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Page 53 text:
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art Brower oben eer, R mg. A.v,,,,. bffffy- J. L. -IMS B. Van - NV, Pal-ish, rerlen, D. H. , Charles E. H- Willard, Tedenburgh, ugene Van 'CL De Witt luackenbush, ard Brower, Jhn H. Mat- .. Van Nest, Y. Wemple, ohn G. Van gn Van Alen . D. D., john ., Charles iver, Andrew ard B. Adri- C. F. Van ftten. Rhinebeck, host Boldt een disp0SCd e by the USC ral Plantefl- wld church af iccn laid In if y ,' s AMA.. ii fi MW H- it af? iii lg 1 ADDRESS OF PRESIDENT VAN DYKE. Genilemevz of Me Holland Socieiys H CONGRATU LATE you on having eaten, and survived, your Sixteenth Annual Dinnerg and I thank you for the embarrassing honor of finding myself in this President's chair to- night. lt is my privilege to live 'near the Hrst building in this country which was named after the House of Nassau and Grange,-old Nassau Hall, of Princeton College. And from the classic shade of that building two citizens of Princeton have come to these festivities to-night, rejoicing in the fact that the fathers of New York had the discretion to place their city in the suburbs of New jersey. Nothing is more remarkable in American social life in this nineteenth century than the growth of ancestral societies. They have become so numer- ous and various that about the only one now lack- ing is a society of the H Friendly Sons of Paradise, composed of direct descendants of Adam and Eve in the male line 5 their crest, an apple-tree rampant, and their motto, Forgive your Ancestors, if you can't forget them. Some of these societies have produced 1'Cm-HI' liable results in the development of the science of forestry 23
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Page 52 text:
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22 Anson A. Voorhees, Chas. De Hart Brower T, H. Bergen, john R. Vanderveer, Roberg Davis, jr., R. B. Brinkerhoff, E. Biting, A. Van. del. Lam de Bie, Charles R. Dusenberry, J, L Vander Vegt, Peter Elting, Cornelius B. V35 Brunt, Col. W. L. Heermance, Dr. W, parish Josiah H. Zabriskie, John B. Van Wagenen, D, H, Van Auken, Harold T. Van Nostrand, Charles E. Whitbeck, Dan. Winslow, Thomas H- Willard. Chas. E. Schuyler, Dr. W. T. Van Vredenburgh, Hon. George B. Sloan. ' At Table 9 :f Thomas Van Loan, Eugene Van Loan, C. B. Zabriskie, E. A. Gifford, De Witt Van Buskirk, D. Snedeker, Abraham Quackenbugh, W. R. Snedeker, S. T. Zabriskie, Ward Brower VV. Wallace Brower, john Brower, john H. Mats thews, Farrand D. Brower, Frank R. Van Nest, William Crolius, Henry A. Bogert, C. Y. W-emple, S. L. P. Deyo, Norman F. Cross, john G. Van Horne, Thomas S. Cruttenden, Stephen Van Alen Van Horne, Rev. James L. Amerman, D.D., john H. Myers, Jr., William P. Sutphen, Charles J. Bogert, William L. Brower, A. E. Conover, Andrew J. Onderdonk, F. Bloodgood, Edward B. Adri- ance, C. B. Story, H. A. Van Liew, C. F. Van Inwegen, John V. Black, Amos Van Etten. Rev. Dr. Howard Suydam, of Rhinebeck, was called upon to say grace. When the good things that mine host Boldt had provided and so well served, had been disposed of, President Van Dyke evoked silence by the USC of the' gavel given by Consul General Planten- The gavel was made of oak from the old church gf Delfshaven whose foundations had been laid in 1416. The President spoke as follows: ,ag , fx on Jr ADDRESS Ggfiffiwgn Qf CON G ands an of fin night. If building in House of N of Princeton of that buil to these fi that the fat place their Nothing is life in this ancestral Q ous and V3 ' ing is a soci F0mP0Sed o In the male and their n Canlt l0I'gQf some of t results in the S I
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Page 54 text:
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24 among genealogical trees and in the propagation of progenitors. It was a member of one of these societies who, going d0Wn'f0WH, Saud to a friend, with great pride: I have just l121'd an addition to my family. Being asked Whether it was a son Of 3 daughter, he answered, Better than that,-it is 3 great-grandfather. When We consider the nature of the lofty ances- tral claims Which are made by some, and compare them with the present reality, it reminds us of the experience of a little boy in Baltimore. I-le attended one of the new-fangled schools where a little of everything is taughtg and one day when he came home his mother said to him, Frederick, what did you learn at school to-day P I learned something about devolution. What is that? she inquired, Well, said the boy, once there was a man, and he was very bad, and they told him he ought not to be bad, but hewent right on being bad, and he turned into a monkey with a tail on. So he kept right on being bad, and pretty soon his tail dropped off, and he turned into a protoplasmf' His mother said: What became of the protoplasm P Why, mother, said the boy, the protoplasm,-that is me l But thereare other ancestral societies in this country which rest upon a more solid basis and have a more serious object than the cultivation of family pride. They ,exist for the recognition and remem- brance of the. different strains of blood and nation- ality that have entered into the making of the American people. This is a high, philosophic, and patriotic object. v , It helps us to remember that our Republic is not a new experiment, but the result of gloriousefforts Cl? afll' ra mall' ' f asoecl, emerglrl1ghP5 pr I edible' 'Or halls fclllllllatl ' I r the irat10ll5 ln L noble asp d, in l I ll hill and rilegweden. lland 2 r ZeNo one C0Ullm ca ifnno, rifle' lo' P rin ohffllage 0' noon has mall' f holler is that heavelhl ihom m2HY 3 land his land a settled ho Her children are not I irst settlers, but all Wll her protection and acl own history should tea ialiity, the folly of lorms. America does the tribe of Tammany, spirits, gathered from ll1 hAI1ll lll0ll, my gmnur' flhysons are they '50 Who consemig his W Wherever hom' 5 un Lllelsll I-My mn Trey shall be hi il I lt isfor th . iron H,,,f,j,mwg an eating, like the SWUY1 l0r Ealing, W 1
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