me&&& And if that were the general attitude of .the church toward labor the church would be packed with laborers every Sunday. They would get acquainted with the preacher during the week, when they were solving their daily bread-and-butter problem. But how many times has Rev. Mr. Lloyd gone'to the workingmen hi their troubles and tendered his aid toward getting- them justice? How many ministers of the church tbok up the fight for justice and a living wage for the clerks in Chicago department stores when the O'Hara committee exposed the starvation wage policy of those stores? How many ministers of the gospel even lifted up their voices in the pulpit to help arouse a public sentiment that would insist on a decent living wage for. the department store clerks? What ministers of the gospel went down into the loop last year to help the striking newsboys and save them from the assaults of newspaper slug gers and policemen? , How many labor strikes have ministers investigated? How many have they taken enough interest in to find whether the demands of the men were just or unjust? How will you make workingmen and women believe the church is the ally of labor unless the church is with them in their most serious trouble when they are striving for a living wage and a fair chance to feed, clothe, house and educate their children? I am asking these questions to be helpful, for I know something of what is running through the minds of men who are struggling with all "their might to keep their heads above water in the fight for an existence. I have talked with preachers about the falling off "of church attendance. I have talked with men and with women. I find no falling off of reverence ior religion or of love forthe Christianity of Christ. So there is nothing the matter with Christianity It must be there is something the matter with the church. .Monday after Monday I have waded through the Sunday sermons as printed in Monday's Inter-Ocean. Many of them were beautiful. They were full of as lovely language as I ever heard. The word-painting was artistic. ' The interpretation of Biblical quotations was classic. But I have not yet found one-that would make we want to go to church to hear it or another like it. And I didn't find what I was looking for something that would help the daily toiler solve HS vital problems. Possibly these preachers who are so often quoted in the Inter-Ocean on Monday might find illumination in the fact that the only paper that pays attention to their sermons is the boldest organ in town of the interests that thrive by exploiting labor. It gets down to this: If the workingmen won't go to church, then it is up to the church to go to the workingmen. To get to them it will have to take an interest in them seven days of the week instead of one. It will have to be sympathetic with their daily-bread, problem. It will have to be with them in their material troubles as well as in their soul troubles; for the two are closely related. One trouble with some churches is identical with the one big trouble with some newspapers too much editing from the business office. Some churches have too many business problems. Some preachers are too fond of the creature comforts of life. Sympathy that works both ways is necessary to get workers and church together. The church will have to sympathize with the real troubles of labor the troubles hat involve the family before there will be that mmammmmmam