Conservative , 13 as feeling. This feeling rises into some thing higher when the Psycho distin guishes the content of this feeling from that of other feelings , and forms for itself a mental imago as an objective ex pression of it and towards which it as sumes a free attitude. "When the religious instinct or urgency is arrested at the stage of more feeling , the devotee does not recognize the crea tive energy , the nous , the idea , the word , the Divine Spirit , God as personal. To him God is an immediate manifesta tion of matter , hostile to his freedom and intelligence a fetish. The feeling in rising from itself ns feeling to a men tal image of the object of feeling is not destroyed. It persists. If the mind is held back from the act of forming mental representations , and continually redissolves them into feeling for fear of aiithropomorphising the con ception of the Divine Being , one will at tain no purer idea of Him ; but will rather destroy all attributes of personal ity in his conception of the absolute and leave an empty abstraction like the Brahm of the Hindoo. One rises out of the stage of represen tation , of images when ho begins to think. Reflection , thinking distin guishes that in the content of the relig ion of imagination which is necessary and universal. For the imagination the necessity of its pictures is a hidden assumption. The thinking activity re cognizes the contradiction between the - sensuous limited form of the representa tions and the essential nature of the con tent , and also the contradictions between the conceptions themselves with respect to each other. In attempting to discover the contents of these religious images the mind rises to true concrete insight. Thought first made the images created by the imagi nation as a scaffold to stand on. . With out them it cannot begin at all. They who reject the imaginative stage of religious culture are not able to rise to a concrete doctrine of God as a di vine , human person such as Christianity reveals , but make him to be a being with the negation of all the attributes which characterize a creator , because such a being transcends everything finite , and everything thinkable is finite. On the plain of insight there are three stages of religious thought ; the abstract , the reflective and the speculative. The abstract sets forth the doctrines as dogmas. The reflective busies itself over the mutual relations of the dogmas and the proofs of their necessity. This leads to skepticism. The speculative thinking sees the logical necessity of self-activity , self-movement , self-deter mination in. the absolute and therefore of concrete attributes such as belong tea a creator. This is a conscious return to the creative energy of the evolutionist the absolute reason the Divine Spirit This seemr to be che process of connect- ng the self with the infinite , of bringing one's self into unity with the infinite. In the light of this discussion the iccessity for the school as a distinct and separate institution from the other great primary institutions and its function should bo clear. The school in the widest sense may be taken as including all edu cational and cultural agencies. Hence ; here is family education , the education of polite society , industrial , political and religious education. The child or youth acquires habitudes and capacities for social action by direct contact with : iia environment. These acquisitions gained by direct contact with social in stitutions may be called spontaneous education. It forms a large part of everyone's education. The civilization of today rests upon a body of languages , sciences , fine and useful arts which are the growth of cen turies of social evolution ; hence the necessity for the school in its narrower and technical sense as an institution furnishing a time and a place where the social pre-natal work , so to speak , of or ganizing in the brain and nervous sys tem those capacities and habitudes which will equip him. on his social birth into the institutions of industry , politics and religion to successfully engage in the struggle for existence. In the school he is to master these subjects tools of civilization which lie at the basis of social progress and hence of personal development. Not only this but ho must be made conscious of the ideal aims and purposes of the institu tion of the family , the industrial society , the political state , and the church that ho may become both ethical and religi ous , in the language of Aristotle , "That ho may not only live , but live nobly. " Only by this insight can ho bo touched with the divine fire which lights him to the infinite. There is no good vhy the public treasury in the state of Nebraska should bo depleted each year two thousand dollars for the purpose of running a state fair. If the farmers and manufacturers of Nebraska deem it advantageous to have a state fair each year , they have a right to hold one at their own expense. But there is no excuse for a law which puts the hand of the state board of agricul ture into the popular pocket for the pur pose of talcing out , each year , enough tax-lovied , tax-gathered cash to pay the expenses of the board and its officers for running a state fair. More than twenty years ago the editor of THE CONSERVATIVE served as presi dent of the state board of agriculture. While acting in that capacity ho de clined to take the state appropriation foi the board of agriculture. To the Hon orable Eugene Munn , then a member of the legislature from Otoe county , he ad dressed a letter protesting against the * . . appropriation. It was not made. The state fair was a success financially and in every desirable way. But never since that time has the state board of agricul ture failed to seek and secure and con" sumo its annual stipend of two thousand dollars from the state. In the last twenty years that stipend makes an ag gregation of more than sixty thousand dollars. No such appropriation is needed. No such appropriation should bo made. If there is not demand for a state fair in sufficient force to pay the expenses of a state fair Nebraska ought not to indulge in a state fair. Things undemanded arc valueless. There is among the statutes of Ne braska one which provides for an annual allowance of five POTTVPV tMTlfC . COUM lAiicb. hundred dollars by the commissioners in each county for _ the purpose of holding a county fair. * " The ninety-eight organized counties of the commonwealth availing themselves ' of this lax , unwise and extravagant leg islation may squander in horse-trots about fifty thousand dollars annually. In the lost twenty years these expendi tures which are wholly unnecessary have added about one million of dollars to the taxation of Nebraska. The legislature of Nebraska should abolish all subsidies to the state board of agriculture and to SUBSIDIES. oounty ngricul. tural societies. If these laws are not , repealed it is a duty of tax payers to sue out injunctions and permanently , under order of the courts , put an end to this waste of public money. "It has boon wisely said , " says the Congregationalist of Boston , "that some of the profound sayings of the Sermon on the Mount await their entire explan ation and fulfillment until the kingdom of God , about which they were spoken , shall bo fully established on earth or in heaven. A similar thought may be true of other words of Scripture. It is sug gested by the remark of a lady , writing as to her mother , who had suddenly been taken from her : 'I am trying to rejoice with her , and so forget my own loss. ' Wo think of Paul's familiar in junction as belonging only to our life hero ; but why should it not become our duty and privilege to rejoice with those who have finished their pilgrimage through this evil world and entered their Master's joy 'glad also with exceeding joy ? ' Would it not turn our sorrow into joy if wo thus tried to sympathize with the supreme happiness of those whom in our half-selfish grief we would like to bring back to earth ? It would surely give a broader , grander meaning to many precepts and promises if we ex tended their scope from the narrow world around us to the wonderful world just beyond our ken a world already the abode of so many wo have known and a world , too , which is soon to bo ours. "