Rensselaer Republican, Volume 12, Number 49, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 August 1880 — GEMS FROM LATE READINGS. [ARTICLE]

GEMS FROM LATE READINGS.

A lew I how vain to ahi.iL Anma. a grave which lovww finger. amiXS grasp.—Mortemr CWKm. When aman .peaks the truth you may ** P°“** Every effect has its cause, and every man mort reap as he sows. To thrive or .offer is his actual desserts.—Amafe. Hang art the lamp and scan the omens of duty; ply cheerfully the task in thine °<n special field; in thy work of sorrow and tod.—lßDmmm. to new, and GodfiilfilS’tomsein^many wav. lest one good custom should corthe world.— Teaching is imparting ideas; training is reducing ideas to practice Teaching * giving knowledge; training is converting idea, into character— Beecher. The dying Chesterfield complained that he had Deen behind the scenes and had seen the dirty pulleys and daubed canvas of the world*, paltry spectacles. h t b ’ 1)670 ““y • bos ® d . be frisely charged and causelessly accused, when men unwilling to be blamed alone, shift off their crimes on him which were their own.— Defoe. He who betray, another's secret because he has quarreled with him, was never worth the sacred name of friend. A breach of kindness on one ride will not justify a breach of trust on the other.—Victor Hugo.