Jasper County Democrat, Volume 5, Number 39, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 January 1903 — Few-Line interviews. [ARTICLE]

Few-Line interviews.

If I were hungry I would steal.—Rev. Dr. Charles 11. Purkhurst. There are some things worse than a strike—degradation, demoralization and a cowardly manhood.—Samuel Gompers. The highest honor lies in the king’s uniform. The highest work is die calling of arms.—William 11., Emperor of Germany. The trouble with English hospitality is that they make you feel you are doing them a favor in accepting it. —Maj. Gen. Young, r. S. A. No subject can be dealt with in half nil hour a week. The present Sunday school system is nil wrong.—President Eliot of Harvard University. The interests of both England and America are tho same. Prosperity for either moans prosperity for both.—ViceAdmiral Lord Charles Beresford. From tho viewpoint of health, hardly one girl in ten is fitted physically to stand the mental and nervous strain of a college course.—President Taylor of Vussar. I wish for the #crman people freedom of thought in religion and scientific research, but not freedom to govern badly at will.—Emperor William of Germany. The Irish, nlone of all the world, control neither tho soil they till nor the government under which they live; they demand the control of both.—MV. Bourko Cockran. The chance of a university to enlarge men's power of happiness is not lesa than Its chance to enlarge their capacity for gain.—Associate Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. I do not know thnt a union of tho churches can be expected in the near future, but a spirit of live and let live is coming, and I see the prospect of admitting, to the heathen, at least, that we all worship the same God.—President Woodrow Wilson of Priuceton University. I think it is n good thing that Itobert Burns was not the Mayor of New York, for ho could never have written the lines, “O, wad some power tho giftie gie us to see tfursel* as ithers see us."—Mayot Low of Greater New York. Every man born in this country is a born policeman. He is burdened at birth with the responsibility for his own wrongdoing and for the shortcomings of his neighbors.—Dr. James H. Canfield of Columbia University,