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need. Many an invitation was given to come to office or home where his influence was exerted. These witnesses all testify to the exalted charac- ter of the man about whom we write, as a moral teacher. In the class-room, we regarded him as especially felicitous; his explanations were so plain and simple that the student readily and easily grasped the truth, and his analyses of the whole subject w^ere so clear and accurate that only the most obdurate failed to learn. In the pulpit his method of instruction was the same; his propositions were clearly stated and the argument plain and pointed. That he was a skillful financier of the college funds, the present sound financial system of the college plainly testifies. He inaugurated this sys- tem. The monthly statement of the treasurer to the Board of Trustees with the monthly supervision of his accounts and no bank system, is better adapted 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. 85

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