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to protect the funds, and in all Dr. Wallace's per- sonal care of any public funds in his hands an accur- ate account was always rendered. The great power of President Wallace lay in his personal magnetism. Full of his work, he possessed the power of imparting the same enthusiasm in others: full of Christ, he was able by God's grace to bestow in a large degree, the same fullness to his College Work. 35 co-laborers and pupils. It was this spirit which inclined the student to look on the president as his personal friend, and to see in that friend, the godly man, the Christian gentleman. But his work in Monmouth College as its honored president, needs no eulogy from us to impress upon the church its influence and importance, and rank him who did it among the first college presidents of the land. It speaks for itself in its grand results. It is seen in the character of the school he founded, its liberal curriculum, in the thorough training it furnished the intellectual powers, in the minute details arranged by his acute mind for the conduct of its affairs in all its departments instruction, exe- cution, finance, from the care of the building to the supervision of the Senate but above all, in the moral character of the instruction given, the training furnished for the development of the moral qualities

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