| Show 1 At A A AALL Ash ALL MONO TO HIS NAME F I The event of oC the week was the memo mem memorial orial services In honor or of the late George n B Mathews held by the tho mem mcm member bers ber or of the thc faculty and the students tn n the art room rown Thursday AU All the classes were dismissed d at 3 and the tho thronged Into the large room on the third floor which was entirely titled tilled b by them together a 11 number of visitors who were friends ot of hIm In Inthe time the honor whose memory the cervices were being held President Joseph T Kingsbury tn bur eon on ducted the services which began with witha n a song b by the students led b by McGhie A short but eloquent Invocation Invocation tion was offered by He Rev Clarence T Drown after atter whIch Miss Lawson and Lottle Lottie hutch Burch sang the well known know song Lead KindlY Light LIht their sweet notes producing strong emotions In the Pro Prof George M I Marshall hall was then Introduced who In behalf or of the faculty delivered on an address which partook ot of the nature ot of tI a characterization Thu closest attention followed Fret Prot Mar Marshall shall shaH all through his eloquent eulogy which was not the mere calling of words fords but the articulate beating ot of tho rho heart henrt or of a 11 frIend lie Bald A light has b been en extingUished and our hearts are arc ha heavy Death said he Is not an wall that divided the tho worlds but a 11 soft curtain that t Is for tor forever ever moving and tremblinG A friend passes passu through and aud ns as It opens to ad admit admit mit him wo we think that wo we can almost see ate the great at unknown and here the tread or of the feet r t ot of him who just left leftus leftus us Prof Mathews continued the speaker was one ot of the nobl noblest liIl ot of man mankind mankind kind and aud his hili record 11 s written upon hearts of It nil all who knew him him and upon the thc lAmbs book or of Ute life Life Lite was n a more awful thinG than death because We cannot ape Its reo re We ate arc nil al pebbles said I Prof Marshall cast In the tho sea of hu humanity manity manit and we nil all throw out our clr co cle l or of influence which grows ros wider wd erand I wider until It reaches the shortS shores or of eternity Our OUI trl friend nd has made mad his wave o of influence No one ever carne came into his pret ence without feeling the tho Influence ot of his splendid personality lIe IlS n a man and being a man mall must ha have had bad Imperfections Imperfection but I could not count them Ills JIls intellect was Ile He acquired ll n m mass massof of learning hat appalled le m man n lie fe climbed heights ot of which most moat of be stand aghast Qt at And coupled with this knowledge was a rip ripened ripened ened Judgment tie lie did not tn things through ey eyes s ot of prejudice First and for foremost most after his intellectual P powers Oo 9 came camo his modesty lie fo as humble be beCAUse because CAUse ot of hi hie great now DO u uiA w 11 C Cit iA i it Jo j t ik i U so 60 much and could see so 50 much that hit he realized what a small thing man I Ii Y 1 compared to the great reat Intelligence Ho hate hale ignorance there thero Was only one thing he despised and that was prel Ignorance II Ho had hod that charity chant which thinks thInk no evil lie He relieved distress because It was distress Before Detor he came to Utah he burled his heart In the slums or of Brooklyn to uplift humankind and quit only b because to continuo continue was set sUI sUIcide clde cide No man was waa ever Ier more faithful and ho hI was all kindly Prof Marshall said he never neer heard his deceased frIend frIends speak s ak an unkindly word He sometimes spoke sharp words because there thero way wayno a ano no more marc exacting critic than he but butth th were like the knife ot of the surgeon the they cut to heat heal MIss Estelle Watson then In behalf of t the tho students delivered an address addres She said laid no one could realize line Ule place Prof Mathews occupied In the hearts ot of his i students lie He was a 11 man without sham and without hypocrisy and th the atu dents dent I see O the depth of his great 1 1 character ills 1118 learning was walS so 80 broad brond that he enriched every cery sUbject with I anecdote and made everythIng ho he said uld ot of r Interest At the close ot of Miss Watsons excellent effort Mis Agatha D Berkhoel sang n a solo entitled And God Shall Awn Away All Tears Teor r which was rendered tn in a 11 rich melody Qua Volvo voke Following the solo was a short address by Rev C T Brown lit Ha know knew Prot first In ht the divin divinIty It Ity school at Yale when he was n a stu atu student dent enl and ho ha had always been Ii a stu student hi i dent and ond It Ie he had lived a thousand F years In thIs world he would have bae re Y r 1 a student Y Mrs AN Rebeeca Little In behalf ot of th the c board of regents delivered an eloquent ot of the tho late litotes ear She indicated how high Prof Irot stood In the tho confidence ot of tb the r both as n a man and an f tor Prot Prof Mathews WItS sync n man wh whom m r to know was nt at onto once Q a pleasure and a 1 benefit He loved the but beautiful thought and r beautiful actions most Our lives have j been boen made better and purer throughout associations with Prot Mathews f President J T Kingsbury a most thoughtful address Life Lite he sald rold appears to be simple but It 1 16 beyond the power ot of mil man to fathom It 1 dent ent paper was wal a hUo view ot of life lIe and was wr In Ina 11 jf a 1 scholarly style lIe Ho dosed closed with a i short review of Pro Prof Mathews work ork and Q a high encomium on his hll chAracter r The services closed with the students sinning singing Nearer My 1 God to Thee Prot Prof Richard Lyman pronounced tine the theA 6 u |