I Dakota County Herald DAKOTA CITY, NEB. IOHN H. REAM, Publisher. Many a grafter hnn built his fortune n a steal foundation. Aflfr a while every sneakthlef ran elalm that he la merely a souvenir col- teotor- 1 1 fi sua Some people seem to be making for tunes out of wheat without a grain of trouble. , Our Idea of a hypocrite In a man who really admires his mother-in-law, but Is too contrary to admit the fnot. ; It's a wle ninn who ran distinguish the difference between a pilfering sou Tenlr hunter and an old-fashioned thief. The word "thousand" on the new ll.OtK) certificate la said to he misspell ed. IxKik among your change and see If It Isn't so. Bisliop Bowman, 00 years of nge, Is not a millionaire. Still, we think we may safely say that he has been a suc cessful man. The price of thread has been raised cent a spool, which Increases the val ue of the nal attachment for holding the susjicnders. The Minneapolis Journal has discov ered that the word "thousand" Is inls pellcd on the new $1,000 certificates. Haven't bnd time to examine ours that Closely I During the time lie was on the stand Mr. Rockefeller's Income was so much greater than the $90 he earned as wit to ess fees that he did not think It worth While to put In a claim for the fees. It Is reassuring to learn from Recre tnry Taft that the Panama Canal will be completed wiihln seven years. Seven years Is' not a long pctlod In time !n the carrying out of such a colossal un dertaking. "Riches will disclose your flatterers j poverty your friends," says a Baltl- bora philosopher. In most Instances poverty discloses your lack of friends, and riches disclose nothing because you don't have them. "Save; work bard; practice aelf-de- fclal." Thus John D. Rockefeller lays dawn the rule which must be followed ty those who wish to get rich. It Is a botlceable fact, however, that the poor generally follow these directions. A Pennsylvania mail told bis fiancee that she would never be able to keep nlm from going to lodge. Whereupon she straightway broke the engagement, Incidentally, she also broke his neck thus promptly and permanently break big nlm of the lodge habit "Honesty Is the best policy." Presl dent Hadley of Yale advises his young tnen not to accept that precept He aaya honesty that Is based on policy Is bot honesty at all. Bay It Isn't; but under the circumstances It Is the best policy. There Is always the hope tfiat fjoncsty accepted as a policy may grad' oate Into a principle. Appreciation day Is the name of a new festival In a New York hlcrh school It originated last year, when one of the girls In the cooking classes Bug rested entertaining all their old gram mar-school teachers. The Idea anneal ed to the other girls, and the teachers Were Invited to an entertainment by their former pupils. The clrla did all the pleasant thing they could think of to make their guests hannv. on the th. ory that It la much better to do a kind aeea to a live teacher than to my ap preciative tilings over the coffin of a dead one. Where Ignorance Is bliss 'tis folly to oe wise. The modern facilities of com oiuuicatlon give us altogether too much Information for our comfort about what Is going on In the world. There Is danger that nervous persons may come to imagine that there are tin usual disturbances taking place In the tody or the earth, portendlmr some tr rifle catastrophe. There Is evidently Dot the slightest foundation for belief. Nothing Is bow happening which Das not oeeu happening since the earth h was Inhabited, although the Drobahlllrr Is that the earth, like folks, grows steadier as it grows older. We merely bear more news than our forefathers got An Incident which occurred In New Tork Is Interesting, as showing lu how short a time women have succeeded In Inspiring confidence In their ability to ao wont wnicn was formerly done ex cluslvoly by men. ; The employes of the corporation counsel's office celebrated the completion of fifty years of serv Ice by the chief clerk, Mr. Andrew T, Campbell. In referring to the changes which had taken place during the half century, Mr. Campbell recalled the com motion which was caused twelve or flf teen years ago, when It was first bus gested that women be employed In the office. "There wna almost a riot," he aid. Then, he added, "But to-day, If any one should suggest that we do away with the services of the twenty five womeu helpers, there would be something worse than a riot." In view of the disorders that have already taken place lu Seoul and the further troubles that are anticipate there and elsewhere 'In Korea, there Is a illnixixitli.il lu aonie quarters to blame or sneer at "the indifferent on looking powers" that are jsr;nlttliig ag cress I vc Japan to abolish the ludeiieml euce of the Hermit Kingdom and con vert it Into a mere colony. We uro even told that Jnpun has disregarded, or proposes to disregard, the Torts- mouth treaty, secure lu the knowledge tliat uo -nation would dare offer any eZccMve opp'jrltlon. Hut all comment of this character forget the unauliuous Interpretation which the world put on the very provisions of the Portsmouth treaty which Japan Is uow accused of trampling under foot. If the world, was right then, thre Is no occasion for ludlgnatlon and protests now. It Is trt that the treaty with Russia os tensibly left Korea the status of au Independent state. The Czar merely recognized Japan's predominant Inter est and Influence In that "sphere" and bound himself to keep his hands off. This means a protectorate" all said, t did, and It docs to-day. Japan sub sequently made certain agreements with the Korean government which, In fact If not In name, abolished the tatter's ndejeiidence. A government which must conduct all foreign relations through anotlter and that Is bound to ake that other's advice In sdmlnlstra- ve and fiscal and military matters Is not Independent nut the masses of he Koreans did not jcrhaps under stand (he exact rhange that had come bout. The court continued to Intrigue, nd the mission to The Hague eonfer- ence was unquestionably a violation of he spirit of the Korean-Japanese treaty. Japan did not fight China and Russia In order to gain a nominal "pre dominance" In Korea. Expressions of Ity and sympathy for the Korean peo ple are In order, but the Interests of he people are not Identical with the nterests of the court aod ruling poli ticians of that misgoverned country. The fact Is, If Japan had not secured control Russia would have grabbed It, nd would that have meant more prog- ress and justice and order In Korea than Japanese overlordshlp la likely to secure? Should Japan's role prove try presslve and tyrannical, the enlightened sentiment of the West will be Justified n protesting. With mere changes of form and ceremonial the outside world will not trouble Itself. WOULD HAVE SWEDES RETTTRNV Effort Blade br Kin a: Oacar to Get Emltraiti Dark. Heme. An effort Is under way by the Swed ish government to effect the return to their fatherland of the hundreds of thousands of Swedes who have emigrat ed to Amerlcn and by discovering the causes of emigration In Individual cases to prevent It In future. Swedish edi tors and pastors have received a re quest to co-operate In this work. The request Is la the form of a cir cular from an "emigration committee" of. 100 prominent Swedes, with head quarters at Stockholm, asking them to ascertain from as many Swedish read ers and parishioners as possible: The chief causes of his emigration from Sweden. His present condition and earning power. Whether he Is employed In agricul tural, mechanical or other pursuits, or as an unskilled laborer. When and how often he has visited Sweden, bis family connections In Swe den and In the United States, and In what trades he has been employed In this country. Editors of Swedish newspapers are asked by the royal Swedish statistical department to publish this request for Information at intervals and to send all data to the Royal Swedish consu late, 17 State street, New York City, before Oct. 1. The circular says In part: "The committee believes the princi pal causes for emigration from Sweden are the lack of sufficient opportunity for work, and the difficulty of reaching a position of independence, and th consequent difficulties placed In the way of marriage and the establishment of a home. 'It Is for the purpose of removing these obstacles and of Improving condi tions In Sweden that the emigration Investigation committee has been or ganized." Minister Lagerkrantz, the Swedish representative, was charged to open a bureau In the United States through which a Swedish-American desiring to return might secure information as to the conditions In bis trade In Sweden and the probabilities of his prosper ing there. Consul Ekman, who died re cently In Sweden, left 400,000 crowns ($110,000) to the bnreau which Mr. Lagerkrants Is to establish. , Sweden Is said to desire particularly the return of skilled mechanics, of which there Is a great scarcity In Swe den, owing to the better opportunities for high-grade workmen In the United States. Manufacturing towns which fifteen years ago were prosperous com munities are said now to be almost de populated because of the heavy emigra tion to America. The bureau which la to be establish ed In the United States will, It Is said, be provided with enough funds to as sist mechanics unable to pay their own way back to Sweden. MOBS WOEK FOB THE P. M. The Postmaster at Squeedunk By Ginger! The mail will have to be opened after this an hour later because of this new-fangled law allowing peo ple to write on both sides of jiowlal cards. It takes Uie Just twice as long to read 'em. A Moilera Heart. "Do you ac that lady over there?' She broke my cousin's heart!" "Was she so cruel?" "No, but the day Is-fore he broke off his engagement to her she Inherited, 200,0(0 marks." Translated fori Transatlantic Tales from Fllegende Blaetter. Every uiuu gets mail wtieu ho sneaks to the pantry Just before bedtime, and finds only cold potatoes. WHAT THE PEOPLE DEMAND. By Oov. Ours Is not and was not Intended to be a pure democracy. It Is Im practicable that the eople .should administer the government directly. They govern through representatives. For their protection they have by direct legislation created constitu tions fettering the power of their representatives and establishing safeguards by which they are secure In their personal liberty 'and In the results of their thrift. We note with satisfaction the In creasing sense of ,resionslhllity to the fieople on the purt of those who represent them. Efforts to dominate legislation for Yt i ;'t"s-v:-t iim-aa r ' - r oov. a a buohks. selfish purposes and attempts through the form of popu lar election to place In office those wlw In the guise of executing public trusts serve private Interests, are less successful than heretofore. The people have become In tolerant of such traitorous representation. And It Is entirely within their power to put a stop to it altogether. Political leaders who have performed the function of clearing-houses for legislation, and who while posing as party workers have served under a retainer of spe cial Interests, careless alike of party principles or public Justice, are passing from the stage. The people demand leadership, and parties ueed effective organization to ad vance their principles. But the time Is rapidly passing when any one can long maintain a position of wide political Influence who Is under suspicion of maintaining a double allegiance. GREATEST DISCOVERIES STILL TO By Justice 0 Some years ago Lord Kelvin, thnt master mind of British science, remarked to my uncle, the late Henry Field I cannot quote his ex act words, but the substance of them was this: "Great as have been the discoveries of the past fifty years, those that are coming will make the next half century as far aliead of the last as It was In advance of the pre vious period. We are on the brink of dis coveries greater than have been dreamed of, and of high est Importance to mankind." I can see the forerunners of some of the marvels that are In store for us. What a weird thing Is wireless telegraphy, aeadlng our messages mysteriously over the seal The airship seems to be a practical possibility of the near future. The telegraph and the telephone al ' ready have enabled us to accomplish a valuable saving of time. Think what It means, this one thing of saving time In our human existence. It gives us more oppor tunity ,to think, to study, to work, to accumulate wealth, to carry on trade and commerce, and more time also to devote to helping others and promoting peace and hap piness In the world. The merchant of the past was confined principally to bis Isolated community. The merchant of the future may deal with the whole world, reaching out Into every country, buying, selling, trading In faraway lands, car rying on enormous transactions that could not be un dertaken but for the Inventions of science that save his time at home and bring the other side of the world In stantaneously to his door. We have millionaires to-day and billionaires to-morrow. Perhaps we shall have trllllonalres next. Let us ENGLISH AS SHE XS SPOKE. tJaoser of V'alasr Slana; la Baalaeaa Intereoarae with Foretffaera. Illustrations of the dlsadvontuges of cultivating local vernacular and slang la one's own language are sometimes brought sharply home to business men, as was the case In a letter received tlie other day by a New York firm from one of their own correspondents In the far east, which read In part as follows, ays Shipping Illustrated: "Will you kindly send us a modern dictionary of American language, as we are unable to understand some of the plirases In your letter. Writing on the th ultimo, you say, for Instance: 'Do not let Messrs. hand you a loraou In this deal. If they try It on pitcfc one for fair right over the plate to Mr. , and If he foozles cable for a solar-plexus.' The terms used are foreign to us and we entirely fall to comprehend their significance." Another Incident similarly Illustra tive occurred on board, a big liner In New York n short time ago when a representative of Shipping Illustrated was conversing with one of the officers : "Have you been often in New York?" asked the visitor. "No. nils Is my first trip," was the reply. "You have leen running to other Engllsh-sieaktng ports then. You speak very good Kngllsh." suggested tlie visitor. ' "No. This Is the first Engllsh-sieak-Ing place to which I ever came." i ".May I ask where you learned Eng lish?" "In school at SebastojHil. We had a good professor and I understand you very well, but many of the isxiple here with whom I speak I cannot under stand, so that I have suised the American language Is different. I am told by some of the other officers wls do not sjieak English, but who speak French or German, that people b,.re Who sieak those English languages speak the same as at home, but Eng lish here seems too large n language. One ctinnot understand the words. Teo pie say things and laugh and I am pu. ilM. but do not comprehend." The moral of such Incidents Is obvi ous. If business men are to take ad vantage of the fact that English is now more widely spoken abroad than any other language, they must lie at n!na not to lav-loud their meanings by the use, essH-lally In correspondence, of Slang pnrusea which have merely loca iigamcance. A Malla-a Wlf. He Do you kuow thero Is to be t grand ball for charity, and I am think Ing of taking you. Have you evei danced for charity? Sher-Certalnly. Do you not remem ber that eveu before wo were engaged I never refusal your Invitations? Translated for Transatlantic TaKts from 1 Motto per Illdere. Tramparrat Ulaaa Huler. The transparent glass ruler, au Ins ration, la of great assistance to drafts men lu wolr work. Chaa. E. Hughes. have tlirm if their wealth Is ut-.-J for Increasing the welfare aiul the happiness of Immunity. I do not view with alarm the accumulation of wealth, liccause I believe that the spirit of humanity ami the sense of responsibil ity Is growing among us. v YOUNG- MAN'S SALARY NOT MAIN THING. By John A. How land. In life us n clerk In a general store in a small town, lie could have had more money in another store whose specialty was shoddy goods of all kinds. He decided to stay by the better man at the smaller salary, with the result that to-day In his own business, aggregating mil lions annually, he says that some of the basic principles of his house were found In the methods of that country store where he first sold goods for an honest man. With the young man at the outset this question of salary seems all important. To the extent that It shall not humble his pride to have to accept so little, this salary has distinct bearing. But as between $1 and $2 on the salary roll, many a young man who In the beginning lived well on half as much finds himself In debt with twice the money In bis pny envelope. He discovers sud denly that a salary of whatever size Is subject to new perspectives. Considering the young man venturing Into business as an Individual, training for business, he is fortunate If he shall hare some level headed counselor who may help hlra see the full stature of Opportunity in sharp and lasting contrast to the petty salary of a day. COME. David Brewer. WORK FOR THE. - 3 f'l'i -V I f JAMES I1BVCK. L how to mitigate tlie contrasts of wealth and poverty; how to adjust more fairly the burden of taxation; how to deal with Intemperance, with unhealthy dwellings, with discharged criminals, with vagrants, with neglected children how In various ways to help those who need help. . All these questions have a double side. They need to be studied la tlieir principles as a part of economic science. They need even more to be studied In practice by getting into actual touch with the evils Inherent In the growth of dense enters of population. And if the antagonism of rich and poor which exists In nwiny parts of Eurojie is to be averted from American cities, It must be by keeping the richer people In close peryinal touch with the life of the poor. ONE WAY GucBt Why do you call this the ocean from here. Proprietor Oh, yes, you con. We 600 feet. You get a magnificent view of AMERICAN GIBLS. Ona of the Ylataare of '4S Expreaaaa lleraelf. "I don't kuow what the world Is coming to," sighed a New York woman of tlie vintage of 45 to a New York Evening Sun representative. "Time was when we used to go down to Castle Garden and watch the Immigrants come In for the purpose of congratulat ing ourselves ou being American girls. "You know how the immigrants look when they come in, the women and girls weighted down with huge bun dles, boxes and bags containing the worldly goods of the whole family, and the men and boys walking along with their hands in their pockets. We used to feel so sorry for the women and the girls and so Indignant with the men, and along with It all so proud that we were born lu a country where all wom en were treated with consideration, not made the burden-bearers for the whole family. "Now, from all I uan ace and hear. It appears that American girls are no longer proud of the way their fathers and brothers have been relieving thcui of burdens. They ' not only want to carry all the boxes and bundles of the poor immigrant women, but they wish to take ou themselves all the resMiusl bility of the government. "I don't know anything about, the suffrage question. I'm neither for nor against It, but I do know that if I had my life to live over again I had rather be au American womau than any other created being. That Is, of course, un der the old order of things. I have had men protect mo and humor me all my life, and have found It pleasant enough to be willing to live it all over again." "But suppose you had to earn your own living, be your own protector, with uo one to humor your whims, what then?" asked the suffragist. "If I Just had to I suppose I should do my best I but I don't like to think Thousands of young men are starling out In life with the salary magnet the only at traction to them. "A Job" that shall pay suf ficiently to meet his small necessities and pay for as many of the small luxuries of the time as the young man feels more and more are pnrcol of his necessities liecomes at once the young man's objective aim. 1 have a business acquaintance who started EDUCATED WOMAN. By Ambassador James Bryce. There are two fields of work which the average educated citizen of the male sex does not find time to enter, but Into which women have more time to enter. One is the cul tivation of a thorough knowledge nnJt A A ... - lu A. 1 1 " ""' mate iu nieravure me habit of reading that which Is not ephemeral, the habit of study, the ' acquisition of a critical faculty which discovers and enjoys what is of permanent literary value. The other field Includes the study of economic and social phenomena- OUT OP IT, Soa View Hotel? You can't see the have a captive ballooa that goes up the sea from there. ot such a possibility. If I Just had to be a drudge, I suppose I would want as mucli money as the men drudges, and In time I might want the ballot" "That Is nil we are asking for," ths suffragist rejoined. "Industrial condi tions have forced us out of the homes, driven us Into tlie array of workers. Since we have to do men's work we wish men's pay and their privilege, the ballot. We only wish for a fair deal and uo favor." Fair deal and no favor! How many women In this land of the free and the brave would be content with a fair deal and no favor? A fair deal? Yes. When It comes to no favor there will be precious few who are willing to sign their rights away even for the power of tha ballot So long as wom au nature Is woman nature and the American mau la the American man the American woman will claim and get favor. Unless the signs of the times have been stacked In the shuffle she will also get her fair field. All Had Meanlng-a. "So the proprietor of this hotel hns n big phonograph that plays while you dine?" "yes, and some of the selections are very appropriate. For Instance, If he thinks his guests are get.tlug Impatient he puts on such pieces as 'Life Is Too S';ort to Worn" and 'All things Come to 111m Who Walts.'" "H'ni! 1'retty good Idea." "Yes; but tlie last selection beats them all. If he tbluks you might over look tipping the waiter, he puts on Kipling's recessional, 'Lest We Forget! Lest We Forget !' " Brooklyn Citizen. HcUbus Are Small Katcra. The bedbug has been scientifically in vestigated by the Department of Agri culture, aud the reassuring Informa tion Is given that au adult IxvlUug feeds only ouce in from thirty-six to forty hours. A wan uever guts dysin-psla from eUiiig the tUlugs he dislikes. 0TJB HASTE IN BUILDING. TVe Are ow Taklaa; More Thought of Stnbllltr aad 1'rrnianr nee. To the European eye American towiia and villages have the HpH-ar-mice ;f temisirary structures. Even In NewKngland, rich In stone, most build ings, except in tfie crowded parts of large cities, are of wood. Old ami much traveled highways cross streams over wooden bridges, which last but a few years, During the first three months of this year the fire losses in the United Jitntes and Canada amounted to $t)l, IHHUOO, $10,000,000 more than for the corresiKindlng three months of last year. Every year cities on the Inland rivers sustain enormous losses from flood., lossea greater in the aggregate than the cost of preventing by proper, embankments and other means the disastrous effects of the floods. Every-, where 1:4 evidence of u deposition on, the part of Americans to build for to day rr.ther than for to-niorrow. The reason for this Is that America has not wholly outgrown the spirit of pioneer days, when shelter had to be thrown together for the night. Peoplw needed houses faster than they couldj build them. There was not time t u brick snd stone. The habit of hasty. Impermanent building Is fastened upon, us; wooden bouses of the flimsiest kind rise and decay like mushrooms. Permanence and stability come with age. The American Is taking more time to think of the future, he Is be-, ginning to build more solidly. One sign of this Is the attempt to Introduce! Into uiauy American cities architectur al plans for streets and water fronts wheh shall give order and direction to' growth for a- thousand years. 'The American imagination is 'gaining In scope and steadiness. New York City consumes 5,360,000 pounds of tea annually. The birth rate In Germany Is six a thousand higher than In England. ' Genua ny has ten government poly technic schools, having a total af 15,458 students. The Russian secret service employs more than 6,000 women. Several of them draw $10,000 a year. In the north central States there Is a percentage of thirty unmarried men out of every 100, to 19.3 of unmarried women. Tlie village of Elm, In the canton of Glarns, Switzerland, Is so surround p(l by mountains that It has no sunlight all winter. A census of Egypt Is being taken. In 18!7 the population was less than 10,000.fKK), and now it Is thought to oe iver 13.000,000. The Black Sea contains less animal Ife than any other body of water. The ower depths ore saturated with a poi sonous gas which kills the fish. India has 4,835,047 acres of Irrigated land in the Punjab, an increase of 453, 501 acres in one year. The crops are mainly wheat, sugar cane, grain and winter oil-seeds. The latest figures available, those for June, show that the gross earnings of railroads operating over 93,500 miles amounted in that month to $82, D5fi,3.)0, the gain over June, 1908, being $0,700,423, or 13.4 per cent The fire loss of the United States and Canada for the month of June, as compiled by the New York Journal of Commerce ami Commercial Bulletin, shows a total of $14,765,000. This makes the aggregate for the half year $117,477,500. The six great ports of India which received merchandise and distributed It for consumption and re-expout In 1906 were: Calcutta, $141,470,130; Bom bay, $120,048,055 ; Karachi, $31,449,085 ; Rangoon, $31.100,2!Ki ; Madras, $28,896, 900, and Chlttagoug, $1,027,030. American aad Madera Art. We are all familiar with the weary plaint of our artists that in America we have no atmosphere. We are ac cused by the American student In ths Latin quarter of having a country with out nuances, without half-tones or sub tleties, light and shadow. We arc sneered at as not palatable. Perhap we are not, as Brittany Is or Naples or the harlsir at Boulogne or Kothenburg lu a sunrise mist, but Just what is real ly palutable is somewhat a matter of opinion not wholly of French tradi tion. Remington has fouud the western In dians and their environment worthy ol a masterly brush ; Borglum has discov ered subjects enough roaming over th Western plains for a techulque that might seem good enough for French rivers and Brittany meadows; Twlcht man did not give up painting becauso New England was bis abiding place und lament the absence of Freuch at mosphere in Connecticut He Just stepis'd outdoors, walked through his garden, looked down a winding lane or out over the sound at Cos Cob nud painted und achieved mar vels of atmospheric effects that few ot the greatest or foreign laudscaplsts have ever excelled. Ho did not worry because America was not palutable. If he ever thought about It at all It must have been with a quiet little smile of amusement. And so what we need iu order to create a further national spirit In our art Is not a different country but a dif ferent, new, Intelligent understanding (Hilnt of view toward our country as it exists. The Craftsman. friendly Ad vice. Coal Dealer I want to insure my stock of coal. "How much will I have to pay yearly on 150,M) francs' worth? Insurance Agent Is It the same as you sent me the other day? Coal Iealer Exactly. I. A. Then take my advice and do not insure at all. Nothing could pos sibly make that coal burn. Caricatur ists. Some women are always pitying some one at homo or abroad, aud rather atwui to cujoy It wig 6 ' Life. Things pass ami perish, but human twings abide forever. Rev. J. W. Iv, Methodist, Atlanta. Womanhood. The young man gets his first Idea of womanhood from home associations. Rev. F. .1. Van Horn, Congregationalist, Worcester, Mass. Influence. Never forget your influ ence. Do not wieck with a J.'st what you haye wrought with n Javelin.- Rev. W. II. G. Temple, Congregational ist, Cleveland. Better than Prayer. There are times when there Is more religion In 25 cents than iu a long prayer. Help your brother iu need. Rev. M. C. Brooks, African Methodist, Brooklyn. The Armor of God. The half heart ed Christian is not happy, but the man who has on the whole armor of God Is the one who rejoices along the way. Rev. W. F. Bryan, Methodist, Dallas, Texas. Readiness. Be ye also ready! How helpless we are before the forces of nature. Be ready. The calamities-of life reduce us all to a common level. Be ready ! Rev. Samuel Rcid, Metho dist, New Albany, Ind. Buddhism. If Buddhism, without a single promise of future life, with Ita fatalism and practical annihilation of the soul of man, Is better than Chris tianity, then follow Buddha. Rev. K. Wheeler. Baptist, Camden, N. J. The Duties of Life. Life must unified by having but one principle ufJd then seeking to attain to the one goal bv iislnc two Instrumentalities, relig ious duties and secular Interests. Rev. C. D. Case, Baptist, Montclalr, N. J. Indifferentlsm. The notion that one religion Is as good as another means practically that one religion Is as bad as another. The step from Indifferent lsm to Infidelity Is easy. Rev. George Thompson, Roman Catholic, Portland, Ore. Disaster. I can never believe that our God works disasters for the pur pose of punishment He uses them, but so does He use all things to bring men to think of Him and surrender to Him. Rev. H. G. Ogden, Methodist,, Louis ville. Change. The form of Christianity Is constantly changing. Organizations nnd symbols of faith, long identified wltn the religion of Christ, loose their hold uikhi thought and life. Rev. A. J. Ray mond, Congregationalist, Schenectady, N. Y. is Fellowship. A man cannot be a stranger when he stands In the pres ence of the spiritual life. He has eyea to see the eternal realities of God and comes Into closer fellowship with Illm. Rev. P. G. Sears, Episcopalian, Merl deu, Miss. Doubt With all our progress In In genious Inveutlon nud mechanical np pllunce, with all our marvelous con quest of time nnd space, still the ele ment of uncertainty is not yet over come. Rev. Henry Frank, Independ ent, New York City. Honesty. Men find It easier to take the path of least resistance. But the honest man will follow the beckoning hand of truth at any and all cost. He will be true to tlie promptings of his conscience, no mutter what the world will say. Rabbi J. L. Levy, Hebrew, Pittsburg. Pa. , Jommittees. We cannot safeguard ou" civilization by the appointment of committees of inspection for Insurance and for buildings and for packing house corporations nnd for railroads, and for steamship lines and dry goods sores and the thousand and one other enterprises of to-day. Rev. J. R. Strat n, Baptist, Chicago. Material Things. Too much ImjKirt ance Is paid to material things. Re member, "Man shall not Irve by bread -1 flAn . . . Hi.il1fnfru oiH HlOIie. .H I U crrvi uuimifftD, " ...., their names emblazoned on the front, to be seen of men, so they will, go down through the ages. But these things d not endure. Rev. D. W. Bartlett Bap tist, Lob Angeles, Cal. The Golden Rule. If the Golden Rule wus the regulator of life and con duct, the "smart set" would have lit tle time for gossip and slander and, more for reading, reflection, and study. This would result In many of the di vorce mills shutting down, thus perma nently benefiting society. Rev. G. W, Grliitou, Methodist, New York City. Certainty. No mau cou le a Chris tian without being sure that he is a Christian. If u man Is a saved man it Is the first fact lu bis existence, yet people often base on wrong grounds their belief that they are saved. A man Is not saved simply because be bellevea certain tilings about Jesus Christ Rev. G. B. Vosburgh, Baptist. Denver. The Gospel in a Nutshell. The cross is tlie abridgement of the Christian religion. It is the go-pel In a nutshell. It Is the Alpha and Omega of the BU lilc. It is Hi.1 Christian guide boos to heaven. It Is a manual which the un learned, as well as tln learned, may oiK'ii unii read, und draw from Its page:; the hidden maruia of spiritual ds light. Cardinal Gibbons, Roman Cuta olic, Baltimore. Au Stratus Thounht. f Vrta'iil.v, i.i our own little sphere it is not I lie most active XHplc t Nli'iiu we owe the most. Among th common people whom we know it la not necessarily those who are busiest, not those who, ineteor-like, are ever om the rush after some visible charge and work. It is the lives like the stars, which simply pour down on us the calm light of tli.lr 1 rl:it ami faithful ls lug. up t i uiilrh we look ami out of which we gather I he deepest calm and ourag". Phillips Brooks. It ii iu.: ili.m-ult to gs people starts ed to iiilveriislu;;, but It doesn't da them any g.hid to keep il up uiiIcsh thay have the sxidJ.