HARRISON PRESS-JOURNAL CEO. D HARRISON, CANON. Editor. - NEBRASKA NEBRASKA NEWS NOTES. The spring term at Doane culks peaed. ha Work has been begun on the depot to be erected at Waterloo. Judge Brandon, who resided at Te cusnaeh for many years. Is dead. The Niobrara presbytery held its thlr. tieth annual session at O'Neill. la a runaway at Ainsworth George small boy, had bis arm broken. The recent rainy weather has done wonders for crops throughout the Mate. The congregation of the Methodist huxch at Humboldt raised $10J for In dia's famine sufferers. George Kendriek, proprietor of the atendrick hotel at Odell, died of neu ralgia of the heart. The Union Pacific surveying gang is t Chapman laying out the , double track to be built this spring. SHUTDOWN ACTION OF AMERICAN STEEL &. WIRE COMPANY. METHODS OF A TRUST. I Estimated That the Loss to the Workmen Will Reach the Sum of $1 10,000 a Week. The supreme court has declared un anatitutional the free high school law by the last legislature. Mr. Caroline A. Woodruff, aged S2, Who has lived in Nebraska since 186a, fct dat Tecumseh of old age. The republicans of Brown county met at Long Pine and selected delegates to Uks state and district conventions. A new paper has been started in Owmsburg. It will be called tb Stroma burg Journal and will be repub- la politics. special election was held at Mad easa to decide the question of issuing CM bonds for a new school house. 'She hoods were defeated. City has raised $180 for the people of India. The amount Jill he invested in corn which, will bt from New York. "The large barn of Matthias Lund, tear miles southwest of Fort Calhoun, "san struck by lightning Wednesday 'Xagbt. aad burned down. Insurance, JiOO. evening a fire broke out if that composing room of the office 01 the Osceola Independent. A type casi "was ruined and the floor burned thro' The whoie loss was about Word has been received in Nebraski f the killing- of Miss Jennie Palmer is Wisconsin while out riding. She waj sue of the best known and most pop alar school teachers of Cass county. Oovernor Poynter has been In Sal' Lake City attending the meeting 01 western governors who were consider hag the matter of the disposition of arid tad semi-arid lands. The Plattsdeutscher Vereln. whlct was organized at Gretna about threr Months ago, expects to have a big time about May 5. The occasion will he to celebrate the arrival of the $111 banner which was ordered some tlux Co. Neighboring societies will be invited. Cabela Y Semin, the general mer chandise firm at Brainard, has dissolv ed partnership. Mr. Semin succeeds the eld firm. Ma. Cabela will at once erect h brick building and open up with a aew stock of merchandise. This means three new brick buildings for .Brain ard this spring. Johnnie Bleck, .15 years old, son ot Martin Bleck, who lives eight miles worth of Axtell. was wounded by the accidental discharge of a shotgun. He 1 out herding cattle and had the gun with goose shot near him. In way he caused the gun to be dis charged, tearing away the muscles of the forearm and Injuring the bone. The parents of Ture Sutton, a 18 year-old girl of Nebraska City, are greatly alarmed over her mysterious fit tun Iran ce from home several days go. No trace of her can be found by Ver parents or the police. The police sure Inclined to believe that she has litn a young stranger, with she recently became Infatuated. ejaeation of establishing an elec tric light plant for lighting the city, the plant to be operated in connection jrtth the city water works, was con- it the council meeting at Grand The majority of the council and yor are favorable to the project, and thai amsuuit seems good for Grand Isl and to he lighted by Its own electric tight plant at no distant day. Bmm Omaha Chamberlain, aged 17 years, M at Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Chamber asn, and George Murphy, aged 12, sun t I. P. Murphy, both of Stanton, left h limes during the rain Monday far parts unknown. Both were ey and clothing except they wore. They were seen In on Tuesday. They had aad 00 reason Is known for It Is supposed the older the younger one away. sbsstousky of Brainard, while stepped inside of Bpahl't He baa only got Inside the he fell to the floor. Dr. called and was at hi side t eould do nothing, as he hastaatly. The doctor pro- It heart disss. He was a af the Modern Woodmen of mm Bohemia lodge. In the r mmm la -- a aoMr af St at --- :'. UC MMr Ifo toavea a wife CM mall children. Chicago, III., April 24 A day or two go the American Steel and Wire com pany, a trust which has made its ex actions felt most cruelly by farmers who have to make much use of Its product for fencing, issued a peremp tory order closing down twelve of its mills sitlated in Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania. At the headquarters Of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers In Pitts burg, it was estimated that the lima tn workingmen would aggregate about 1110,000 a week. The Chicago Times Herald a staunch republican newspa per, gathered reports from the mill towns themselves, which indicate that about 6.K0 men were thrown out of employment and a loss of JiS.WO In w&etes each week is Incurred. Colonel John W. Lambert, one of the directing officials of the trust, explained the shut iown with the characteristic insolenci ind brutality of the typical trust mag nate, thus: "Our company Is running its business without any need of ex plaining. We shut down and open our mills when we see fit." No well regulated mind nor any con- iclence not completely ossified by per iistent pursuit of money-making to !he exclusion of all other ideals, will for a moment accept the theory that 1 business which employs nearly 7,000 men, a business upon the continuance it which the livelihood of probably $5, 00 people is Immediately dependent, is the sole concern of a few Individuals who, by methods familiar to corpora- ion managers, have seized upon its control. The people as a whole have lome rights in these premises. The na- Uon cannot honestly remain silent and lupine while the domination of a cor poration over the lives and happiness )f a great body of Industrious men and heir dependents is thus wantonly and irutally abused. In this specific case lifferent explanations are given for the shut-down. It Is said that it was caus sd by overproduction, but that la a He 'or all through the went farmers and mechanics have been stopped from sat sfying their wants for the products of his monopoly because its managers lave repeatedly increased prices until Jiey have reached almost tUe problbl ory point. If there is any over-supply f its product In the market. It Is be :ause the prices put upon it are such hat the ordinary consumer Is driven to til sorts of expedients to avoid pur- hasing. It is said by others that the ru reason for the shut down was that he ruling spirits in the trusts, one of hom by the way. John W. Gates, is republican aspirant for a lnlted states senaiorship, have certain plans 'or manipulating the Mock market hkh the shut down will further. This possibly true, but it only lays em phasis upon the folly and the criminal ly of permitting the control of a great nd necessary Industry in the I'nlted states to pass into the hands of a small body of men, men who would aot have gained control of it If they lad not possessed the Instinct of gam olers and who naturally utilize their jontrol to further their gambling trans let ions. We have said that a business of this ort is not a private business, and that o individual can rightly make such statement a Colonel Lambert Is juoted as having made, and that the eople as a whole must not sit quietly y and allow his position to be main tained without a protest. But In say- ng this It Is not necessary to go to the other extreme and hold that be- ause the business has attained such ualities of monopoly It should be con- ucted by the government according to the socialistic idea. The reason the 000 employes of the American Steel and Wire company are suddenly and arbitrarily thrown out of work Is be- ause one single governing board con trols the employment of all of them and controls the Industry in which all are engaged. If the twelve mills Involved were operating as corporations should operate, independently, one of two might shut down, but the others would continue. Indeed, it Is most unlikely that any would shut down, because the mill so doing would be In danger of los ing Its trade to those which remained In continuous operation. If, therefore, the existing anti-trust law had been enforced against this monopolistic cor poration, not only would the farmers not be compelled to pay extortionate prices for their fencing, nor the me chanics mulcted of extortionate sum for wire nails and metal rods, but the workingmen now out of employment would still be lit enjoyment of their wages, their families would be living In comfort and the tradesmen dependent upon their custom would not suffer. It Is probable that Mr. John W. Gates, the president of the present monopoly, might be unable to lose a hundred thousand dollars at poker, as he was reported to have done a few weeks ago at one of New York's gorgeous hotels, but the country at large could strug gle along even though Mr. Gates' sport tin Inclinations might he restrained. WILLI" S. ABBOT. PROCLAIM INDEPENDENCE ONCE AGAIN, On the fuming Fourth of JuH, or n the pr-t e.lir.g day, cry (rue Armrit.in newspaper in the rnlted Stat-s publi.-h in full the lw !aia:iun of Independence., It is the charter of uur libertl.. and it Is being sneered at and treated with contumely as eflcie, by those who aspire to destroy ;t underlying print ipW jf hu'm.in freedom by a return to ini-ri;.-ism and the destruction of a peo ple's government. Thousands are familiar with its spirit, but have never read it. and by proclaiming It once again .in the coming Fourth of July, it w fll surely bring about a revival of 4 palrior-ism similar to that expert- , enced by our forefathers on Jury 4, 1776. when they repudiated tin- perialism and tyranny. There is all the more need of Its proclamation because we shall 4 then enter a political campaljm which means life or death to the republic. 6A6E JUGGLES FIGURES. One of His Own Officials Exposes Cross Inaccuracies. Washington, D. C (Special.) Secre tary Gage was today convicted of jug gling treasury figures on the war reve nue receipts by one of his own officials. This official corroborated the state ments made In the press, and expressed his amazement when the letter of the secretary of the treasury to congress on Apt II 2 was laid before him. In which Mr. Gage fixes the war revenues for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1S3, at H5.724.510.94. ' "Those figures," said this official, "are notoriously Inaccurate. A careful est! nunc was maue 01 tne proposed war taxes before the bill was introduced In congress. We estimated the annual revenue at about $100,000,000. We did not miss it by ten million dollars. "The war taxes for the fiscal year 1898, which ended June 30. 18S9. aeere- gated $35,000,000. The books of the treasury show it. How any other con clusion can be reached is more than 1 can comprehend. The revenues derived under the war tax alone will aggregate during the fis cal year ending June 30 next between ninety and one hundred million dol lars. The figures of the denartment. If they Include every item of taxation Imposed by the act of June 13, lts. will show that the secretary has either been misinformed by his subordinates or that congress has been denied the accurate Information to -which It Is entitled. In the tobacco schedule there Is probably an annual Increase in buLlness of 5 per cent. Everybody knows that the tax on manufactured tobacco was doubled by the war revenue act, and that the increase of $16,2,000 in tax for 1W3 means that at least $15,000,004 of that sdm was due to the war tax; "The annual lax on beer, at tb old rate, was about t"3.0K.00. The rate of 7i per cent under the old law wss In creased to Vt per cent, so that the ad ditional $30,004,000 collected on beeer represents the war tax. 'Both these Items have apparently been Ignored by the secretary in his let ter, and both of them are due solely to the war revenue act. r.'n matter what other mistakes' may have been made, there is no excuse for cutting ofT $44,000,040 from these two Items alone." The New York Journal's exjKisure of the Jugglery created a sensation among men who are searching for abwlut facts upon which to base future legis lation. It was said that If all .Secre tary Case's communications to con gress were as Inaccurate as this It would be well to have. a congresslon ii committee appointed to ascertain whether or not the treasury department can be depended upon to ci.rret lly transmit to congress Information which congress is entitled to receive. FINAL VOTE, BRVANS MAJORITY IN CONVEN. TION FIGURED OUT. THE MAN WITH THE HOE. APPEARS TO HAVE 742 Under the Two-thirds Rule He WW Require Only 606 Votes for the Nomination, Total number of votes In the con vention 9o Necessary for a choice 6M Probable vote for Bryan 7J The Influences that Induced Admiral Dewey to announce himself as a can didate for president are so far un known, but the elements which have very recently made his candidacy con splcuous and lent to it an air of rea'lty are said to be those which antag n ized the democratic candidates In IstiS A few of those persons who bolted he iarty four years ago. without sv- rlng their connection with It, are now aid to be on the point of organizing the Dewey strength. This strength, so far as ascertained, will be el(tht votes n the national convention. These votes will come from Vermont although there is some doubt of the admiral's ability for getting more than four of them. This Is the practical measure of his strength as a presi dential factor. After the admiral's declaration that he would accept a nomination for pres ident the democrats cf Pennsylvania met In convention and pledged their sixty-four delegates to Kansas City to Bryan, The program arranged months before was put through. This gave Hry an 118 votes pledged to him by state conventions held this year. INDORSED BY MANY STATES. Enough other state indorsed him for renornlnatlon In earlier conventions to give him a big majority. With the national committee practically solid for him the absolute control of the con vention Is sure to be In his hands. There has been a good deal of talk about changing the rules so as to re quire only a majority vote Instead of two-thirds vote to nominate. The making of rules rests with the national committee, and It takes only a majority vote of the convention to adopt them. This is acknowledged to be one diffi culty in the path of Dewey, even If his friends succeed In securing more than one-third of the delegates for thlr candidate. ( The following Is a table showing the practically sure votes for Kryan In the convention. SUIIB FOR UK VAN. Mark!, am s wonderful poem, entill' d. uais The M.in with the Ho-." still .i:itin- Ues to attract attention fn !hi country and Europe. The critics hae dlwected It, the plutocrats have denounced It, and economists have studied It. In last Sunday's New York Journal there ap-ars an article from the pen of W. J. Bryan, a;ong with others from Jus tin McCarthy and I'.ichard LeGallicnne concerning It. Head these words of Bryan's and then reflect that there are men calling themselves populists who organize to defeat him for the pr'-sl dency where he would have the oppor tunity to make these principles potent In the government of this republic: "It Is not strange that Edwin Mark ham's poem entitled "The Man with tlic Hoe," created a profound sensation. It Is a sermon addressed to the heart, and Its lesson Is not limited to any nation, race or clime. It voices humanity's protest against Inhuman greed. There Is a majestic sweep to the argument, and some of the lines pierce like ar rows: Is this the thing the Ird God made and gave To have dominion over sea and land; To trace the stars and search the heuv- ens for power: To feel the passion of eternity? ADVICE TO DEMOCRATIC CLUBS. Bryan Advises Clubs To Celebrate the Coming Fourth, Washington, D. C, April 23. W. J. Bryan, now In California, in replying to an Invitation to attend a Jefferson dinner In this city, has sent the fol lowing letter to W. . McKean, secre tary of the National Association of Democratic Clubs, under date of April 1900: "My Dear Plr I regret exceedingly that engagements made bef re your In vitation was received will prevent mv attending the Jefferson dinner. It is especially titling that in this centen nial year of the party's first victor e should commemorate the birthday of the party's founder and patron saint. "In 1SO0 the genius of Jefferson or ganized the democratic party and led a successful fight against the aristo cratic Ideas of Hamilton. Today, when democracy Is engaged in a life and death struggle with plutocracy, we can find Inspiration In the teachings of the sage of Montlcello. "The doctrine of equal rights to all and special privileges to none, applied to present problems, would restore an equitable financial system, deprive na tional banks of the power to Issue pa per money, destroy private monopolies, remove the menace of militarism am imperialism, save the nation from en tangling alliances, make It an example to other nations, and Its flag an em blem of peace. Justice, liberty and pro gress, . '( hope that the National Associa tion of Democratic Club will urge each local organisation to celebrate the com. ng Fourth of July. "Those who assemble throughout th country csn listen to the resdlng ot the Declaration of Independence, heat patriotic speeches and then learn by wire that the nstlonsl convention of th democratic party, meeting on that day has reasserted the party's faith In th principles set forth In the Declare tins and embodied In the constitution of the United Btstea Tours truly. "W. J. BRTAN " Pledged this year Pennsylvania .4 Nebraska 3? Kbode Island 8 Massachusetts 30 Illinois H Colorado h Connecticut 12 Indiana :,fl Kentucky , -j6 Michigan 2 Nevada 6 New Hampshire 8 North Carolina. 2j Houth Dakota Ten nestle 24 Texas :w Virginia 24 Washington West Virginia n Alabama 22 Utah S fieorgia 20 New Jersey 2') Iowa Minnesota ih Idaho 6 Kansas 20 Mississippi 1 ioiai 74 This Is 120 more than a majority vote ind only 32 less than a two-third vote Ohio has been left out of the total tlthough last year the Association of Democratic Clubs declared tor Bryan ind shortly before then Bryan met the itate central committee and helped It organize, tt Is, therefore, certain that Ohio's it votes will be cast for Bryan. Maryland will surely follow suit with her 16 votes, and such states as South Carolina. Wisconsin, Louisiana. Mon tana, Missouri and Oregon will un doubtedly swell Bryan's vote In the convention to 742, which Is 134 more than enough to nominate on the two- thirds basis. No mention has been made of New York for the reason that It has been classed by many shrewd politicians as "doubtful." It Is the opinion of David B. Hill, however, that the resolutions adopted by the state committee pledg ing the "love and loyalty" of the demo crats to Bryan binds the party to him It Is also the opinion of Hill that the only state that can be properly classed as "doubtful" Is Florida. New York sill have 72 votes In the convention: r"lo rll a will have S. U is practically ?ertain, therefore, that the vote In the ionventlon on the first ballot, even If a much severer storm attacks Bryan :han now seems probable, will be: for Bryan ....' $14 icatterlng 91 New York Journal. A firm of rlgarmjikers, In whose welva factories 2,000 union and non jnion hands are on strike, has sudden y discovered an opening for pugilists, now that the Lewis antl-prlae fighting law has been passed. The plan Is te rmploy them ss "bouncers" during la Mr strikes, Morris Brown, secretary of New York Ctgarmakers' union No. 114 has reported to the Centrsl Federated anion that Kerbs, Werthelm aV HchlrTei have employed a prise lighter known sr Bill Bennett to act aa "bouncer" foi Che .liken' picket Through this dread shaie the suffering ageg look; Time's Tragedy Is to that aching stoop; Through this dread shape humanity be trayed. Plundered, profaned and disinherited, Cries protest to the Judges of the world. Is this the hanoiwom you give to God? How feeble. In comparison, have been the answers to It! The poem deals with the condition, the cause, the remedy and the warning. The condition Is set forth In the lines: Down all the stretch of hell to its last gulf There Is no shape more terrible than this More tongued with censure of the world's blind greed More filled with sighs and portents for the soul More fraught with menace to the uni verse. It Is not an answer to the Indictment to say that the ioet selects his type from the middle classes, but from the lowest level. He Is dealing with the mill whjch takes In, as raw material, the man made In the Image of his Creator, and. If It Is allowed to complete Its work, turns out us the finished pro duct, A thing that grieves not and that nev er hopes, Sometimes it is a tyrant who oppress es fur the benefit of himself, his family and the warriors upon whom he relies to enforce his authority; sometimes It Is an aristociacy which gathers In the fruits of power and throws upon the mascen the burdens of government; sometime it Is a plutocracy which openly exalts money and debuses flesh and blood; but eveiy where it Is the siime brutal (spirit which ignores the brotherhood of man and violates the commandment: "Thou Shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." The extremes of society are being driven further und further apart. Wealth Is being concentrated in the hands of a few, and tenacity Is on the Increase. At one end of the scale lux-. ury and Idleness bre' d effeminacy; at j the other end cf the s.ale want ami 1 Restitution breed desperation. Civilization cannot be measured by the refinements and the enjoyments of the rich; the tollers who produce the nations wealth In time of je-ate and constitute the nation's strength In the time of war muyt participate In every forward movement of the race. In fact, they are so Important a factor that the real advancement of the race Is mens, ured by their advancement. Improved machinery and Inventive genius have multiplied the productive power of th" Individual, but the producers have not rtcelved their share of th Increase. The capitalistic clays and the Hpeculat Ing class have enjoyed anil are enjoy ing, too large a part of the proceeds of labor. What Is the cause? Who made him dead to rapture and de spair? The literary sycophants who strew rhetorical flowers in the pathway of the successful, without Inquiring Into the methods employed for securing success, complacently throw the responsibility for failure In life upon Ood, or Nature, or upon the man himself. Is It the 'suit of God or of Nature that children ire drlv.t Into factories at so early an age t,mt their bodies are stunted, their minds dwarfed and the strength and usefulnes of future generations lessen ed? Is Ood or Nature responsible for lass which permit this Impairment of innn-power snd the woman-power of the nation? The labor organizations have done much to mitigate the evils of child labor and to shorten the hours 'if adult labor, but what encouragement have their received from those who fa vor government by Injunction, oppose arbitration and denounce as disturbers of the peace all who criticise existing conditions? Is It the fault of Ood or of Nature that our tax laws are so made and our tax systems so administered that the poor man pays more than hli share of the taxes, and the rich man less than his share? Is Ood or Nature responsible for s financial system which raises the pur chasing power of the dollar In the hand of the money changer, while IMncreaa es the burden of debt' to the man who owes, and decreases th vslue of prop erty In the hands of the wealth pro. durtra? Is Ood or Nsture responsible for a paper money trust that makes the peo ple at large victims of private Individ- ntrufted with the control of tt.t vluin" of 1 111 rency ? is ; d r Nf.ture res v.nsble t'.r pri vate pi', it. ip-ill-n that ccrri-r Die rrnir kets, eit nt ftorn the 1 mple and dis burse the pim-eeds among the holder! of watered stoi k ? Is God or Nature to blame for the substitution of force for reason anl niiKht for right In Government? Is t;ol or Nature responsible f-r the nation's entrance upon a career of conquest, en tailing upon the many the burden anl menace of militarism and conferring upon the few the benefits 6f exploita tion? The United States supreme court hat coined the phrase, "larceny by law," and compared with trdinary stealing thin form of theft may be called gr.mtl larceny; and yet wholesale wrongdoing is never taken Into account by those who assume that all who are poor de serve their poverty, and that all who are rich earn their riches, if one em ploys another to commit robbery he is as guilty as If hecommits the act him self; does it change the moral charac ter of the act because the Injury la done Indirectly Instead of directly? Does It change the moral character of the act becasue the Injury la done thro' legislation which he has secured or it the absence of some righteous law the passage of which he has prevented? The accumulation of wealth by hon est means Is to be encouraged, but the line must be drawn between honest wealth the reward of brain service or muscle service rendered and predatory wealth which defies the law or turn government Itself into a machine for the plunder of the public. The Indolent cannot expect plenty under any Just form of government, neither can the vicious expect happi ness, but under bad laws those who work the hardest may enjoy the least, and those who labor least may have the most: But the remedy: How will you ever straighten up thin shape. Touch It again with immortality? Give Justice to every creature Jus tice In the methods of government, Jus tice In the making of the laws. Justice In the Interpretation of the laws, Jus lice In the execution of the laws. Jus tice first and charity afterward. Justice will not eliminate distress entirely, but It will greatly reduce the number of those who come within the description of the poet. There will still be some poor and destitute, some d perate. Generations of vice will trans mit tendencies toward vit e, which must be reformed. Some will be the victims cf unavoid able misfortunes they will need the aid of the more f irtunate. The orphan win need a foster parent, the widow wtil treed a friend, the aged without 'rela tives will need a ben factcr. The v.. it must be encouraged by the strong; those who fall must lie lifted up. I-ove is the antitln-sls f gr eed; it will Inspire both Justice and mercy. Ive and love alone can regulate th rela tions between man and man and plint a hope In the breast of every child tro Into the not 1I. When every man-msde wrong Is rem edied there will be suffering nioug;i to enable every person to prove hi l.ve toward Gtid by manifesting his com pussion toward his fellows. Hut the poet ali-o presents a warning: How will the future ret ken with this ma n. How answer his brute question In that hour When whirlwind of rebellion slrike the world? How will It be with kingdoms end with kings With tlintte who shaped him to the thing he In When this tlmb terror shall reply to God After the silence of centuries. In monarchies revolution is the only weapon of the oppressed; under our form of government wrongs are righted by the ballot; but even here the longer a necessary reform Is delayed the mir disturbance Its accomplishment causes. Vlitor Hugo has described th. mob as "the human race In misery." We cannot afford to make people inls.-rable Ufe U secure and property rights a; rcxpe. ted in proportion as the p.-oplij find life worth living. Happy will be the lot of all when each member .f society make to society a Just, and adequate return for that which he receives from sot lety. Happy will i (he Jot of all when each member of so ciety reco-nizeg tne indissoluble tie that binds together the highest and the low est, the strongest and the weakest, the rb het and the poorest -when f member of society aids n cording to his ability to give bat k to the poet's sub Jest : -the upward looking and the llgfcf iehuild In It the music und the drei; ?.fUW t-(ft,t Ik.. 4 . . . . ii Vi 1, miuiemorini intAin 1 e, 1, .," wrongs, immedicable woe. Plans for the first Itusslan 'Orthodoa church of Kt. Nicholas to be built Irt New York have been completed. The, -oet will b 170.000. Work will be started In May on the return of the Kev. Father Hotovlsky from Russia. In the ba.rnent will be Sunday school room and a printing office for the Russlon church paper, edited by Fath er Hotovlsky, The main congregation hall on the first floor will contain ne seats. The Russian fongregatlont stand on the level floor during worship. There will be a atnall gallery fur th choir, but no organ. Count Ofcuma'of Japan fsvora th adoption of . ( W ,of , a religion af .decile character whirl shall Include the ot feature. f But uhlam, Confuclsnism and Christianity