The Dillon herald. (Dillon, S.C.) 1894-????, July 29, 1909, Image 2
? .
AT SCHOOL. i
I like to sit in school and look
At all the girls I know,
.When every nead above a book
Is bending very low.
They are so mucj alike, you see,
And yet so different, too?
For come have eyes of brown like me
And some nave eyes of blue.
(When we're admiring Marguerite,.
AVl'.OSO hmitla lire lnnir nnil lino
Bin- cays site thinks that curli are sweet,
Like Josephine's or mine.
But Josephm.* and t believe
f'tnisiit liaiv is lovelier,
'And look at Marguerite and prieve
\Yc ore ntt uiore like her.
'And so-ie have shiny t:a::cn hair;
And others urown or biack;
wc*:- ;* - >ort: and ot.iers wear
Two p.vi.a! i down the beck.
Aim some i . e bows of ribbon gay?
Hair pati.'d < the side.
Bin every girl likes be t the way
L-uaie other's bair is tied.
Ju t thin'.:, if all the little girls
Coal'1, veiling, change tneir state,
Tlmn u.l t si-.- pip tails won id be cur.s
And a.l t e i v:v!s be stiainhl.
And 1 should look lute Marguerite,
And Marguerite like me.
And eve v ?,ny nt school we'd meet?
llow S unity it*would be!
?i.thrl 11. Kelley, in St. Nicholas.
A EOT'S ECGAY ON POLITENESS.
Politeness is rather a difficult
thine, especially when you are making
a start. Many people haven't got
it. I uor.'t know why, unless it is the
start. It is not polite to fight little
boys, except they throw stones at you.
Then you can run after them, and,
when you've caught them, just do a
her that all little boys arc simpletons,
or they wouldn't do it. It is not the
thing to make fun of a little chap
because he is poorer than you. Let
him alone if you don't want to play
with him, for he is as good as you,
except the clothes. When you are in
school, and a boy throws a bit of
broad or anything at you over the
desks, it is not polite to put your
tongue out at him, or to twiddle your
fingers in trout of your nose. Just
wait till after school, and then warn
him what you'll do next time; or, if
you find you are bound to hit him.
be pretty easy with him. Don't keep
on eating after you arc tightening,
ami you will bo far happier. Never
eat quickly, or you might get bone3
in your throat. My father knows of a
boy who got killed over his Sunday
diuncr. It is not polite to leave victuals
on your plate, especially anything
you don't like. If you don't
like turnips, it is better to eat well
into your turnips first while you are
hungry, and you'll eat the meat and (
potatoes easy enough afterwards.
Boys should always be polite to girls,
however vexing they may be. Girls
are net co strong as boys; their hair
is long and tiieir faces are prettier;
?o you should be gentle with them.
If a girl scratches you on the cheek,
don't punch her, and don't tell her
mother. That would be mean. Just
hold her tight by the arms till she
feels you could give it to her if you
had a mind to.?Children's Answers.
TICK-TOCK.
"Yon must not climb into the bottom
of that clock, Gertie."
Ecrtii! crept out of the low, oldfashioned
clock door with a wheedling
smile.
"But, mamma, I squeedge In just
lovely!"
"And jar the clock, dear, so that It
loses time. The other day It lost half
an hour, and Uncle John missed his
train."
"How can a little boy like me make
a big clock like you lose balf an
hour?" he asked.
Several days later mamma came
downstairs and called Eertie, who sat
waiting to accompany her to see a
great ship sail away with Uncle John.
"Tick-tock?tlckcty-tock!" ticked
the big clock solemnly.
"You are right this morning, I
hope," said Eertie, softly. "I crept
In so softly last night. One leg at a
time." But a troubled look shone In
his bright eyes.
"Tlckcty-tock?tlckoty!" answered
the deck. I
And then Dobin drove them to the i
station, where mamma looked at the
station clock, and instantly her face
grew very sad.
"Our clock has lost twenty minutes i
again," she said. "Uncle John must
u sail away alone. Bertie, listen to me. j
Go home, my boy, get Into that clock ]
and stay there until mamma comes." j
Bertie trotted gloomily home.
' "Tlckety-took!" wheezed the clock
as he climbed into it.
And it kept on saying that, until
Bertie felt sure it was the slowest j
work in the world for those weary !
ttckr to grow info hours. Everv I
fecart-broken thought he had about
missing Uncle John and the beautiful
hi;? tho clocli beat sharply into his I
memory with Its constant "Tickety- i
i, took, tickety-tcck! You never saw a j
Ship or a dock."
At last mamma came and lifted
feini out, stltf and miserable. Ho |
& dung to her rock, and never said a I
The neat day tho moon looked
down with a sldewlse smile at him.
? Bertio shoal: his head sorrowfully.
"1 oba'c't ever come to seo you any
ffxnd tho cjnoer old clock said, approvtar\y,
"Tlck-tock?ticl:ety-tock!
Bertio la going to mind?tock!"
Whoa Undo John came back BerMl
wout to moot him. for tho clock
P apM Jnot right.?Lillian Prtco la
m *
" . . *
PIGEON'S RACE FOR LIFE.
The passengers on the ferryboat
Piedmont, from Oakland, Cal., were
treated to the spectacle of a speed
test between a sea eagle and a carrier
pigeon, In which the smaller bird
won, saving Its life.
When the boat was opposite Goat
Island, P. H. Schlotzhauer, a pigeon
fancier of Alameda, released five
birds. Among them waf the famous
five-year-old homer, Duke of Richmond,
who has proved his right to a
title of nobility in more than a score
of long distance flights.
The pigeons rose into the air and
circled several times. Four of them
turned toward the cast, but the fifth,
which was the Duke of Richmond,
was seen to flirt and drop towards
iuv i iviiiirjiii. i in :i me iiHSseiiKera
made out that the I'l^eon was being
pursued by a large bird.
The two bird3 were at an elevation
of one thousand feet wlicu the chase
began, with the carrier a short distance
in the lead. As by instinct he
dropped straight for the place where
his master had released him, and
landing upon the ladies' deck of the
Piedmont, fluttered through the
cabin door. The sea eagle was so
confident that it wctpld strike its prey
that it did not check its pursuit until
within ten foot of the rail of the ferryboat.
Then it wheeled suddenly, and
hovering about the stern of the boat
for a few moments, winged its way
back towards Goat Island.
Once Inside the cabin, the frightened
pigeon ran down the aisle until
it came to a passenger reading a
newspaper. As if sure of protection,
It fluttered up to his side and perched
on the arm of his seat. There it was
caught by Schlotzhav.er and safely
caged.?San Francisco Chronicle.
"i
AN EMPEROR'S LESSON.
When the Emperor William was
a small boy he had a strong objection
to being washed in the morning, and
his governess, having had some unpleasant
experiences with him and
being in some doubt as to what she
had tetter do, appealed to his father,
tho then Crown Prince Frederic.
Frederic answered: "The next time
he gives you any trouble on this score j
leave him alone to his own pleasure
and report to me."
Naturally It was not long before
the young prince refused to go
through the purification process, and
the governess followed the orders received.
Now, the boy had a little carriage
and was very fond of driving out in
the morning, and he generally orrlprpd
flip l>na?hni!in in nn hu li-air nt
the Brandenburg gate, as It amused
and flattered him to see the soldiers
in the barrack, just inside the gate,
turn out and present arms as the heir
to the empire passed their quarters.
Accordingly, on the morning of his
disobedience the order was, as usual,
"To the Brandenburg gate," and the
carriage rolled rapidly thither. But'
what were the amazement and the
rage of the princeling, on arriving
there, to see no sb'.diers encept those
on guard, and they took not the
slightest notice of him. In a towering
passion he ordered the coachman
to return to the palace, where, rushing
into his father's room, ho complained
of the indecent behavior of
the guard and demanded their condign
punishment.
But his father only smiled and
said, in the gentlest voice: "Fuer ungewaschener
prinz wlrd nietuals praesentirt"
("An unwashed prince is
never saluted").?Youth's Companion.
i'nwn *! i '> i I I
{K^nNPU5,TR,lAa||
[i.vnsgP'
In Paris they call radium le metal
conjugal, because it was the joint
discovery of husband and wife. It
was Mme. Curie who first suspected
the qualiilta of uranium and drew
her husband's attention to the sub*
Joct.
In the reports of the recent Antarctic
expedition frequent allusion is
made to the prevailing southerly
wlnd3 and blizzards. The fact that
these winds continue to within such a
short distance of the South Pole
throws doubt on the view that a great
anti-cyclonic area lies over that region'.
If such were tho caso light,
variable breezes might rather be expected
so near the pole.
In Franco Monsieur Ilardy has Invented
an application of tho microphone
to detect fire damp in mines.
This is it3 principle: If sound waves
from two pipes of equal pitch impinge
on microphones connected In series
with a telephone, a clear noto is
heard; but If or.e of the pipes emits
a slightly different note, beats will be
board in tho telephone. Here is the
Hnn la vv1aaa/I ? *
tho mine, the other Above ground,
and they are blown simultaneously.
If the air in the mine is charged w ith
fire damp, it will produce a different
note from that produced by clear air,
owing to tho dinerer'je of density,
and in consequenco a series of beats
in the telephone gives warning of the
presence of fire damp. The same apparatus
is very sensitive to the presence
of coal gas.
fc?? > ???n
A SEASONABLE FOR
?Cartoon
BOY WHO SHOT WEE
'I Don't Know What Made
Kane, Ag(
Burlington, N. J.?Declaring that
he deliberately Bliot three-year-old
Frances Lord, but unable to explain
what Impulse forced him to the act,
eleven-year-old "Joe" Kane, held for
the slaying of the little girl last Saturday
evening, made a complete confession
to Assistant County Prosecutor
Robert Atkinson and Policeman
Claude Sell, of Burlington, at the City
Hall jail.
"I knew it would kill Frances and I
I know they hang people for doing
things like that," said the youthful
I prisoner. Then recovering some of
the braggadocio he displayed when
arrested, Kane said he had been inspired
to play "robber" by moving
picture shows which he had witnessed.
"All the boys play robber," con
imuea joe. "sometimes we use
stlclcs for swords and hold up all
the kids that come along, but It's
more fun to use a gun, because you
can scare all the kids with that.
"We often used the old gun when
we were having 'fun' playing highwayman.
I came near shooting
Freddie Roberts once when I pulled
the trigger and the gun went ofT just
over hts head. We used to swipe
caps and shoot them off on the gun
when there weren't any other loads
in it, as there was this last time
when I shot Frances. My brother
had loaded It to shoot blackbirds
laBt week. Sometimes I'd chase the
whole gang out of the yard, telling
them I'd shoot them. Once I got a
pistol and made a fellow run like
sixty.
"But I never had a fight with
Frances. She was just a little girl,"
said the boy, in tears for the first
time during the interview, and he
added remorsefully, "I don't know
why I did it. |
"When Frances ran up to see what
wo were doing I said, 'I'm going to
rhoot you!' She says, 'Please don't
shoot me!' and put her hands over
her face and peered through her fin- j
gcrs. She started to run and I shot
the gun at her. The old gun kicked
so hard it nearlv knoo'ipri m? nror
"My mother and father told neighbors
it was an accident, so I just
said it was an accident and blamed
it on Tommy Ocas. I knew it wasn't
right to kill her. I didn't mean to
shoot her, and I don't know why I
did. We were having such a good
time playing robber!"
"Ever go to Sunday school, Joe?"
asked the prosecutor. |
"Nope, but I'd like to go. Never
got any good clothes to wear. I ain't
a bad boy. though. Folks say I'm
bad when I'm just having fun."
Kane had an opportunity to tell
his story again before a coroner's
jury.
Local ofTcials who listened to the
boy's story believe he suffered a sudden
attack oT insanity, and assert
that his case is a study for alienists
rather then a jury.
| The boy prisoner seemed to enjoy
his experience on the trolley trip to
J the county seat with Patrolman
Claudo Sell. "I wonder if they'll
I bang me for this," he asked the policeman.
When assured that hang-I
ing was no longer in force in New
Jersey the boy seemed easier in his I
mind.
MAY WARD C
Removal of Large f rites tl
Backs Up I
London.?As the result of investigations
at St. Mary's Hospital, London,
Dr. Distaso, of Paris, says he has
[ verified the theory of Professor Metchrlkeff
that old age can bo warded
! off
"* will be recalled that Professor
| Mctchnikoff declared it to be his conviction
a couple of years ago that the
large Intestine was the breeding place
of the majoritv of harmful germs In
the human body, and that when this
IntflftlnA wna Vrtmntforl
? .vun/*6u ?-uu liitvjuruy
of germs remaining in the body were
beneficlrl, with the result that life
was prolonged. Dr. Distaso's investigations
were directed to comparing
the germs found In normal Individuals
and In those whose large Intestine
had been removed by operation.
He no satisfied himself bjr his studies
Ex pertinents to Be Made With
View to Supplement Telephone.
Washington. D. C.?In order to ascertain
whether the heliograph can
be successfully utilised In the National
forests to report fires and
transmit other messages In areas
where there Is no quick method of
communication, experiments with Instruments
like those used In the
United States Army will be made
du^ng the summer.
If satisfactory, heliographs will be
naed to supplement the telephone
lines.
J
Iff* ' r^ffp f ?
__ \ \
M OF RACE SDICIDl \|
by Berryman, in the Washington Star.
"GIRL TELLS OF DEED
Me Kill Frances,** Says Joe
scS Eleven.
"I wish I was out in those woods,"
he exclaimed as the car passed a
shady grove. "That's a bully place
to play robber."
"Playin" robber" seems to be the
boy's chief Joy in life. He was
"playin' robber" when he killed
Frances Lord.
"Joe's" eyes bulged and ho wept a
llttlo TV' VlOn f Vio r\rtllrtotr?nw ' - ?
I ..??.V f. uvu vuv iJUUV,CUiilU ICU 111LLX U \J
I the steps of the old county jail, but
he recovered quickly and chatted
with the turnkey and Sheriff Worrell
before he was assigned to a cell.
What to do with "Joe" Is becoming
more of a puzzle to the authorities
every day. He Is too young to
be put on trial for manslaughter,
and local officials wish that he might
be turned over to some "home society,"
and saved from the reform
school.
Testimony of Mrs. Lord at the Inquest
that she saw her daughter
shot, and of eleven-year-old Thomas
Ocas, a boy companion of Kane's that
the latter deliberately shot Frances
after threatening her life, destroyed
j the theory that the shooting was an
I accident.
| "He said, 'Me shoot you: me shoot
you. t rances." She cry. and then he
shoot her," the Ocas boy testified in
broken English, when Prosecutor Atkinson
asked him to describe the
tragedy. Kane at first charged Ocas
with the shooting, but afterward confessed
that he did it himself.
Smiling and crying alternately as
he answered the prosecutor's questions,
the Kane boy was by far the
most interesting witness at the inquest.
Rather small for his age,
with his round face plentifully freckled,
the defendant seemed a perfectly
normal boy, and a murmur of pity
ran through the room as he was
called to the witness stand.
I The prosecutor asked him if he
| knew what would become of him if
i he told an untruth.
"Yes. you'd send me to the reform
I SChoob" nnR*.vov?rl (hn lt/?v
"But If yon died, what would become
of you then. Joe?"
"I'd pro to the bad man."
The little prisoner then rehearsed
the events leading up to and surrounding
the tragedy, which were
substantially the same as he had
given in part In earlier confessions.
He again changed the story to deny
that he shot the girl deliberately.
"Tommy had the gun and I took
It away from him; Frances came
around the corner. 'Lookout, I'm
going to shoot you,' I said. She began
to cry and then the gun went
off," the witness testified. "I had
my hand on the trigger," he continued,
"but I Just pressed It a little.
I didn't mean to kill her. We were
good friends and played together."
For nearly an hour and a half the
Jury deliberated before returning a
verdict which was the mildest form
under which the boy could be held.
Mrs. Kane. Joe's mother, broke
into tears as the assistant prosecutor
read the verdict, and fainted when
Coroner Blsblng remanded him to
Jail to await the action of the county
authorities.
Joe gravely shook hands with several
boy friends, who said they were
BOTry for him and hoped he would
get out soon. But he didn't cry.
)FF OLD AGE.
ne Urged by Doctor Who
wtetchnlkoff.
of the truth of Professor Metchnlkoff'B
theory that he unhesitatingly
says that every child ought to have
| its large Intestine and appendix removed
when two or three years old.
He further affirms that almost
every chronic disease can he traced
to the action of these Intestinal
| germs, among others heart disease.
| arterial sclerosis and most kinds of
| headaches. Everybody would get
I along better without the big Intestine,
but those who care not to sumbit to Its
removal by onrratlon oug'
want to live long, to eat v i . little
meat, once dally being pi \ h
green vegetables, and only
at other mealp.
Water should be drunk a'., i orly
throughout the day, but no i''. (fetor
spirits.
IKmployers Declare That Union
May Drive Them Out of Lynn.
Lynn, Mass.?A thinly veiled
threat to deprive the city of Lynn of
Its chief Industry, that of shoe manufacturing,
Is made In a statement
Issued from the office of the Lynn
Shoe Manufacturers' Association,
which Includes practically all the
manufacturers In the city. The
statement, given out by Seeretarv
H. A. Sawyer, refers to the alleged
domination of the shoe Industry here
by the labor organisations, charaeter|
Istng ljt as "undue interference.*
%
\2^ THE a
r&ULTRY YARD.
Tw *
^\J^*yyandotte Male.
Tht H V i*cture shows the Ideal Q
fowl?i// ^\.mp body, full breast g
and stated \^ge. The Buffs are
strictly Wy in all else but f
color, except i J^ey are just a trl- I
He larger than ^ Xjiver Laced. In t
general appearauv^FVy resembie the c
Buff Plymouth Roc_ Vxcept that the 8
?atter have single combs and the former
have rose combs.
They are splendid market fowls,
and are good layers during the fall
and winter months. They are very
docile and do well in small yards,
though if allowed freedom they roam
the fields and orchards as much as
some of the smaller breeds.
Fruit and Poultry.
A profitable combination on a small
farm within easp reach of a good market
is fruit and poultry.
Hens, to do well, require a liberal
range that contains bushes or trees
enough to supply partial shade. They
also require a variety of green stuff,
with a sprinkling of Insects. Such a
combination may be easily supplied
by planting the land to fruit and enclosing
It in poultry netting wire.
The hens do not know that they are
confined. They dig little here and
there, but quickly abandon the task
to chase a moth ?r a grasshopper. If
the trees or bushes are mulched they
work in the little to their entire satisfaction,
destroying many Insects.
All .the bush fruits are benefited by
poultry, provided the soil Is made soft
enough for them to scratch. Bush
fruits cannot thrive well in ground |
that Is packed down hard or covered
with a mat of grass. But if the plow
and cultivator are operated as they
should be early in the season, the
ground is put In condition to yield
fruit and benefit the fowls, which Is
the most profitable way to get two
crops from the land at once.?Farm
Stock Journal.
A Lean-to Poultry House.
The above represents a very convenient
and comfortable poultry house,
built against a stable or other outbuilding.
The portion adjoining tho
other wall is eight feet high, and the
lowest part of roof is six feet. The
r<fosts and dropping boards are set
parallel with the yards, and a partition
separates the two houses, so that
they may each have a yard, as shown
in illustration.
The nest boxes ure placed under
the dropping boards and the straw
and litter are kept on the floors of
the houses.
Of course we prefer the separate
scratching shed, but when something
cheap, designed for utility, is wanted
then the above is most admirably
suited. It may be built any size desired,
and the cost will be much less
than that of a separate house and
yards.
Practical Poultry Points.
A cool, airy scratching shed is hotter
than a dark, closed house for the
day room.
There is no foundation for the as
eertion that the "sweet, rich flavor" I
of the egg belongs to the breed. That
condition can only be brought about
*-v ru"''4'* of rood .
I Hnd < !. 1. -lit . r ? .. i 1 Iinvo i
, ,> : . un b } :!. ting ?: .1 the i
' {Ml plat i 01 .i- * ? that have -hat J
! th? r f?-aib?'vr < '' ?' with a p.eriJ-- j
i r.M.Jii nuule of , e;f disj
solved m t'.colii !. 11 ns not Use
the bitter taste.
Board floors in the chicken house
are better than wet ground, but dry
ground is best of all.
Vegetables of some kind should be
fed the poultry the year round, cabbage,
potatoes, beets, turnips, etc.
Shredded alfalfa, which costs about
two cents per pouhd. Is a fine green
food where yards to provide the
same fresh are not available. It can
either be fed dry In boxes or scalded
then added to a one-third bran xnaah
?-fsed thus ones a day.
i THE PULPIT. j
,N ELOQUENT 8UNDAY 8ER *$N BY
THE REV. 8YDNEY H. COX.
41 j(
Theme: What Is It to Lire?
Brooklyn, N. Y.?Sunday morning
he Rev. Sydney Herbert Cox, pastor
1 the Church of the Evangel,
reached on the special subject,
"What is It to Live?" The text was * ^
rom Matthew 4:4: "It Is written?
rlan shall not llv
ut by every wor
>ut of the. mouth <' ?x m j
laid:
It is written! Dtute<- 1
momy, the second >lw- law.
he recapitulation - periep.r.w
vith God, and . ?"f
hereof. It is decl <
mething raor , . **"*
Iderness of 1 ' < d <>"
harvests.
e temptatlor
e through c v I i - '
Ity must ps
Latt of spiritual -1 ^
man face to face i- '! ?.
questions of his wj
life? Why are we tempted, and how? ^ .J
What is sin, and how can we be free
from it? What is to be the end of
the battle, with its deep failures and
few successes? What does it mean to
live?
The answer of Jesus includes a
denial and an affirmation. He sets *
forth (l) the unity of life. His reply
to the tempter was surely unexpected.
He does not say, I am divine,
I am unique, Kam in a social sense
the Sou of God. \He speaks for the >
race as its representative and refers
to a fundamental li.w that man has ,
experienced, though^ ~ra\ely Interpreted.
Man does not live \^y bread
alone. His living is something more *
than the means to live. Thelre *8 one
life. Only part of it depfnds on
bread. Bread, like the plow\and the
soil, is but an agent, a tool. \ 11 Pre" ?
serves the body, but the body\also is
only a machine in which the \person r
who has life for a little while *wellsThe
answer of Jesus does not |deftne
life, but declares the source *
fullest expression. "Your fathers
eat manna in the wilderness and are
dead. The bread that I will give, ^
a man eat, he shall live forevg-."
There Is a distinctness of the life inat
is purely physical, or intellectual, or
moral, or spiritual, but with the distinctness
there is also the impossibility
of separation. The source of each,
and the unity of all, originate in God.
This, then, is the denial of materialism.
Man does not live by bread
alone! God has given to each phase
of life its need, and no lower nature
in us can supply the needs of the one '
above it, though it may influence it
more or less. A bilious body may
cause a pessimistic philosophy, but it
could not be the sole cause. The
pugilist acquires a perfect physique,
without gaining an atom of intellectual
force, moral perception o.'
spiritual desire. The skeptic may
Inherit wealth without faith, and the
hypocrite may own libraries and art
galleries. These live?that is to say,
they exist; the/ eat, drink and are
merry, because the bread of the
world, the things of time and place
and of the present are theirs in aoundance.
But in the deeper, profounder,
timeless, ageless sense of life, in
the vision of the true, the beautiful
and the good, do they live?
Jesus denies it. He affirms the reality
of the spiritual. All things proceed
out of the mouth of God. The soul
must receive life by an incarnation.
That is the representative miracle or ?
sign of the being of Christ. God
must pass into oar consciousness as
He had always been in that of Jesus,
dominating our nature, but only with
ur voluntary acquiescence. What is
it to live? To have the force of the *0*7^
lifer of God put in control of our human
forces at the command of our ,
own will, the higher controllng the
lower, and yet making more of the
lower. The spiritual, feeding on the '
vision of God and then expanding the
moral, the intellectual, and th? nhvs.
icai, so that, for the whole man, limits
disappear; time, death and the
grave are but temporary expedients
and all his nature cries, "1 live, yet
not I, Christ livo.th ii^ne." Thus life * eternal
is something ntore, and something
different from Ufe prolonged. ^
It is a new quality of life, involving
the recognition of God's share in the
making. It is God lifting man into
the new spirit of being. Man lives? ^^
by the things that proceed out of the
mouth of Jehovah, said the Deuteronomist.
He does. The words of God
are symbols of his volition, whether
his will reveals a new harvest, a new J
idea, a new duty, or a ne* sacrifice. M
The spiritual man greets either of
these words of God by giving them
their holiest expression because now m
he lives! He lives in growing harmony
with the perceived will of his
eternal Father. He has a stronger "*
life than the pugilist, because his
physical powers are only at the service
of the world's need. He Is *
mightier than the physical champion,
because his superb bodily endowment
cannot escape his spiritual Idea'" of
service.
His mind towers above the skeptic's
because, in spite of poverty <>v
bodily weakness, or many sor
or grave problems of truth, he as
tne power to prevent these t) ' , .
from obscuring his vision of a cl. <#
f'mplicity, a woman's tenderne . a
man's courage, or those larger iccesses
seen when races struggl p *
through fearful toil to days of la t lit<-.
thousam id
avo risen a ov ^
1 lead selve
he finds .
r monej I ind, nor pc
i'lxuri, , n:i*< explained in-?
primal forces that nave urged 1:1 d >
on.
The eternal choice. And always
that choice Involves sacrifice. It did
for .lesus. It must for us. He desired
nothing more eagerly than the
rapid conquest of His people by Hit
Ideals and mission. His triple temptation
suggests Improper ways of secaring
It. His public ministry wu
quickly filled with opportunities for 7
gathering disciples, prestige and ju
power. Tet he denied Himself am
easy popularity, a legitimate pleasure. *
worldly wledum and current methods 41
of success, la order that absolutely
all that He was and did might be d
- * a. - - J ~
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