Critique . be in no way responsible for the opinions expressed by individualcontributors. RESIDENT WARD; TOOK BAH DEWEY—A PARALLEL. Of all deadly things, un-less it be an unloaded gun, nothing has provedSO destructive to human ambition, wrongfullydirected, as a public comparison of personalmotives and acts. The Critique has been advised recently, and upon thevery best authority, that President Ward has advanced asufficient amount of real money to pay off the entire indebt-edness connected with the settlement of the A. 1. H. Journalmatter, thus cutting off further comment and controversy overth


Critique . be in no way responsible for the opinions expressed by individualcontributors. RESIDENT WARD; TOOK BAH DEWEY—A PARALLEL. Of all deadly things, un-less it be an unloaded gun, nothing has provedSO destructive to human ambition, wrongfullydirected, as a public comparison of personalmotives and acts. The Critique has been advised recently, and upon thevery best authority, that President Ward has advanced asufficient amount of real money to pay off the entire indebt-edness connected with the settlement of the A. 1. H. Journalmatter, thus cutting off further comment and controversy overthis most unfortunate affair. In addition to this he has paid two hundred and fifty dollars cash, which representsa half years back salary due him as associate editor underDr. W. A. Dewey, and which should have been paid by thatthrifty individual. An additional sum of three hundred andsixty-eight dollars difference between Dewey and TreasurerSmith has been taken care of by President Ward. Thus THE CRITIQUE Dewey has been cared for; Treasurer Smith likewise; DoctorHorner, ditto, and the Institute is free. That the membership may know the amount, and judgefor themselves as to the unselfishness of the act, we need onlysay that Dr. Dewey received two thousand dollars; Dr. Smiththree hundred and sixty-eight and Doctor Horner two hun-dred and fifty, making a grand total of two thousand, sixhundred and eighteen dollars. Doctor \\^ard proposes to donate the two hundred andfifty which he paid Doctor Horner and will allow the largersums to remain unpaid until such time as the Institutes finan-ces will permit of their return, and all zijithoiit interest. Doctor Ward seeks no applause for doing his officialduty, and it is w-holly against his personal wishes that we areprinting this much of the letter. We would be only too de-lighted to print the letter in full and nothing in our editorialcareer has caused us so much actual distress as our inabilityto make public the entire d


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidcritique1719, bookyear1910