abundant reason to expect that. Some friends farther East asked me, "Well, what do you think? Can the people of Pella take care of the Synod in good shape? Have they a lot of good homes in which to make the delegates and visitors comfortable?" And I assured them that there need be no doubt about that, that the people were very hospitable and that when it came to fine homes, Pella had more of them to the block than a lot of cities five or ten times as large. But even my most sanguine expectations have been surpassed. I am astonished at the progress Pella has made since my previous visit five years ago and the way the Synod was entertained, with the very best of lodging, excellent meals, wonderful music and every personal attention and kindness that could make the guests feel thoroughly at home was a marvel to everybody. Of course, it was not necessary to make me feel at home. I felt at home the minute the train crossed the east limits of the City. My family and I spent eight most happy years in Pella, the precious memories of which will never fade away. And for the many renewed kindnesses bestowed upon me during this brief visit I feel deeply grateful. -- W. J. Van Kersen. When I think of Pella, I think of a city of refinement and culture, of high ideals and progressive spirit, exhibiting as a community the two splendid traits of courage and faith. I saw Pella first in winter, and made indoor acquaintance with the College and the Churches, I saw Pella again in the late summer, and rejoiced in vast cornfields ripening to harvest and in the wider harvest vision of the Zendingsfeest. I am seeing Pella now in June, at the flood-tide of the year--the month of roses and weddings and graduations. I shall carry away a glorious picture of feathery wild barley by the roadside; of the varied greens of wheat and oats and rye preparing for the rich gold of the harvest, of breezes laden with the scent of clover fields all but ready for the mower; of cattle grazing on hillsides and horses drawing cultivators across fields of growing corn that stretch toward the far horizon; of a land that flows with milk and honey upon which God smiles in sunshine by day and moonlight and starlight by night. More than this, I shall remember a people who love God and their brethren, who open homes and hearts in generous hospitality, who have welcomed a meeting of the General Synod of the Reformed Church in America and have given to its business and social intercourse a background of loving thoughtfulness, of whole-hearted hospitality, of painstaking preparation that leave nothing to be desired. In my work for the Reformed Church in America, Pella will be to me in larger and richer measure what it has been since my first visit early in 1921, a source of strength and comfort and inspiration as I add to precious memories of the past the recollection of these golden June days spent with her peoples. -- John A. Ingham, General Secretary of the Progress Campaign Committee, Reformed Ch., in America, 25 East 22nd Street, New York City. THE GREATEST EVENT IN PELLA'S HISTORY "Breathes there a man with soul so dead, who never to himself hath said?" -- The greatest event in Pella' s history, the most far-reaching in its scope, the most potent in its influence for material, intellectual and spiritual good for Pella, for Central College, and for the growth and development of the Reformed Church in the West. These are only a few of the benefits growing out of the meeting of the General Synod in Pella. And we believe that the influence on the attending delegates has been no less beneficial. It has surely given them a wider vision and a larger conception