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TAE ATLANTA GEORGIAN -~ ¢@& o A _Clean Newspaper for Southerr. Homes @o @ WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25 1919,
UNIV. OF GALIFORNIA PAYS
TRIBUTE TO MAS. HEARST
SAN FBANCISCQ.‘%%‘;H 23,
The children of Mrs. ) bt
‘Hearst's larger family, the faculty
and students of the University of Cal
ifornia, Wednesday paid her one of
the most Beautiful tributes that could
be offered to a wo;nun.
Gray-haired professors, learned men
and women, alumni, stndents—-thoy‘
gathered in the Hearst Greek Theater
to call her’ “mother.” The services
were the more impressive for their
simplicity. l']%ey were an expression
of love and reverence from hearts and
‘minds enlarged by the opportunity
}V\{xhich Mrs. Hearst had part in giving
them,
Gratitude for those material gifts
which Mrs. Hearst had bestowed
lavishly upon the university and sad
ness that death should have taken
her away were but minor strains in
the symphony that was built upon the
theme of abiding joy left by a life of
goodness and wisdom. ~
Above the theater meadow larks
were singing on the hillsides, a single
wreath of lilacs hung upon the altar,
suggesting that note of solemn and
triumphant transition between life
and death of “when lilacs last in the
door yard ‘bloomed.”
“Gathered in Joy.”
“We are gathered in joy,” said Jes
sica Blanche Peixotto, representing
the alumnae. “Her life meant oppor
tunity to the rising generation.”
Below the theater clusteréd the
buildings, quiat, and deserted for the
holiday, whicH had been one of/the
happiest of Mrs. Hearst's works.
“She builded better than she knew,”
said John Alexander Britton, repre
senting the regents.
A distinguished group in cap and
,guwn, the faculty of the university,
‘and officers of the military school in
uniform occupied the center of the
’ theater, {
. “Her children rise up and call her
blessed,” said Charles Mills Bayley,
dean of the faculty.
Staudents canié from their calss
rooms and dormitorfes, with their
customary accouterment of textbooks
under their arms,
““She was our best friend,” said
Frank Foli Hargear, president of As
sociated Students.
} “We can not think of the university
- without her.” .
| Tributes Are Paid.
Thus in simple and heartfelt words
one after another of the various de
partments of the university paid their.
tributes. * And when they had fin
ished, President Benjamin lde Wheel
er rose and said: “The meetdng is
ended.”
Deeply religious in its atmosphere,
there was no note of creed or church.
The memorial services sounded that
note of common and universal faith
which men have striven vainly to
have. ‘
A section had been reserved tor‘
relatives of Mrs, Hearst. Mr. and
Mrs. William Randolph Hearst, Mr.
and Mrs. Apperson, Mr. and Mrs. Ed-‘
ward H. Clark and practically all of
the relatives in the vicinity 'were in|
attendance. .
President Wheeler said: "We are
met here not to mourn so much as to
set forth the record of a youthful
and noble life.
“Phoebe Apperson Hearst, gentle
woman and public servant. By na
tive instinet she followed the quieter
paths, but the possession of power
and rare gifts of mind opened before
her a duty toward her feNow men
which she did not evade. To bring
light and love into the lives of oth
ers, that was her burning desire. To
forward every good enterprise which
helped young people gain thelr birth.
right, this was her open door to ob
ligations of public service.
Trustee of University.
“Her early experiences as a school
teacher led on through one trustee
ship given her by t;ge community to
one trusteeship aftér another, and
to the regency of the university, from
whose meetings, after she assumed
the trust, she was seldom absent.
She rejoiced in the continuous tides
of young life which refreshed the
brook beds of her college as from
some fountain of perpetual youth. She
heard gladly, too, the voice of chil
dren.
‘Art and love of beauty as hand
maidens-of order commanded her zeal
and her first interest lay in . those
early arts of human life which repre
sent the emergency of human culture
into the hgzht. - One of her last de
sires, expreSsed on what proved her
death bed, was that she might live to
brild here on the university grounds
the first unit of that art museum
which she had planned for her crigi
nal (‘nllections\already given to the
university. In those last days—her
mind singularly clear—she was zll-l
ways thinking of many things she had‘
ver o do, the messages to send, the
last injunctions to give; so much to}
do and the hours so short,
“It. was a full, rich, abundant life
that she lived; a life abounding al
ways in ecare, often in pain, but a
great life; a great life, gloriously
worth while, because she so lived that
the community wherein she lived
chighly per cent of all head~
wehes are caused by defect
ive eyes. With proper .
glasses all distressing e
pains would vanish {
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greatly and soundly bettered thereby.
“Phoebe Apperson Hearst, gemtle
woman, public servant—blessing to
her day and generation.
“I introduce to you the first speaker
of these exercises, one who is not
here to represent women-—she repre
sents herself, the university and the
alumni body—Dr. Jessica Peixotto.” ‘
= Called Perfact Life, w
Dr. Jessica Blanche Peixotto said:
“When we gather here, we gather
not as our president has said, to
mourn, but to commemorate; to look
‘backward, that we may learn more
‘bravely, more really to live; that we
‘may go forward through what we
learn from the lives finished per
ltectly.
“This woman whom we gather here
to think about led a life that more
than ordinarily expressed a life of a
perfect roind. There are thousands
who have lived for culture, for beau
ty: there are thousands who have
lived strongly and intensively for the
joy of living, for the service of life.
“But we think today of one who
did live the round of<life. Possessed
of more than the average of educa
tion, of much more than the usual
amount of beéauty and personality,
possessed of wealth, of lzpofl.unity
of travel, she never let y one of
these presumed-to-be lures of life
turn from life’s real substance. She
}]iv(-d fully, freely and bravely, and
because she did, we gather here to
rejoice in having known her, in hav
ing, perhaps, most of all, known her
‘as our Mrs. Hearst.
| “Our Mrs, Hearst.”
“l am thinking of her as an alumna
of this university. lam thinking of
‘her then as our Mrs. Hearst. 1 am
‘thinking of her in the days when I
was a student here, She came first
‘about this university, a gentle, beau
tiful presence, that first of all brought
thoughts of beauty of personality, of
kindness, of womanhood. Always that
impression lasted when more and
fm(mv she learned to be a public citi
zen and social servant. Always she
‘managed to carry through and into
every act this sweet, lovely personali
‘ty that carried a world of joy, of life
to everyone, high and low, who knew
her. ‘
~ “After I graduated from this ani
versity I went out into what is com
monly called social work. I went over
to a settlement house to learn some
of the things that we need to learn
in life, to learn to live as others who
live in other ways than ours, and
there 1 found the efficiency of Phoebe‘
Apperson Hearst preceded and made
it possible for me to go there and en
gage in acts of social service that
were not the commonplace day-to
day traditiopal.”
Life Lived for Others.
Dr. Charles Mills Gayley said:
“We are all speaking to the same
text today, teachers, alumni, stu
dents, regents. ‘Her children rise up
and call her blessed. Not for pleas
ure did Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst
live, ‘not for that enjoyment in life
whose way is egotistic and exclusive,
and which, even though guided by
prudence and by respect for the feel
ings and the interests of others, has
for its ends en's own ultimate gratifi
cation.”
“Her life centered, not about her
self. It was a life of happiness. She
lived most for herself when she lived
most for others. The guiding princi
ple of that happiness was reason in
ity higher, reach and sympathy and
the mind conscious of right.
“Sources of delight she found with
in herself became streams of living
wiater to reach the society into which
she was born, to waken the verdure
of joy where loneliness and hopeless
ness and bitterness had ruled the
waste—where no blade of grass had
grown and no flower had bloomed.
Cleared Path for Others.
“pPracts of native worth, oblivious
of their potency, overgrown with
brush and noxious weeds, she clear
ed that others might till and sow and
reap for their own good and the serv
ice of society. Such was her happi
ness. Opening up fields of activity
and useful endeavor for the fellow
ship of mankind, she opened to her
own being new inlets of wholesome
ness and inspiration, But this happi
ness. so highly endowed, unselfish
and sympathetic existenee, this hap
piness of intellectual enlightenment
and weli-deing, this happiness in a
conscience that bribed not itself, but
examined and steadily strove toward
goodness yet attained and unattain
able in the span allotted to mortal-—
this happiness of which bhenevolence
is the chief part for human beings——
this happiness stimulated, fanned and
fed by ideal-—this happiness compass
ed by few, and through the few en
riching the lives of a multitude, was
not the noblest, nor the final dower
that we recognize in the life and
character of Mrs. Hearst,
“Her children rigse and call her
blessed. Blessedness includes all that
has gone berore the rightness of mor
tal motive and mortal conduct-—and
still, over and above, riughteousness
in the eves of the Eternal Judge and
an apprehension of God as man au
thor and final resting place or end.
ing place or end.
“Such blessedness is beyond the
vealm of finite reason and human
ethics. 1t is that of which Cicero
speaks when he attributes to man a
felicity taken in connection which his
heaven-born nature and immortality.
To happiness, blessedness adds the
iden of religion.
Her Creed.
“Not the religion of sect or creed,
but the religion whose two simple
doctrines of Mrs, Hearst herself are
that God is and that He i 8 that sai
vation of them that rightly seek Him
There is in man, =ays Carlisle, a
higher love than love of happiness,
He can do without happiness and in
stead thereof firll hlessedness.
“Was it not to preach forth this
higher ideal that saints and martyrs,
the pot and the priest, in all times
have spoken and suffered, bearing
testimony through life and through
death of the Godlike that ig in man
and how in the Godlike only has he
strength and freedom.
“Of such blessedness or hope of
it, was not for the Mrs, Hearst that
we knew to speak but we speak of it.
Her children of this university shall
rise up through generations to come
to call her blessed,
“Every good gift and every perfect
giver is from above and it cometh
down from the Father of Lights, with
whom is no variableness, neither
from the Father of Lights, with whom
shadow or turning.
“Pure religion undefiled Is to wvisit
the fatherless and widows In their
affliction to keep himself unspotted
from the world.
“But the blessedness of pure re
p SOUTHERN PHOTO MATERIAL TV
r’-rlt'vvv' et ROOAL
ligion is the blessedness of such serv
ice done in the service of God and
the Father. Such blessedness shall
be always hers whom we revere and
for whom we give thanks today and
forever. Blessed are the dead who
die in the Lerd.”
Britton Speaks.
John Alexander Britton, member of
the board of regents of the Univer
sity of California, said at the Hearst
memorial services: “It seams to me
more than usually appropriate that
the words which are being said t~ lay
in honor of our benefactress are be
ing said in this theater where the
bopes, the ambitions of the student
body and the university life have so
often found tongue, this splendid ed
ifice given to the university by Mrs,
Hearst's loving son. What bd.ter‘
place on God’'s footstool could we
gather to say those things, oh, so in
adequately, that our heart's desive
to say. Today has a twofold signifi
cance, 'This morning, marching tri
umphantly through the s‘reet of San
Francisco, came¢ those heroes of the
‘Western front, typifying in their sac
rifice in their desire to heip you and
me in this hour, the snnrise of life.
“We meet this afternoon to memo
rialize one who typified the bright
sunset of life. ‘How alike the two
things, one going forward, fuil of
energy and vigor and hope and
strength, to die, if necessary for the
flag of the country; the other loving,
laboring all of her life with ihe same
love of humanity which actuated the
men under the flag,
Memorial Is Given.
“In a letter dated October 22, 1396,
and addressed to Regent J. P. Fein
stein, Mrs. Hearst said in part: ‘My
son and 1 have desired to give some
suitable memorial which shall testify
to Mr. Hearst’'s love for and interest
in this State, and after having care
fully considered the matter, we feel
that the best memorial would be ane
which would promote the higher ed
ucation of its people, and ¥ must con
fess that the absence of a suitable
plan for the university briidings has
seemed an obstacle in the way of car
rying out some ideas which we had
cherished. I have only one wish in
this matter: That the plans udopted‘
should be worthy of the great uni-|
versity whose material home they are
to provide for; that they should har
monize with and even enhance the
beauty of the site whereon this home
is to be built, and they should re
dound to the glory of the State
'whose culture and civilization are
to be nursed and developed at this
universtiy.’
“Wonderful words from a wonder
ful woman. Omn August 10, 1897, Mrs.
' Hearst was appointed a regent of the
‘university, and continued im office
‘until her death, No day in over twen
ty-one years of service but was filled
with the ambition expressed in her
letter of October 22, 1896, to carry
speedily to completion her express
desire,
“After a world-wide competition by
the world’s celebrated architects, the
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Marry L. Schiesinge Allanta |
Bernard plans were submitted to Mrs,
Hearst and adopted, and John Galen
Howard was selected to put the plans
into execation, and through the aays
Uncle Sam Has Never Offered
You So Good An Investment
As V Ictory Loan Bonds
: This w.ill be the last Libcrty Loan. Wedid our duty and we had a
blg hand in the Winning. Now the bill must be paid. We're going to
pay as well as we fought—out and out!
.chrc are some points for you to consider in connection with the splcn
dld investment offcred you. Study thcm well and decide to buy carly:
I. It wll pay vou 434 per cent income. | his i;
‘)y far the l\ighclt interest rate paid on any of
your government war loans.
3 Thc security behincl tl\c ]oan wi“ bc tlu un
qualificd promiu-to-pay of your own govern~-
ment and every dollar's worth of property of
every kind in the entire United States.
3. You will not lmvc to pay any normal Federal
income tax, state taxes or local taxes on your
lavestment.
4. If you wish, you can exchange your 434 per
cent investment for one bearing 3;4 per cent,
which will be free from every other tax except
cstate or inhcritance taxes: or if you wish to
subscribe to the 334 per cent scries imme
diately. you can do so. :
3. Your invectmcnt ablolutcly wi“ be rcturncd to
you n ca.b at 100 cents on tl’:e do“ar in four
years (possibly three years) with interest
meanwhile. :
Evcry Amcrican Who 18 thankful for Victory should say soo by l)uying
Victory Bonds to the limit of bis abihity. He 1s hclping to finance his
government and incidentally making money on the job.
See US and Buy Early
Fourth National Bank
2 YLANT A ;
Jof work in the perfection of the plans
| Mrs. Hearst's brains and art were
| determining factors.
; “Imbued Hy nature with an artistic
temperament and perceptioh, no item
of design of construction estaped her
watchful eyes. With the discernment
of an artist, she would suggest
changes and alterations, and tlfi‘ flg:
cussion of Lpn problems In rel
would argue Her points with lfllfi,
and poise of a trained debater,” o
7