"The Most Valuable of All Arts 9 ' 95 



lionaires of happiness. And they said we could join 

 if we were in that class. 



"And we said we saw the point, and it meant that 

 Rockefeller and Morgan and the Jap potato king, and 

 those kind of fellows, were barred out. But the neigh- 

 bors said that this did not necessarily follow. That 

 if a man had $1,000,000 he could join just the same, 

 provided he were also a millionaire of happiness. And, 

 if he did not have ten cents, but were a millionaire of 

 happiness which he could well be if he wanted to 

 why, he could join, too. So we put in our application 

 and we hope that we will not be blackballed. 



"For, dearly beloved, a man is a millionaire if he be 

 happy. More than that, he is the heir of all the ages. 

 He is son of the morning star and brother of the dawn. 

 To him has been handed down the heart of the dancers 

 of Babylon, and the souls of them who laughed in Eden. 



"When God made you, He gave you the gift of 

 happiness at your birth. If, since then, you have lost 

 it, go back and find the road where you left the sun 

 to wander in the shadow." 



Valuable indeed is the art, and precious the way of 

 life, that makes everybody eligible to membership in 

 the kind of millionaire's club whose entrance fee and 

 annual dues are payable in the golden coin of happi- 

 ness! 



