
Out of and from each we have gained something for our national character; to each we owe something special for what it has contributed to us as a people.
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Out of and from each we have gained something for our national character; to each we owe something special for what it has contributed to us as a people.

It is gratifying to know, what we would of course assume, that the government of Russia shows the feelings of horror and indignation with which the American people look upon the outrages at Kishineff and is moving vigorously not only to…

Warning is hereby expressly given to all persons not to make settlement upon the lands reserved by this proclamation.

The rights and privileges reserved to the Indians of the Blackfeet Indian Reservation by Article 1 of the agreement shall be in no way infringed or modified.

No more important work can be done by our people; important to the cause of Christianity, important to the cause of true national life and greatness here in our own land,

We are not to be excused if we selfishly sit down and enjoy gifts that have been given to us and do not try to share them with our poorer fellows coming from every part of the world.

This church is consecrated to the service of the Lord; and we can serve Him by the way we serve our fellow-men.

let us so far as strength is given us make it evident to those who look on and who are not of us that our faith is not one of words merely; that it finds expression in deeds.

The man who is not a tender and considerate husband, a loving and wise father, is not serving the Lord when he goes to church;

Better lines could surely not be brought into any dedication service of a church; and it is a happy thing that we should have repeated them this morning.

This church is consecrated to service and duty.

I have appreciated more than I can say the welcome back home that I have received to-day.

This is not and never shall be a government of a mob.

Different methods must be devised for solving them, but the spirit in which we approach them must be the same as the spirit with which Lincoln and his fellows in council, his followers in war, approached their problems, or else this nation…

All men are not merely wicked, but foolish, if they ask privileges to violate the law.

All men are not only wicked but foolish if they complain because they are forced to obey the law.

I feel that as an American citizen it is proper for me to express to you and to those like you, the obligations that good Americans feel for what you and they have done in this university and in other educational institutions throughout…

But it will not fail—it will succeed because we still have in us the spirit of the men of '61.