Show Looklnc Forward Very often the station of life In which a man I born I not the ration I which lie belongs by right dominant qualities As soon ails a-ils unconsciousness becomes pr cut within him bl moves onward and upward to hU own place The experiences of the past do not each us that Tolstois doctrine ol nonresistance is particularly efllca talons l a theoryhas not stood ttie test of repeated experiment It may t dismissed as practically J worthies In eplla of the poetic assertion the wlnd that beats the mountain does not blow more gently round the open world In act the mostdeUniptlve tornadoes are those that rage over the wide expanse 4of pen prairielands Every great revolution l the earth has known has beenpreceded by cars of uonresfftanco on the side of the classes whose duty was sup posed to be meekness and subservl nee to those set over them as rulers It 1 was the heavy Breathless omInous om-Inous silence before the breaking 01 the tempest no real calm They born until they could bear no more then the hour of revolt struck ana the fioodgates burst with the stress of that pentup torrent which swept nflt J way everything in Its track and wrought a ruin that only the labor of years could repair It Is for the ternal welfare of any nation that each member thereof howsoever tumble he nay tie shall ruin ru-in Otherwise he is lib one who works in the dark nts of a tunnel which has not even a starry ray of light towani wIlled he may journey telling him halt lie space of gloom has an ending end-Ing It is the Olflercnrobetnieii slavery and freedom When once you set a limit upon his hope and draw n rigid boundary line you i rob his asplratiouscftlieir lifeblood The dignity of labor need not be a phrase of empty mockery If em player and employed would combine com-bine to make their mutual oblica thou what It shoiM oe In the co partnership of brain and muscle ach member of tnir firm Is of equal I importance Bcnnmb the quick brain and thKrtroug arm fall powerless palsy the arm and the utmost Ingenuity of the brain becomes futile The worker in any field should realize that he is the debtor f his profession or trade and that lieis not working for his own profIt or aggranillze men alone or for any resultant praise or applause but for a prlncl pIe that bids him give forth the lest hat Is In him without counting the cost When once a man falls a prey to the pernicious dread of doing more than he I paid for he has ready traveled tfarfr the road to morI deterioration It will not belong be-long before ho becomes even as the hIreling that flecth because he Is an hireutnga I lo sordid drudge J without couragoor loyalty instead of a selfrespecting Jaborer who looks beyond the little daily task and dOCh 1 not grudge to spend himself upon the enterprise that engages him Thin worker must become one with his work ertrh divorce blmsolf from It continually to mark Its cflecto on others fixity of purpose will soon falter into irresolution Irresolu-tion So Ions aa lw is true to his Ideal he will have light within his JI wn clear breastft precious lp ark that nothing can dull or extinguish Irlt is 0Id that inch a standard Is co loftyfor human natures dally > ractlcelt may bo replied thatevery great gift that has enriched the world has been bestowed upon those who cast aside all considerations of self and labored not only for today but for tomorrow and forever ltellr Orlcara TimetDemocrat |