Jesus? How many of us can recall appointments with Christian students to meet for a quarter or a half-hour before the Monday evening prayer-meet- ing, to beseech the throne of grace for the outpour- ing of the Spirit upon the college ? How often he directed the attention of some one who professed Christ to a fellow-student whom he wished to bring into the family of God ? As one thinks these old times over, the memories of his concern for the salvation of souls and his honest and wise endeavors therefor, sweep him on the most profound conviction that here was a man who loved the souls of liis fellow-men as made in the image of the Creator, and who loved the kingdom of his Lord as it is established in human spirits. Few men in the United Presbyterian Church are better qualified for speaking with authority regard- ing the fitness of other men for teachers and edu- cators than Dr. J. E. Johnson. Long and famil- 82 A Busy Life. iarly acquainted with Dr. Wallace, Dr. Johnson thus speaks of him in these regards: In the death of Dr. Wallace, the cause of educa- tion has lost one of its best friends. There are men as deeply interested in the work as he. but only a few combine so great practical efficiency and enthusiasm with the power of passionately showing