Show A DIVINITY STUDENT ROUTED One day wo wore traveling across the plains in the caboose of a freight I train writes Rev Cyrus Townsend Brady of his experiences a A Missionary I Mis-sionary In the Great West in the August Au-gust Ladies Home Journal A young divinity student was with us lie wan one of the ambitious kind of divinity students who wreck a parish or two when they begin and finally drift upon the ecclesiastical bargaincounter He I I was ready to argue about anything with anybody A greasy dilapidated I looking tramp came into the caboose at one of the stations at the end of a I division and presently engaged In a heated discussion with the young thc I logue on the disadvantages of cduca ton He maintained the affirmative that the less a man knew and the less education he had the happier he was with so much skill and adroitness and showed such mastery of logic and III eraluro that he routed the poor boy horse foot and dragoons so effectively that the young man rose and went out on the platform to hide his chagrin leaving the supposed tramp chuckling over his pipe In huge enjoyment at his easy victory The bishop had listened without saying t word and when the student left ho turned to the man and Inquired sharply I What callegc ore you from sir Yale answered the man without thlnlcIng The unlucky admission destroyed tho mans argument for he was n living example of the fallacy of his own proposition prop-osition I ositon |