6
YALE AGU MeaNT
MORE NEWSPAPER TALK.
Compiiments and Other Things Gath-
ered Up.
WHERE THE MUSES ONCE DWELT.
(Tulladega, Ala., News-Reporter.)
Unless the Yale Faculty punishes
its brood of hoodlums who _ insulted
Bryan when he tried to speak there
last week, no liberty loving American
should ever again let a son of his
darken the doors of that institution.
If it, too, has been sold and delivered
over to the royalists of this country
then let them, and them alone, sus-
tain it. No American freeman can feel
at home or learn liberty at its poiuted
fountains and the sooner they are
dried up, the better.
A DELICATE THRUST.
(Salt Lake City Utahman.)
The Montgomery Journal heads its
account of the Yale blackguards, “The
Bray of Asses.”’ The Journal owes an
apology to every ass in Christendom.
A REPUBLICAN PAPER'S REMARKS.
(San Francisco Argonaut.)
Mr. Bryan has been speaking now
for over two months. He has spoken
from Maine to Nebraska and from
Minnesota to the Gulf. He has spoken
from car platforms, from hotel bal-
conies, in city squares. He has spoken
to grimy iron-molders in Pennsylva-
nia, to cowboys in the West, and to
negroes in the South. Everywhere he
has been heard with courtesy. It has
been reserved for the students of
Yale, under the historic elms of New
Haven, to insult him. By this act
these young men have placed them-
selves far below the level of the iron-
molders, the cowboys, and the ne-
groes. Those at least are native gen-
tlemen. Whatever they may have
thought, they did not insult this man
who is earnestly striving to win the
‘ votes of his fellow citizens.
Shame upon Yale! An alma mater
which fosters such unlicked cubs as
this has need of regeneration. But it
is not upon Yale ~alone-that~ this
shameful conduct will recoil. The
worst of it is that the braying of these
fresh Freshmen will lose many thou-
sands of votes for the Republican
nominees.
PARTIALLY EXPLAINED.
(Salt Lake City Tribune.)
However, much of the blame is ta-
ken away from the students by the
tore of the press of New Haven and
“by the action of the authorities in
that city. It is true that those stu-
dents were not. gentlemen’s_§ sons.
Wherever they were born and how-
ever they were reared, they were nev-
er taught respect for other people, or
self-respect; they are of coarse stock,
but in New Haven, with the New Ha-
ven Register and police to encourage
them in their cussedness, it is not so
very strange that they were boisterous
and unmannerly, considering their
birth and rearing.
TAKEN SERIOUSLY THERE,
(Exchange.)
Bryan’s friends are still ‘‘working”’
the Yale grievance in the west. In
the little town of Litchfield, Minnesota,
where the candidate spoke on Satur-
day, a correspondent noticed a ban-
ner bearing this device:
“Our Sons Will Answer Yale
vember 32.”
No-
ADVISED TO .KEEP BOYS AWAY FROM
YALE.
(Omaha World-Herald.)
In view of these facts, of which the
Yale incident is the most notable,
does it pay to send our western boys
to such schools as Yale, to be return-
ed to us as mental weaklings and phy-
sical ruffians? Is it not better for Ne-
braska men to have their boys educa-
ted in Nebraska institutions, of which
there are sO many, and so superior,
such as the State University at Lin-
coln, the Wesleyan and other schools
and colleges there and elsewhere in
the State, and the Creighton Univer-
sity at Omaha, where the parents can
look after their mental and moral
training, as well as their physical de-
velopment into noble, manly men and
good citizens upon. whose shoulders
must some day rest the burdens of
the commonwealth?
The spirit of the West is the spirit
of liberty, the purest morality, the
highest respect for woman and _ the
largest likerality to those who differ
with us in their opinions. The grow-
ing boys of the West must be imbued
with these principles, but in the light
of the event at New Haven, it is evi-
dent they cannot be wholly inculca-
ted there with these precepts if the
pupil at Yale is to be the accepted
ideal to which the boys of America
must be taught to aspire. It is bet-
ter to keep them at home at their own
institutions under the sheltering love
and protection of parental influence.
WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?
(Pueblo, Col., Journal.)
Possibly Yale students are of more
force as hoodlums than as football
players.
THE CONSPIRACY LAID BARE.
(Little Rock, Ark., Gazette )
It is reported that the Yale stu-
dents planned the disturbance in a Sa-
loon in New Haven and all of the ar-
rangements were made the night be-
fore the Bryan meeting. There is lit-
tle doubt, therefore, that it was not
‘a boyish outbreak,” but a carefully
laid plan to rout Mr. Bryan. The at-
titude of the Faculty of Yale Univer-
sity will be regretted by every law-
abiding and right-thinking citizen in
the land. Every student who partici-
pated in the disgraceful riot should
either be expelled from the College or
severely punished.
JUST WHAT WAS DONE HERE.
(Los Angeles, Cal., Herald )
And yet those five:or six hundred
Yale students who pretend to be young
gentlemen, went to that meeting with
the evident intention of practically
breaking up the proceedings—and they
succeeded. The feeble attempts of a
few policemen to quell the collegiate
mob proved unavailing, and the aris-
tocratic rowdies, aided by a ‘brass
band which they had secured for the
purpose, were enabled to drown thg@
speaker’s voice, create a panic in the
audience and transform what was in-
tended as an orderly meeting into a
pandemonium of wild excitement and
confusion.
TOLD IN SIMPLE LANGUAGE.
(Windsor, N. C., Orient.)
The newspapers of the day teem
with accounts of one of the most stu-
pendous outrages which disgrace the
annals of modern history and civiliza-
tion. On the 24th of last month Hon.
William J. Bryan attempted to ad-
dress the people of New Haven, Con-
necticut, and -was - “interrupted at
least a dozen times in his speech by
the disorderly conduct of the Yale
students.”
Every time the great tribune at-
tempted to proceed with his speech,
the students to the number of five
hundred or more, would yell, shout
and sing college songs, in which the
euphonious monosyllabic refrain of rah,
rah, rah, predominated. “A band of
music and drill company of militia al-
so added to the difficulties of the situa-
tion by coming near the stand in their
evolutions.” Mr. Bryan seeing he
could not proceed with his speech, in
a dignified manner then abandoned
the attempt and quietly withdrew
from the disgraceful scene.
Fine conduct surely! And this too
in the land of “great moral ideas”
and superior civilization! And what
a contrast, the gentle, manly and dig-
nified conduct of the western hoodlum
to that of these sweet-scented, kid-
gloved scions of the moneyed aristoc-
racy of New England.
WE SINK.
(Grand Saline, Tex., Sun.)
Yale College has been the synonym
of learning and refinement, it will be
hereafter a hiss and a byword. Let
it go down in disgrace.
——___+>—___—.
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'D. Stevens, BE. P. Fisher, G. L. Wrenn,
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