OCR Text |
Show On questions of social import the decision of the Catholic church is known before the question is asked. For instance, the question of divorce was settled before Henry's time, and it has been settled ever since. Henry couldn't change the decision. Still, the reports of bounteous crops hasn't seriously seri-ously affected the high cost of living. While the small boy feels discouraged to think I that vacation is drawing to a close, let him be re- "? f minded that Christmas is also coming on apace. , ..?' And some men are born poor, others achieve pov- f I erty, while others have poverty thrust upon them, ' At last reports the Rock of Peter was still undisturbed un-disturbed by the change of French ministries. We don't believe anybody today would be so fool- j ish as to attempt to deny that the Catholic church j saved the Christian religion and the Bible during 1 j the long medieval struggle toward the light. That's one debt Christendom owes to Catholicism. If Catholicism Cath-olicism had failed there would be no Christendom today. It is an entirely wrong conception that a taste for dress can be developed by biting off the thread. It does seem strange that when the people with the phonograph move out, the next occupants o the house must have a crying baby and a dog. Newpapers that know, who is to be the next president presi-dent ought to say nothing about it. They detract so much from the interest in the campaign ! . i A New York newspaper furnishes the informs- h v tion that there have been 125 murders in that city A f since the first of the year. The wild and woolly ; I west certainly is tame by comparison. ( If wishes were autos wish beggars might prefer ; to walk. ' : ! . . . ! f A woman's college with more than C.300 grad- ' f" : uates, it is said, has only some S00 married alumnae. No doubt most of the girls are young yet. And when the debating clubs take up the incoraa tax question, they might tip off a sure method of getting an income sufficient to make the collection of a tax upon it profitable to the government. I The proposition to turn kerosene oil into milk t and crude petroleum into the finest dairy butter of ! course would have a tendency to Sfandardize.those i j products of the farm. ' j j |