people must be gloriously happy with such fabulous wealth around them."
"The bulk of my fellow-men there are not happy," I sighed. "So many spend their lives looking for diamonds and gold, the most of whom are doomed to disappointment"
An incredulous smile crept over the faces of my newly-made friends, and by it I read the doubt that was arising in their hearts as to the truth of my utterance.
"My words are sincere," I insisted. "If you could take one bushel of your diamonds to the world where I live, you could get more soil for them than you have on your whole globe."
"That world is heaven," exclaimed a few of my hearers at once. "A world of such abundant soil cannot be any other place. Then I learned that their conception of Heaven is not a place of gold-paved streets, but a place where soil is freely distributed even on the sides of the streets.
I continued speaking, telling them how diamonds were considered in our world. These professors were astonished beyond