J'HE HESPERIAN STUDENT. 3 Jil T nally open for University scandals, or again that in his laudable attempt at perfect consistency he do es not see that the students arc too modest to make speeches when a large audience has paid a high price to hear a noted lecturer and is waiting for him to be gin. On the whole thin we suggest that the "Demo crat" man ponder over his University items in future, not to see if they are tvue, for that of course is unnec essary, but to see if they agree with each other and with common-sense We fear that in providing for the intellectual well fare of the students, those who control its financial affairs forget that physical health is valuble even though it be only as a means in the attainment of wisdom. We wish to remind them that the command is not only "get wisdom," but also "get understanding." In other words the University needs walks constructed of some more substantial materials than water and mud. In the west we do not care so much for style as for utility and we think the proudest of us would prefer an angular, prosaic plank walk to a serpentine path whose graceful curves only serve to prolong an unnecessary and undesired experience in fishing for overshoes. We have often heard and in part experienced that the path to learn ing is thorny and rough, but it seems unnecessary to make it muddy as well. Further the young ladies and gentlemen who wish to shine in society find it impossible to ever show a neatly blacked boot or 6hoe within these classic walls. Now a blacked shoe is not an indispensible agent in the acquiring of an educa tion but it is a much more agreeable object to eye when the Prof, asks unanswerable questions than one covered with the drift of the glacial period mingled with the favorite beverage of tlv 1 teetotaler. In throwing out this hint we are actuated by no selfish motive. Ifnecssary for the good of the University, the Student is willing :o continue the unwelcome task of transferring the campus to the various recita tion rooms; but for the encouragement of morality both in the students, since cleanliness is akin to god liness, and in the janitor and professors whom the condition of the building often brings to the verge of profanity, we beg that a (cv inch planks be tastefully arranged in the muddiest spots alternating with frag ments of stone at convenient distances. There is something truly poetic in the thought of the damsels searching in the records of antiquity for. forgotten lore, tripping gracefully from stone to board and from board to stone, while the splash and ripple of Nebraska's staple reminds the listener of the pleasant brook babbling over pebbles. We would even be willing to dispense with the annual trimming of our "forest primeval" of cottonwoods, and trust this hor- ticultural duty to Hie playful cyclone, for the sake of even a two foot walk from the front gate to the front door; while even the delights of arbor day holidays and commencement receptions pale before the vision of an asphalt promenade. This last thought bring up beattific visions of Friday evenings which cause us to drop our pencil and meditate on the nights; when the moon is dark and the air is warm and the young man's fancy turns to something or other, we forget exactly what, but are sure of the main point that it turns much more lightly on a dry walk than in the mud. The lecture by Rev. DeWitt Talmage was enter taining and intereting, but some perhaps went away with the feeling that there was a certain something lack ing in it. To these it gave the impression that the lec ture had been studied for efiect, that it was not the sim ple natural outflow of what the man had thought and felt in his inmost life, such as was that of Dr. Thomas, but there was something strained about it, the illus trations were grotesque, and many of his expressions approached too near slang to be agreeble to all ears. The orator manifestly attempted to make his lecture 'striking," a thing which characterizes him asa min ister. Dr. Talmage is the leader of the great army of sensational preachers. He draws immense crowds, has great success as a revivalist. He strikes the pop ular chord, he knows how to stir up the emotions. And if we judge of the success of religion by num bers he is certainly a powerful advocate. But if we judge from a higher standpoint whether his influence as a preacher, asa man, is such as to truly inspire and lift up those around him in their religious life, which is the only true fruit of religion, we shall have to ac knowledge him as inferior to many having less pop ularity. The roots of religion run deep, its strength and support lie within. If this source is not reached,, it withers and dries up; it can not thrive on surface culture. The test of a minister's usefulness is how deeply does he implant these roots, not how many, for a narrow stiearr. of great depth has more momentum, than a wide and shallow one. Time and theologians have two standpoints of looking at religion. The theologian estimates the success of religion by converts; time decides its suc cess by the character of its converts. The one is partisan in its view, the other cosmopolitan. What ever are our theories, lime decides upon their value in this way. There is no subject in which men are so liable to err as in religion. We can not divest ourselves entirely from superstition and judge it as we do other things. Half-seeing the grand possi bilities of it if the world could all be truely conver ted, we blindly attempt to convert it by storm. But many times, alas! we discover that only the bar O WSM