BIGNESS IS NOT GREATNESSBy Rev. Wallace C. McGillThe thought of today runs toward••utrali/.ution We I.oust that it is the•lay of big things. Trusts : in: syndi:it« s control jcanv lines of industrs.• *fade ami trfinsj ..rtation « li:ii:i stores .re preempting man;* mines *f iner nnlidise. to the exclusion of small .erchant*.Wo j;,Ife g hi;, of mil inns in priva?• rtuios an11 public enterprises. AUle . iws of business are merged i It to pu’\ rfnl corporations. S.-ho. 1» and col ejo-. rlt;* merged into large educational s\' ins, and re‘i„ mi' bodies nre com bined into vn * wi rid ; oceeioBN thatropOs*’ to iliieet t !*«• lit flii g’fl.' e a lit •.•ealrli of ('lirisT.didom in one might;, i ipm-t ago nst heathendom and ‘‘eon rt th- world in this generation.'Oil’ gen ration need, nothing mor • in it in . d to re.'; /•• the value • f pih t'iejs and lt;• a 1 niness-r-ttioutal and noral pot'?*. There i a knowledge 4a im d on ’ v ill -.t illneKs “He still and know that ! am God There isstreiigth : imd only in .piietn^s Theirtr. n dli is to it still. Great b. di 'S i. ist move slowly. Great forces worksilently. The purposes of the Almighrvaiul tht. jre»e*m of uftiuro move with I a let t .ward tin ir ends.Majesty in v ithout haste. Medi1 itioni, ssary to strong intellect andleep spiritigillty. So*ne knowledge ts gained by experience, other by stud... but th* deeper truth, of life are t aught by the *4 still snail voice which may not be heard amidst the