnia will not be perMitted to gain livt.Minutea upon its - ordinary dealinga - vith,him on accoUnt of the questions that.havt justOpeen , sub- ff.there fg anything-More • e ra3a c n..,Niiva:46 8:, DAec keel!, o oi4 got4 cc tu , Dtaortcoxeic,'Nai. 7:riga:out 334.tc4n. tie ltortJetutoSlit99,3. t. kees. (F - Oz.-W4te-3-) this matter or any other, . I shall be very glad to do - it .• •• expect' to ,leave here on . Monday for two Or three weeks at the South4z and so shall hardly hea,r from yo4 for that length of time.. an- . OITIOE Or • SPENCER 8.-NEWBURY,  ACTING PROFEBBOR OF pt ERAL, OROANIO AND,APPLIED CHEMISTRY: / . DEPARTM.ENT OF CHEMISTRY, CORNELL UNIVERSITY, Ithaca, N. .Y., I ,f•,.•• ( • •0 4 7 5 2 4 THE NEW YORK, STATE ROADS IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION. ISAAC B. POTTER, Secretary. PerrER Bk1112DING, NEW Willi. -C77. • at 141i eit 001. .,10 L.**. *WO 101* -03,00w. a opr of circular *004- .' .41. 6.• -*ICI' Cotttse, in the e*1*etton ,f $4 * epsak" * $ 't bow ':capac ity (eay . of „ter:o the1.404300tis =•=2,1:1:1 Per• the Cetweittse. VI DEAR SIR:— The first public meeting of the New York State7R-oa4s-Iniprcrvennent ASsociation will be held at .Utica, N. Y.., on Tuesday,, March 18, 1890. This meeting will be devoted to the work of formal organization, the election of 'officers, and a general consideration of the subject of Roads, their construetion and repair, and the.needed revision of the highway laws of the State. It is confidently expected that prominent and able speakers from various parts of the State will be present and address the meeting ; but as this is essentially ,a; people's Movement, a general invitation-is. extended' to all citizens who desire to attend the Meeting and take part in the discussion. It ts especially urged that all agricultural, trades and labor ,boards, and associations will 'send delegates With authority to present their views., . An effort will be made to secure for all such delegates reduced rates of fare on the principal lines of railroads. s AS a citizen of influence and abilityryour presence at this Meeting is especially desired, find 'your aid: in enlisting a general interest and full attendance is invoked. The Stntee of 1Vlassachrisetts, PennsylVania and Rhode Island have already taken active steps in the direction of this gre, at reform, and the last message of Governor Hill to the Legislature of this State shows that the time is now but too long delayed for decisive action here. With a property valuation now approadhing four thousand millions of dollars and a population averaging one hundred people per square mile, the-Empire State should no longer tolerate a miserable system of dirt roads which is condemned by experience and shamed by comparison. It is only necessary to popularize this moveinent in order to insure its success. That the educational work is already well under, way is - shown in a marked degree by the numerous articles which have appeared in pamphlet form and in the journals and periodicals of the day, among which may be mentioned, " Notes on the Making of Common Roads," by James B. Olcott, and "The Road Question in Pennsylvania," by Samuel R. Downing, in The American ; "Road Legislation for the American State," by Professor Jenks, of Knox College, Published by the American Economic Association; " Roads and Road-Making," by Captain Francis V. Greene, and " What . I Know About European Roads," by Joseph Pennell, in garper's Weekly, of which a second edition was required to meet the demand for the illustrated article brOaptain Greene; "Highway Improvement," an address by Colonel Albbit A. Pope before the Carriage Builders' National Association; " The Common Roads," by Professor Shaler, of Harvard -University, in Scribner's Monthly; "Resurfacing;" a letter by A. J. Cassatt, in " A Plea for Better Roads," by William H. ,Rhawn " Municipal 'Engineering," by Professor Haupt, of the ;University of Pennsylvania, read before the Franklin :institute and published in its fournal; " Improvement of Highways," a series of articles on the making and care of good roads, with the draft of a proposed bill for legislative enactment to secure them, published ' by the League sof American Theehnen, ai organization that is now endeavering,to educate the people up to a higher appreetation of better roads and streets, and to secure the enactment of laws' providing for 'them in the several States; and the articles that appear almost continuously in the Manufacturer, in the Wheel and in the Bicycling World. 047526 aPrecrecel - Later and more specific .information Will be sent yon regarding the proposed Meeting at Utica if you deSire-ity'ank-yo-u-a-re-pyrtio-00/y requeited to conznzuniccite with the Secretary announcing your intention to be present in case you find it convenient to attend. The Committee will be pleased to have -you co-operate in putting forward thisgreat work, and request you to aid them by enclosing to the .Teeusurer your check for such 'sum as -your-may -fol -dispoTe71 to contribute to the general fund of the Association. George 1; WhecW., John C. Jacobs, • M. F. Collins, W. P. Richardson, Thomas Hunter, - Russel S. Johnson, James W. Husted, G. T. _ D. F. Mullaney, James H. Everett, Florence F. Donovan, jacob Rice, • John B. Weber, Ezekiel N. Thompson, 'John U. Abel, Jno. II. Myers,„ .John D. Blauvelt, Charles M. Titus, F. 0. Chamberlain, Seth Fenner, G. W. Churchill, George L. Flanders, J.. 117f-Spaldizig, A. M. Dickinson, F. P. Prial, 0 OM MITHIMM. Henry . L Coggeshall, George Z. Erwin, George _F-Rbeich i-Edward Hawkins, Israel T. Deyo, Bradford Rhodes, Isaac Mitchell, .Geo,_.W._Van-Vranken-, Calvin j. Huson, Wm. II. Kimball, 'William Purcell, Nelson Stevens, Augustus Denniston, William E./Spier, William/H. Robb, Ux. C. Rogers, --Nat. W. Foster; Abram B. Lawrence, George 11 Smith, Peter Collier, Emmett .S. Goff, Josiah K. Brown, GO, Blackham, . 0. E. White, • Michael Furst, Thomas Newbold, P. H. McCarren, ----Donald-McNaughton, James W. Birkett, Leroy Andrus, H. J. Lane, Wallace L'Hommedieu, S; P. Mott, Milo M.. Acker, Gilbert Robertson, Jr., William R. Rose, John B. Sackett, H. W. White, W. A. Collamer, Jr., Henry B, McCaffrey Clinton Stevens, Lewis E. Gurley, J. S. Durkee, Adin Thayer, Frank E, Emery; A. Sylvester oline, Barkman, Walter S. Jenkins, W. S. Bull, • H. E. Raymond. 'Nan B. Eotter, • n W—W-Ood, Secretary, Chairman, 240. Potter Building, Syracuse, New York City. • N. Y. George Treasurer, 313 West 58th St„ Nev York City. 041 tUr ) 44(tAikk- /1/-14/0"-- 0-4 le4? fr-UVal k_cA ;1 d 41,6-;#;1-, to^- 01-0-1 P e 1-c4A7a/Le_e_) cq't 34-e( - 9 17-1) 5/Pt AYpe , OL1- The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 047527 r*ri, , , ;i.,_ c it, ,,,- :.e ( . , t ,, (y- -(_' ) , t it ,-C I -Z2 2t, ,c7-)--( I. , 7( 1 1 0-- 3 ,i - l yr 7 1 .. 7 ( re) 2- 7 , ‘17 de l 4_ , . 6,_ ' ,..-, ,1 ,, - : - 1-._ . 44.- '7 i A, y. L th- 'C y ,-7_,L i II , '--1/: : ;"-- 7.//ts L4- (--zr 57 -,_', e - - - --'ts " . e eci-Q. --a C_ 4.4 f -k. ' /4L, eef/i ,--7 -,-- , --, P----)./..e - .-- tc .e.....c-).- /4 ' A ee ..0C ,e;7 et-lAi... ./c A ,"7-e zee .) -- ,./1.09,(": C..A.._(' f A I )( 1,.. ‘. / A.,Ar._../ -^- ( 2 '(''? ("._ 4 , "A , A. L /1 1AL '.-- --`- 1 ,"u, 1 k e ( -C -74. ,•" 2C: ( , el.- I,x-- -)1- ....i--(..- /L ESTABLISHED 1852. Ft7tlizen WooGrs 5or2s, Importers, Manufacturers, Jobbers, OFFICES, 334 86 336 S. SAUNA ST. You may possibly rec Al me as the youim:er .son of C ertain y the writer rec all S you with„. mina Pleasure, as so'o -ften held by my-4AI success of manhoo You may al so possibly roc, all me, as the son, co Tic erning whom father conversed with you, regarding Coll ege. C ire uni start es were suc h however, that the writer found himself at Will labs, from whic h institution, he graduated sop,e years ago. With thi s intro due tion, you wil 1 all ow me to Si] 0;e st, what I h ad • hoped to present to you in person, the c onsideratiOn n f Leg slation in rei tion to the imp ro v orient of StAe Roads. The ert 1 o sea c irr! ul ar etter, may - son, ewhat expl !An the matter. Although very -muc h interested in State and Lo c al Legisl ration, it •t has never been my ambition to, in the l east, Ir,eddle with poi itic 8. Thq 8ppoiritft,e,.rit there fore, a s C hai /man o f General C ommittee was a gee, lc:tea su Lpri se to me but as suc h, there is nee essarily det!,ande.d aneffort to organ' ze . aria set i -n . motion, prac tic al Legisl ation in 047530 ESTABLISHED 1852. • Importers,( Manufacturers, Jobbars,. OFFICES, NEW YORK AND CHICAGO. , ._ Mr.. I saac. B. Potter whom .yo u-wil I undoubtedly rec:all_. as a_ C Ozne,11 • Man has suggegted my c al I. ing up on you here and , sec uring as 111110 h coOperation, in the way of interest. arid endorsement, as seemed best to you. —As the Writer as written Mr. Potter to day, there c.,ould One be secured, whose encior.sement alone, would mean so mudt and whose inf1uen3 e would promise so mu c h o f succ e ss, as _1,1 1 GZ-1-4.y 41-acF;1 PC(.7rss' , ,• /af--:k. 2-L-ZI:/ aele ,fa :-L-t--11/2.Z ZS — 1 • 1 The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 4 7 5 •3 6 flt,:esnv, • ag'atvie;;;;zitzfrraw, ,; - 4-- Bootart, U. •„ • s• r " „ PIO 4,-, , t i (,•A_-t. 4 (1-----1 ( / ,9,5 (97,7--r_5— ,1,62-7, 0( GlOt'Yee'..., 37.p,4, /#25, ,216 ,. V .... G4Ze // ) I am very sorry that your Card which has lust ar- rived .did not arrive a. clay. or two sooner. I have Waited. • to hear from you, but. the members of the cOmmittee were so ardent in atheir approval of Hart that I finally, With a good deal of relc , ctance, consented; *adding a page to the report statin that I threw the responsibility of the. matter entirely upon the judgment of the _mem- bers of the committee who had known •Har4 and been associated with him as a professor in the University here. The matter came before the senate last .evening, and was di Sp.osed of by a unanAnous vote. . I have had several .talks with Professor Fuertes in regard to 912,v4(4 ' the Te-ue-r-te-s monument window, but it was only ye st °relay that we sue- ceeded in fishinr-, Out the letter giving the price. As the price for the inferior de sirm is $814, and only $150, or therea.bouts, has been raised,. it seems out of the quest ion to rai se the full amount without delaying the matter so much as to make it impossible to have the window in place before Commencement. It seems tome that we must either take of the windows, perhaps that of }loward r or else wait until another clesirr,n can be executed. • Day before yesterday a representative,_-of the ?:•_lunic1 las Comp:..ny - the corn- pany that furnish od the r';1 as s fo r the (:hapel o -1' the new university The Andrew Dickson White Papers, CorneI Universi C„,..? —45 —903 at Washington- was here, and said that the Munich glass was lower in price • and that for abb-ut seven dollars per square foot very artistic and acceptable wiridoWs could Provided. They ha've -a• n - office in New York, I believe in Ne:ssau Street; itwöüldl3e easy toascertajn from a directory. It occurred to - me that you might be interested in looking in and talking With them to ascertain what the y have an d CTdO, I b el i r3ve I wrote you b ef ore • that the Senate recommended the Tutt i e stery-and a.ppointmtht of Dr. Albert • Shaw to the position now held by Profes- sor _Tuttle. We are still' at a great loss t 0 . know what to .do in regard to a professor of Political Economy. It seems to be certam n that we shall have to make a .choice between second rate men. Ashley, from tie University. of Toronto, and Folwell, Ex-president of Minnesota University, ve both been •hero on invitation and lec- tured, but neither one seems to have created a very strong impression. It is not 'improbable that I shall next. week go to Boston, for the purpose of looking up the record of Davis R. Dewey, Assistant Professor of Political - Economy in the - InstitUte of Technology. If so, I may -stop in New York on my way . back. Percy Hagerman told me 'last - night that he'had just 'received athe-r and mother wer 6: coming e- as t - for a week or two and would , spend.most_of the time in New York. I have not learned tit exact date. Andrew D. White,.U.D. Very truly yours, HERBERT R." ADAMk- Sooretam- :- Johns Hopkins University,_Baltimore, Md. — A- HOWARD CLARK, Assistant Sooretary.and Curator, U. S. National Museum, Washington, D. C. Dear Mr. White: ton me/et ing Putnam. Will you kindly fo-rwar-d to Me your manu- &cript of the' paper on "The Journalism of the French Revolution"? - There is' no irrmedi ate haste but I should be glad to have the .manuscript within a -week.Ford has finished his bibliography and I have sent it to Washington. It will Make a volume of 3 or 400 pageS. With President Adams' address and My general report the Secretary will have enough material from us for the first year. Tuesday evening I gave an address on University Extension to a large and scientific alidience in the Contemporary Club phia. The lecture was upon much the same grounsl_as that repro- . sented by the enclosed syllabus.. In fact I practiced my speech in Baltimore before going. to Philadelphia. Dr.Pepper dis'cussed the subject after my talk and showed himself quite alive to the movement I was glad to :see the other day in the New.York "Times" your views upon University Education sincerely yours, AMERICAN HISTORICAL HERBERT B. ADAMS, Secretary, • Johnt Hopkins University, Baltimore, Did. A. HOWARD CLARK, Assistant Secretary and &rater, U. B. National Museum, Washington, D. C. elected by the Indiana Board. Harper has been trying for three months to persuade me to go to Chicago as Dean. of his Graduate Department and Professor .of History. He offered me 5,000 Baia y and a year off in i Europe on full pay. I declined his offer last month, s-bUt he now-comes up wiling with $6,000 and the same generous proposition regarding a year's outing. I do not think I shall go West if the Trstees Your excellent picture has come safely to hand and I shall give it a prominent place in our portrait gallery of historians and statesmen. ' I thank you very cordially for remembering - our ,eminary of History and Politics. We shal_lalwa.ys rembr you. ,1 "1;0— --.77/frtrat,,,ra,m. 4444.0...= Ab 41.44:11-N- - ---14-777144417141(44- `4,04 #c"..4.- A-4c- 4401= 4114 :4;e- 1 ... C id'e4-44•-? 12 1ttm_. 4411 /M.444 01-0,/X4t7. 47 - The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell Univei.si THE NEW YORK STATE__ ROADS IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION. clz-z 047546 PerrERBUIDDING, NEW—Y-SRK ROADS IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION. ci ISAAC B. POTTER, Secretary. 347 " 4 7 • . LEWIS MILLER, President. JOIEV H. VINCENT, Chancellor. • TV. A. DUNCAN, Secretary. GEORGE E. VEVCENT, Chancelloes Assistant . Address: 458 FRANKLIN STREET, u • BUFFALO, N. Y. . gitantaitrilta- - 45 e1llUX,C4,1045; - Vittfato, V. A March 15, 1890. My Dear Sir:- I wiabto acknowledge your kindness as expressed in the article in the i*entieth.Century. I may say that the whole affair was a complete surprise to me,and an embarrassing • oneX'It is -hard for a sensitive man:ta'read-such-warda in print .con.- • cerning himself and his work. I write this line,hawever,to carreat-,ane-impression under whickyou_laborl_and which your contribution conVey-sto the public. : , While I have had:ea:Superintendent ofInstruction,and4hen as Chancellorl entire control of the Chautauqua Platofmr l and oft- e educatiOnal work of Chautauqua:from the beginning;and while I am pecially responsible for the C.L.S.C. in its inception and deve1opment-0,hp HOT. Lewis Millerof Alron,Ohio,the President of the Chautauqua—As Sembly,and in one sense its original projector l has*always been maSt., intimately associated with Me in'all the work of - ChaTttaikilia..' We have together borne the burden from the first. Mr.-Miller is-a man of advanced educational ideas l a recognized friend of public education inthe state where he lives, and he has contributed in manifold ways to the.great work of Chautauqua. Without him,indeed,the Assembly in its,present form. would probably never have existed;and it does not give me pleasure to reoeive sole praise for the greet movement when I think of all that my honored associate has done in connection with it. Fraternally Yours ) (Y, - I knew that the Editor. intended to ask certain leading men - theiir 'opinion of Chautauqua,but did not once think of a-personal tribute;nor did I know the name of a single person what he purposed to address an thesub:rect. s•s Ge/(4L-1.- /I.- iv / 7z_z ) 44- 'Crc.4_,-174-. 2C4_47 e.24. 4t/-7-ja: eF.7 /-7.4.-= az-7. L-- 44--c t.‘,_Z , 6- y 4,4,17-7 A"-zZL,- //1,/4-/---- c;171 • cA4,724. 42'4z7_ 1-7P-12`. tfl; JP\ _ •I i/ 7 A a ) The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University f 047548 1 gcP. M:MMMMMM=n=14*.**, , Pg:M55:,,VM7 a.7 //a I °MOE OF' :•••• •1) SPENCER B. NEWBURY, .,' WINO PROFESSOR OF ' GENERAL, ORGANIC AND APPLIED CHEMISTRY. DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY, " CORNEL UNIVERSITY, _ co9F4Etlb IVERSITY. DOLLEGE OF civil_ EfIGI A. FUERTES, DIRECTOR. My dear President White: Mr. Biirr.thas told me thi Cox charges $3157for the windows 38 Barc47_ Sti_N.Y._ who zwarantees"as good_worLas_any_that—May be , ordered from any house any where" for greatly 1 s - B Cost. N The financial condition i : the young men ha collected ,N 155 dollars, and I have a cheque from Schuman for $5. C4/1-t/.2—' r .• ---e-€71— .l. i.fi"i.'i;'L:li'l Is 1..j 1 f_ j 7/,- .---( :,,,,,, • .'1.2.} --/. 7-,--;-7-. p-'---7---177-7 . P ' —...,..;, , z.... - c..--L....e_.— s .=.t.,. 1 •... / \A 1A '.f : 2-1-2;----- , .-,:. ,,, i DEU.X - MOIOES PARIR 15, Rue de l'Univere06, 15 Paris, le 18 i4-1-- ;” C-r7-71.m 67i-4- Geee.,1e- 14( a/15- (A- r.e "# ,zer-Z-- —A;c- 2-ii ce-4,1.-4- I .4# z /6e.), A-e Zr , o7Ze 474-d- air777-e_ 4o7;409 Xeii,z - f vf ezick A..17e-cs €:17 j4/692,0 ,71.4z. /- 4-e-- /,-e i 92,9--Ge), le7047-. 7'-- ,i_e_frz.a- a97---›-z . ZZC-it 191- 1,7--0;2:t / a "- X ;k/ /• Lei4- xii A74 . 4zz; 4 ..(.___,._„.7_z_."...4-- ax‘,_„_ Ae__ aele-t-e- 47- /Xe..cto. .c.Gr_ - ,2-2--I2Z- frfr;‘,40-1-,4- 4:67-:a,l'-.e:e.4' i 1` eo-ze--). iftr 4. je.‘4., , /7- /(72.//7-7-Z .v):2#----st-4.-- all/Y-Z•e- . Ze/7/Ze-li4C v:47- ibi,v1•1---4-ieet_ .24,4er,-;47 4- 9 iteee__, .7`.- er.,7-7-i--,-,-z.z1edee ,,-.71 11/7,741W .ai,4-- - /e4-- .'' fle,1,-z .e.4 ae.4 Z.,,e 4_ .o .- Zo'-- A-4,C- Ce/)-7.z,mc.,,,z 1. - 14:z;---- sz.-----4-- ...--i., AL /i 97/ "'.. /--)--77 , ..-?--/z co_ ,7-ze,4-z€41.4" 4,/?-zr,.,-z-.t. i 42..,‘ .;.4 - t - /,& —1.---,-z-----,-)-ze-o-z---4". 37 THIRTY SECOND STREET, WEST, dep.,1* Mr. t .' I --wri t e- to-- a-sk -yon if you. think I onld have the degree of or Whatever is befitting, conferred upon me by Cornell University . , in consideration - of my cotrse subseq -aent to leaving that instutition? In June 18,70, becaus e . of my Father' s misfortunes, I was obligecl to leave college,b -at not before I had begun to realize the import . ance of mental culture,nor before I had, despite my embarrassMents, determined to make a place among men -worthy of mys elf. My re4sons for desiring a degree are that I may•have, as an alizenus, a more direct • connect i On with the Thli...versi ty, ii will eh I am deeply int er e s ted, and that I may enjoy the benefits of the title in the publication of my literary work. —Not to- appear ego t4 s ti c-al, but Merely to endeavor to justify such a question, let me _ briefly explain. In 1875 I was graduated at The College of Pbysibias and Surgeons, in a class of one hcmdreit and eight. I took the valedictory; and delivered it . in Steinwayt-Hall. After six months post - grate study, I entered The RooseVelt eXaMita t i on, aid s erved , tive e usual t ime, o e year _ 2 and a half, Ttpon the house staff. For thi s •s erviceri received it: diploma which i s -mar valuable than one-from a medical college., I was U.S. Pension Surgeon from 18' rzt/tO 1885. • and president . of the board. Reee),ved the appointment of attending physic -fan to The OntDo o r-Department (Diseases csf>'the Chest ) Bellevue Hospital in 18,7,7 -whie1a I . still ho], Was 'Made instructor Physical Di agnos i in The NEWT York Po s . Gradttat e Med. Schbo in 1882,— and lecturer zin'1883,,Was profess° ofThoracic DiseasesayThe University of V. wil•nt 18' 84to 18'35. Was appointed profes of Clinical Me& and'Physical Diagnosis ''.Y. Post-Grad .Med. School and Hospita in 184 Now bear that title. Am the examiner .1 The Society for Instruction in First AO to the Injured. _AM an active member9Kthe N.Y. County Med. Society; the 'Med. Society of the State of New-York; the Clinical • Society of tbe N.Y. Post-Grad.Med. School; and the NOW York Academy of Medicine.Was a delegate from the County to the - State Society 1886-18871888.And am the delegate for 1890 from the IVIed. Society of the State of NewYork to the Med.So. of Massrachus ett s.My publications are as follows; - Case of Single Uterus with Donble_Vagin.a. , 18( A-914mi c -,- -A Clinic on Fibrous Bronchitis etc. 1883LL: 4,884 A Clinical Lecture wi tla Special Re fer ono e Di-agn-o-st.s ReInarkS OD Brigh. s Disease A Clinic on .e art Disease P1 eur s Revi -Manual of Olin Diagnosis v h ews on the - Prevention and Treatment of Typhoid Fever 1885 1-886 1887' 1888 1339 Exploration of the Chest 200 pages Some of the Limitations of Medicine. 1389 1389 Pulmonary ConsuMpt i on in the Light of Modern .Res earch. 1890 Exclusive of medical and of light literature, I append to this letter a list of the more important -works that I have read And though I believe you do not now take an active • part in the affairs of the University l may- I hope, being somewhat acquainted with me, that you will, if feasible, help me in this matter,? Very respectfully yours, .171,14:o /201,00t- 4A-.44!tityos 1164 ywe Motley -The Dutch Repub ic Hume -The Student' s Hume Gibbon -The Student''s Gibbon Worcester -ElEments of'History Swinton-Outlines of the World' s His o ry Gaizot -History of Civilization Mac aul ay-Hi story of England • Some Essays Froure is ory o Igland(int) Caesar Buckle -History of Civilization in raag-l-an Draper -Intellectual Development of EuroPe The Civil War in America Conflict between Religion and Science Le.cIty -Rat ional sm in Europe Bacon -NovuM-Organum_ Essays (in part) Smith -Wealth of Nations Spencer-Education The Study of Sociology 4 Social Statics • First Principles. The Principles of Biology The Princ i ples -of Psycho lcgr ill part) - The Principles' of Sociology -The ,D-at a- Of Ethic s Mauds I ey-Respons ib i I ty in Mental. Disease 'Body and ,ill, • liind and Body _ Ga,lton -Hereditary -Genius -11er 1 ty Fi ske -Destiny of Man ,P I The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University .77 -- Darwin -Journal. . ET. M. S. Be a gl e Descent of Man Ori g in of' Species • Emotional 1,pressions of Mallet°. --The- Variations—of Animals andPlants Under Domestication —Tyndall-Fragments of Science Halls of Exercise in the Alps Huxley -The Advance of Science in the Last HalfCentury White -The Warfare of Science Lewes -Bi--o-a.raphical History of Philos° , Problems of Life and Mind ( part) -Subj ection of Women Liberty Autobiog A System of IJogi (in part) Perrin -Me Rel.-i g ion of Philosophy Paine e, of Reason NicholS7- 0 f—Evolitt-i-on__ Mont e Rosa. t t 7Es s ays Whit e 3 Arnold -Essays in CriticisM Celtic Li eratur On Translat4i of Homer Miii er -Se i en.ce of Langua g e Morley -Diderot and the Encyclopaedists VO4.taire -History of En glish Literature Notes on 14Ingland Clark -Ten 'Great Reli g eons Bryce -The .AMerican, Commonwealth 'Voltaire -Candidefor the', Opt imi s t Johnson -Ras s el as Lamb -Essays of Elia' De Quin° ey -Es s ays (in, part) • Prescott-Con quest of Mexico Rome s on -Es s ays Tr evelyan-Li fe and Letters of Lord fta—o-a-itray- Be-,,rd 7rilbe Refomplat ion o f the S ixteenth • -----Century Belation to Modern Thought Rag lish _ Moon -The-Dean' s English a _usasrs ta;srs-:.1:1ne- 4 Milton -Paridice Lost Ruskin '-Trite and Beautiful Urbino -The Princes of Art ilulf inch-Ag e of, Fable Hat.erton int el 1 e e trial life Human Int er c oUrs e Derby -Homer', s Iliad Go etlie -Faust ster Elective Affinities Sorrow, o f We Tt et Les S ng -N a t h an the Wise Shakspe ar e ,-Chief Plays One or more poems of the following Byron; Campbel1;Wordsworth; Sonny; Co ler icl g e; Moore; Seott;ileine; Cowper; Sheller Dryden; Keats Burns ; MeriClJth; Tennyson.; Longf el 1 oyv; Bryant. DREXELMORGAN &CO. • DREXEL' &CO. DliEXEI:MARIES do. Paris. • __ _ urbue Unitetin My Dear Sir You are hereby invited to deriver our annual - eoronemearient dress on the evening f June 2nd next. This lecture is managed by our united Literary Societies. The young men< are no+ able to pay vey much but they have about Seventy-five_ d611.ars • This would give I! ood will. I hope that you will accept this Ainvitation-. It will be a great personal pleasure to have you here and the Faculty join me in the requ.est that you come. Yours, President 047581 "1 7417-r.' rr" All letters, to ensure p nut be addreswd to the Firm. , New York Oifice, uE.i7thSt. .. • ri: gi-de.ee •• A za (-4d9ez- ;z-k i 64/41. L l'e4°1‘d Ziez-ZZ • a..10t..5.4.6135H,V4 . _ d/OLIAA- 6-eC C-AAAA-P-4 , 41-14 ,446 ,4041,e*NrAN:1P .• 7-y...c .1 a cAJT '02-ttAtc. - , , n._t..r...-.W4( 7 .4(4.41Lt _ 6 dC, SCHOOL OF.MINES, COLUMBIA COLLEGE, 49TH STRE AND 4TH AVENUE. - NEW YORK,Mareh...25t4e. 1890 Dky dear White: It is a long time sine jhave had the pleasure of seeing you or he- ing from you, but I think ow where to find you always, d I do not hesitate to call upon you. at 911-s Present moment to get you to give us a little help in connection with the bill for the removal of the pauper insane from the county poor-houses. We have been trying for three years to accomplish this result, dve have just succeeded in getting our bill through the Assembly, and now we want to get the State Senate and we want particularly to get Senator Hendricks. I enclose you a cppy of the bill as it stands this year, an abstract of it, and my argument in favor of it last year. It differs a -little in somi—of iti- details from last year but is substantially the same bill. I carefully read over your article - in the Popular Science Monthly, and you will detect,_i_presume„some •• had had more time I should have gone much more into.detail and used much more of Your material, but the difficulty was there were so many speakers that I had to out it very short. This year when I made my argument I quoted you directly by name and got what lit- SCHOOL OF MINES, COLUMBIA COLLEGE, 49TH STREET AND 4TH 4VENUE. NEW YORK, 189 tie support I could from the fact that you had made the subject of lunacy a study, and that it was from you that I got the historical information showing that insanity had been proved to be a disease., We want to force a vote on this bill this week if it is possible, but we do not dare to do it till we know we have a majority. If Mr. Hendricks is favorably disposed towards the bill we should like very much to know it. Very sincerely Yours C. F. Chandler , (Per F. sThe Andrew Dickson " )Viiite Pape St Cornell University 87 No. 1 Broadway, New York, March 25, 1g90 . Dear I am disposed to become a member of the American Historical sociation,- if I may prove acceptable to the council. In looking over the list of members I find that you are the Only one With 46* Whom I have been intimati4astAppOilaii* I venture therefore, under the letter of in.. structiOnti enclosed, to ask you to propose my nanwand let the proper course be followed. For the, p'Osent I will not bscoue•a Iife member, bntpresumsI:ma :do to - hereafter if I should so desire. The anmnal publications of the AssOCiation,have'lliterested, regret that I have not rightly Understood the work of the Association until within a few months past. With much respect. ,4s 4s 7/-1- I- s. As an introduction or voucher to the members of the councilthe en- closed copy of a correspOndence i VAth.which . :yon ara:***-40.inted, might be made use Of, aWidozh I am Sure your perSona“OPr (r.04 of my nathe will be quite sufflcient. 'My;city'addreSa Is at the number above gilteri,.. and my residence is at Jamaica,-.0tsuients'Co. THE TWENTIETH CENTURY AN ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY MAGAZINE, • Devoted to Literature, Music, Art and The Drama. CHARLES WELLS MOULTON, PUBLISHER. BUFFALO, N Y., .257 189o. . Andrew D r Esq., 7- 7 Ithaca .: N.. Y.: Dear Sir:- I desire to correct an impression which you may have re- ceived from the letter which I wrote you ) soliciting a note in recogn4 tion . of the Chautauqua work on Foultder s, Day. said in my letter of application to you that this was don H IY 'Bishop.Vincent s consent,'but it ,is prOgar,thattktehould state th'It Bishop Vincent had no idea that tae letters called for were to refer in any way to him personally nor did he know to whom Iintended to send the letters of inquiry. write this to you that he mo,y be re-: lieved frqm responsibility in this respect. •Sincerely yours, 1 '_ • T he Andrew Dickson Vnitelapers Cornell Univers! .:,-13EQ1‘11;CFIRISM aJ 0 I. I.ZOT AST' , Salina' sYnkqusE, N. X. 1 . • .-,:•"1 • 0 4•7 5 9 The Andrew Dickson VVhite Papers Cornell University ",` ,NAQ BMW:MD H.CROOKR.Rt afarpserreNAVW7.6:4CifiV a-14 ,444-4 LJ:C3q. OFFICE) OP HILT, VSINNEMPOLIS, TUSIvlspict. ts.s. • , 1sZ 622 BOSTON BLOCK. • k\ _AN " d r1.a12.°46. 011-"-tr e, • • z_z • • ZL•6. -tk• )t) • 1C-a4- I. • '4/ ://, e e-4r ( "ewai/ra;dada/ 14./.e: " 44; //e;47,../ /41.4! //(///e" ,:...r•wq / Xr-474-7y-Aaf 4e•fa•••*--et /17e9'-21,2-6' P4- _ 1,01_ 4- 4.1 7-Z AG--1,/7:1---L-124-r 7LV-4.7, ist4. J The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell Universi 047591 crr o cs: • rL1j.Jri . - :i po` .P1 )4 I !tsri ...1;:) 14 .3 eL4L'./2 "111/ 446111, • -A, • .‘k, s.^^, "hk .;'=. nA, - inr.3 ,rart.mt. esmarastwevaa. loracmrattrrtb, , ., • ......„...,.,„,,ftwralmm,mrmmilygmrgspntssnreza.;,,,,t,,,,,,,,,,. . • 047593 ty Nal=gral'AriWgrrtittVn.V,IMPAVag.t..61.WintalgliVrttngtntkreAni.M.S70=-±TW'T.M1 . (91 )t1 a. , The Andrew Dickson White apers, Cornell Universi 0 47 5 94 smaper.arenr.um , dmizattawavsststeSaMMTK, ell°7 ok 710CA, 21^ari'4 e4:7 7cr-d‘- air-u-eae ail, ee 24 ‘1 7 / • 4. .9)(aL/Jr) / es, 7 OFFICE, OF HORACE„k. WHITE, SYRACUSE, N. Y. ' i 3 • s•••,,!: The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University . 047596 V.• • C 4A.11,46-64C 4"-Xe Yt5r, 24Lnk-AC_ 114 7"'A 94-47e- A4gesre.- 444 ‘41A4 grif-Let, AA/fre,-/ 11444.:4., 41Z44 11644.4 The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University .„„ - [ The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University O. 4 7 6..0 0 4/(7/747,4 f f6e4.-c7, - a_ a- 6. - , 7* 4r4Le4.,e44.. ^.305WW, 04F.:64.1,0 r avr j 0 4 7 6 C., s , • e7,& J. SLOAT FASSETT. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT. lion. Andrew D. White, March 3I s t / O. My dear sir;= I feel very much complimented by the interest you have exp_res past . and in my present w.ork:: I am sorry you _ (// were disturbed fnr. , a moment by sensational newspaper reports that I was going to anaildnnthe work. There is not a grain of truth_im the .etateMents that have been made in that regard. This furrow must be pled through to the end ., if I have my way. With best regards ) I am ) Very sincerely yours 1.1 -1 0 F n• 2 O 2 M 10 •N O 71 X 0 • in M 2 ..1. . 2 . 3 0 .3 C X 0 4 0. 0 4 0 A 0 4 31 0 vc : AO an The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 1 •_ ar.usmassetsmanewner.* trl• ,- ;;;;;I :. r • Andrew 4 ;kz.ifPfiT,'t Dickson •Whi ;L'/ 4A074.4 tr, Lf,..7,.11.722Z-' '',2471P11.722=11WIn't FrSTI;.,:rtlin,t"'" • , -- • ...... , - -g o p_elow 1 HERBERT B. ADAMS, Secretary, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. A. HOWARD CLARK, Assittant Seorotary and Curator, U. S. National Museum, Washington, D. C. Dear Mr. White: ° You will receive from the Putnams proof, and of your recent address before the American .Historical Asso a-on. Kindly examine the proof and return both it and the cop to the printers, 27 & 29 West 23rd Street, New York City . Very respectfully, , ". .t " '" Imperial Photograph Galleries, 712 ARCH STREET. .1: P. HARRESON, MANAGER. El JACOBI, RUPERIN DENT. ELEPHON 460. HICHEST . PRIZESEVER AWARDED FOR PhOtographs and PhotoOpes. N. E. COR. NINTH. AND GIRARD AVE. TERMS : ONE-HALF WHEN ORDER 18 GIVEN, BALANCE ON DELIVERY. -a'ZielTr /6-4i— wt.., Ex. 40--76 FIFTY-FIRST CONGRESS'. JUSTIN S. MORRILL, Chairman. John-Sherman, Daniel W. Voorhees, John P. Jones, James B. Beck, William B. Allison, John R. McPherson, Nelson W. Aldrich, 'sham 0. Harris, Frank HIscock, Zebolon B. Vance. lieltjamin Dlirlee, Clerk. UNITED STATES SENATE, April 3; 1890. I have yours of the 31st ultimo, relative to a bill before the Senate Committee on Printing, and assure you I shall be ;]ad to give the same careful considerat; lOkl. 2he Honorable 476 6 I have to thank you for your letter of April 1st. with its enclosure. With your permiF;sion, I will keep Dr.Hap's letter for a short-time while I am making inquiries concerning the general subject which he raises. With kind. regards, Yours sincerely, _ 0 4 7 6 1 ?. • • AUTHORS CLUB, 19 WEST 24TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY. DEAR SIR: —If i-t---woutcl_be , agreeable to _you to attend the informal fortnightly • mee ing of the Authors Club on Thursday Evening, 41 (or on any alternate Thurscy 1 Evening thereafter until June), --,,,, , the Executive C•dlicil wouldIpa. most happy to send you a car. of invitation. --,--, -,--,----. avorable reply, fixing the date,61.111 , greatly • oblige, Very truly yours, • E. C. STEDMAN, • C. H. PHELPS, Committee on Invitations. serid ---a v• er=tb–MrT=PHELPST rr..66romerftreatam ene."7. 4 UNIVERSITY OF. WISCO MADISON, . OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT. April 4th, 1890. President A. D. Whie, •• Ithica, N. Y. My dear President:' We have deeided to change the form of our Commencement by the substitution of an address for the students' exercises. It would be very gratifying to our regents, our faculty, our students and our people generally . if you would do us the honor to inaugurate the Change. Our Commencement occurs on Wednesday, June the 25th. We are unable to offer financial considerations but will compensate you for ex- . pen-se!. I sincerely hope that you will be able - - — — ,to -do s thi7-great favor.Very truly yours, 70 . .7' • I The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University e. CZOMirr-R -- lat,ormj,akio oce,c,c'ice6 1kjiqi ;1 I 1: ••• :4e;i1c. •. 1 ZW7,1?41-7141aViT4-2ixzwmTam T.+"' XnZeilM:Matrar4 _Irger° All letters, to ensure firomPt . attention, must be addressed to the Firm. New Yor1.O • ,• 1 7, -• • 41*.‘ : CtZ, !, ' !,t),Ict434.4,4, • AT.5AVAA 4 sA Upi - 111. te,giVIAU, The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell Universi CORNER OF 2191' ST. .C./,e'kmi• 7o- April 4, 1890 We beg to acknowledge leceiPt Tpf Your order for coffee and will send eisee'''this _ The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University Central Vineyards and Principle ShIppIng P0 t Washinotonyille, Orange Co. New YOrk. '„fe. t; Ir 11111M10.101.141Mmarsuot1nn...mrmoMAIMPY vt•N gramma, IUfl l IHiffl 13 IroA ilh...V:a..4Z.ZiPORTZDI:060.- 141.1.1A:1110.0%1IM emER0 . RO.BOX , ppNE i421. d pjll _EXTRA DRY G' Address all Communications to our N ew York House 0 Lra .Aims ABSOLUTE PURITY, NATURAL FLAVOR, FULL STRENGTH. crei - a:;ktesat/r, ZuLe L.o.ic,c ciV-t 1Ye)li&I". 6,14,76c424 0, 111, arnr^ fAig,a0 /-1444>o-x-od v-ect -1/Lef.e,p^w Cett,‹A-1 _CIA r trail-04-e 1-4n41A- va,A44- The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell University , Please look carefully over your checks back to the_ first 'of last _October _and 1.et me know what bo-oks------ , Pr-ankfort-i---Germany---and—±t-o—B,—G Am hoping to receive at an early d A - and-r erai-n -- Very truly Yours, -Z2- 2ig=====rMMMireiMW rmalm=274-awlimramm.m......„ At4 r 54 p , Gireu,c tu-e_ emlelt_d 4 Q,e4er-C„.., 4, 0-4, 4-e_L. kzr cfrf fleWir {1'41 `VAVASNOrtft aer4-a-4;1,4-ol cke, LA-e-ertdow ; VIA-C44.4. N Le.42. d-o cLo At_ 0,41 . ert cA.,o , cef cm.4_ r 01/1, atua., ge4-0-r3 , (0-cArto-e.4. , 'L4 W-0,4 "era‘ren.. ot oe ea-a.,04 mit. cA,144 ; pe4e 4 ,d otadth4w4,0.4 etui fry- cfL_ i1 cri b ac b CR4,-cul olL.Lb-eni , cfRg_ cle4,4-ca. atko 6-e _ f-o_fte4,4S L ai , d&a_ ?.vrrfe42 c.v .4 a.N.A.;_o-eot €2.4 &AAA- 4 , vseuttext,,IrazaNtL__, OLL_EGIN or r.t,kt„ ... M.23,Srmt. 4— .4.,a,,t,t--t...e_ .0.... c,_,t__. 2-1.../rje7Z (--r---<--ce.. / , 1, --/i/e/e/e6' tOl--- Ctzke,c_ 0 ,/ /' a/4Z -1/2 /. .2_--- 'i c--6----,( . . /--,--- e- rze_.- ?-(W Z/ 7/7/ •I/6 • ......... _ 4 Ju /4"-. k(t,c-i__ LE- 52'1: , _ LA •The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University , 047.636 OFFICE OF H. B. SEELY, 95 & 97 WASHINGTON ST., ROOMS 45, 46 & 47. Chicago, April 9, '90 188 THE HON. ANDREW D. WHITE, Dear Sir:Enclosed pleast find the crude outlines of a corporation that has suggest.ed •itself to my mind, that inay contain some elements valuable to public institutions. I trust--I am not presuming too smA,.'ch on your good. nature in asking you to _ examine it. Should it meet with any favor, I will send. a detailed statement , inc hiding the method of operation:, Jih_i_ch.,yuould-be.-sini-. ple and. not expensive. I scarcely need call your attention to the obvious advantages of such a corporation and facilities it would offer for securing capital for public benefit. The new security based on the 99 year lease would be easily marketed, and. take the place of U. S. bonds with all seekers for. low rate securities. My professional work for four years has been connected exclusively with the development and management of investanent property, and I am confident there are no - legal or financial obstacles in the way of the corporat ion that I suggest. ' Very truly yours, te in - [ The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University - • - " "- " - ,olowyowpftWAOMMOMVOMOMINAM • • •• • -• ,s„ ....... idicCORMICK, • PRESIDENT. O w? C.A.CAMERON, SE eeY.S.TREAS. My dear Sir;- April 10 /#90 arn already in receipt of a notification that I have been elected a member of the 'Historical Association, and I shall today send my acceptance to the Secre- tary, as reOlested. What you say of the Paris Exposition of last yefir• confirms thefl statements•of others:viaci have written ms on the subject. As a French Exposition it was .doubt r, lean magnificent, but the American department was not what it should have been. Having a larger appropriation and much more time / the American officials should have made a much finer display than we did in 1878. I can only account for t their failure to do so byt1/4 taking it for granted Arnericanswould respond to air tation/ rather than understanding the necessity of solicitin-g end pressing our busy manufacturers. It was only after much ffort that, interested Tiffany & Co. in 1872 tend other who achieved success year were reluctant when first approached, My wife appreciates your aesurances of regard and 1 valtie them much, and Your s sincerely, • OFFICE OF POPULAR SCIENCE MON inze ft Ate,e,of 2131. • No. 1. 11911EIRTESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COWMAN Thia Company TRANSMIT'S and DELIVERS messages only on conditions limiting its liability, which have been assented to.by the sender of the following message. • Erro -In fransmiss, an be guarded against only by,repft: ling a-meSsage n or 'delivery of UnreptatediMessages, beyond the back to amount the sending station for comparison, and the of tolls paid thereon, nor in any case where company the claim will not is not ' hold itself liable for ,resented in writing errors within or s de,lays 1ay,s after This sendit4 the 'Lan IINEEPEA.T.ED message. - • . MESSAGE, and is delivered by request of the sender, under the contlition.srnamed above- T1- 403. T. ECKERT, G-elneral 1,anager. ' 1 J NORVIN G-REEN, President. -- • =EBBE • SE.NT BY BEC'D BY Received at A AI AMY 9-7 // f89 #/ sss••. • /Of P --41 srhe .•-•••tv.• , rt. -^ HORACE K. WHITE, SYRACUSE, N. Y. cal-- de/I-Le_ 44:t f a-et cl_ec_v 43— ' si-e6vcce,(_ z /(e, cc7 4t,t,c;z, /az,c_ yz,c 6ezz-vt4.-e cc.,6e eek,ece af 3 e-v-e-& Maaft.144,11=0=011115121:61=12:1192217.111.M.P............-_, [ The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell Universi 047646 I' The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 047647 s , " - • - •• •• • • • „ • • ,.-. ; ,tee , * TA* USAIQUIlk No. 120 Raridolph Street, :Jr ..•••••." /1/L-€.--‘-- • / :••••" AO" 41 .4111FPIIMMPOi• •s•s4111111L.al••••••./ ./ 4010. The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 047648 ‘.et" ‘-‘1- snom.varssigennme.mmnswactrasnesetrestmle*. POLITICAL ECONOMY CLUB The next regular meeting of the Club will be held at the residence of the President, Simon Newcomb, 1620 P Street; Washington, D. C., on Saturday, April 12th, 1890, at'6 o'clock P. M. The subject for discussion will be The Economic Functions of Prof. E. J. James Nv i 1 I open the discussion. 'Please inform me at an early date, if you intend to be present, or pot. J. LAURENCE LAUGHLIN", Secrelary. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, INSURANCE, STATISTICS, AND HISTORY: GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF TEXAS. E, T. BUMBLE, State Geologist. THEO, B. COMSTOCK, Geologist for Central Texas. 4. , VC-C-- NIrs„,/__KANN.H DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, INSURANCE, STATIST1CS, , AND HISTORY. E. T, BUMBLE, State Geologist. THEO. B. COMSTOCK, Geologist for Central Texas. tileptuumAIROA414164040UNITED STATES GEDLOGIOAL SURVEY WASHINGTON, D. c.,3.3 April 1890. President A.n ew D. Wiute ,Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. Dear sir I send herewith a pamphlet entitled. Women' s Hotels.. " For the further e1uc1dat;ono,fit t, aim I May - refer:to an article -. • by G. W. Cable entitled " Home Culture Clubs! ' in the Century Magazine for August 1888, and an article entitled ,The Working of the 'Peopl s -Palace " by Sir Edmund Hay Currie Nineteenth Centur"7,Februa.ry printed pamphlet. _It is well _kriown that 'women are the _principal support of the church.. They are dravrn to it not_ by its dogma, but by the social advantages it offers. The Women's Hotel will oifer the same and greater social ,advantages, and will thus tend to draw wothen away from_the phiirch But the_great -dangerl-to -such - a--movement - lips in its being captured by the church. Should one or two hotels be started and 12PPye moderately successful all the churches 1,v•rill hasten to imitate them and make them subsidiary to theinzelves; and in view of their wealth and thorough organization.; they can hardly fail to succeed. Liberal institutions of this sort would thus quick- ly find the field preoccupied ) and the very movement designed to antagonize the churches would tend to strengthen them. Hence a couff-de mainl is necessary. It is thought that th, expedition proposed in the pamphlet will serve- this lour.:loSe_. (1) -By - its glamour -of- chivalry it- wil-1--rouse- ent1iusiaSm and may secure thereby the sums necessary to estab -ish the Women's zz Hotels on a solid basis before their ultiinate tendency is per- ceived and thus 'reoccupy the fields To divert attention from 77 this tendency; it wouldctbe to-1- other features, such as -7those coming within the purview of the White Cross League ': (2) To sure this object more effectively, the Women's Holel;Society - nitst- b-e se cret organized -relbr-ehand., so that begin opar-a-tions at once on the return. of the expedition. (3) It is desirable that the members of the Women s Hotel Society 1Dear the principal cost of the expedition, so that they -maY thereby establish in the eyes of the public a claim to the managerent of the institutions. The lectures spoken of in the pamphlet are to serve merely as an advertisement. It i not expected that they will yield The scheme is thus seen to consist of two distinct parts: the expedition, and the Women's Hotel movement. Each of these two-is to •,be placed in the hands of-dile man, who is to _have ab. olute control of it. Lieut. Schwatka-has- consented to assum expedition. It is hoped that Brainerd and other men of experi- ence may be induced to join. -Wi-1-1-you- assume control of the Women's Hotel movement? You . Can fashion it entirely to your &vn The outlines given _ in:thopamphlet are Mere suggestiOns,-, Besides Lieut. Schwatka and :w Melville , there are two more .per-tOn*rwho haVa promisedtheir Cooperation. I haA're. spoken of . it to a number of others,. Major POWeil being _one of them) who ..iagreeing with.. me ,'.. in thinkinc,_ Melville_'s plan_ _the best that- coul-d-be-devised, and approving vYI highly of the Women's Hotel scheme thought it impossible to secure the necessary --e-agital, WMIëI hate the highest respect for their authority, )1-jiarefET-U-in-t aught by experience, A few words concerning : my antecedents. I Came:frOm GerMany ' at the age of 18: to enter the Jesuit 'order, in the-hope of , find.L ing thUs the surest demonstration of the:,Christiat faith .HAV. ing found in the course of 8 years that no such demonstration existed, I left' the order in 1885 and have since then occupied the position of translator in the Geological Survey. It is my intention to write a book "Eight years among the Jesuits." Were lc to publish that book not, it would remain without dlect, for it would be thought to be a mere device for makiigmoney or gaining notoriety. If I make a name for myself by starting the polar expedition and the grand philanthropic scheme .of , tle Women' s:Illotels, no •such :motives catially longer H be. iniputed t o me and my book can then be considered on its merits. For that pur. - 7 pose it will be sufficient for me to have set the movement on foot; I do not claim to have any share in the practical direc. ti on . In case you decline to head the Women's Hotel movement, , I beg you will .suggest somebody else that might , be able and will- ing --tb undertlte that task. What is your opinion of Prof. FeliX' Adler in this respect? • Hepingfo_ran early reply I 'remain very respeotful13/ The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Corne I lUniversi CUE= CU' i2211 rx • APril 14th 1890. Andrew D. Whitey, ,Ttheoe,,N Dear SirsThe iiezt iregstar-Chuvterly .Meeting Direotore of this lospany be held .at the .Hottream in the C1tr of New ,York,. on .Wednesday the,•.23rd day of Apti .at .4 teolook.P.M. ery respeotfally„ /Ow Seoretary. The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Corne I University I ' 37at39$t. eJ • 0.4 7 6 5 5 _ 34 7. 6 . 5 6 meitollitt "7711'1,1=171-.4..... • - • LINES WRITTEN—ON THE DEATH OF MRS, CHARLES A. WINNELL, March /8, /890, six days after her Golden Wedding A Golden Bride walks the golden streets ? A faithful life wins its fadeless crown; • No stranger amid the friends she meets, As they all on friends on earth look-down. For here or there the old love glows, —NW-death ri or distance -can-quench its flame; In souls at rest it but deeper grows, Intense, transfigured, but still the same. Serene and secure in her present bliss, Expectant, she waits for the coming hour, When that world renews the union of this, At the living_word of_the Master's power. 4.1,14 • All 14,44g she worships, all trustful she waits, Giving praise for the past and for_all that shall come, When the Master shall open the beautiful gates 'Weclci-n-- e earth's dearest tolleaveti'S blest home, " For I am persuaded that neither death nor life shall be able to seliavate us from the love of God 'which is in Christ Jesus our Lord." Rom. VIII, 38-39. , ffilt Cornea Xlititten3iif. Ahaiit.Natigarit.; „. April 14th, 1890. My dear friend 'Thanks for yourAind letter of March 29th. I am glad to learn that you are to represent the University of Michigan at Montpellier; our University has already appointed its three Professors abroad, Corson, Oliver, and Schuman The copies of your notices' of American matters I have not . yet found: they are probably in a pile of thi_ng_ s c -CUMUlat ed during my twe monthi'absence . at' Ph_ iladelphia and elsewhere which I have not yet had the _ time to examine. Thanks for them none the :less. . As to my library,:_i_hav-e delayed , making a list for you, partly because much occupied with other things, and partly because I have, since seeing you, made very large additions to it. I hope before. longt .get- 4t.'the Matter and to send you what you need. . Have you seen Von Hoist's notice of Bryce 's book in the last Pistorische Zeitschrift? It is interest- . big and valuable. We are going . on here now in our Spring term. Our new University Libr_ ary is to be magnificent. The main reading room, which is surrounded by stone pillars, is considerably larger than the great hall in Christchurch at Oxford. My own library ha a,ro.orl lay itself, which is to be of .a size to cortain forty thebsand - vol- ,, umes, and has a most charming - outlook over the lake and hills; a big open fireplace being in the midst • of the bay-window-. There will be at the starti'accomodation: for about four hundred thousand volumes. The whole blinding is of stone and there. is soMe,exquisite carved work. I think . you and Your wife . wOuld, enjoy it very , much and among the things which I dream of is that you will yet make us a -visit here. Newbury's big laboratory is also coming up and will be one of the best in the country. This leaves us our former large laboratory building to be entirely devoted to Physics. I doubt whether you yourself realize the enormous strides forward whith University-aft-cation—is-making-- „ ;ili_tJiiS country. And the-e I S another ^ gan Historical Collectioms, University 0 Mic , Andrew Dickson White Papers, Corm I University 04768 . .e ' Avr,-..rerm thing which is going on, a process by Ivhich perhaps a dozen or twenty of the • greater and stronger institutions are t draw away and rise above the three or four hundred smaller colleges. I think, too there is an interest th whole subject which there never was before. I am at work here again, not feeling Very robust; but getting along after my fashion. My lectures for _this term begin to-morrow. I will send you .shortly my • Dead Sea Myth• s article in which you will recogn1aoiresu.Lts of the work at the Royal Library inM ich. My collection upor*Palestine has become y large. •••• . As to ...pr.espects.,___ail. o w it. me tam. There is a possibility that I may run across the Atlantic for the summer, . in which case I am not unlikely to see you. Some of our friends here are going to Oberammergau, I cannot say that I have any special desire to do that having seen it once. Give my best regards to Mrs. Evans, in which Clara and Mr. Arthur Newbury, now seven weeks old, join. Both mother and • baby are remarkably well; Clara being out and about as usual. The Fiske Suit has been advanced another stage by a hearing in the Supreme . Court of the United States at Washington, but all is still in doubt. Whatever may be the result I trust that our friend will • set himself rip-,ht with his o-l-d friends and with the world before we pass of the • -: ....4L1 ••"^", • • - ,ms, S. (over) I remain ever faithfully Yours, • Professor Dr. E. P. Evans, etc., etc., Consulate of the United States, • Arcis Strasse, 13/I, 1f,unic)1., Germany. ichigan Historical Collections, University of Mic HMO And t.iew -Whi pipets •Come-I I • University: 04759 6.--e-144t; WAWItAgA ...711114==ti*40. tuts • WALIfROOKII'. C. , 4ipLAA:11 „ (/s-t-it-t , tc.,-,-,t- • .3 (L71- C4) 14-'y 9 eArr7-_14h.:1„44. • 61,154,e - , c . qa,tA.,A..444-) ljLAI A/6-0-1,---t—Cy I LA„-L4, t4- , il.rt (Lx_e„,9 Lof Ot) 4 :,t- 62t,„ Lv--0-t4C - ,t L-cCe. Tv/f---- 1P--7 '14,4 14-t-At I / 91,4,44) ILA..../1Lls'• s t,.."/ 6, A-/e... -Cti' t' OLMT/if tkci%i 12,,,L., -/-- ( L,:- CrIA/N) et.4 J LA-a. eA f C.-7 IN--‘---1-'1-1-t-/ pr--/ V al I 67/t__,A_A_,, , fro--( - 1&_4-€.---) 1- eAe, i Li41-4-1 .1 Lt,-,,-L-(/--- ,Ct.d--1,---i . r-3- L.,....rt- ,,,„' 1,--- • ti . vL,..,...e---) 6.-L-, , I-1,17u- q,,,,,,) 1,-. -7, - G-t--Li IL' The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University a47665 •-dear friend You1 r letter of.February 22d, whi,h,eeeMs to . picture you in a very merry mood found me in New York, I for- After two morithst abbnceIrQturned and have .since been working pretty anerEatically l f rpeihere Wh t please_s_m,e_most here are the two new buildings, which, each in its way, t,o 4X.e. evidently to The librerl is unquestionably the finest be. eevered by its steel and tiled roof during,th=q7summpr: bule, with polished - g4.anite columns and carved capitals, mosa- ic tympanum above the Inn-ar=aori-„_,w44__col_or,ed_marbles in the own library •room, with room for about forty thousand Vol-umes., containing a -great bay-window with a fireplace in th midst-of _i_t_,_seems_t_o me perfect. The seminary 'rooms seem well placed and well lighted; and the stacks are to me a mar- me time 'device of projecting bay-windows, the sides of eaeh't strong stone buttresses entering into the main Walls b stone caps above / is wonderfully well carried ea. The most impressive, thing in the *hole building is ' the .1 great reading-1.66M. It may surprise you to know that the of it alone, -forming as it Were the of, ' j.us the length and. of two feet A each side of it great arches rising from cut stone piers open into read-ing -rooms , w-oduc-ing±a_fine_!. effect , and The great t' ower, w1di is to contain . t-he-6hiMer ' a=roorri, bells, and Mr-.--McGraw clock, and a si,ried of one a b oVT ethe--other -;----w-i-1---1-4i 6 a very 'VT and from clock faces are night, as is to be the whole, bUilding.. ' As -regards book, my purchases.. have , Iately been coming in in , considerable l'rumbers, especially the -books' on Egypt and on Mediaeval and R-e-naissance Hi tory ,, I: ordered while in Europe and since. The library will contain at the open- ing of the nezt college' year -about one ;.hundred and six .th.ou- sand volumes; which is not bad as the accumulation of twenty- three years -with very inadequate pecuniary resources. .11o net fail to bear in mind that there are sundry beau- tiful rooms remaining Which can be devoted to special collec is fire-proof. the other structdre , 'Newbury! la.boratory, one of the best; if not the best s and largest in this country. better' piece of - architecture, too; than ,.anything -else done here as yet, save the library.... , The only other piece : of building in which you are likely ilite-r-eati-s--: 1Ctlar a ' up thirty five by fiftIfeUry:andMii1.0C#Iade- __I_____think-, a very tastefuir and . , eV ,en. beautiful thing, 'of it. As to "University .,news- here, our Senate, composed of all members of the Faculty holding full Professorships, recOmr- mended . Professor ,Tames Morgan Hart for the Professorship of English Philology, and their nomination will probably be con- ( over ) F firmed by the Trusteet ..',.., •' A, S:to rfainiay ,''neWs ',Claraand. hr Arthur 4,bekie care -'.wOhdrertillly gor ,ou L•s ,) Ow seven . ejmft, jOut „and • s ••:;--'-• rettrn • •• • ,-1dtvt, h av!.e -nOt..,.•••se•en • . .77777t-sh. eniyet. In fact, I see 1itt1eofanybodyoutside oouurr lit- • • - .. quit e•••- seriously of taking ,"'a:brief run abroad, especally into 'Scan- : din av i an couritr s av e b con 'f; or ome . timpäst giving myself ' to tosee tli.e mus eums of,')Danisn and %'f oth er Sc andinavian • antiquities • "•• ' -nOt meet me and go there? . It would do you a wor 'Why ;good. Please give my love to your mother, in which: all.,b.pre heartily join, and I remain Yours faithfully, ' n 'Professor Willard Fiske; - - Fiforenc•-e,--1-taa-y: e.0...A-CP7 c-c-- e.-4! ()---e-rz-u- _ - •1 • Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell University 04772 Xce ‘z-a' a,of A ti e_s_ f - 4/ gei4 tQi P4- • 4•- ‘,/..: At* ,X.tutrarr 14 attriAtexo'ck, /6. eat fro aele,,C. a7C1.14) kt& (r.frUCCsC OPERtn-C1 sraLRA4...e_ r"14"e61) -t,r1/4--C(4-gegt&AT" hf_ 4fsztAcc?", At 4ech7 /7f- 1&‘4-gt - cts ciL cur'? il(4) cActst itta cgOr" W/ -7,441 ((1 `‘ 1`5 r9- -5 c62-, a„31.4, I. merscon. c..42.44e4,241„. $da t cp-o-tt o/ : 't4s. t Bio eta The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 047674 • •••• )4'1. Cornell 1.Irliversity, . Ithaca, IR • . t i. / April 16th, 1890. eY1, 0 . 'clear 'friend, Your letter of March '15_ th arrived: duly, and gave us great pleasure. It was to me an exceedingly . agreea- reminder. of my. stay An Cair.o just la year ,befo're yours. ' I What. ,a 'dream 4 ‘t all .Aseems :CS only-Mish, that you may be enj eoYing, Athens.- and -Censtan- t inople-as. much-kias I did:botterM&sters , ti an ftiho se who represented our country in• !those parts,: theni,At.:would.‘be dif- . :141-Cult to find.ti I sincerely hope that thepresent,. ones are • -,N as good,- r C,. t I You say , nothing as to the time of your \coming "home. ,• have had some little idea of running )across,..ipossibly,,tp the ,. •So and.inav i an ' s countr Jed, this summer', ..lout it „is all very uncer- "r rrrtain,rif yeti and yours vire*';-be .,in;:those ; ,r,egions that would be an additional inducement.. For he, past •-;y ear: prehistoric hav e-Igrn at ly.in_t_er_eaited , ate land I am ., anx not only -. .'• to 'see%thoSe northern oOwitriesjwhich r I haveonever ,visit ed, but•tti..stUdy-a;:tlittletin the Archaeological ,t.M13.:-;t0.?j frerjd, Crles Tiffany, urge,6_1•• Over Johns Hopkins University about to make to California u most reluctantly I felt . . ,, •• obliged to dol1e. - lift m oyes, • see over the mantel piece a 'photograph of my' cad 'chum Fred Davies, in his Episcopal robes and 'a very-dignifie „ shop' he .undoubtedly.,makes, with his " "oed.,gray •lied, • an • full graY . beardi- , • All goes well hOrOISO ,far as .- I cart • see.. Our new....librar s really magnificent : all of stone,'...dron, and steel; very arge',•• Very-MaSsivei, yet very Iight, And with much very, beau..... tiful work UI)Ofl it. 11t may - interest 0 •know that the . reading,-room .:"is of length • a s the great hal]. at Christ- ..tfraroll;: ;Oxford, and two feet broader, .and • :theit out of it on either side open, two other' -lar ge rooms under, arches., which add mearly. fifty r dent to its size. trust that ,'you see anct , study it as soon 'after your return as convenient So, o our new chemical laboratory is nearly finished, , and that, too, isanadmirable building. A large engineering* 'building was finishek..last -.., autumn;. altogether we are doing Profes ors are entirely, successful; though one • f them, S 1Tartnaii, is now abroad. hope that you may meet im , and -, hiii wife r ,:they_L: are_very charming !:',people. • .‘ .recent, letter from Fiske' show„ •s. h4Tr , iri.rather;.rnerry.,mood ut,*'Aitterfiniewi'YsPeaks` .• , • , ••• • Very 00P-ea r •• •— ,•The',.latest,s *cE the great suit..is, that;,:the :cargumeint..be-: r• e Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell llniversi 04 2 'fore the SupremeCouràt Washinp;t on :has been made, and all be due 't o absolut e.; folly 'CM': the:part ,p.f, thel:University authorities.' There never was ' the slightest occasion for any ,/ break zviith Fiske in the first place; after the 'break it could have been easily _settled 'for nothing or next to nothing, and , then, after the suit was begun,: our case was so inadequately presented that we lost it in both the St ate Courts. But never:mind, — I. trust that in some way we , shall get over:. the chagrin and loss. - tt .1/ :We have recently had a curious new departure . and I:wish that you would think upon it a 'little, and give , me your idea—s, about it: at the last meeting of our Board of Trustees one of the Alumni representatives, just at the close of the ses- University Senate, which 'is Compos all the full Profess..! ors, and that such e • ions he submitted ta. the. Board. of Trust or .c onfirmat ion. • There was no t ime to 'discuss it , • so, though I did.. not - •bel4eve in ,it,.. I. thought It.. hest to let . the thing b• e tried 'and . wait for results to throw :- light upon . can proper for , the‘ selebt ion :of 0 . ..r .tfiat- is the . Pr esidentr;',..and then confirmat ionyby : a proper .body. I *ate qUite willflgto *have that.:bodyI be , the 'University: Senate, - only' with 'the 'veto power the. , Board. of Trustees. ,What ". , think you of tras • plan -for - the matter is 'sure •to 'coma up at the' annual' me et ing- of Our Trust ees on the' 20th of June. . The case oil . Yale College was urged as an- example of this new way' of doing'thinp,s, but-we tiow'aearn that there . is . a strting-! fe.eling•.t herb against it T. • - As1 id' Understand it , Yale is the only .UniVersity where such: a system of' election has j 1..liqbeervadoptedi-:1;1 , , , ' i ,'. " 0,. '' : ''..‘i . ' ' If . ,, 2) 4 ry .%. asef 'give t.Triy.r e Spae.t s ' and best wishes t o Mrs. Gilman and d'aught ars andJ r emain, my d ear Ever: fdithfully- Yours, .;t v.:. 0 .1 • I have a strong conviction that the principle is wrong, that ( over ) T. 1 ) Aohns Hopkins University The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 0 47 6 7 6 4,4124A.il 49. 44. dp,2 ltio ' 44 es%& frIZI4 te P --X.-4-c. dizz The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell Universi 0 4 7 77 _ _ d (/(45e- cL:t, /Q e..t.-4-e aec-> cer-z-al ff--' 67, o ) 0/ZAJ-- ozaaap,- 1-a-‘47zA-47.- 4.4 e"-ZA r 4 27 id-Lc , a_z( kr-A—A-4A- 2Zt. c,..ere 64-e -IL t->er-2--t-t..e...-e4-4....t,2:7- --- The Andrew, Dickson White Cornell 'mwtt;ty ‘be---Z -4--/t•-•-•t..--1-, Vrtj:L-e% II it Co rn ett EDWIN H. WOODRUFF, - - EDWIN A. WOODRUFF, JOHN FORD, - - - ESITORNN-CHIEP, - BUSINESS MANAGER. =f6P-f.TiltolIV EVA : -7,7z rr- s5. 0 4 7 6 83 //fe c92_ 'add_ , frA. IZigLffagfg,..7.45.g.r...1,BYPLASUMozonrsenva, {. 6 ' arm, *rnst. . 047687 ,M,Vc"..116..WXVI-TITIV..11410aA. .51=-Tent, V.MT0g0V.Onz,Z1V:11,A ”Vgagfia 6.9 ,a4M-MizaWiggza,TarAw The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell Universi 0476 UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI, OFFICE OF THE DEAN. UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI, OFFICE OF THE DEAN. UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI, OFFICE OF THE DEAN. OFFICE OF THE DEAN.. [4-01-qa3 _ „ ===ututzgzm7=E SMITHS ONIAN INSTITUTION, C April 19,1890. My dear. Doctor White: Since I had the pleasure of se,e14 ycu,I have been thinking a great deal about a subject hich is always growing a greater care. I mean the abso inadequacy of the Smithsonian Institution -private—fa to do what it has done in the past,while collegiate and o r institutions,which in this respect, were on a par with Us star-dd,while the cost of everything has increased l so that now;so far as this fund alone goes;we cannot possibly do what we once did Our field of work was never so large,nor were we ever so active as now,but this is largely due to Government appropriations, which undoubtedly promote "the increase and diffusion of knowledge': but provide for it almost wholly in one direction,that of biological science;while our work in other directions rather tends to grow circumscribed. These Government appropriations enable us to 047695 advance in some ways,but only on raila t as it were a,nd without the freedom of initiative and-o-f--movement, that we have in the use of ' sugge s tions from you as the nature of the cornment,if you think the original fund,9rh1s absolutely under the control of the Regent s. word of Now;will you be good enough to read (if you have not read) , the fe c-1,ts? - . . ..... '''' ' iv • • . • " L ^r 0477 de' — Hbn.Andeq D.White, .Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y. _yourself. _I have taken the Liberty of making a copy of it in _the_ hope that at some later time I may See my way to profit by its suggestions. You will appreciate that in the short time that I have been at Columbia, other questions more pressing have attr a cted my attention. I hope you will feel however, that a 1. -Stdh suggestions are we1corTf6j one .never can tell when they may prove to be most important.. 7715 The Andrew. Dickson White Papers, Cornell Universi 90 it e ,A4tea 9. Aex c9/ t1,14-,1 ZetiAe leeL se- 4. 1;r9w7.4ee/ 4ael;e44 4• 0/c c>4.7,ie 4 06,7 or,11_0( at The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell University 1 iteattt===ZZYMP/COVISMSMTOZWIL2LIZMISERIAMEMINIMAIVALMOVII.70.2.14.102•27CLUVOSOA • fi p ti-4-t-S2cth- ('-P--c-t7_-&-7 (c)-1(`- , Aoelz /kg. cr2- '-t- • _ .• -"A_ • :"( Ckt.-A!" itkt.;* _ • The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 047720 • • ' •••s••••,mmontenndirre r•r02.,MMIMPZI.1,87,MFrtggra! 0 Or - It •• 1 v 74/c- ,szt ( ke-1 ,4 IA-6(76.? ck_ <24 ..•••• ti I The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 04772 7`. • "j,wl ;FROM BURT G. WILDER, M. D., s PROFEBBOR ' OF inarii0 1043nt Compantibt Anntomu nub Zoolonp, coRxEr.t, TINIVRRSITV. Ithaca, N. Y.,. '7WUC76D`r 0 4 7 72 3 The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 047724 .•, • thlivv Jtrri9-0-4- Lenal°sur"-3 Tr ,9.) .A-livsf P''‘e kr:s /3441—e- tv..- M2-4447 M.L 14,4.4 01,u— u4s4A hte,,,—ai2) (17- .04-0 _ f elt,e-tate-4: err444.-- Q—Ae 19414P-Ail, k 071• Wfrf r tr4.-7/t y"No_ r.4;rmQL Qs4.‘€91- oto ,0,40-141," /OA P2/ tiy-co-sy_k four4. ) 0-0-- 4-4 Irak e;P__Ani A 0,4- GiN4. -1/ t p/ 011;;,07--9 (r4e 4, eiVidai;ft' (eVA OS.#S1 42,4 yrve-p-d4, ,ffle2„, ‘45'2.74 0/fr) -ts ad,A4r 4b 41 4;ipr, ° s. ' n1A-Q„,a, PUSA. • t, a The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University - Hartford, Conn., April 2, 1890. Will your engagements takeyou to New York (city) on the 2nd or 8rd of !ay or even on- the -5th or6M I _wish tco_have_ a talk with you in the matter of a suitable Memoir otur friend . in the United. States. And this wit-flout any expres:sed—wish of wrs. Bar-a—n-ard, but from a conviction she needs the opinion of old and appreciative friends • of her husband I am. expected to"I talle to the Graduating class of the. Universi- ty (City) School Of-Pedagogy on,Saturday afternoon, May 3rd. I will ,no down earlier and (UPC- laier, if I can have this interview with you by so doing. Yours truly,i,011.3..2.7 314 I3ROADWAY, NEW YORK. APRIL 29TH 1890 HON A.D • WH I TE # I THACA, N.Y. MY DEAR 8IR; • . I HAVE NOT THE GREAT GRA TIF I CA T :I ON OF YOUR PERSONAL .AC- QUAINTANCE.,BYT YOUR PROONIENDE .11/1 LL . PERHAPS EXCUSE My' APPROACHING YOU FOR SOME GUIDANCE. I AM :ASKED TO SPEAK BEFORE THE CONGREGATIONAL CLUC A. VERY INFLUENTIAL BODY HERE, ON THIS QUESTION, It IS THE COLLEGE FULFILLING ITS OBLIGATION TO THE YOUNG MEN OF THE COUNTRY IN PREPARING THEM FOR BUS I NESS PURSUITS. '' I BELIEVE I HAVE BEEN SELECTED TO PROVE THE, IslE0ATI.,VE , OF TH I St BECAUSE IT .16v INDUG:H.T THAT 1 AM A REPRESENTATIVE BUSINESSMA,11101: :A 8ENSE,W1 LITTLEOR.410—EDUCATION*:*14C4ETABLE TO , EORE2e.-'6.0.C.A4.E4'!OPON.,THE , POVOT. I .:DO . NOT '.WANT TO DD ANY 1143'TI1UTI ON I NJUS T10E,'AND,,.. HAVE SUCH A FEELING THAT :CORN ELL UNIVERSITY HAS PONE MORE THAN INSTITUTION TO --- WARDS THE ACQU I REMENT OF REALHPRACTE CAL KNOWLEDGE THAT PERHAPS YOU WILL DIRECT :ME 'WHERE 1 CAN 'GET, SOME LEI TERATURE)OR 0),IRRESS SOME VIEWS ON THE 'QUESTION' THAT I CM ;MAKE USE OF. I WILL TAKES IT AS A GREAT FAVOR IF I CAN, HAVE A .FEW WORDS FROM YOU, NOT FOR QUOTA:TON,- BU T FOR DIRECT- ION AND Si GGEST 1 ON• MY FRIEND GOLDW1N SMITH WAS HERE THE OTOER DAY ON HIS WAY TO WASH! NGTON,AND SPOKE OF YOU IN THE KINDLIEST WAY• I AM. z FA I THFULLY YOURS . CITY LIBERAL CLUB, WALBROOK. E. C. 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KIP,t4 r44:C14-44‘. r6 14' k 644 AAA( Ait-4 )tit (I, 4 1.( çJi 1,.44 ar+-0,444- 'Yu.c v- 61;911 n )0,444.44.1 • "Aum.h" -rittat 6kerAcici, sAA, HvYa's;' 1'4'41 11,4 •O+wn. n(.1,4k41'A1c't1mU'4Ic1A14r4i.1anIv.itt‘ a/v...4-c4 (A. 44/4, 11,444 14 fp-Zk I'vc (A.1/4 "141-410 • Ye-att 4 Ivan Alt Ikur c41- efr-lyv Vyrov4., e wyot 4,4 dri.ta.. L. co.A0462.Atri,...-extexko,vEa ,A. . Cirg.11 1, ‘IZ C • The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University kx, 44. `'91 °4 ivl '' 1;1Al2'')11316 11.4.91:1 "1s4414 at ik. wi.A.-A-Z , AA IvAc Gcl,,, 1v-L044,4 tivt4-c kg,( ,... 4-• /col r f; 4; . 1,14,41 lig. X iv,41' NOILtaA•Nva spfl. 0,r i. 14 WW1 15-10 t Ift. T"ill 1,1,4la44. ikg:+i kyi 11‘4•44C1% cva fluiL revzAt rill ' 4-6- ttil- Wist A Ck4,4 14-4 . iv 44 'A -- Armwit. 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The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University _ e 7-65,:ee 1 The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 047791 4 ,e2. ai41lt.27 j 4L A tti et„,2 ,t2) ' M=" etfrdar 441lar/v• 441. Se. eh 4,, -404,, 4,m n,u 1,1,& diaw ";-„"44,t gi,d444.2,„ ‘r.t.e4 4frao_ 4" 0.4 444.r? 1. ./4- .4 1-716.a4 et..o 144,4J/41_0) If40,Ley foc:*„. A IZd 17eLe:R dt/K1' 444.1/4 4, 4 . A,•. Ia47 e A144•144/ 4144‘1 71. ,41A 24„i ti-K.z4L d,t.r ZA..2 AA ‘,,,,,,,„6/-- 46,4 eel,/ Le, du/1,v fe,ty 7erZ, g 447/ "Lew 0111. L14, lath 40,44(4 0-424( New YOrk, May 12th; 1890. Dear Sir : At the last xneeting of the I Club, the Special Committee on By-laws reported that they would be unable to complete their report till the October meeting ; consequently there is no reason for further delay in issuifg our Annual Book. The Secretary will feel much obliged if members Will make suggestions as to any change in the Book ; also send their names as they desire to see them published. Very respectfully, SA.NFORD, FLA., f3 1890 n ;4)fty 444ziti 14) _ 7wiu'd, 41ett;,TJ 014) ;ftethitifyv ;4 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN. SECRETARY'S OFFICE. rsendo..sa ire. Alar /A2 • - CAPITAL, $75,000. - S. S. WALKER, CHAIRMAN. BOARD OF MANAGERS E. E. WHITE, SEC. & TREAS. ., SUMNER COLLINS, EDWARD BROWN. MICHIGFIN MOR GAGE COMPTINY, (LIMITED.) (Summon To WALKER & WHITE.) Dealers i n Mortgage Securities, LOCAL AND MUNICIPAL BONDS. St, Johns, Mic h 4Itt(4;1 18PLA Cti( ,A4A144.- $75., (flstr-t4!C+. (.41 c-44) iatiA40.46•Xt's @VP-V.-4042.. y '1C"- - tt. CV- c.41 U;Lek Ce-C.4.3 .51/Q 4 a.4 0e ‘.Z2Z-4‘,4-41"'es7 ""64^11•4441(t f J• ('4(( APlA"erra.../ 044. t tak gtx_ +,Ackitz' tttA iak fcA olf--.72: , ."Y .4•--- .eZt. ,l-fAZ-0- I ‘..,-- W /z. tif , -1- l-L47- "Ax-c. .0._____kiz....-- oz.e.A A-,eA r ..& 7---o- -iiz-4 .4e.c..d //1-,A.-, /44-4 OZe-i-td G" 4 -4,-1' "- - (--gi'l %4--- 14'- c, I'VC ,.- /7:Al(f 7fr'l a.s-a- It_c- e,4) ;_44_, ' -t ‘1-`7 6 Ale, 4*- dAllid 4 7-- f-ez-L, /2 /i4- 4,‘,.- - a-Lp 7.-, ,/g_...,-..- 7,4..-. 4744-4.1 n:1—it /--7-7-2- 7 44-,- 7-‘,.) ;7 The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION, Organized at Saratoga, N. Y., Sept. 10th, 1884. Hon. JOHN JAY, President, Hon WILLIAM 'VVIRT HENRY, Vice-President., JAMES B. ANGELL, LL.D.,•" " HER RT B. ADAMS, Ph.D., Secretary, A. H ARD CLARK, Assistant Secretaryand,Curator, CL ENCE W. BOWEN, Ph.D., Treasurer. How:ANDREW D. WHITE, LL.D., How. GEORGE BANCROFT, LL.D., JUSTIN WINSOR, LL.D., (in addition to the above- f iad officers): WILLIAM F. POOLE, LL.D., CHARLES KENDALL ADAMS, LLD., JOHN W. BURGESS, Ph.D., LL.D., GEORGE P. FISHER,• D.D., LL,D., • DR. G. BROWN GOODE, JOHN GEORGE BOURDNOT, LL.D., D.C.L.,C.M.G. Aild r ew: Ithaca, N. Y. I beg to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of the 10th inst. addressed to Mr. Clarence W. Boweh enclosing money order for in payment of the annual dues to the American Joel Moody Mound City , Kan.s as. way to the 13 acific cos:1st aid will not return 'until the last of June. I have sent Mr. Moody a receipt for the annual dues and /return you the money order asking Mr. as the probabir es are greatly oblige Ji Te L 13 eti.,eVue. • .11-11LTIIIELPFIIR• CEORCE C. BOIDT, PROPRIETOR. J-10 TEL Be 1)LCV LLG .114 ILA LPHIR • oume.E C. BOL DT, PROPRIETOR. tego.L; L ' El dgriutt Artitureitg, Pititant,Nguigririt. May 13th, 1890. Yours of April 30th came in ten minutes ago. The prospect of .see- ing- your mother and yourself, and the possibility of the Scandinavian trip give me great pleasure. I am also very glad that you approve of the library building on the whole. • It comes out better and better: Goldwin Smith, who has J.Ust been here, was evidently strongly - impressed by it especial• ly wherr he went into the great readingroom, which is somewhat larger than the laugh at me when I say that it is to be a I..: :liar' 04.7 8 0 4 fiterl• room than that. The sic1e:rooms opening out from it under archways, the great fireplace, the coved ceilings apsida3, windows; the three lines of 'melding and •cornice in stone running ; . completely about, 'it, all combine to give it a really high !architectural character, my (own library room comes Out better and better: the tig fireplacte in looks over at your ,chat eau and down the The' carved rork in stone throughout There are to of Ahem,' b•oth'i 'and one Of theta said to me, great pleasure ,f•Dr a an to put himself into his work as we can do here mithout -stint." , I have a .suspiciOn that more 'money is going into the building than appears bfitie publishedT1gures Idori9jeo how cJt can be otherwise. (lc !.:Goldwin ,Smith!s visit :w. as very pleasant in every respect: -3'night before last I. had a ;dinner-party, in our simple fashion, for him and the Rev.- Dr. Hoge, who had 'preached , t he Urilvors fty sermon. Stops to ,look at and I; haVe,just,...re= turned from my: usual morning visit to the .-better sort;; has been much ':abroad-, and has prof it ed ';‘"There • is som ing fas- inating about him, in spite of our great difference of- opinion so many Virginians. I know perfectly what you refer to as the drawback in our University affairs: in fact, the cloud is •clearing away, if indeed i-t—h b not already disappeared._ manThas th -e defect's -of his qualities, and. the philosophica iway would seem to be to adjust oUrselvet to them. • I envy you great1.1 your visit to Munich, where I was,”.st a year ago at _ they shape-themseive_ s_omewhat more def.- - I1 (!tuU Aniitersitg, "41titartt, Atiu Oink. initely you shall be - informed. see that in any case I can get away to Scandinavia •quite as early as July 10th, but .will try ilt, you are to go at that time. -Thze/ Other night -, being with Fred in New/YOrk On business,- we .went lit thee evening to . the theatre and there found the Thachers close beside 'tit: they were delightful as usual and insisted on our coming to dine with them, and on our going to the' theatre with thern afterward: coiirse - we made a very pleasant night of it It is now considerably more than a year since / have spoken to either Judge Boardmari _or Mr._ Sag_e_regarding the suit, save in the one or two instances when they z,Lm,,ttav4- Ntr"ttIO," Professor Willard IFiske, Ph.D.. etc., etc. Care of Macquay, Hooker & Co., Florence, Italy. closing one from you on the subject. Judge Boardman expressed a wish to have and I hope that you'millkeep_the_mattet_in_mind,_ rally mUCILdepend6 p4the-reault Ofthe litigation; 1 understand that the other • half of your side, does not respond to your wishes in the matter: do not let it go out of your mind entirely, but which all here join •• • _....----,„—:,,,,At.sny.m.,:,,:,..i.;. Iltnt • •At."1.: . , /4...A-12-4— s-e—a4.—e.... S.-4.-4--/,_ (....r-C C--'4 , • ms 11.....46s1 — ,:l 1 .:'.,; ,1 •ci .4 'i •;I . , .1 ?, 'q-Niyirmoy i Arm _ , lb§ No: 64032. /4/ /kz-ezel 0.16z.zile4 10—,L pA9, OLLt • •' -/2 f ,E:---• ' ..- -. Postmaster James' Endorsement of THE CLASP ENVELOPE. POST OFFICE, NEW YORK CITY, N. Y. OFFICE OF TER POSTMASTER, April s, t80. DEAR SIR—It gives me pleasure to comply with your request for my opinion with reference to your " CLASP ENVELOPE," for the enclosure of ordinary mailable matter. It is an exceedingly nseful novelty, and will prove a benefit to the public in the protection it affords, while quite convenient in the matter of examination to the attaches of the Post Office. Yours very truly, THOMAS L. JAMES. PARKER —Entered into rest, May i3t1i, the 83d year of his age. AMASA J. PARkEtt, in The .funeral services will be read over his. remains at St. Peter's chtirch, on Friday, May i6th,at three o'clock r, M. tFrom The Argus of May 14h, 1890.1 Ripe in years and honors, having long passed the allotted term of man, and having enjoyed fame, esteem and reverence such as only attend a blameless life and the faithful performance of duty, in all the trying circumstances of an exceptionally busy public career; happy in the consciousness of work well done; distinguished alike as jurist and legislator; ever foremost in projects that promoted the public welfare, and tenacious of honor and-rectitude at all times and in -- all places, Judge -AmAs-A Jutitus -PARKER completed a well rounded life and entered into eternal rest yesterday. Earnestness, sincerity and good, strong, hard sense were the chief characteristics that carried him successfully through the exciting and trying scenes of a public career that went back nearly two-thirds of a century. To them were united exceptional legal ability, which made him a power before a court or jury. He was one of those rare advocates who are never disturbed by any, unlooked for crisis ; but meet it with as much promptness, fortitude and address as if they had anticipated and prepared for it. His well-stored mind supplied him with inexhaustible material in the most complicated cases, and his keen powers of analysis enabled him to unravel with ease the knottiest points of law. He was principally distinguished for the readiness with which he mastered and ot well in hand all the questions, both of law and of fact, in any se in which he was engaged. Fifty-e . ht years have passed since AMASA J. PARKER took his seat in the ssembly as the representative from Delaware county, William Ba r being the Speaker during that session. He was elected Regent the University in the following January, and in the succee 'ng eleation he was sent to Congress. His appointment as uit Judge, in 1844, was the next step in his career, which was fol , ed by his elevation to the Supreme Court bench. In 1854 he as one of the Justices of the Supreme Court sitting in Court o Appeals, and he was appointed, some twenty years ago, one of the ommissioners to revise, simplify, arrange and consolidate th , statutes of the State. In 1856 and 1858 he was candidate for Governor of the United Democracy of New York State, and on each oacasion he polled a very heavy vote. In the first contest John A. KinereceliTed -Z-6-4,400Tibles, ATU- asal.—PRTicer, 198,616, and Erastus Brooks, 130,870. In the second contat the result was as follows.: Edwin D. Morgan, 247,953 votes ; Amasa J. Parker, 23o,5i3 ; Lorenzo Burrows. 6o,88o, and Gerrit Smith, 5,47d. President Buchanan offered him the 7 and honorable trust which links in the name of Mrs. Bleecker and Mr. J. V. L. Pruyn, with his own to illustrate in a degen- erate age how honor, integrity and faithfulness are jewels in the crown of character. And he died, like the old leader of Israel, with unabated natural force and with his undimmed eye looking back , upon a record of distinguished public service ; of success achieved by devotion to his calling ; of an unblemished reputation in private life, and looking forward to " the morn " in which " the angel faces smile" of those " whom he had loved long since and lost awhile." Most pleasant to his host of friends is the recollection of his life in Albany. Young in his old age; -because of the fresh- ness of good sympathies and kindly interests in life, keeping pace with progress in all best ways, he had been, I fancy, old in his youth, in the habits of carefulness and thoroughness and thoughtfulness which marked his mind. And he was what we call old-fashioned, always since I knew him, in his courteousness and dignity of speech and bearing. He will be greatly missed in Albany; for long as he has lived, rounding out more than the circle of most completed lives, he had the will and ability, if God had pleased, to work still longer here. But he had amply earned his rest, and they who love him most cannot grudge him the happiness of dying, as he would have wished, with all his native powers, passing through no painful process of decay into their fuller completeness and their larger service. An old land- mark has gone from the city. A home is empty here whose atmosphere was fragrant with all that graces human life. But - the city is richer and - better for the memory -which will live on as will the home life passing into other spheres in the eritage of his influence and his name. W. C. D. The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell Universi „.. CZ. AMASA J. PARKER.. AN . ELoQuENT AND FEELING TRIBUTE FROM BISHOP DOANE. With characteriStic simplicity, Judge PARKER wrote, last March, a private note, found among his papers after his death, expressing his desire that no display should mark, and no eulogy mar, the dignity of his burial. ” The beautiful service of the Episcopal church," he wrote, "is all that I desire." But- there_ are-desires of our own . that will be gratified, and that may be now, since he has been laid at rest by the side of his beloved wife, under the shadow Of the massive Celtic cross of pure New Hampshire granite, which admirably typified the upright dignity of his character, and bears upon its face the legend of his own crest, so largely the law of his life and so full of his realized hope, " Fiddi certa merces"—" The reward to the faithful is sure." My knowledge of Judge PARKER lies outside his political and professional life, to which his brethren have already paid their eloquent and affectionate tributes. For twenty years I have known him in his daily walk and conversation as a man, not only constantly occupied with his duties as a lawyer, but closely concerned with all that could advance the interests of the- city in which he had lived for nearly half a century. I knew him also in his home, where his old-time dignity lent itsel.f with very gracious kindness to its delightful hospitality ; where he realized and illustrated Jeremy Taylor's exquisite description of married life, " as doubling joy and halving care," and where With patriarchial pride he gathered Children and grandchildren who love and reverence his memory as a heritage in honor in the blood and in the name. • His -early:interest in -edu cation-gave-trim-titelo u nd a t n- ofan elegant scholarship ; --and,- in Spite-of the constant-pressure of his professional life, he was a man of literary accomplishments and large information. He was permitted, in the 'Completion of Harmanus Bleecker Hall, to fulfill thatsacred 3 position of United States Minister to Russia, the post of Collector of the Port of New York, also United States DistrictAttorney for the Northern District of New York ; but he declined, -for various reasons, all of them. In 186i he was chosen President of the Convention which .,met at Albany, and was composed of the best men . of all parties, anxious to arbitrate and establish. peace between North and South. It was a great occasion, but no good came of it --:- bad blood was too strong on both sides, and the firing on Sumter soon followed, notwithstanding this brave meeting of patriots. He always believed afterwards, as he believed then, that with temperate counsel on the part of the Republican leaders, then about entering upon the control of the Federal Government, civil war could have been avoided ; but when the first blow Was struck at Fort Sumter and rebellion was thus inaugurated, he did not hesitate to regard the die as cast, and became at once an earnest advocate of a vigorous prosecution of the war on the part of the government, and freely contributed his own money and time to the raising of men and means for that purpose. But while he did that, he protested earneStly against what he deemed the gross abuse of power practiced for merely partisan purposes by high Federal officials, in the making of unnecessary arbitrary arrests of Northern men, whose only offense was an honest and independent difference of opinions and a free expressicn of it on subjects of mere party differences, in no way, involved in the prosecution of the war to put down the rebellion. This tyrannical exercise of 'power and gross violations of the right of personal liberty he stoutly resisted, and not only denounced it in public speeches at the hazard of his own personal liberty, but he freely gave his professional services to obtain redress for such wrongs. 04781 4 Judge PARKER made several delightful journeys to Europe. The first visit was when he was on the bench, in 1853. When in England he was greatly interested in meeting Lord Lyndhurst, then Lord Chancellor, and Lord Brougham, then at the height of his fame; and at the request of Lord Brougham he addressed the Law Reform Club of England, at its annual meeting, and explained to its members the results of his experience on the bench in regard to the chang had been made in this State, and especially as to the administer- ing of law and equity in the same court. His last visit was in 1878, when he went to Frankfort as a Delegate to the Associa- tion for the Codification of the Laws of Nations, in which he felt a great interest. He continued his journey into Russia and happened to be in St. Petersburg and Moscow when Gen. Grant's party was there, so that he saw many things not generally seen by travelers in that great country. His labors in his profession were prodigious, and the imprints of his zeal and industry in that direction are deep and lasting. He was a most enthusiastic student to the last, and never wearied of devising methods for simplifying esoteric methods and practices. He was one of those good old conservative Democrats who believed only in men con- secrating themselves to the public service, after first utterly abnegating all selfish purposes. Judge PARKER was through life a firrh advocate of Jeffersonian principles; and when he was in political life he was active and aggressive, and con- sulted by the great leaders of his time. He was wise in council and thoroughly at home in all public questions, and his discretion gave particular weight to his opinions in politics. He was philanthropic in mind, and was always ready to aid any project that he thought would benefit the community -. It is to this charming quality of his nature that Albany owes the 5 existence of its magnificent public hall. Judge PARKER had always a kindly word of encouragement for the young men in his profession, and he was himself a sNining exemplar of what every young lawyer should seek to attain. Albany has lost one of its most distinguished citizens— the law one of its most illustrious representatives, and the Democratic party a faithful, loyal follower. Judge PARKER, fifty-six years ago, married Miss Harriet Langdon Roberts, of Portsmouth, N. H. Mrs. Parker died on June 27, 1889. General Amasa J. Parker, Jr.,, Mrs. John V. L. Pruyn, widow of the late distinguished Chancellor of the University of the State of New York ; Mrs. Erastus Corning,.and Mrs. General Selden E. Marvin are his surviving children. 11..r.l'eb. Z6, ego.] JAS. G. BATTERSON, President. RODNEY DENNIS, Secretary. JOHN E. MORRIS, Ass't Sec'y. riforzzamax Coloiaason4 .57—/ — 9a] JAS. G. BATTERSON, President. RODNEY DENNIS, Secretary. JOHN E. MORRIS, Asst Secy. • 3478 Your kind latter acknowledging receipt of the "MemOrial" - volume of my dear departed wife was duly received; Referring to your long absence from the countryl I am reminded that possibly you may not have received Mrs. Francis illustrated book, "Across the Meridians. It was published by her not for the mar- ket but to be distributed among friends; I am sure your name was on the list, and if the volume is not in your possession 'I Will promptly send you the book 1)17 ex- What can one do to alleviate the yet there now and then intervenes that sense of irreparable loss, that vacancy in life, which seems almost overwhelming. I have made a strong fight to get a new grip upon life with a view of recovering 'content and te assert self-command for surroundings--a charming home, dutiful . children and loving grandchildren, with friends on all sides to give me courage, and with grief largely resolved into precious memories--there is the visitation' so often of that terrible senseof desolation which even the Faith I have tried to cultivate seems inadequate to remove.' Heartwounds such as you and I' have suf- , waste away life by melancholy. Some months had elapsed before -I . could handle the - matter that: makes up the "Memorial" volume. Emotion had the mastery of me so that I could not read the obituary .contributions and letters of condolence Without breaking down. And thus nearly a year elapsed before I was able to take hold of the work and see that the compilatien" was properly' made. This fact shows that I have made great pt gress in regaining self-comman and I . have no doubt this has beer your 'experience. But can we' ev entirely triumph . over the terrib desolation? With rMest personal regards and . good • shee for yourself and your family, remain as ever) Faithfully Yours 51PTR, 9-1890-1,000, , 1, aa/ 2_eceeve 4e erdweiret.4'el 144814 Secretary Smithsonial Ins 7 ton. 0 4 7 8 2;? laww,vtwpmmt.F..),/, dr/..tate* gi '1•A -/7-61" \ ~70;004 11•4.6) /4-1.4/, e 14444444, dt. a44-C-4. 4;fr" AV-AE4Z' 44irIAC.-Ca.4..i.44 44. L4/18.4 a--e 444 11 7 4&444 aZ41-0114. 44114477.: P-‘41/14-07444) Au) 44.4.41 fr447-- I,'4a` k.t../4/1 144%44Z- 4100-4- g4.4. 47- '1 4.04.4.6e 14.441i. 4/1-a44:Z4f-e". 44.44) .4.:f• z ig Z4Gt.4.144‘4111. 4111w 114.:1).Aegil4if 444.44) Gret.*4 44,44, 4.44.44f aeqr 444' ROOHESTER, N. DEAR BROTHER : - THERE WILL BE A MEETING OF THE OF THE SIGMA PHI ASSOCIATION OF CENTRAL AND WESTERN NEW YORK, AT.. ON YOU ARE EARNESTLY REQUESTED TO BE PRESENT, AND TO FAVOR US WITH 'AN 'EARLY REPLY. YOURS IN THE BONDS, E . 'P. V. SEORETA eollepe of Medicine. bicaf9) opcvaim ova SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY. Syracuse, N. Y. • .. Cornell University Library, Ithaca, New York, AZar . A2'-e:;;--)-2 /44!--frz44424,Z 4/7;e-4"zee." 4'0.7-7 cm-...7 oZ-7, 4z4 LZ, er,_1 A":42-4- 4.1 I ./te .e; -s"e- f , .4- Crr-7-7-.-eze-- /4-Z4-Cc-I r- e-ex 41- ri %1L€ 4-411' - X-Cd4--44 42-e, Get, A-e 2•7-zr_ , 777: cc 7Xe. .• da...-24fr , 4 4%!•a-a_e_.e..,z,e /La_ ./4..az-c--t__ 4-41; 77"Z.4,_ /71-4t. 07, 0 .e4(47 %Gee 44L. 4f, air .4-ere*" 42t-c6- Afu-0 447 - dx-OFF,C4e- J - al-GI-72-0 4-- 07zir- IX/17-711-1:4( 4.ee 4-; aiee ac..0€___ 04-7- 4.-C7--4., L;e0'4L G-sc2;& GEne4-20 2 /44- , ei 271 -1 4 ZrZz-l-et?'227 1 ;1A.. Zey;-2 0%-cc.,€elor //te 4-- a- JOZeG- / CL/Z4--7-a4e-/ 4G.e-e.e: 7 erg--c..._ oz... 2 A;---z-;s-r-: 77-7 a. Ae-e- ‘-7.7 xp*-ZeZ e&r e: AlaszylI Ge,-e-s?,14W4. • •t." 44/76,e. ca-s.D k07/2-4,-ed;z-1 a-7s. • .P-a..e.c.c. / GYz_e_ eff ./2.&Z"ef;wzrz) /&- 1,-m. e-es-s-se‘. - lerZ)Ze "Le:0 - arze-Liff 9. 7iYi C-44.-Z 4t-t-g /4"- - " GEO. W. TICE. AGENT& or B. F. STEVENS, American Library and Literary Agency, LONDON, ENG. FRANKLIN LYNCH, Hikers; Ligi*S4111 , ii4/ POPULAR SCIENCE M. ON 1, 3 & 5 Bow STREET, 047829 [Form 144. VW 1,000] OFFICE OF WARREN-SCHARF AS-RHALT PAVING COMPANY, 11 EVERSON BUILDING, PRINCIPAL OFFICE, 81 FULTON ST., NEW YORK. Syracuse, N. Y., May it 1890. 'Prof. Andrew 0. White, Cornell University, Ithica, N. Dear Sir: At the'reqUest of Mr, FretWhite, OUT son, whcyhas called on, us tOdaY - in 1eference-t0 the-Pet-al* W-Raving—the-street th frOnt of-yiour bioak-611 West Genesee St. with Trinidad Asphalt-Sheet Puementri-sens you a mar ed copy of a very good Pamphlet composed of articles from all the papers of New York City. We refer you particularly to the references and quotations frOM the work of Prof, James S. Newbury of the School of Mines, Columbia *College, with 7Whom we believe that you are accivainted, and who is One in whomHanyone,can:pot ' condidence, I think. He has thoroughly investigala all the different sorts of asphalt pavements in this and other countries' and has come the Conclusion that the Trinidad Asphalt, which is that used almost ,entirely in this country, is superior to any other. He also says that it is a mthgtake to suppose that, When properly wed for. it will not OW the heaviest of 4aff1.c. Hoping that this will be of _interest to you, we are ery respeEtu1ly yours, C bit" I 311 •hcat •raviztg-Cmi7 , BY oat IP"cerzca?..:AurfEit. tSee . pages . c5 and 6: for. his articles] 37 THIRTY SECOND STREET, WEST. _at7 /0 ),/ cve. et et cosde tiflo‘ tdtr4. ,% eMAZiArt, 4 m. A• A•v-t;*. 14-TnA. tto,i v*A- att41 cw. 4,4 .,eva.v.1.4., yint 1 frt':^41 clyt-AA 1.4044, 041.4,100 /g;v1oCe4.47 4441 7 044. 1 The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell University •34783. 0 777. Sautit's Ctrin — 90u.e (4,3 cut) 6tv-1- C Andrew picksOn....White Papers, - Cornell -,_U-Oive.e:"1.4, 347 GORNELL UNIVERSITY, IT CA, N. Y. CP< C 047832 4.-t) z.(4-04=- tea-. it-t,,_t7 cca 7 - • Viafla."Zaa4.24"; . .„ GORNELL UNIVERSITY, ITHACA, N. Y. ,7 1 C,0-14-A 0,217- -,arze,/ • 11 1.1 atdv,/,v tc4 ./zecd-Azee_e&d, liae.",/ref 4,(e./a7z.d/ V/6“(AA #cee_.e 7%td etvel owz`e-, ea/Id, a-(-d-(> iae-e/&x 7/2,7 a.e,1 J. itue41/4.7 La` 4v/A/ce, a40,/ a d ‘/744-1 ,ev1e.47 .77_4(4,‘ ya-w, Fpv / "Ylv 21-626t, //AAA, / (ifiet,00t.dce4/ , Cct/ce /. 1(-c/X) - ) wet & 1ke,7x a,f oi,424 /f/x(4, ti/u6t, Aiged-fa/7 /-a-eAft , AzA-te, de714-/f/at; 41/it ,e0ez.° 41/(g The Andrew Dickson White Papers,Cornell University 4 7 8 3.5 „ Cornell .'UniVbrsity My dear ..friend4 ' You have gained the final victory: --- mains to be seen what use you Will make-of-it. • Ailbw me. •as- ne wha..has•Anewn. You.trom'bOYhood 0 ._and,,WhO has Stood -10:. Y. -Y61#. • v. .• side at almost all the important periods of again to speakplainly with you. Two courses_are before you. one absolutely selfish, I policy dictated by dislike of individuals, by indifference I I, toward the University, which for nearly twenty years you did so much to found, and by contempt for the opinion of good men d, and true, including your own best friends and well-wishers ) here and elsewhere. The other course, perfectly accordant with your II '^f f' best financial interests, is dictated by a larger, nobler V. -ft, I '/ 1 feeling, which will give you in addition to this material victory already gainedy-a-new-ltictor/ over your opponents in the eyes of every right-thinking man and woman: a victory whlch will shbw what • I haVe:steadily-insiSted upon from. the will prove that in breaking your wife's Will; you meant to , carry oUt her purposes ; and thatyourconquering the -men who 04786 [ 6--A43:4;(03 .V steady). ,inthit re Speccr: ;IThwidimple announcement that you have made arrangements to do in some form what .I .have 'always told you you ought to + do during your lifetime, will rouse an outburst of good feels , :0) ing toward , you in all parts of the country. Curtis, Warner, r, L t ç ; and your other friends, many friends whom you do not know, taking the lead in the press. '• worth having. That will giVe you a victory • -, ;' , ;-• I still believe that you should make provision at the — c' earliest day possible for 'giving this fund ultimately the destination which your wife intended for it. • best be done?.•.f. How can this Formerly I suggested that you allow Judge Boardthan as your agent, to gather in the fund for you, allow the Universi- ty to become the Custodian- Of it, to invest it, paying you the interest under a thoroughly guarded contract during your lifetime, and then applying it to the library after you have , ceased _to _need it. But should your rePiagnance to .Judge Boardman be invinctf ble, should you feel that you cannot recognize him -and Mr. s- • -Sage in this Matter, then another expedient is ,open to you: you can doubtless create a small body of trustees to Accept ; gather in, and with Your cooperation., to invest this fund,: with the understanding that they are to pay it over to the éI' Mr. -sotto and...+:ludge Boardman shalLf:cease ito be -Inernbers of theflioerd- Of TrUSteesf, , , YOuflO. receive , the fentire income o r said fund, less 'necessary expenses of the trustees in the matter; + as long as you live. The latter plan have some ,+ excellent point s.. It can be arrange cL so as to gUardr::, your interest in every particular," .S as-.nte. • shbfr,..the',.f*orld :whO,V+, 7thecreal:SOUrce ,..off,)the'f:diff ,14$ulty.;)1 to prove that yoUr -2.f.:purpose yotr.r4ifes intention. Should - y .u, couple with this a general ., . fdealarat ion that you' bope during your ' lifetime; teb ' of use Ltothe library. arid , the University- in , : the-waT of supplying from "t ime ; t t ime' works which you think, may b è valuable: t it that 'would , be 'additioriril proof :of , your right feeling and. fwould iiiak,e your victory in the eyes oVtheLpublic' far more complete. In suggesting t1ii to you, I do, not ask of you anything which tI . refuses to domyself. I ba,ve ,,. this last year, as during many ;, .1.yeToror, paO-t";f) giverv a large sum , :for this purpose. I expended oui v4' of-rnyT-own-;=-p ocket jilt or t he -1-i-brar y -Over tie. -thousand d-ol 1 ars dur ing my , 'Stay in AU.ropef-; last '-.'surnmer, ,.- though I had mult itud es v: ' other , upon me land,i could really; afford fx.. It • How • • could such a trust be cre,ated? form is perfectly easy: the rionlyt quest ion. isi as to.' the' Tind,ividuals. , +YoUl. have a, large. , ra e of friands to choose) -from .Ourtis , ( over ) • The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University -7 • Warner; Horati o. Whit é ;.; ', , and.;., others.. The Ora Y cl4ffidU 1tY about such ' a ,,)combination is that these gentlemen areso , far removed frQrn #3, 14P11.1., ;Qtherik,,,; :. Another 2g.a y. , Lsugge St e‘,:itsedf:, - you told me e'th t you had made Fred„. one , t or your', executors : straight - forward.; .with an excellent bus inessl.head •,E has - cleared - up and. good , got intoshape two large interests of 'ours,, which; l apparently had becothe ; chronic ' calamities, and wou ld do,very; , Wel-loas one of Your trstees.r He his alwaysrEbeen - raofriend Of yours through ' and , good report. I do,not urge : ,,himinthe ' slightest ; 'in fact , I by no rneansrefer - him, if ,' ant.101der man or the right sort can be found to take his -t place; , , , 'Should you adhere to your idea of continuing him as your executor, he . might do very well as one trustee, , Horatio ,White as ,another, and say, Judge Charles,- Andrews, or his son.; ,William S.' ,;Andrews, whc is a Harvard graduate .'and an admirable young lawyer from , every point of view ,or young William Tracy,, whe alsO a --high-iiiinded. , and- capable ,lawYer SyracuseT-or,' ;M., ' Hal.liday -for whom -I-,haV a-veryAltgliTznespect-, and,-.;who6-woul.d doubtless discharge his duties' thoroughly well. On the whole it would Seem best: to have; Say , - three:, trustees, th.oUgh . /two, or even one, if of the right sort would do perfectly. well. writ T• Ahis: Without (oen ,sultati on?, with any 'one save a ;ishOrt ?it h lkilW it h Adama.;: , ,sha not,);COna4t;;Jud.ga.rBoardman, unies% he -, showe' ,a !_wish t o: rcerfaUlt me; norshall3 ,./t.alk,)with .' Sage n t e subject, unless ( h first speaks to rne ' about it which , its ' :unlikelY; but I purpose to consult: either ',Halliday, or one t'gotir'''Law,, Prefes.sors4 to ' know just , what the be st way wbUld se em:, tO be,' both for:you arid, fOr': us , and I earnestly hope that you will take that war.; In view of the great importance of the int erbsts concerned.; it s -12riethat o you shOuld:! ,,cerrie over , here - ati,, the earlieat - :day osaible why net Came at once? AJporiv your arriva l , t alk with. such' men as Ju, dge , Andrews, if you like, or any or , all of the -other ' Men I have . narned: r:, put.' e matt er into final , shape, bohasregards: your :interest dintL . - that of the University, and.. then ljtrust.thet ,', we can'.so (tadjust,, matt,ors , as to go back to BUrtipe together,' Think of. this; : be gUided bY your (nobler feel'ingS; and.: 'thus mifie ,ygur vi.ctor sr templet e4 , . ,Should; I get anli, lInformaitionor suggestions likRa.IY,,t40;..ber.of,use to you, s.ssricP:tam.; :st :ori-ore ' Be careful 17hom you --trUat : see how int erositTs,,1 fpoth-e-rs st and r or oho eLto lrouraivrLand ., othajzt ere st s of the • .:University .. ,:giving this .advi;ce, YOu.g .at'l leastypan:;.; ..ac.4u.it me 1' S4' .I have otteiv reMind,Cdyou;2 -1 of,1an cdP ad;r,ST t o promQ my own int crests '. As you know, ; ‘.want not a dollar of your 'ffeneY; ,I ' want no participation in any trustee -ship, I want nothing save that a course be adopted which will save your own honor and interest, as well as that of the University. .,„ a s.1,• The Andrew. Dickson 'White Papers, Cornell University .. Aiid ytiat qonentifing ert Only' r`athPA'r lend Mpwhich .;11,a so.Aong between ;US• : ,j1414.3r e. SP gal,c',ipla inl y t +6-'4 ou ",itbOutwanotherspat ter, r.C.044icli-ftT h elsp:okenotp •you before. Now surely there!: reasonmyhy,, a ,si.,3itabIs i,mon- ument t o your dear wife and t ;Mr% GraWy sh (mid, b a longer .e a, And yet' another thing Bacon ,t m NeWH,7ork that he Should advise as a imat t er .of honor and decency , „ the,. oppo- tent sy, af the . Unit. ere itY ; in , lt as ofthe ory, did not doubt , to.p y over t e tituti on the specific - beqUest a made by = your' wife , that is the bequest t the„Hospi - tali the., rna'int enance of 'the Mc:Gr aw ld ing :tshe HathatiritunaMed•Tor;Abelibraty. ShoUad the)fab,er$ AgrO.P.to- L ['Jab ouVi J harve esp ciali hopes c Ann nk you5 Attr :04e. 90x/f). 1..1a cs,erve t o show that your real purposes. fwer.e notwoppesed; tpt itaaose . of .7y °Ur- ysfi e m whatiur views lar , and hen) mre' eXpe v TWA a: qaurrinCit h en' ci.nc wh,lith ...here ..A-rema in ,Your s th.ful - r Professor Willard Fiske, Ph.D. , etc., etc., • 'r Care of Macquay, Hooker & Co. , Florence,, Italy. AMERICAN HISTORIC ASSOCIATION, Organized at Saratoga, N. , Sept. 10th, 1884. I Hon. JOHN JAY, President, Hon WILLIAM WIRT HENRY, Vice-President., HERBERT B. ADAMS, Ph.D., Secretary, A. HOWARD CLARK, Assistant Seeretaryand Curator, JAMES B. ANGELL, LL.D. L RE CE W. OWEN; Ph.D., Treasurer. HON. ANDREW D. WHITE, LL.D., HON. GEORGE BANCROFT, LL.D., JUSTIN WINSOR, LLD., COUNCII, (in addition to the' above-named officers): WILLIAM F. POOLE, LL.D., CHARLES KENDALL ADAMS, LL.D., JOHN W. BURGESS, Ph.D., LL.D., GEORGE P. FISHER, D.D., LL.D., Dn. G. BROWN GOODE, JOHN GEORGE BOURDNOT, LL.D., D.C.L.,C.M.G. Office of the Treasurer, 251 Broadway. eue Wel21, May. 2 • ....... /?7O Hmi, . And row D. Whi t e Ithaca, N. Y. Dear Sir:I have received your letter of the 19th inst . en- closing postal money order for $3.00 in payment of one year's dues to the American Historical Associati on for Hon. Joel MOody, Mourid City, Kansas. The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 047839 ' il51144 IPICACIT S WILfltLk L1ThQ .coai.r, r ••• x x •• X$ • • • -SWORN-01 ROO LAT I 0 N SUNDAY - - 4,000 SUN AND STANDARD, WEEKLY, 2,880 ••• itlt •• X% ••• • Hon, A. D. White.- four note du1y received and perused with curious mixture , of pleasure at hearing- direct ..-'disclaiMer of the materialistic philistilism Which I was so sure you were aj '.but not o; and of regret at your not finding_i_t___Lpracticable to meek_Mr.21111it-etead. He has gone on eastward, but must be ere lore aga,in at Rochester and I reiterate that it would be well for You to appoint meeting, if possible either - eteed/tede...a e r / / 1,7777 , I fully appreciate h.ow occupied your tithe must be; and realize hw how the more concentrated and . intense the intellectual : life the more difficult it is to divert it to a novel channel. IVIKIDC I ask as a perSonal favor that you peruse inclosed slip .and, provided and provided you favor Mr. Aldrich's reform -at earliest possible eonvenience send him a note stating., that YOU have received one - of the Public Defenders slips per the .witer , and while commend- you see fit the plan,- also vouchsafing any modifications or practical features, your researches as a publicist may suggest - es- t, pecially 9'our ideas lpropos of the bench-interrogation I understand 047 41 propound [Form 144. 1-'90. 1,000.] OFFICE OF , WARREN-SCHARF ASPHALT PAVING COMPANY, 11 EVERSON BUILDING. PRINCIPAL' OFFICE, 81 FULTON ST., NEW YORK. Mr. Andrew D. White, •Cornell University, ithica, N. Y. Dear Sir: Your Letter of the 19th in regard to pavements is at hand. We think that yovhave a mistaken opinion in this matter, especially in that of our cOnnection-with , the pavements laid in New .York City, with which we have had absolutely 'nothing to dO: This Company has never laid a single piece of work in New York Citp, but we have some contracts for work there this year and they are to be laid immediately. ' From the popular favor witn which the merchants of that city receive the asphalt pavements, I judge that they are well satisfied there. An occasional defect may have occurred, but that should-not cause a wholesale distrust of the pavement in general. Probably if one were to go over some of the stone block pavements in New York he might find an occasional small defect. As to the matter of summer heat, we be to state that but a fraction of the Trinidad Asphalt pavements laid in New York City were laid last year, so that there has been ample chance to examine the effect of the extremes of heat on them, as considerably more was laid in 1888 than in last year. Also in the two years previous to 1888 tnis pavement was laid to some extent. . If you can find a city where our own company has done and maintained our work in an unsatisfactory manner, we should be very glad to learn of such a place and to correct ousselves, but we cannot be expected to be responsible for the work of the Barber Asphalt Paving Company or any other of the corporations engaged in laying - Trinidad Asphalt Pavements. If you have doubts in connection with our credit and standing in cities' where we have operated, I would take pleasure in referring you to any citizens in some 13 or -i-4- cities all Over the United States and Canada. f Savannah, St. Paul , Minn., Chattanooga, Tenn., Montreal, Canada, Detroit, Mich., Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Columbus, Ohio, Toledo, Ohio, Cincinnati, Ohio, -Utica, Bingham-' ton, and Syracuse, in,New York State, and aIso Rochester]. We think that we can refer you also to cities where other Companies have laid Trinidad Asphalt Pavements in vast amounts and where there is a constantly increasing amount laid every pOar. The City of Buffalo has within a few yards as, much Trinidad Asphalt pavement as there is asphalt pavement of any •0 4 - 7 8 4 2 WARREN-SCHARF ASPHALT PAVING COMPANY, 11 EVERSON BUILDING; PRINCIPAL OFFICE, 81 FULTON ST., NEW YORK. sort whatever in all the cities of Europe combined. They are to lay about to to 12 miles of this pavement in Buffalo this year. Also, in New York City' there are to be 1ai0 amounts of it this year in comparison with which the amounts already down are most insignificant. Hoping that you will encourage Syracuse to keep up to the times and not disgraCe hereelf with'any more of the , pavements with which most •of her Streets are so well eqUiplied, and that you will appreciate the fact that, altho' any pavement cannot be absolutely perpect, self cleaning and self maintaining, what we claim is that the Trinidad Asphalt Sheet .Pavement is'the best of the forms of pavement.,,as yet devised, we are By CAsurEn. asks*. .:,-cAlIZ,,,ITT,", -1,,'q!7;" . ai-e.-Atz. A e4-4.) ci uryl,c..e 01 /4.y d44AZ G44;74: 04) 41.4-4/,:crep( c c cv-24. 4.1. / 4-44.4.4 Pa:Z. 7 /“. A-v-eZ 4:1 AA-4_ 7/L.,;, 4-4 .yi._4c721-t cel-a-t- -e: 7/7- 6jZ24: 7&e A-4-L.,/ ‘.‹. toljZ I aece.c.1 4.4.; 4-4z (.41- 44.2,644.-4-X Zug-t-:c ce(4/A Lgr 6‘47. , - /tst.v?b- dig/frt-e-ut.p. 7er- .e--)‘‘‘ Z 14-e-.4.44 4.6.) a..401) ale 6404- ‘4.-;11 k1.4..-1/YeL elrie):ZLI we( .471-4j oi ) Alb The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell University • lli. —Feb. 26, 90.1 JAS. G. BATTERSON, President, RODNEY DENNIS, Secretary, JOHN E. MORRIS, Aas't Secy. ewzott/f; fi-izt i-e-c414/1- ac.e&ii„ elt4, , a prosi.e.,1044/ 4- Acj — 11skat., ae4,xvu.,4, Ptc..2 rik.e110141 1X0144 e'r4i2)7/(Ai...Ls0644,1 1'1p1fr.i46.444:. 407 egaztvp 1444 t4 44 L-t 4kt:e. %14y ;4, tCi **/ 1,14.-X, 4 14 iderpt446% 4:.0iffeAstes, beff.41 144, 1-0544.4. ,24‘444,4,47 frar( s a‘,•1/ 3-41, 4/-g4:4 41141v a;4 1/ t4, ..ylie--u14°4* . 4 1 ; The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University ii_ ManUISCARIWK1.7192211. &A;, f . .g,/,,-,-,:a, iii-t.774-Ri,..,2 % 0,...,/,,,,,,,z,,,-- a-i- ..-- *-50,-;€. 1-0*-0- • d-/-4.-- . ..:7 ..s.//11, 0 l •lz-41*:; 01 16 #1/ar ‘4I, 77‘‘ 417‘ 4,4 ‘ ,f,'‘ 0/ itI$V . aeAfifri ° ‘4 1''l .4' AtZ6 L*.c> 0.Or• ds •-•1I', -s/ ' ,:; , ,. . 140:6• 4 .- --....foledttw. / 1/4.-- X1-‘0440 0.74 .,1 t• "Keleieneet0L-, ,, /1,-7ii--Zt *, r- "e",e-- ,,, ..-- , 115-40:&'4 , i- '101_"44-z4' i9 L ,•fri.-, 7Ar-f--A., /j'e.jt,e4,7/2-;',00,7- -W). 1 iivear---:-/Z.., 4; ,107.1..0,..-.- 01'04, - ' /14e-0,e II; / . , 4,1 , . _g_/W%,1-c‘if.-*-„-.‘5ie...-7-0,,,,,,2•5C--^_/./0/,4.-7-°X1-,e‘-„-,il....:._,(,,„.,.., . i 0i 41 , a). 15•,*. ` ,1zswo/oeli4, 4-4-71 '11. 4 !, 14-A4r7 , Q C C. - et (' rL _ . ' 'A C ( t c , ,_ -A / ,.'; //t__..,..\ /X. .r i 7 ('( 1 6, )-,,, .C. 71_ (./ r ( /1 , ( _6 ,—/7(.4! 7 A c , L ,Nk, , L' /' frC c -)6 L. - -X,/, ( : --vi \ --',,, t ( : (1-:( 0 )1-7 (,- ( k t , ,\_ / a--c (s ://r, \ c,_ 1 --- 4\t-- ,, ,(/ 14 11- : l°‘ ,(//)/C C1 ( a ,i ' / - / (,- , .'. / /7' ' ^( ,r . .t_ 1(I. (,- -,, ti, It ' 't '(..0 -, I: ( . .:/,:il t :( ,;i ':-: " (L i !, i,,, f/ :\-.C K._ c c I7'.. ' ( .1 , \ , ,- ,. i (A ! '(1. 7 -7,'_'XOI-:, -' (.' C I (. (1 rr: The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell University •• • •,, •';•,it.••(,1/).....•., 4`,`:!;;ZTELIRMAWNSAVVAr rFeRm'w""' •TE:n•• JA-o ILI;(2-1.e w-, AA /1/LNA- Q-Our. ' (vvs cdksk AJ1 ct,Ct_frfr. e eadtz ,j—Lu rl U _cat C2-s. e_eitcj - Cefut--x-te a,LPs 1 • Mr", • • THE DEERFIELD SUMMER SCHOOL OF HISTORY AND ROMANCE. - 1889. --- The FOURTH season will open Saturday, July 6, continuing every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, until August 1. Sessions will begin at 11 10.30 A. M. •Among those who are expected to—a-ddress the school are : Dr. GRACE PEcKtum -of New York, upon "The Higher Occupations of Women"; Miss C. ALICE BAKER, with a Historical paper ; Mrs. L. K. LIPPINCOTT (Grace Greenwood), upon "Yankee Character and Humor"; Miss CHARLOTTE FISKE BATES, who will give "An Illustrative Reading from Whitman's Works", with prefatory remarks ; JAMES R. BREVOORT, Esq., of New York, upon "Realism in Art"; Mr. CLARENCE C. BUEL of the Century Magazine. upon "The Literature of the War"; Prof. JAMES KENDALL HosmEtt of Washington University, St. Louis, upon "The Story of Anglo-Saxon , Freedom"; Mr. EDWARD BELLAMY, upon the themes treated in his "Looking Backward"; Mr. G. HILTON SCRIBNER, upon "The Origin of the lied Man"; Dr. TITUS MUNSON COAN of 'slew York, upon "Matthew Arnold"; CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER,ESq.; Mr. EDWIN D. MEAD of Boston, SO widely known in connection with the Old South Historical Courses; GEORGE B. BARTLETT, Esq., of Concord, upon "Hampton and its Environs". The last session, August r, will be upon the question, "Some Present Tendencies in American Fiction", and several well-known authors will be present. DisCussions will follow the lectures. There will be a class in Current Criticism, and readings of Original Stories by members of the school, open only to members, upon dates to be hereafter announced. The historic\ village of Deerfield is easily reached by the N. Y.,N. H. & II. R. R., the Conn. River R. R. and the Fitchburg R. R. (Hoosac Tunnel route). The scenery is of unusual beauty, and its situation,_between-the Deerfield and Connecticut rivers, makes the walks and drives especially attractive. The Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association has here its Memorial Hall, containing a unique collection of relics of the Indians and early settlers of the valley, and a valuable Library. The Dickinson Library and -Reading;rooin is open to the' public, and contains the more recent standard works and periodicals. Board at the Pocumtuck Hotel, and in private families, can be obtained at reasonable rates. Excursion tickets will be sold on mornings of the sessions from stations on the Conn. River R. R., between South Vernon and Northampton, for one fare, to patrons of the school. All communications should be addressed to L—J—B—LLNCO LN, President of the Summer School, Deerfield, Mass. The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University OFFICE OF WARREN-SCHARF ASPHALT PAVING COMPANY, . • tr-t1A-t ; -.4f,t,AwrAt4.14WA0447401.1.?-1 - / 111 "Y. • Dear Sir:- Our Cashier in Syracuse, Mr. Robert M. Pier-de; has your letter-ofthe 19th, and as he has ansWared__ it, I take the liberty Of commenting on it still futther, as the facts In regard to .matters_therein Ate known better to me. Our Company has never yet laid any pavements in this City, ai- though we have some largecontracts to execute here now, and are just beginning the.work on them. • The pavement referred to in the New York papers as being too soft, is on Wall Street,. and was laid by the Barber Asphalt Paving Company. I tiave seen OIR pavement almost every day since it was laid, ancI;can testify that it'iS apparently a4ierfeCtly good pavement • and no soTter than a newly-laid pavement should-be. Experience has • shown that a setting process, the nature of Which we do not exactly know l takes place after a pavement hE!Iaid and after it has been subjected to the„traffic on the street;' . As you khow, we lay these pavements with a roller, ,which has a tread of from 3 to 4 feet wide. Although the roller compresses the pavement while hot-r_ketit_cannot tompress it so much as traffic would do, when heavy loads are drawn over it on wheels with narrow . . tires. In many places where pavements are laid in cities for the first time, and where people have little knowledge of the - character -'of the work and what may be expected of it, there have been numerous corn-, plaints about the softness of them. In two places in our own ex- perience, property ovinerS have held indignation meetings, protesting against the Softness of the pavement, but on a statement from us that • all would be tight if they would only give us time,. all the objections have diedzgWay within a few days; • . Theie pavements are not an experiment•and have been laid An elimates-where-tbere are great extremes of temperature; They are a success in Southern climates, in SavantitE -arid---New—Orleans, for • instance. - We haVe just completed a pavement in Savannah,' in which city we have had pavements in use for nearly four years. The statement was made in the New York 'Evening Post' that the Wall Street pavement was too soft. The Matter was called to the n [Form IN OFFICE OF • WARREN-SCHARF ASPHALT PAVING COMPANY, No 01 FULTON STREET, A. D.W. (2) New York, -5.7.-2240. attention of the Conamissioner , of Public Works, who stated that he had received a communication from the Barber Company, in which they stated that if he would give them time, he would find that the pavement would be all right. It has been our experience in the matter of newspaper comments that it is 4 waste of energy -attemptet;cuply to them. Newspapers are constitutional misrepresentors,anhing which will rectify itself later, it is better to avoid discussion of in this way.. If you uould come to New York, and look into the matter, I am quite certain that you would be entirely satisfied with your examination. Sincerely yours, je, hiatitAzt.cj P411)P. 4 ktry.• • K-4? ek-r 4,4 / ,./i'''''' 1 - 01 /1 e or 44,, ' .2e (2, 7-14 ,) -2,17 ".-71'' _ The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 047860 . .- _4. _ ..l. -e1 e-7. ! -117 ' ,,-5-.%‘;--,-,'.-.,1---.-. ::-.•./.- ' - c., ..-•=a 2:' 4‘1'e • _ --,.'---,e-/-e c,reze;1-5, 1314- ,'/ ., _ eZt*.-e4 0%'ef -2 .. A— „---," 62,,, if, "''' 7 C --"C-..Z'll, 42 0'7-„?...;', --171.4,'" .4, et---1,761 ‹.__r__ _ I. _ ;47 e -0 _ ---,- ""4-Z ..-- '. 4:,_4, ( /e..4.0° ie9-Z" The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 7• 6 1 010.4,4'.i.f.•..F.t.-17,,W.155,.0..y), 0, Ube &mull nthersitt3, ,clitiltcra:Neufgark. - May 23d, 1890. I enclose a form'for your consideration, and I hope, for your use. It coVers all points, so far. as I can see. It seems to me that this simple statement going, as it will, from one end of the country to the other, will set you right, and show that you have always intended to be right in the matter. The simple statement tn . few words, coupled with this proposal, will do far more to produce this impression and 0-eate a great revulsion in your favor, than any elaborate.state- . ment leading to recriminations, 01.,4gagla 47, 047862 • "Al If 1 57.1r : T----- , . .1 . , .. ' , • _ • ,, • . • • . •, , , ,• , , , I . . .• . • •1 . , -.. , . • • •, 1 r, to be sure, a portion remains to be sold, the but the Judge has taken ,admirable care of A ready for immediate payment. What your arrangements with your law- yers may be, •I do not know and I do not care to know, nor does the public need to know: that is a matter between yourself . with.your trusteeP.,on , one ,side, and your .- lawyers on the other. , As to the clause regarding the mon- uments, it does not follow of course that your trustees are to carry that out necessarily; they are simply to do it -if you direct them to do it, otherwise not. So too, as to the house: while I hope that, if the property goes at a fair pric9 you_will purchase it and retain it, there is nothing in the document which requires them_to—da_s_o_r_unless you specifically direct them. If you conclude you do not -s want'it at any price, or if it goes at a higher price than you wish to pay for it, •of , course,- they being bound by your in- structions, need not.buy it. Should you buy it I hope that you will arrange to have your trustees hold it for yourself as long as you want it, finally turning it over to the University, either. for an art gallery or Faculty Club, or even the hos- pital above named. • , I remain Yours faithfully, Professor Willard Fiske, Ph.D., etc., Care of Macquay, Heeker & Co., Florence, Italy. The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 047863 _i_4964Z4‘• f Are.0 Le.‘ 4 Cd 062:8',4 or-‘, ci, c A.4„01.4.4c., X4--- 0c4.4 4.2 /z: 1L 9 AE,I, Arza-- Kt.,. 744 t ez. e„„t,e_ 75=liliatv The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell University Cu RT) tatNetalkigryinit 5latext l'oiargtr, m ay 26d 1890. A My' dear. White. 1.1107ve just a=pHmdtmg.L.Aaf) • your tieminiscences of Mr.gornell with very great interest and pleasure. , You give a most '‘714 -id portrait of the man , and your pamphlet does the work of an elaborate biography. My Own acquain7 tance with bim was slight, out eyen •my 7 imperfect knowiedge feels the truth of your appreciation of • 'im and your. story will oe of the. highest service to his •mamary. Swi become one tla3red .,bOak5.-of tat—Uni4trsily. Did I •e. ver_t_eily_ou of his remark to , 1,e at I sat by him one day in -the Con -. 'stitutional , GOwentio441 during the discussion of the clause confirming thb lend grant to the University ? 4udge $.Mith of Fulton quoted a 'little Latin. I rather think it was a Varese from the Latin . GraMmar. Mr.Ua. rnell asked me, What does that mean ? and _ when 1 answered,ne said."If l'can have MY way nobody in New York hereafter - need ask'thatquestioe. It was said with the simplicity and tranquillIty , that you detcriot. To read your sketch is to recall • very pleasant days and I thank you sincerely . Yours always, acon,a3vicno 'Nee fete -tj , own4eecrta cd atachea.-tex,:Dt ai. Moiose Mice*. 31141004146..3ticig4. ;Jofw!. at:Wed:fey. a The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell Universi < LANTZ OPPICO OP PROOKBR & H•T./M=40QT, MINNOTSPOL.IS, MINN. ,..71CrAP-5. 11=7111 ,11. LJUist OPPI00 OF art,GROOKER HUPPCUT, 211EINNORPOLIS, MIN•N. '622 BOSTON BLOCK. LFSISE °spice OA CROOKBR & HUPPCUT, 2UINN6POI-.IS, 711T INN. / 6Ls-trica 1%er- 44 - 9 622 BOSTON BLOCK. jt 711-4-4_ 2.44- , r7 Itir"4-4 ir _ — The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell University 4•7 8 7 1 The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University • ' A111:121261MWItw 4:1 4- t The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 047874 w 9Avf-t ^ A- 4,C--4(t•4 •••Z'AR---r) egrZ C_ .24ArJ( "---/ 4 ,47--• er °Pk 7/14- oz-0-1-17 42e/f d-a- C.11 7tr- , cJs 447 4J',‘-‘1 /6—Z 4- -2'-:2 tPe "1.._,„ LI [ The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 047876 ARIE TA COLLEGE, JOHN EATON, President. 0 4 7 S? 7 ' , vljt, 1 r,,,,e //)//‘. /?/,..02/)(eolwr • 1 driza- .(0C--/)/yariv-x/ /O1V 7 /02 ic/CeW ,- h,7- ,.9/{,9p/ /Jeye 4/- ;/ (.y-0/ 49/6y -7. -//,. af/gey an.460,,,„ ./ • //% / utte/f (, A- x?/ ,ow/-Affie/ r///e ////, C/('iL //0 e A017;et/ / '1/ ./41 / //,,e/e ?X7404 e// c' • - ?Mira 11.• IlAret.ftt. ff • z,v../K-(' (A- • M3r dear Bi-sh,op, " Thanks for your very kind , letter'. As to your question, I am stillliving in my old house here on these -. grounds, with my unmarried daughter, .my ma- 'ied daughter and her family. My house at Syracuse is occupied by my son, family. lectures here to the Senior ass and others upon sundry per iods in History, occasionplly varying e program by giving • "courses elsew re. Within the past few y-ear-s— av--e—done—s-o--a-t—th-e--Uniters-ity of ennsylvania, Philadelphia, Columbian University, Washington, and Tulane Univergity, /New Orleans, and shall, if in thigcountry, give a courge at. Yale ir October. bestowing a good deal of labor and time upon a series of articles publishing in the Popular Science MonthlY, wIdch it is my intention to put in book _form if I live During the last two years I have een much away from home, having spent/last winter, a year ago, in Egypt And the Eagt began, and is carrying it on most nobly. . We have atthis moment over thirteen hundred students here„ and the teaching body • numbers over'a hundred. • I remain ever Yours faithfully, General A. W. , Bishop, 160 West Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. you will come over /here and. see what we have been doin ,I think it would sur- ," priSe and please you. My successor, who is aTiold student'and•Warm persenal -ti-end 26f mine, has taken up the work which 1. r N. . anitett *fates intevnal titerate, Collector's Office,21- District, New York, tiAt. dAtAAJ tic deg.x.e_.., cL; - /2 OCALA te_OLA.04^ n/1,4.404 &Se} (AAA:71.AV &&6 .02-1z) 4(41/•-1.0e-- n. r4263 s.s The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University Collector of Int. Revenue, Dist., Ne Officers of ;Internal -Revenue must .fill out the indorsement and brief on the back of each letter to the Department. i_.emcnoztrxxvo,exar..; romite)_1=1ZOtar. , ',It .:.::::.'llis:1::leglItyl!. r. :':,:':::::, .: ' 8 ElltMr-MVP:Mr' Booton, flasoss. - waxmazizzwaligaaifkiajog7-,,, r7 , " amsfarez, • - • • „les '' "'"7;"•z47RF4i2Y.Z.Z:.ZT`igreitaTi.FAVEXjaiilat-W.14==.7 • -- - • Kftla MO, PWE,V4i* • 4.> .-c(r-ruid 4‘.> • 1 c.A9 te77.ii &.4.&A- (aie,t.c_x Az 14..i ctieee-x-r- de-e-t-ta-t.4) 4vtaA.-,74,- • .21L2L a f 474,c-ca._ &e_4-ee -647 4-4A1A-t-er4--/ /6-7.t.Lef 4irm'4' 44._ a_ /2-0-4‘.4,4e ce/e-t-reiz./ oae/44 -;. 4:- /- C-7 4-1,<- a 41 a..44.4-0707 G-e az_c-cd-ed 4.4-6:14--4497-1) (44AA-cd (4/. Aie.t 1/4A-cx-c cn y tzz ak/ ., 6t,ezie. C.c.;• eit4.7; 4.1Ga ‘47 /94-4 A dot 211 i..i-c/1-4.-41-4--eA-Get.- 4-4 unzle 44.4.4.at,t tZ w-pc Aro.; 4(4... /a44/41- /&Lity 74/Y417 .424-A47Z C,.(47.4:4A.4/re7E4A-4.- 1 e44 GIA47 4W 4W,1-(4,-i4/.74- i4- 4„„vad e- C), Al--tL- a7 1 At4AA,40; aL-t-4-.91 - The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell University • T • ••4 47- a.41 • s• avo;e4adt ,';.•`"- 4- 94 40 a_c44ri,e:y Gc,e_ di 2 -1-1-7--44_41 4r- (14.‘-(12/-c %a- 6r4./1/6-e-t. Gvf 43-7,74- e/er 2-trwe az4 Le4ZZ r- (;.,a-c_V c/a4.44. ‘4.-;‘,1 Cle." C-0-62-ter 4cr-44..t (cc Ca-tA. A 1;47 c;..7‘ a..144-t Gut., -4-d- /44" Za.Z4Z, a.u. A. `1444•:4- .14,C etA.A4..-/A7- eut. C.-€41-e-4-11-Z1 N“C-€)-i ei-tA4) GeZty av-r%Le_ Azcz,a4 ad..‘2t1 4i/rt-t7 .te.4, VArt- Gr,La c4 /i4tp = / Lii7/74, C.0-urete.2 e24.1.4. 71P4a-47- 124. 4tr 211-0/ 4,e CiAAS C 4-e/2 Ist.4444 ' e4/1 ,a.-1.4..ace eat(1--(4.4Z , - eu..e.e) 0-(d a A• . • te rece.-„( Pi r z.e.,ee te d4,* 1( /1‘7- ottea. . 7-1,t4. 4.4 ,e/l/64.Z. - -44e A 12 I ly I I La aL-4-- aXecr 4.2zy. t-Y 2-c4 44-t-t-e) l.e4t /cc Z./ A-L.(2 • 2,‘La2e vet 2, I ro. 7447 iii-m44771.727 .ra. --. ce/24-c4 itCt-C„ ( 9e2.4.4 eil-ACCe/Atct.4 ‘e-vz The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University GARDNER WETHERBEE, WILLIAM S HAWK, ANDREW R. BLAKELY.. HAWK & WETH.ERBEE• ca•Ai“ :1•4>• s;,A1.24114, GARDNER INETNEREIEE, WILLIAM & HAINK,. ANDREW R. BLAKELY. HAWK & NETHERBE6. 7 - 90] O: , 4 7 8 8 8 E. B.JUDSON, Prest E. B. JUDSON, J rt.Vice Prest GEO. B. LEONARD, Cashier. EDW, S. TEFF•, Asst Cashier. /2_ •cairztlVILAv 1200 *rt *red. Z-"/ aik1 liSeitted2ft 41414:4;41,i s:,a Vr44,:e45. itc-e deer7lIZT N >c &?. -i-z-e '( -, %.--e/r-r .r..=•.427-.4j . ' : /-e---A--e- -e- GtZ A-e,-.--/.---.,z_._. --. e ei ty--/0--,-.7/ de-- 4JZ--e- 1_,7 -r'e-.=-0-. '`--- -4,-:€----e--6 • .e.e,•---, il --a-x / ---7--e-,-//- ''R' C/2t'v/ P . z/ z_, ctc/ ta,d/ 45'/ -t liv4i. - mgrAftztoztratv.e.mte.-3..,.. effiCi1921517, — taii,Vratr,“ _ _. ri.'1,77:7205.10:474V ,f 2.4 74_ ozw, 4kwsafigawacre:pkvasmal...... ' tafiftlig214 t°12-,,tAn silMIY: • -...;kz.w.vgRwazaszrat-aazigawpisoAtkwafaa,'IAWIPW'"''' . • 3478 9 8 7." EFO- , .01f.ku,t441.);-;.:,11VAIX.41*01;1.-it:',13:0;1eoW. Ci5Ug the 44011,[0sSid.:, ga.:46.411y drifte1 towO4ii,414,0*.A.7 . • -olir....lop4ge-,;•oltip*Ii:tivzit 60011j.Og:0'.1410; . 0,404,4fp.,94441.411i;.,tifliiiittOretNIAAh04-iggst 1/40gt*.00 - iii'.'401•9.,:1606, "oer; rotor*jW, 1i9j.01. i81y :1) TS4:44l's„C.ticekgcli4i.c0,:*011:;.th$. 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V4/1 ,-G- Lc- et.,ec .4/ /VY. s/s ka:14A/7;e4. Gv-ro.-&- //171wz7 e,14.- 777€ eid./Lt 2 ‘0 /(.4-7 4-1.-1---) ,44 /L4z-‘x e/ diriove4 c.fry4c4;,-- • 1, Th. (la 94i 47- ‘ti-rJ">-/c. 444-& The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 04790.1 0 • .....,....... !p•tlk 2; 6141.‘-- ‘Ct. , 047902 iii1chi/79,19/4 . reminiscences of Ezra Neorne gles with tha stupidity "against triumphed. It is a useful lsson JAMES H. PEIRCE• GEORGE P. FISHER, 40. LAW OFFICES OF PEIRCE 86 FISHER,,. 801-805 TEMPLE COURT,. (225 DEARBORN. STREET.) SPECIALTY: THE LAW OF PATENTS, TRADE MARKS AND COPYRIGHT. CiIcAqQ, '44 9.. Your gift of 14-AAA, lak-fehAd.c.e4t.,.0.4 has been received, and is thankfully acknowledged, a/4c at"..it t Xe.f2 41.44, z,e, "te±e-; ot_LeA , i_ The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University t( a2_ Ltua d'JvcArA- ce /Ve- rw (9 71E ot_crlAct,77GsJj, — Let 4te„, ,tArk -ruts, cl_LAJatiut If 171,e_ Ke`l- o 04.A,J-i LLiLo iv .ç (14/to- c.9 Ir-&1.. ivvutk_d 1 c 1 t '_ a ,tio`41,014, vv-ke, NA/Ta.s 7764,_ ot,4,t -11_0--1_ 06o-biL - Cotw,v oL-e_91-e_aLLA o/Intv-e_. , atz _ecAA,,e .,e4Lec p/vot.42,_ ,04.1„uct pU CAAA 1/14/LiA-e- -4:A: I Tjk-- ft.- . QA. --e.i. it:t. ' ,Wk-l:t^. Ot-i?re.A OtA, I;1,1-ri: iel il i IS-t- crnstAa‘uaa. (1/1" 04-W4-4: Ch. ot15, - dis fhty. Tret,te_, AAA_ - s ovtiv (IAA_ of-.. ) vifue/Le_ cuv...046vvvicr),„ ,9 ivv,91 /14- • 3 • The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University - • V7INV.Wrzln07..t'q 2M:"4kio `f/ue_ocA. 4 orw "ek.714frurz, rvvue_ et.4.-N-et 1/1-44.1- d'e-41-41 oL 1/174-04t- /14-t 1 C1 4,01.4".cA /14,s12;e4.„4„us /1,1,-s42 d, 114-0,0 at+e-41,k_ P.Re 0.4.d Atele,s UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA. vfOFFICE OF THE PROVOST. 1811 Spruce Btr :et* , NIN. dm. Dear Dr 1 White, You will be clad to knOV that I have completed the sum r equ ir ed f the endowment o f the Department of Hy g ienewIndeed I have secured more than the $200,000 n.cessarywThe plans far the building have been approved by Mr Lea, and thus one of the most interesting movements in which I have ever been connected is satisfactorily completed, I am very glad of it / for it hus been a care - to me all 'Winter. , It was an outrageous assault I made upon you at General Wistexis thit night ,LBUt - indeed I am glad to havO your name connected with this achiever.ient ,./I .enclose yo:u a formal no But wh at I began to write to you about is to thalk you for your kindness in having sent me a copy of' your address on Ezra Cornell. _I have read it carefully l and have been not only pleased l but helped by its admirable lifelike sketch of' a very unusual character. , Scholars are so apt to regard the Capitalists as big game in every sense of the word,that it is a useful lesson.to sea one of , that class treated in this sympathet lc and apprec iative marn -lerw With kindest regards Yours sincerely Hon Andrew -D ,.7White May 30th 1800.. The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 7 f :777 ":7-; "f )7/ .7/7 1'4 ."/ 17c272(,1 . 7.fv7/ - 44 ,ci.17,9 v: / 7:,.va: G-e Git y 1-1 CI ,Y. )'xi7/7a7t(G- e74z.t / 19-:-:(yt X 5--,t,"-- X 6-1 -- .._._3,,7,.L-.-_-_--_-,..___ __ .:„..------------ The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University zrvoLo )t4' ?vel /1-4/1 C't1 aa deer,(„_ x.(' 4'1/e/ ik7 ,614/,/ Ze--740(0/ (6111-Z4, / e-r-e7 1)17Z- &(74 61- u.i,/e044; oWtx4Y 444;4_ ac;A„,//4,-,-,/ 4,4 ,„)/ al h-T-4( _ d r, Vr /44' *h.a tI cl,& "2-chf, c lagli 0, 64 d'44,4.._,_ C,46' dbfct,:f 16Ce,( 0.dGeAy C )4-e,fe /Z — 41,/, 67/7Z-- h4,.??" e * ,./4-7- Co-14,7 _ a/t„. )--ag,&/3"a-ze Lc,• X 1c/60 /44 1,jua.‘• / )11z/4 2Ataie2.44-1 - A-.57 4Lt-J:5/ 4— d Ch/4/ zurL. C c44-v, 4a4 414,.....,. • • The North American .Reeiew; 3 .east Aitrtenz.th'Street, New York- , June •17 .1890 Can't you give us two articles -- a brief one college and its sham degrees, and subject you propose - namely, the future of the American University. Many thanks for your' kind ,letter To. the Hon. Andrew B. White. WILLIAM SPALDING, PRESIDENT. " A. B. BLODGETT, 81110T. 1 C.irtifeb ,Safez Zenate, June 18th , -, bill for strengthening institutions of scientific,technical l and I,,-1 ., ,t q 5 practical instruct&on in the United States t and shall heartily - support it. I am glad to have your good opinion of the measure as I know it is , an enlarged view of the subject confirmed by ac tual experience. mamma Ta SECRETARY'S OFFICE, 0-Qyzeaea, 4. " [--- The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University • ___ , 047996 ".••• 04 7 997 • - ie- 90.7 ' , KINGSTON, 1ND., JUNE 911EPO. MR• ANDREW D• DEAR II R, N PREPARING A COU r LECTil RES oN Tool oo CONNECTED VJIYI POI. IT I CAL ECONOMY FOR STUDENTS OF T -TANOVER COLLEGE, TPT STATE, I W I SH TO SECURE A COPY OF AN AntnEss DEL I VErten r3Y. you,' or //MU! KNOW NOTHI NC m0 RE THAN i REMEMSER OF A SRI EF REFERENCE TO IT TfIl ONE OF PROFESSOR ELY' S BOOK 1,THE INTRODUCTION TO POL CAL ECONOMY; THINIEITHOuGI-1' I CAN NOT NOW PINT) THE ALLUSION, AS NEARLY AS I RECOLLECT, THiE ADORES!) ANT PERHAPS THE TITLE CONTA I NED SOME REFERENCE TO THE 20TH OENTU. Rif, ANT C AT I NG CERT A I N DAN GERous TENrICNCt F r; , wwc olc E-F-e OR GOVERNMENT m nrr SE . CALLEn TO MEET. ir YOU CAN I DENT I rY E AonnE^,"; FROM THIS VAGUE DESCR I FT I ONti cirOULD SE GLAD TO KNOW, VI -TERE, AN!,-- AT wHAT PICE, CAN OSTA IN A COPY. IF YOU HAVE WRITTEN ANYTHING LATER ON THE sAmE sUak/ECT, PLEASE INCLUDE TI-TAT ALSO IN your; MENT Or:: ANY FURTHER I SCUSS ION or THE ItiSJECT SY OTHERS d=YOII CAN RECTMENS AS YALU* OLE• ,. I It-totlin urt To PriEserrr THE FACTS ILLuSTRATING THE triCREAlltsIG Err RAVeGANCE OF OUR FEDERAL LEG! SLAT' ON IN TI -IS WAY OF ENS ONS, PuSL SU1 LD NGS, &C• ; ANn IF YOU CAN, VI ITHOuT ALLOWING RAE To TREP UPON YOu'R- COuRTESY, REFER mE TO ANY RECENT nt SCUS') I ON Or TF-tAT 70 0 1C, SKAL!„; SE SINC'ERELY OBL I . GED. I ENCLOSE STAMP. Younl RES: 6t The Corporation has received , . A:07elf /XlAr/ree 4,,eep, .t.;" 4,(z/a... ./600-46g A GIFT To THE LJBRARV OF THE UNIVERSITY, from • , .. d... . R2., • for which they return a grate ledgment CAMBRIDGB, MAss.,... .. .,. .:4;,-17,t,en7z1W-Ari&.="ZrAmr-as. e"t—utv"FaWMT,TMIMV-V=SW,„47.-.=a415614ga - .WAWA/ • z- 048 ,LIAIDs.&•¢1.. . ,, :;A'::.,1,"t•L'&,r,1!;;t1V-r.,:t?1;=,:i- '::"S:::::• .! • HARVARD UNIVERSITY,: POLITICAL ECONOMY DPT. M ,051711- x 4 I-1 0 9 ' IN LOVING REMEMBRANCE HiNRY HILGARD • VILLARD, YOUNGEST SON OP ' HENDY AND DANNY GARRISON 17H,LA1ID, BoRN, MAT 22, 1,893, DIED,' JUNE 11, 1890. " Thou art a Dew-drop, which the morn brings forth, Illfitted to sustain unkindly shooks, ' Or to be trailed along the 8 oilhig earth; A 'gem that glitters while it lives, And no forewarning gives; But, at the touch of wrong, without a strife Slips in a moment out of life." " 0 child of Paradise, Boy who made dear his father's home, In whose deep eyes Men road the welfare of the times to come, I am. too much bereft. The world dishonored thou hest left. Oh, truth's and nature's costly lie I Oh, trusted broken prophecy I Oh, richest fortune sourly &used I Born for the future, to the future lost!" My dear friends, Etzt dorndl Aneraitg, 2.1tItztra .,Nnugil:rit. June 23rd, 1890. likely to need her services. We hr ave just finished our University year here; Commencement has gone off finely, nearly two hundred and fifty men taking degrees of various sorts, all representing courses of work done here, and honorary degrees are forbidden. I am just hurrying .off to Ann Arbor, I have been more. and more reluctant to go ; on this account, and shall probably never visit the:.place.again.• Mn to stay with President Angell in the old Tappan house, and you can imagine what, thoughts will come to me both in that house and in its neighborhood. You will play a leading part in mach thoughts, all our life there Was made pleasanter by . .Fiske, seaming to indicate that he'is on his way to America, but may be detained on his mother's account. His letter seems to show that h:e-- -apaztha:LimpOrtalle_0_4 nay., the necessity, of his being here at the decided not to come, please show him this letter, and urge him by all means to be here at as early a day as possible, and above all things, to srevoke any power of attorney which he may have given his lawyers, enabling them to receive his prop- In saying this I but utter the feeling of all his friends here. •I• think that if he does not do this, he is in has left for America , you will kindly keep. all this matter to yourselves. If he has not, show it to him by all means. He ought to be here as early as possible, look over the whole ground calm-: ly'and-dispassionately, and then decide I expect to return in about a week Wg:4:JtgeV,:e2:Z.,;.tg:ZZZT, so that I shall be here in all probability to welcome him, as we shall all do. I hope before long to send you notes for that description of my library of which we spoke when we were last together, but how soon I can do it is doubtful. As to my own plans, all is uncertain. Europe ,this summer, but hardly a probability. Meantime, I remain Ever Yours faithfully, Andrew D. White. P. S. As . I am hurrying away I leave my signature to be attached to this letter bY the type-writer. ;1,:qt 1"/;.-",,oSP, • • r7P'' ,077 , • • •vtur 2 LONDON OFFICE: z DEAN'S YARD, WESTMINSTER, S. W. June 24, 1890. I thank you for your kind letter of June 21st. I shall be very glad- indeed to be able to add your name to my list . of contributors for the coming -year. trus1 that it will be convenient for you to send me at ail early date articles on sane of the subjects you have in mind. I should greatly obliged if you would at your convenience let me have a manoiandum of the topics. ... 444...-01", e to -(._ 0.- 1-46.k, ,t,. • 4 -e ,,44-0. • ". ,i 4et44444, / e le,--- (11,1,0 ',./;., 4 ler ., ,,, 4' , ii. -- ,,, ,, c, ,4 ez-- ttieU.4/4,------- ' ,A 11' It 47 '' ;4s•:.;!'::-.4 2.4.:::;1 ••: -.7•:::.4.T.;'.4;:i7,4r..T.f•Pr.:444•':••43T)474274 • .4!54,44.:14:4,r.•47, 74• 4-4 4•7-7,4••• ••,7774,4,7 •• 4 p 4' • 4if it I 40.•'. • -024, 4 C4f*"."'1..41'96,-' 12-., • •• • ,(/4 /01:,40. -• n. ,•.I„;,',,,,,-,t,;,:'---. /fr ) --1-'&.--4.„ -1A„,..-••- 11' • (1-- : ,.. ., ,,-,,, ,,,, ., , i itt ..-E,de1ihtfUl clay or two in your company at Mohonk , a t cul notwithstanding that very free-hearted ride we took to M1nnewaskoGtogether0 you still address me as "Rev." Dr. Gates. a layman, and I always take it as a compliment. that I have been unconsciously ranked with ministers by such excellent companions' as yourself. Hoping that our paths may oft en intersect and at times run : parallel in the future, I Yours with cordial. esteem,. // ToEx -PT-asid'ent Andrew D. White, LL. , Cornell.University. _ The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell Univers' 41' 1,1 • ”," A 04 . 806 "•, 1, L- , pt, c-7 11 /- 4-• Tek< A 4r 0 jw uj- G%-e 6r-i--i • ‘; /1"-11-€-'- / ,• ai, e4_,p pi- 7- 1, 11- -1/7-1 , - 7A- •1/4-1-4 b'e-7 co , The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University 0 4. B. Q . § 7 r•si , July 8th, 1890. I am sorry that you purpose. to delay your visit here so long, but we will be heartily glad to welcome you whenever you arrive. Would like a little notice beforehand that I . may make arrangements to be here. In compliance with youi. cable messagds' I submitted my draft, of which I sent you a copy, to Judge Boardman, and he has drawn up an entirely new document, which the original. It is thoroughl ayal to you, aka-s-point, at the same time that it carries 048(68 1; out your ultimate purpose 41 a waY far • better and more safely than can ever be done by a will. When you came here, I hope that you will look it over carefully, consulting any lawyer whom you may choose, Burdick, or Governor Hill's particular adviser, Professor Collin, two thoroughly • _ good and trustworthy men, lawyers in the ' best sense and of the highest type. The more I think of it, the more the course indicated by such a docUment seems to me the only one worthy of you. It will at .once set the whole question at . rest: it will be telegraphed immediately • all over the country, and wherever there a Cornell student or a .friend of the 1. University will be received most gladly. , It would give you a complete victory over those who opposed you in the public mind, and as I.have formerly told you, show that you were actuated not• by cupidity but by a desire to carry out your wife's beautifu347d inspired purpose in a more Intelligent manner than your adversaries_were willing to d . More than that, yOur interest would be fully taken care of in collecting the Funds together; the judgment of Judge Boardman being used in the line of your interest as well as that of the University your property would be more secure than it can be under any other circiamstances; it could be more wisely invested in this than in any other way, and in ever- y respect, -both for for your interest as well 67- your reputation, it would be in all •-• ' ways a benefit to you. ter how (A07,Z10=0i.0-405Lto .you, to prejudice you .against tle plan or against your old - friends here, before you come here and -look over the _matter carefully, dispassion..ately, by yourself. Hoping to see you before long, I remain Yours faithfully,. P. S. Your letter . of yesterday just received: sorry ,tit you are out of sorts. Why would not Clifton Springs, near Geneva be a good place for-you? They enjoy . a great reputation 9r setting people to rights by ,• water apblian-ces. D . Foster Is a ganIus. You•remember.perhaps that John Van Buren from time to time, when he Mituersito, /Hymn, New Mork.. had utterly run himself down, used to go up there and be patched up, coming out generally as good as new. . thought of putting Fred, and am now sorry that I did not do so, Dr. A...ndrew Willard of Burlir tam, Vermont. You will find it very quiet and pleasant here, and it is Governor Cornell's old idea of a University,..an institution without students. Give my love to your mother. 20 West Twenty-second Street, 048070 ••• '• rko A ci y aqd 19t. tICW1 yo t‘ h•frvr.t>o=-(.14L/("4i e,zt. -t-e.- sci 9 ?./Z-44, . .1. /r-4, ce.44.L. s LA A et/C44 1A. ; 14/1.C. . . 1444,1/L di.64D- 'Z7 c444& AA/t. Of., /4 144/104 41 Zi14-4. fr/4/1.4) UC41-74,1. _. /4,4z-14A. 17-1.4?"-r2, J k1/2pe Gu4.020e4,(#1.0's ./.7..i.ve4 v-1.1. (714-e- wi.q4:14-4, yuct4ef44.a.& Viwk// ;t,frvau.pti4lir1/14, it 144-h /4 ,e civt, i..zi lpix. 7.L,c, 914444444riz. 4 4 alitii.._,,,, , ?4/1. 4.,. ;teA.ie,,,..(2.6 • •pr,,,4i,44.2„,,,. ,t cvz. c/4// 2;1 frl.11 e Cf./(2 CA4. . C/64., ACIA;C/V(... kA.C. .0-14./14 3 )/A. C;IA. ,e4 . 048072 THE CLEVELAND COLLEGE FOR 1.11021EN, 42 WARREN STREET, NEW YORK CITY. The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell LM kvvo co4 W4- kc: ktoWit. ct4t & R-E0144ii, 6%44 Ati, kVi; •4/0 A040: tola VStd thP eent5 me4ts t 1,v1"1"1/641* 24 *falvtit 1110 tiuri) if we* Ogi) P0015440114,1at 6e liSed attatiikEt 1364 bevn Ittota 4VP6rtun1ties an 210$ had t° 4111;81TEr*- V*44't -era lmos 1n ptIr firsi 4,1me huridAdlittars1 h0 met od!,- alx -attre 41300ni OXPOribilee . the' tt oft* *14, t4at we Wouict xea beift VALle'40 abOw okifrhe wai$:d a prosP02444, Oat W9V1 •1 d4olt4r 'the 0:14t. 01' varkima* i3 beSel tileze4 o thg 'VI 1tt OT Zings but j 4e tirES - d 1.iffe70ent govtXtVitut - aciloPte4- ivMbrnx fitearaY a ahal .se 00110400-4 , t42,4 'f4i true that w1t a Irtrel lerpt 4M3bO7 4or our Ottitt$plb Tra*ViatA, ts secondary to part$N We hprit 414"htraned the imerfit r past-bitfy 44.-vp 4inthrone.d 340 vitioi361 *ter 0016W3 41-* 14 igke.4.444444!444 we firia a 04E4 4:1 -iii„t'4oo 'blame and, .614,14/31-S-4 - sansilll and patitiCat managemerrt, ive hfiVe in . AkaittrIci,it., and in Eithe'7, diittintriet Oftfic:.! 461011, 04714414 13044 tto , -Ohitot Maw .na liartitabik and it iris not posq4,41,e 14.04 41,1.94 a gath7., '13/4$1*113 tiO' the • P400000 rtkp, $(0piolict alstoo:sEppgr opo,b'leio J•R .44.1ce 4013°tIcikr0 ',4tt vt0:4ftve Vet 441#4 ,,!ttailt. czetv. tafem 'Mt standpoint of pai-tisanship. $tic h. Congress would imi.1?34.4 'twtip br lig together the expertenoe of the Republics vioriamwide, that .1,,i%any goad. comes from it, it must 'be --in two directions, Hoping to :heat' from you again at your e arliest conveni. Pinoei41Y Yo AURORA,CAYUGA LAKE. N EW YO R K . The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell Universi • 8117V,P;),.`,ZT -741n.it7i7=TAlt,. /141. • a rnIWAVV.. - Ip Q.lorn )111)arzt.- N ,1i1ork. jrily 1 Cth , 17590. / d ear fr en I•Lave 1 eer as1:- ed to prepare ;10 for 1e ss , ent it led ""fl. " ly t] is I try to Thow t at t'e ]leads of t'i'e Tntoodao Collor- es 17 0-,.1 1 (1 1 - e, or a proper sys' or - 0 ,1 1r,1H1 V r 0.S1)0 . et y fficers ,,- ersitis, as suc. -I. In ;10 Th'1-7 is re-For - to Ermr.lry cads _of J]yrlish Collcres in words: "Indeed, it is a o en ques- tion w:LetA:flr t 0 Pre'sioency of1,,i1c1 an irt rred i_ate irst itution we Id ot t e. con- sidered f11 v oval to ar 7 position aniar I iOraall&TSO Z,:pc,:,L=4• 04 B08 4 the state of things tn Eng:land'and Germany, as wall as. some facts 'v in our own history, seem to Ahrew an en- ceuraging 'light into the question 'a well known fa'Et that the heads of such Eng li sh Int ermedi ate • College s as Eton Harrow, Rugby, Marlorough, and the like, really hold a more important position in the community, as rule , than do any of the resident University authorities, as This is 'easily shown by the fact that the highest places in the English Church are:, as •a rule, more fre'quently given to men •ha have proved administrative atiliti'es in these .Intermediate Collages 'than to those who' have merely shown high scholar- .. silip the- Vrriver -eity:FaoutIties: :The preset . Archbishop of 'Canterbury . greater, part of his recent predecetsars have been chosen from among the heads , of the Intermediate Coheres. The sane thing: is true In regard Ao .the pre sent Bishop of London and to other Bishops; as also in. refrard to very. many in other' h.igh inal reputation as head of one of the Intermediate, Celleres. It would be bard to find men more honored - or of wider in?' fluence than such heads of public schools a:g Busby, Hawtrey, and Ai*old." • .0 . 4 B 0 E„I •5 The importgnce'of the matter is Illy excuse Fiske arrived irj New York iast week, and Sees much the worse for thevoyare and, the _heat. 'He is i ti e 11 and s (f,two t 26 West Twerty .-secord Street, and if simple note from "cu referring, to the library matter ; f grtat use,... Ye os an ..spedial respect and rerard fer .: you ard for yoUr opirion,• and ar ox- of it would certainly influ.erce sity 1- 7 wiil,whLtover he reccive-s from the Olp 6errrit ("31-tra. N( ov Pork. Still, my eNperience .undm—.advice of a lawyer whOm I have That I am endeavoring to induce him to do is; to 3- ake ar forMal trarsfer. of all tha 4, - he receives fromi:t1diu-it, either •4 to three trustees or to the TruStees of the Univcrsity, he to receive ,th drirr is lifetime, and t, wholn at is death to go to the objects specified ir , Lis wife's - This would at •once re- mo.Je all dangers 1 . ikely to arise from a will, wcrIld 6, a131e himLto uo to of the funds in. such -way as , he may think. 1 "?'"1 proper during his lifetime, ard Irfould at once'shOw his friends the Alumni of the and the public generally, that •• led to take the course he,has . pUr sued - not by cupidity, but- ,by dibagreement . . vith.the executor andsurdry University' . Noreover, it would ba for his •pecuniary advantage, since the funds would • be better brought together by.Judc;e14oart;; ' .117- •man, and better invested and care the Trusteea, than can be done by hiMCSalf —Or by ary agent whom he is likely to oln - nd I hope that he will make such - a transthe 'Trustees, even though the two men_ he has most deteated,_Judge Boardman his antipathy ta.,them is invincible, he can easily Make the transfer to three trustees who will hold the property until. his over to t .15;6•Uni-' after Judge B--- shall have A passedaway,: for the reason that stituti• On efthis State forbids bequests ..corditi -Ofied on more than one Life. It is a curious fact of Cornell University that all its . calam- ities until now have. turned out to be bi'eSsings in disguise. •. plunging us into debt to the areurt of ore ent Scholarships and Fellowships have been established. The attacks by_Furcall iand ' other miscreants led to various additions ) v• o 01,,Tytt ra •2:Tirst, to the Investigation Committee, _ ly, not consider their own wishes. as ;• absoli.ely• certain of fulfillment, - and to Vice-President Wheeler, roratio Seyrnollr„i =,47- and Mr Van Buren, and .th eir recornme:rda- .• their and row, if Fiske __ 10 1d th_ tran_c,,.--fe of our property r. , ake . this .g-ft to 11s, carryirg - - •te custodyito our own. wife' s purposes, the endowrert of tl -; e Li -: brary will be very larr7e, -Sam orit to be a done what Mr: a6r fl -fiare will give us fifteen :o..usand dollars a year to be expended for t -do. tl:ronoi 1;ooks, and wl•at Fiske sholild give us would State, but of the Trustees. It brought- out hr. &ire' s .rift of five two weehs ago. I 1-3topyied Lover at riagara, :'and grea14y enj oyed the irprove- . ments there; -ithat is, the impro4eirents of oughly well received. ln up to T . r. ortib and concratulate you • it; but I shall shortly be •going to r-- seaside, • which puts all• other travel. out of the question. Our Social Science Association of the United 'StL -es me-ets at Saratoga, during first week in September. andcI feel, sure that you ;would . both -enjoy it and profit - by it Core, ard give us paper' if yoU'posObly • can. Top ing h ear from . you soon, all. g- ood.. wishes and sincere . GoldwthN,Srith,,.' I remain Yours aithfullY I course anxious ti , at the whole tP irg shall • xo off with as,ruch glcat . aid profit as The Grange, Toror or Some subj ect which. intorests .you: OFFICE OF :POPULAR. SCIENCE i/IONTHLY, 3 & 5 BOND STREET, 04B090 028,e0ipeticitt- AvenUe, '-'1Wa,shington. D. C. :.:. t - :>4 -'+--- - 7. 7 1,7,nr.3,,177.ktlet L7 - // • ? oj - • -s 7•••• The .Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell Univers' , CORNELL UNIVERSITY, DEPARTMENT OF AMERICAN HISTORY, 04B095 legmvilmoAgAmm_ AIXTVW:.i4MW74,5411f 11,7, E§e•PenrunNarita fate _Coffege, PRESIDENT'S OFFICE. ; Dictated. The members • f the House Committee,.on EduCa4 tion, who need to be specia y influenced, are Messrs. Jos. H. Sweeney of Iowa; Asher r. Caruth of Kentucky; and Jno. B. Pennington of Delaware he last two, as I understand, are decidedlyropposed to bill, the first named seems to be about half and hall have a clear and overwhelming majority of the Committee, ut the delay in teporting the bill has been occasioned by the repeated and protracted absences of different members. I. have Just returned from three .days' Work in Washington, and the situation i in some respects, more hopeful than ever before. We shall reach the crisis early next week. Air-ilicerimas_uf_Mar_yln -nd was,aut_tharis_ed_ to report thP - Rill Find waIheart],ly in favor of it, but his authorization was coupled with a qualification. Some Grange influence had been brought to bear 41pon members_of the Committee, in,bpposition to the Bill, owing to the fact that the Senate had stricken out a provision 'which was ins-er•ed:, in-theenate Committee- on the.special demand bf, the ,, Grange and tte -F--a-r1:mers' Alliance, but of which they accepted. such . a modification as was entirely acceptable to us and was-accePted enninbania fate eolfesp, PRESIDENT'S OFFICE. gat*, citenti. e-e by Senator. Morrill • n the Bill came 'up for Oiscussion in the Senate that Teri- provision, wth some others was made an obj.ect of attack and was dropped by unani ous - cdnsent. Mr. Brigham Mas... . ter of the National Grange then chargeN he College .men with hay- ing secured the omission'Of that provision, 'immediately set to _work to array all --‘he Grange influence agairist. e-:.have now ar-7 ranged to __restore tit as an amendment - in the House, in a ified and greatly improved form. •Mr. Morrill th • gh relu tant, will accept it. _We hav s the written ass f the-Secretary of the National Grange (Mr. 'Brighambei away from Washington), d of the National- Lecturer-- ,•ill ,with this amendment and -hould seem quite ar for -its passage but here comes the difficulty:, Mr. McCo ft „ was to report the Bill Taylor, Chairman of t Sub-Connittee, did2r4t present objections previous _ to last Tednesday, but Mr.,Tayror - had by that time received enough ections to rattle u him, and was in the stitte of 'mind that seems - to be normal to the_averkge politician,- not daring to do either —-- one thini; or-the other. We placed our paper in his hands, giving the -t'assent of the Grange to the 13irl, and' thatseemed to satisfy him; but,Mr. Brigham lives in his own State, , the 2grange is influ ential there, and he is anxious to hear from,Mr. Brigham directly. The . Andrew D cksoR. -White, . ennspbania fate PRESIDENT'S OFFICE. J Ofege, (It' re Co., 189 • -Lit Meanwhile, _Mr. McComas .; s awa sick 80 not able to report t,4 _ Bill lasti Wednest ; y as had intended, so that when j ithe comes .?!...;;;• back he w fin r. Taylor ready with whatever objections have ac -u ulate I • y that tiMe..-J am Confident, h'owrevteh,at Mr. McCo- N rnEls ill : report the;Bill early in the week, and .probably Monday, that then we shall be able to secure consideration for it, and if we can accomplish that point the Bill will pass without a 'dozen negative votes. Anything, you can do 'to bring pressure upon the liRembers named will be of very decided service. Faithfully Yours, or/Army 7, s, Cornett- University •ss••s•111.,:e.A.V.,,,i/ - tri,57r./WliT 210, i777- '1(1 6 CA-40-4" 4 )9 - 1/I/Le 1/teka • ,41f.V.022V.ra riza z1j4"' 1)4) (A% 6-t-eA4J-, 74-5t s2 ;v p a.(44 ‘e/v 774A, A et--- Atif.), 7-t-e oav"' urfr--(6 Mr‘-4-0 (4-- IRA;a/t/L ,/,L41 71 s •get&Nikiki t.-s.4-,,A*Atovt, \ N\ "-L ,: :..1-. ---<, . (-,21-07.--&77: 444— i•t-a.4_, . t 641 , 0‹. E-- he Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell Univers' 0 - 4-1 -e , The Andrew Dickson White Papers, Cornell University ‘7, [4 My dear friend -am very sorry . t0 your notice that you. c•annot come here. I think you would be much struck by the .• improvements of various sort's, especially : the Barriesml2lding, Laboratory, and Li brary, with sundry changes in our grounds uty, as:an old President of t erican Social Sci- ence Associati,o to be present at the meeting at Saratoga duiing the_ first week -in Siptember? There are a multitude of tiding educational subjects. Naturally, as I am 'President this year my desire is o have the whole thing go off,yrith a much eclat as possible. WyN not :zrUn. dOvm the United States Hotel, so that we zz could all have a good time together? Now, another-matter': do you know anything about tuned bell metal t bes, who has an '-piscopal Church somewhere near Baltimore, first_sp_ok_e_ t_o me regarding it. Then I saw and heard a set at the Glasgow • xposi.t ion, and afterward an. other in Lon- church bells, in fact any strength of tone can be -" had., and—far more beautiful a-3n_ d v• was the judgment 'of Robert Newbury whorr. I asked to study the question, , being a musician as ill as an architect. N' eubes e suspended in a frame, The . ber req ired: as for examp four for enty or more as it is, the Wells College people church in this town are each think- ing a•peal. They are very much cheaper th'a bells; in fact. f price of .a moderat e- sized bell you a peal or even a chime- of hese tubes, ,and of course they are very durable - - They are played by hammers in the usual way, ,might be arranged for playing by electricity. d I have written President Adams, w o 02 4 ••• `$es s.hrim;:v -is a very competent man,.since he.seleoted with great Oare,the.dhime,of bells at the university of Michigan some time since, , A and is a musician himself, asking him to study,up the matter while he is in London. ave you any information on the subjeo ? It •is possible that Bishop Do e may have; '.1 .1 so, I will be great obliged for any - -thing you can me about it. I have 't vague eory that . any , institution might t" a set under the head of acoustic apparatus without doing any very great ,violence to the conscience of anybody, es- pecially if the Department of Physics should.experiment on them a little. At Glasgow I saW various sets of these tubes, from little chimes used for dinner bell-e, to sets heavy enough for a great ConmilArduelmft, Sthaca, Slew cefork. 1.-; and the price struck me as extlemely moderate. You know that I am estrbhg belieer . NN • ,o i everything Which tends to throw a charm About r prosaic American life, and to banish Philistinism from Universitie s : hence my constant ' deavor to secure here - everything that will mitigate a tendency to anycthing like a dry, hard, '"ta,otory" tone. Chimes, st6tuarY, pictures, land- scape gardening, bits of good architecture ) picturesque groups of buildings, all help In this matter. It was for that reason that I took the'liberty of suggesting that you at Baltimore - have a really fine, noble academic hall, as a- center of your more open University activity; and the same -41 Jams Hopkins Uni\tersity The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell University Eg] feeling prompts me to bother,c-165u in this matter, so take it kindly from your old friend. With all'good wishes to Mrs. Gilman and the remainder of your family, and asking to be remembered kindly to Bishop Doane if he be in your neighborhood, remain Yours faithfully, 54te,t p /2 /kid fennillbania fate Cottege, PRESIDENT'S OFFICE. T We are look. ing for a Pri.ncipal e•Preparatory Department connected with this Co He must be a man of accU- rate apt t each and to goverri;,of approved exper- ience, of-the ghest person1 character, and, preferably, "a church be of active christian life d work, the denomination being a matter of indifference. To such a man,, we are prepared to pay t once a salary not • less than $1200.00 a:year, with house rent, 1 \ O other, p_grqui :- sites) and an as stir die e o f annual increase unti1haary reach- es at least $1500 00,, with a prospect beyond that for any proves- tb have the requisite qualifications. The appointment will be made indefinitely as to time, but with the -agreement that the relation may be closed at any time by either party on -three month.st. notice. Our purpose ib to make the situation of desirable men such that they :will feel no inclination to make change, an.d we do not expect ourselves tO seek change. , except for cause. The present incumbent of the position has occupied it for eleven years, wid leaves now to accept a place which pays a much higher salary. No appointment will be made without a pe7onal interview, _ Which I can arrange at any time during the latterNikart of July., __- or the ni9/1:th of--Atigust at any 'place between Boston and that may be found most convenient: The appointment will n.ot c- be made without, f9con6áerat,ion of applications .presented, tholhN - id15ilad to Close the matter as promptly as possible. Yours Respectfully, r:L'LZ,12.:;T2S.tr,"..tfat'S.T..r.n.ttaqr.nntue;+, 4$ 01-A04$4, coi,Emcor, ows ca-FIC3E, E.7-/q-faJ 2if,fels417. 4- (--1‹ 6 FIFTY-FIRST CONCIRSW -..— 3178TIN S. Monnmi, Chairman. • John Sherman, Daniel W. Voorhees, JohOP. Jew, „James B. Bock, William B. Allianne'John R. Mellthenum,. Nelson W. Aldrich, • laham 0. Harris, - Frank Hissed, Zehulon B. Vance. ' Benhunin Nike, Clerk. • • COMMITTEE ON FINANCE, UNITED STATES NATE, r, rainflatifiliii44441ftgraffilt- c„,kk LatArL . P , o:dent's Off( e. • (Dictated.• UNIVERSITY OP MICHIGAN. ANN ARBOR, July, 15 '1890. My dear Mr.White ., send copy of the: Commencement: Address , in the: - form in which itf is! regularly. printed.. 'Ate: usually printl about one: thou.sahd copies.. Th&t: huMber proves , trx ficientf for the: ordinary .d.emand.• .ge•wi11 iii1ingprint • fifteen hundred. copies .•- Nre . you likely to• want , more. thah- 'DOUGLASS BOARDMAN, PreSidelti. EDWARD S. Esry, Vice-President. I-loam B. LORD, Cathier. • CAPITAL, $256,0q13, - SURPLUS, $50,000, 71- t C_e. atc.e/z,f72-e-c-e4) . /.2.4?,_ ae-ctc.or. z;c47 _ ._ _ RUTGERS COLLEGE: NEW BRUNSWICkNEW JERSEY. 1 ric.Sicrtua-f+a1m-4;,t-fa'-11. 0144 F vu,. .04Aft. .r.m.,K 14-1-„t buivi, "me 5,,,t(AT I 'otri lit 14'1:X1r VCAI atalL. 0. 9-mt wit, 41 fAM 6Li- 4-rii:WA. t3A, r-16,4 yyl,6.e 4 L6*Amt , ct.{- Cliu )1L:na,C6'; (Priptck,,j‘ ;A A- 16-21Aat fit.mt 1 Ot. irtA144-;AP-IS thiltA ota cris IL _-Ib0frSi4.-vi-r6ifml..R4k'cV)muI-.Ank.()-tt[T.-t+i--y(Pk(e)taLfiaoiCmv-IIApvv4e-q-4xLr,tor-9l-c'^ou,iiwal''te";ja/1rd1l.4nr-.i.'ak'-wIt.,I-t“tti`Aen..L'4-1ft1o(rI1(."lcki,el4o.A-"k,aJ(,ft,.rrjr-ovI'aN.l:Al••cic°-eC.i.-,',fkf^a-_-Ca,k-Atl;.-m.t3‘ 1,.rg4fJwf6u-ew4oifjA,t,)4-L%.4,,.a.,c.-e7lc1' ke4.. (rAcg. 4 p.rfv_e 1-c-U.ac1A1r^c1iir—k4+4,(.C-+?, fl,i-oz. ,..,wa,t-,_ , ,fj, 1,1y Dear PreSident White: Apropos of your lett er of ten days _ago, you have noticed, I. presume, that the bill in question has at last been favorably ' _reported in the House:, Now is the t irne for us to' use all possible infl once, with- all the members of the House whom we, or the friends of the Corlae,o•ey we represent, can influence, in order to secure from .Speak er Reed 'a pi-6e and time fo r • th e bringing of th e bill, and from the House/ a majority vote in it s favor. We are so near to success in the matter now, that I hope you will • bring out a strong contin;ent of votes—friends of Cornell and of yol'ar own personal friends-- to help on the measure. e Andrew rirri4 Emir mamma , .42 WARREN STREET, NEW YORK CITY. krQuA ip& ‘rtk cXs14(eA-a \\PoitUktz-o Citelrei ,ad; 4tet3t 1oS0 104)444111( 14 1401 litr Deer 432n : aii in receipt of YoUr letter of July lah% will make it a dUtY to be with you in Saratoga, Septembeft 1 Om not mAch of a pOblie speaker'. The war coming intO iffir lifo i Mitch• 4 way as to deprive me of edmea$40nal oppbt. tunitiee l b1r I have been a practical man of affairs in contact with probleme that, to my mind must be solved, or they will Solve our system of government: The greatest problem of all, tome, and the one that the cottntry is ripe to grasp and settle, is :4110 Or. poration- truat. 10or questioni would be pleased to speak before the convention on this sUbject 'making my 't itie '11!fiechani a, the mode/in Revolutionist" To me, the fault of our age is in the fa3 t that the statesmen and theologian have not been able 'to keep up with the progress, that tlale mechanical ingenuity has compelled, and the result is that the benefits of mechanical progress, the place of being distributed so as t'O help all, have been m4nopolised courmuilityq •The gellow.ing is my remedy and i is this that" • woula bring out in my address% SincerelYyours, • Prof, FRANCIS WAYLAND, Dean of Faculty. YALE LAW SCHOOL. New Haven, Conn. 1 Gvd)tvd-ni 6c,r_ Itol4 seUivt ocetArvivt 6 etA9 klqra.A4 10100 Tog fr --rk, 6,, t. tt,6 ,f1E044 - 61.1- hoLck pfali a-cikt TCOVAI 1-k4k. vt out 4 krt( f264 .(4. a-14-4 INVA-tit trgA.% -MIL ?red .c-,)adt.. k tA4 I titA.C4. A*141/i 41P4 1\141:r ICC. Lin leth kli14 •r44,AA4 2,11,4 4-tiu e"jt4i44. 11-444 ""AA• I:CA" to0 - utottd c140.01005) Dep'y Collector's puce, 2 F strict, New York, 7m4dAt Vount„. SA - cr-ei WO; k GItt-th k 'eke. it.e.A.r .14Jk4 V4A irlti:45- 60-4 h-4iVrt ^r-rivrtVg.& Nrt-ni. `Y.N411/44- &kJ' t1-4 u haw (Aral- 6-(-z -„1— c)-CL srut; h-g-t /Kt4 trAA kl^'9L4. afts dA. t JA4n., rt 1 ;‘ 4t.,., (243144114 CgruvtAlz r1N4A- 11.4-A-06K,1 u.Aary=0,40 uvita.," c,,,,,Airk,LA 0..cc rL eJ- I V -vs SA- all i-n-0-,,A;1. Li" IL0 Kikao I I_ -r-4,(153 14,-64 e9 en“ CAA/F. ct-h c.Z1.. +0 TA41 h tkc -0^-ex-rtv clitAA-c't litn,,z,ym.z,hz _ ((Li. 16 to 11.4 Tura),4.. vki7-14 rA-at &IC-cod( P ri- mce-ct-4Y-11 13,-t The Andrew Dickson White Papers Cornell Universi anu 4a. 61-'Y k L 1-ikA Crw-C4% ns IA-A 1:01441t z) an:ti TtAn44% Ckt, • 64‘. "ttm. wItt cu-,/-‘z, Yvi,141. 'rya Cu 41 -eke lAr&k:( , hAmJrcASz 3(3. i-k-snA 19Z -, 4%3 , eft..44-c 01, KeA4,,, - N'k ci-st 4cs v c r iro-ga cAdt; cL flu tr14s24 8-6.41 L twai45 '4A XZ: refiv-g-z.Lez Ais- fluL Cv,st 411,01);k cfx. vA4za-st am*(41. 94- 1Zzc4. 11,44:4(. 6v-it( 1-41L-r cowourg,t kw9fi„,/k.,/ c_,14- • GOW TrcireaiL4,;,_ of,-YlAnAA r, HAAA6t. y T n,t.r1r4 rn.t CA, Ou?:. Kzei 0-c 63,,r1L-1 ct.4 s-41 A-44— flt.e. /NS t14.4 ciwz 4-v -6f_ trl cat L6-toteit 1.1m tk,c,t, (134-ca‘) tru-o- LArwtr,i- Vvvvvt. I 1AnAl.:Of bm.t c‘t 1st 0,1 IL,424), ....euravaserstle=523.2.-..V VIIMEMM=Mili tes•rnm..sxt=na&sesnas s MA-Ai 11.01- (rc „am tt, -teLt L cLI Art it., Ll_ari.,st CAla. PIP144- 'alAL 11-C424;vr_ crn. efr scutt cir62,c,CW-k s — r 1 L La-exc 64„.0- tr.qA-1 •okr fr:-/v14 6-c-e0A-L. 6tAvr cic, 6.6 cea-44_ et,:t -1,t cirr,e(rx cryv.4., t-kt. rkt_ t. c tL Luf. s kr( "m4 Ilkt. 6-04 tt,z.vii r. . , trr . 6\rwr )1S " rfr cjInLY• f*Y1,-51 LL “Gr$J(4-i fr a..1.77ycm a vorfrr,A-Lt tkA•4 a/.1 v.,a1- 51.4 ec*' I (11 Trill, Oh ri.4„0,4 64.4_ LNYi (3-C /NICA41‘ 141-9"44 .1t411:•c(I' 1-11 . („2,, kAX Tv,p- b-r,it, cxwavAtt:iv. 14-01( ,tuv, rciA-6t TrAl2-44- 6'4 '441 • eP A.Gviftt tkmc !,7fp..nmz,,,tvi-m.tt-mrzmitaymtvemn=megtemmatravntaggatimazimmtosmtaaaratt-araaa 11+911 L/r4 LenClosci.Ve 7-/7-903 S. D. White Ithaca, - N.- Ti, Department of Education. of the American Sociai Science Association has provided for the :roil oviinl papers - to be given at Saratoga at the meeting in Septern1er I Send you this that it naaybe . entered on the prelithinary. announcement. Later on there may be another paper to be added to the regular 'Pro- • .r-e'c'qt1 11 Y4 11114E•NAIITIONAL. BAIDIBISM: • • A•01111STIAN-30T7BNAL. •H. L. WAYLkAND, FRED'K'WELLS WILLIAMS, LITERARY DEPARTMENT. _1426 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. 4OOMITIOT3 1 WTOM bnovi orf FRANK a DOBBINS, MISSIONARY DEPARTMENT. b NI donMRS: M. B. BOSSON FAmiLi.Aptivrerr Mies BURMEISTER , STiNobnAxrtmi&I..C 114118 Hon. giretruD.Whitt,I4iipi flop.anuopeL lgoy, •,c36A lo erxm il ogviaolq • Ithaoa,N.Y. MyLdi oeramr.0priVihaiotmeo:wb.l. AntaIbbn ot artoqo ra tob•i:• rt,rhoTRew0r3,,.-r.-et'‘-am.critaiu.•rPk12s1, -,r0•wi1t1h.i.0im•.,c,I••••-...•••• Jhé:Afldre :Pickoon. White -Pape s,.0 orndl University ' 71z, 40ance it Otitotves in,thelteuse will bo appreciated and in due time publicly aokriowledged, not ,only by the hundred men in our raoultY and the thirteen hundred students at present in attendance here, but by the fakir thousand young men who have gone forth tram its walls, and remain in-all parts .of this and other States thoroughly loyal to their Alma Mator. The original Bill Was first vetoed by Jleimes Buchanan, then signed by Abraham ,Lincoln: tbt tells the story of the connection of the Republican Party with the measure thua far. hoPo that the present leaders of the Party will continue a record so sure to add to its glory and strength. I remain, Dear Sir, very respectfully Yours, 6,t-g _ r