Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 226, 5 July 1919 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, JULY o, 1919.
THERICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Street Entered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, as Sea ond Class Mall Matter. MEMBER OV THE ASSOCIATED PKESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the us tor republication of all news dlcpatches credited to It of not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of sps c!al dispatches herela are also reserved. The Work of the Junior Red Cross Minnie Lee Davis, supervisor of the primary grades of Richmond, Va., believes the Junior Red Cross has a distinct place in the educational world. Before the National Education association, she recently said: The Junior Red Cross" has a membership of ton million children out of a school population of twenty-two million. The Junior Red Cross arose in response to the insistent demands of the school children of America to help win the war. Through it the children rendered patriotic services as an actual part of the vital business of being educated. Today the Junior Red Cro'ss gives children the opportunity to help rebuild the world. Its peace program is a concrete expression of our new conception of life born of the world war. It represents an organized effort to help the schools meet the new social demands. Whole-hearted . participation in this program by the children of the country under the guidance of theirteachers is producing the following profound changes in our school life: First: It is transforming our potential American citizens into real American citizens. The patriotic services rendered by children in the membership have given them something of the same fine spirit that overseas service has given our soldiers. The children have a sense of the
dignity of their own personalities. They are loyal Americans who desire to" meet their social obligations. They are united under the banner of mercy to minister to suffering humanity. Second: It is shifting our attention from old to new values in life. Children, parents, and educators are appreciating the national and international importance of such ideals as social service, health, thrift and international good will and helpfulness. Third: It is connecting the school with real life. The peace program of the Junior Membership gives motives for purposeful school needs in home, school, community, nation and the world. By centering much of the school work about these activities, a vital point of contact has been made with some of the school subjects especially civics, health education, productive work and English. Lack of this -vital point of contact hitherto has caused the hearty discontent with the present status of these courses. The activities of the Department of Junior Membership have a permanent value. As long as the function of the school is the education of good citizens so long will the schools need the co-operation of this department. Each school should be permanently "A Red Cross Auxiliary, a center of community, national and international service."
It would be difficult to single out any character in all history that has sunk from higher
to lower estate than William Hohenzollern. Five ! years ago he was a blustering, pompous, braggart . strutting about in white uniform and posing asj the vice regent of heaven divinely appointed to. shape the destinies of the world. His word was, law among tens of millions of cringing worshipers who trembled when he frowned. His sub-j jects accepted his estimate of himself as a heroic iigure among a world of pygmies. He was the' embodiment of the spirit of militarism, of the theory that might makes right. He was the per-! sonification of ruthless force which brooked no opposition. j Hohenzollernism and all for which it stood had j trained 80,000,000 people to believe in force and the destiny of Germany as the great exemplar of i military efficiency. Germany marched to war, gayly in the belief that it could not lose. It was I prepared to the last buttof!. Its war lords said,
the hour had struck. They called on the people to make the great test for which all had been preparing during forty years. The advance, which was to be one of triumphant imperialism, was ordered. No crime and no inhumanity was too revolting if committed against those who deigned to stand in the way of German success. All the world knows how tens of thousands of subjects fought desperately for Hohenzollernism
during four years and a half while the Hohenzol- i history of Kentucky than la James
Lane Allen, himseir a native of the Blue Grass state. He chooses as his setting for "The Choir Invisible" that nictueresoue
Condensed Classics of Famous Authors
ALLEN James Lane Allen, who has lived much In New York City since 1886, had th- -i .-..-. -yhod in a country of surpassing love
liness. He was born (Dec. 21. 1850) near Lexington, Ky., on the old Allen estate, where his father settled In ne wilderness days. The sheer charm )' the blue grass reg-lon seems to ii ive woven itself into the nature of l'ie boy, who was destined to paint a many exquisite word pictures of it. ir. Allen took his bachelor's and master's degrees in the old Transylvania University, founded by Kentucky pioneers. He was compelled by the failure in his father's fortune to begin to teach at once. In public and private schools. He later became professor of Latin and higher English at Bethany College. He never married. In 1886 he definitely forsook academic pursuits, went to New York City and devoted himself to writing. By 1918 he had published 17 hooks. "Flute and Violin," a collection of short stories, appeared In 1891. "The White Cowl" has brought many pilgrims to its scene, the Abbey of Gethsemene. an exquisite bit of old France, near Louisville. In "Kentucky Cardinal" and "Aftermath" (1S95-6), Mr. Allen first .really proved his power. Well known among his later books are "The Relsn of Law." "The Mettle of the Pasture" and "The Bride of the Mistletoe." His
novel "The Choir Invisible." written
Mfe lib:
Jamea Lane Allen, Born 1850
In 1897, is perhaps the most "vibrant with the passion of beauty and pain"
oi any oi nis dooks.
Good Evening BY ROY K. MOULTON
THE CHOIR INVISIBLE
By JAMES LANE ALLEN Condensation by Miss Sara War Bassett
Few writers of American fiction are
better qualified to present the early
lerns skulked safely out of the danger. The sound of his vain boasting about "no soft peace,"
of the ?ucres? that PrnviHfmrp wnnlH o-ivo tn hi, La a J xr Ji L Pjctueresque however, he tells his future bride quite OI me success mat providence WOUld give to hlS period during Washington's adminis- f.ankly that he loves someone else just cause had not died in the ears of William ?i free' aDd u ls ith eeing opened for navigation, and great this knowledge that she accepts him. Hohenzollern's dupes when utter defeat became Hf",.0'..510". were migrating j while the wedding is m preparation
BANQUETS WERE NEVER ANY GOOD, ANYHOW It is said July 1 will kill the banquets. Well, what of It? It ls an undiplomatic banquet speaker who mentions food In his oration. A banquet ls always $1, 2 or $5 a plate, but any man who has ever tried to take his Dlate home with him after
i buying it has learned there is nothing
in signs ana slogans. A3 an exchange place for ideas, overcoats, hats and umbrellas it has had a mission, but, gastronomically speaking, the frost has been on the banquet for quite a number of years. And now that after-dinner speaking has been placed on the list of non-essentials the average man will get his entertainment first-hand from the barber shop publications. THE PENALTIES OF PEACE Nine million old gentlemen in shiny Prince Alberts will start out selling "The History of the Great War." Stick-up men and burglars will have a fat chance trying to scare about two million of our citizens. Nobody will be deterred by barbed wire except the cows. Several million army mules will return to private life and not kick about It. There will be several German guns for every park in America. The man who is climbing Mount Popocatapl will get his name in the papers for the first time In four years. There will be a revision in prices probably upward. Everybody who bought a bond will still have an interest in the war per cent interest, though.
The insipid young lady with the rose
apparent to all. Men were still dying by the
rettle the sparsely populated regions of the West and South. Lexington, Kentucky, chancing to be directly in the path of one tributary of this current, received not only
many of those who were abandoning
against him and he is cast into jail for debt, from which ignominy the efforts of friends release him. He is a proud man and wishing to pay his
debt of gratitude he proposes to marry ' yh. " ' ,,,1 ' 1" k" i th rt,,v,f of tu hanging from her mouth will be back
befriended him. Before the marriage. V. , !g"Lnv?LZ!re' v.
end of the favorite old joke about the man who made his automobile jump through a millinery store window by filling the gasoline tank with gin.
a letter comes to him from Mrs. Falconer announcing the death of her husband, and in the silent hope that his fiancee will give him his liberty he acquaints her with the change in his prospects. We gather from the text that the girl is unwilling to give
Amerongens Sorry Spectacle.
No man has undergone a greater change in a year's time than the former emperor of Germany. Twelve months ago he believed his hordes would conquer and Germany would have a place in the
thousands to protect him and his when he sneaked away in the night afraid of the fate to which he had driven millions.
Nearly eight months he has cowered within ' IjL0"9 lhe 'j? tir1 i him up' d a3 he is t0 honorable to - . . . . . jtemtorj of a newer land, but also demand his freedom he carries out his
tne wans ot an acquaintance s castle in a neutral country, afraid to see anyone or to be seen. A
correspondent from The
others who, having tested out the Uto-! pledge.
viou nesitni country ana lert mere . , , . . health, wealth and dreams of success. .A" J?? ? A'3 Ju, ' 'f
Hague Who recently returning broken-hearted to the , ,0 ZtT't. in
spent some time in the vicinity of Ameromreni Hen in imrt . M a ! distant Kentucky a stately mansion
says Wliliam Hohenzollern's timidity is so great that he never ventures outside the castle walls although at liberty to go anywhere in the parish. He lives in fear of being kidnapped and is terrified lest an airplane map swoop down and carry him away to answer at the bar of justice for' the WTongs he has inflicted upon the world.
persons of every class. There were ! ,r 1 !Z . U students from William and Marv col- imtY!;, fhe !? 5tI,I1it?e,thiftw?d, lege, voyageurs traveling for adven-L b.ea.utif.u1'. and ,delued into the belief
'lure, traders, the gentler bred English!11,",, ai . 1 nfr Qrea,ms, ai? 10 e
colonist from Virginia, homesteaders, I Iuuuleu &ne maives reaay ior ner marand even an occasional group of the i n?Ie' A raper telling of John s union friendly Indians. Uh someone, else rudely destroys her It was a heterogeneous populacej wto high of courage and strong or forti I prlze of hPPneJ ' , Th6 ,ntn" 3ys tude. that amid c.earing in forest and Sf rJt In mv'dsv, "B-ho cane-brake laid the foundation of this i 1 sna11 go softly a11 my days' she
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today
I
A safe and sane Fourth was celebrated In Richmond. No accidents were reported. Mrs. J. H. Weist, died in New York. The body was brought to this city for burial.
William Hohenzollern is a sorry spectacle, a; fine old Southern city; a populace not . m VJ.11111"-.
Tim sweeps on but her beauty does
not fade. She becomes the great lady I of the Southern settlement and at her home Aaron Burr and many another
famous American is entertained. More than one man lays his fortune at her feet and goes away disappointed. There are women who never experience the heights and the depths of life. "Gazing deep into their eyes we
The chief character of the story is I "I!" ''
ho know
flection give .. i
rowerful build, lean, muscular, wear- j ,nemselves, tl" u . Xh" ,tht ing simply but with gentlemanly ca ' company of these quieter pilgrims that a suit of black which was relieved 1 Etl n p f A u w ? around his wrists and neck by linen I One day long afterward hen she is rnow-white and of th, finest quality." ! f lone n. her gden she sees corning He had a handsome head covered with i ow"d hh"a nm.a J ung fellW (vl- wh koi. j 1 at the brink of manhood.
: ""u' IT ....... ."I He lifts his hat with courtly gesture.
I am John Gray, the son of your
craven coward afraid to risk his miserable car-IS unSntoii discomfort Privatlon Cass outside a self-imposed prison house. The' The heroes and heroines who thus one honorable thing he could do now would be to teJil'S author SnWt relieve his friends the embarrassment his pres- long ince Joined "the choir invisible nr,c. i j , , - , !of the immortal dead," but they have ence causes them and take from the shoulders of 1 ie.ft behind them a heritage that has his faithful henchmen the burden of responsi- come down t0 us thrush the cen-
bility rightfully his, and he will not even do that. ! The'
Many a ruler and military leader has lost power j "he master in the little iogac5sseld"ehyapaeseand and position, but it remained for the bombastic I SKeT'hiSl X foul? Sw'ol but having &ned of affect ij ... iiv.wprfiil hi.Urf tn tt,,,,,!,,. .o , i 1 hemselves to duty. It was
.Luiiuei uvenuru ui uennany to ioneit even tne respect which, from the beginning of time, the world has been accustomed to accord to the manly victim of deserved reverses and disaster.
POINTED PARAGRAPHS
SHOWS THERE'S NOTHING IN A NAME Houston Post. Villa's name translated means "House." So Mexico has one, too, but not so composed and orderly a one as our Colonel Edward M.
STILL PASSING THE BUCK Boston Transcript. Since Congress Is going to make the president solelv
gun ; today he is a craven outcast. This reversal j responsible for the lifting or nonlifting of the prohibition prompts the Indianapolis Star to say: edict July 1, it seems it's a case of Wilson, that's all.
a man of such integrity as to render
e.nsmg arm . , ii,T .y,;- uer "
We therefore are not surprised to ; ' Zl In ' ' L
fl.i i,u!.. , jonn uraj; sue uibu
.liJU liiiii iiuiuiuB iijuibeii aiuui irom p , Yf,..t TnVe off vour hat " !?: 'fUUSf "T'.r" sefklV" For . moment h. looked t his ZsZXZZ ot Hfe ap. yZSi
luae Ot niOOQ3. .Moreover it IS OUite , ... -..j. , v.,..-.. , firpss favnrine- thP T.Pnc-no r,f Va.
A reunion of the Dougan family was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Dougan.
William Morton Mitchell of this city died.
Ohio News Flashes
FOSTORIA Dr. Ivan L,. Biggs of thJs city says he has found a cure for tuberculosis, having cured 92 per cent out of 13S cases.
ELYRIA Cleveland and Southwestern motormen and conductors by a Mite of 68 to 58 declined to accept the comnanv'n nrnnrnlttnn f a na o-o in.
crease from 38. 40 and 42 cents, to 41. Jnan,Jlew, int 8lsht the grVe
MONROE TOWNSHIP HOLDS CELEBRATION FOR SERVICE MEN ELDORADO, O., July 6 Several hundred people attended the welcome celebration extended service men by the people of Monroe township in Ware's Grove near Eldorado, on the Fourth of July. Refreshments were furnished all the service men who attended the gathering. The Hon. Marion Murphy epoke of the significance of the previous wars in which America has taken part and their relation to the world. He pointed out that in the last war the men of the south and the men of the north were Joined in a solid body defending the United States. "I believe that this nation In the hands of Almighty God was moulded and trained for the part it played in the World War Just past." said Murphy. "The revolutionary war was for our independence, the war of 1812 for the freedom ot the Beas, and the civU war to unite the north and the south and to prove that all men are created eaual. The civil war was fought a
half century before the outbreak of the world war so that the men taking part in the former would not be in the latter and so the feeling between the two would have died down." "The blue of the north and the gray of the south have blended into the American soldier of today, the khaki clad man who brought victory to the armies of the allies and made the world safe for democracy. "America owed a great debt to France for the help she gave during the revolution and we had to help France in return. It was our duty. "The light of liberty and democracy was brought to this country and fanned into flame that in the years just gone by we might know the meaning of the word and teach the world how to use it. "This is the dawn of a new era of peace and prosperity. The time of "the divine right of kings" is gone and from now on the true government is that which derives its Just power from the governed." Judge Mannlx Speaks. "America now leads the world and other countries are following," saiu Judge George W. Mannix. Jr.. of the Greenville common pleas court, who also delivered a patriotic address. "Our army has gone to a foreign soil" and helped make the world safe for democracy. The young men of Monroe county left their homes a3 did many others all over the country and went out. ready to die if necessary to defend those ideals which we have stood for for the last one hundred and forty years. . We must stop and pay tribute to these men." The East Monroe baseball aggregation, strengthened by Richmond and Greenville players, won from the West Monroe nine with a score of 6-0. Lewisburg won from Whitewater in a fast game in the afternoon. On account of the heat the game between the winner of the morning and winner of the afternoon was not played. Howard Rhinehart. aviator of the
Wright Field at Dayton, a Preble coun-
44 and 48 cents for a ten-hour dav.
The men asked 60 cents flat.
CINCINNATI John A. Underwood, sales manager of the Favorite Stove and Range company, who was found guilty on a charge of misusing the mails to defraud the Y. M. C. A. in connection with an application for an overseas secretaryship, and with having "devised the Echeme to evade the draft," has asked for a new trial.
during the afternoon.
EATON COURTHOUSE BUILDERS DISMISSED
CINCINNATI Indictments charging violations of the anti-trust laws were returned against the Ohio Butterine company and its president, Andrew Rohan, here Thursday.
should fall in love with a woman whom ! sh? a?"!hA v,.
JUHH Lens ne LiittL lit; iuca uci, t"i-
A Nation's Distinguished Guest
he idealizes. Amy Falconer, who "was ferhaps the first beautiful girl of aristocratic birth ever seen in Kentucky, and the first of the famous train 'of those who for a hundred years since have wrecked or saved the lives of
men. She is a coquette, vain, shal
be has always loved her; and that it
is the fire of this love that through the years has kept his ideals aglow. "Many a time this candle has gone
anv torch with your sacred name on
low. and incapable of deep feeling, and "y.- .Vv?kfS 'unbroken she tosses John s love aside in a mo- , ,'' ' : : ,l,T,i.. i.
From the Christian Science Monitor. to lower this high standard of idealism. With that bond THE government and people of the United States, j cf international friendship cementing the affections and without reserve, have extended, and are continu- J ambitions of the peoples of all nations, there could have ing dally to manifest, a most cordial welcome to i been no call to such a war as that through which the their guest, Dr. Epitacio Pessoa, president-elect of the world has recently passed. Dr. Pessoa speaks of "disrepubllc of Brazil. The opportunity to extend an invita-1 interest in international relations." By this he does not
tion, when it was learned that it was possible tor Lr. mean, as is unmistakably apparent, lack of interest. He Pessoa to arrange his itinerary to include a visit to means, of course, unselfishness, and that, now or later.
faith with any of mine, thanK you. And thank God!" Thus ends the novel. Ti 1.. V - rt AT.. Altorv'a
a fortune and becoming a person of' 11 was a" "nt. ,nH it importance, she shamelesslyoffers to lJ? Sfe.e"l
ment of pique for that of Joseph Holden; afterward, on discovering that
there is a prospect of John's inheriting i
EATON. O.. July 5 Following completion and dedication, last September, of the $250,000 new courthouse for Preble county, the building commission has been dissolved by Judge A. C. Risinger, upon formal request of the commission. The commission in its application set forth that all contracts and bligations had been paid and that the commission's work
COLUMBUS Former Secretary of was completed.
the Treasury William G. McAdoo was ; The commission's application for the main speaker at the Fourth of j dissolution was accompanied by a July celebration here. He delivered an minute financial statement, a strik
ing feature of which was the fact that from the $250,000 appropriation there remained a balance of $2,087.23. Among other complimentary things said of the commission by Judge Risinger in hi3 formal order of dissolution was: "This achievement ls a pride to Preble county, not only as to architecture, quality, utility and simplicity, but also in that the temple has been created without a suspicion of graft, without extra bonds, and without a law suit. Every interest of the county was guarded, and mistakes, complications and extra expenses avoided."
tions.
Masonic Calendar !
Monday. July 7 Richmond Commanderv No. 8. K. T.. Stated Conclave. Tuesday, July 8 Richmond Lodge. No. 196. F. and A. M.. called meeting. Work in Entered Apprentice Degree, beginning six o'clock. N. J. Haas, W. M. Wednesday, Julv 9 Webb Lodge, No. 24. F. & A. M. Called meeting:
work in Master Mason Degree: begin-
Vnhn Vr w reinstate . Ume atmospherei and ln the beauty of j ning seven o'clock. Clarence W. Fore-
John in her graces
John Gray, however, is not to be so
description, and delicacy of feeling so i man. W. M.
Washington and the chief cities of the United States, was a welcome opportunity, which has lost nothing in appreciation expressed by the guest himself of the opportunity to accept. It must be, It would seem, that the president-elect of the great southern republic has by Ms urbanity, his sincerity, his statesmanlike trend of thought, and his accurate knowledge of world affairs, to say nothing of his assurances of friendship, won the genuine f-steem and admiration of the people whose guest he is. A jurist and former senator, a man of broad education ;md versed in the affairs of statecraft, he speaks as the i ccredited representative of the government and people over whose political destinies he has been chosen to preside as chief executive. Speaking thus, as in his recent address at the national capital, Dr. Pessoa reiter-. ales, though he says there is no need of so doing, the friendship of Brazil for the United States, a friendship which he declares has been consecrated by international Hstory, and recognized and heralded in every continnet. Uxplalning this bond. Dr. Pessoa said: "It resulted from mora!, intellectual, and political ties, from identical feelings of dignity and independence, which are a characteristic trait of our two peoples; from the same tendencies in the advancement of law and other domains of intelligence; from the same ideals of liberty and justice in our home life, and the same elevation of mind and disinterest in our international relations." Scarcely any tribute to national standards, from one v. ho speaks with sincerity and knowledge, could be more genuinely cherished by any free and progressive people. Ky this declaration alone the distinguished Brazilian has made the people of the United States his debtor. But l:c has, no doubt, done more. He has probably instilled into the hearts of those who have heard or read his words a determination to see to it that no false call of
must be the attitude of all nations, one toward another. The peoples of all nations, moreover, must come to a
lightly dropped and picked ud aKain. i "VaV"""Wi -,.1. r;.:" " C'?J ' v . " ' s . "r.1" 3
The episode proves to him that This i . "llul lui " i X" Claiea con' irU6?: of Hclr- ,anHd Tith ,his fai ! S;!:1? post pum., i ocationin her shattered he bids her farewell. Co. lThe Boston Post). j PANAMA ADOPTS JULY 4 Amy, in the meantime, has made her ! condensed from "Th Choir invts-1 Clvu,. ..... . - .
i juiy o. in ranma as-
Vi fttvt a vt'itU n . . J 1 - ; 1 1. i w.. 1 r- - r. r. TorA Allan
and Mrs TTaiooncr m PoiJ.J Copyright. 1S97. by the MacmiUan sembly has made the Fourth of July
realization, as he says the people of Brazil have, that this j stands out against a background of "and publisher
Used by permission
attitude, when it Is relied upon, is a safeguard, firm and
impregnable. The existence of this bond of friendship between the peoples of Brazil and the United States has been long known and recognized, Dr. Pessoa truly says. The visit of Doni Pedro II, the last of the Portugese rulers of Brazil under the empire, who came to the United States as the nation's guest in the seventies, was the result of the cordial relations which existed even then between the two peoples. Other notable visits have been paid, both by Brazilians to the United States, and by distinguished Americans to Brazil. Indeed, it was to return the courtesy of the official visit of Elihu Root, then secretary of state, to Brazil, that Dr. Lauro Muller, the then minister of foreign affairs of Brazil, came to the United States in 1913 as the nation's guest. Dr. Muller again visited the United States in 1916, when he came as a delegate to the Pan-American financial congress. By former interchanges, then, as well as by the opportunities presented by the present occasion, it has been the good fortune of the peoples of these nations to keep somewhat closely in touch with those important international affairs and undertakings in which they are most interested and most deeply concerned. Thus it is not strange that, both being actuated by unselfish motives, a friendship, long established, has progressed and become more firmly cemented. It is doubtful if the presi-
high-born Virginian ancestry a back-
of a national holidav anrl th reniihliV
i is joining ln today's canal zone In-
ground of jewels, brocades, fans and! with the Meciur Newspaper Syndi-. TXl y W,T T . satin slippers: cf balls and minuets: cate. All rights reserved. "h,nols f.Pafnama conducted exerciser wide-reaching plantations and! w. u 1 es ln celebrat'Q" of the occasion, slaves. The Maior has hePn one of ; "-es Miserables," by Victor Hugo,
those who has hejoically fought in the as condensed by Nathan Haskell Dole, Revolution, and to whom the Southern , w'" be Ppinted tomorrow, beauty out of patriotic gratitude has
given her hand, bravely following him ! r
into the Kentucky wilderness. Unfor-! tunately, although neither of the pair! confess it, the marriage has been an j
uncongenial one. Both, however, are
Patriotic Program At First English Lutheran Tomorrow Program for First English Lutheran Sunday school Sunday morning ls to be of a patriotic nature. Including an address by the pastor, the Rev. F. A. Dressel, a transcription for the piano of "The Star Spangled Banner," played by Miss Florence Bartel and patriotic songs. E. B. Knollenberg is superintendent of the Sunday school.
Dinner Stories
The son of the family was homo on !
too noble minded to do otherwise than ; his first vacation since he had attain-
be true to the union that holds them 1 ed to the dignity of college prelect, together. Yet there is a scar of dis- He and hi father were discussing , appointment beneath the surface, and affairs of the day, and finally the ; in the woman's heart a weariness and boy remarked: j longing that nothing satisfies. During I " Say, gov, I hope when I am as old j John Gray's visits to her niece Mrs. j as you are I'll know more than you Falconer has become deeply interested ; do." j in the young schoolmaster who is "Ml go you one better, my boy," the : about her own age, and whose tastes ' father replied. "I hope that when you '
she shares. Between them a compan-
j ionship has sprung up which each
honestly mistakes for friendship. Amy's attraction for the man has been an untutored impulse of the
are that old you will know as much
as you think you do now. , A story told by Bishop Greer i'.Ius-: trates the plain nature of the man. j On an occasion when he was to con-1
senses; but Jessica Falconer's power firm a class, a carriage was sent for
over him is one of deep spiritual in-; him in charge of an English coach-
spiration
When he awakens to the discovery
man wno naa been imported by a wealthy American. Bishop Greer
that in reality it is Mrs. Falconer ; walked unaccompanied and in nonwhom he loves his reverence for her, clerical dress from his front door to
her purity, and her loyalty to her hus- the camege and entered it but the
opportunism, selfishness, or discontent shall ever serve j friendship and appreciation.
dent-elect of Brazil is in the United States because oflDand a11 bind hlm to silence. She ' driver did not move his horseB. After .T 00iiT, ,i, i -ii i , 'also loves him but is in honor bound , waiting for a moment the bishop askany feeling, anywhere, that there is particular need of in Iva him nn airrn Qrw, Uv ! th(,6min w.hv r hm t rfrw m
"I'm waiting for the lord bishop of New York, sir," the proper person
pects to inherit, but determined never replied, to return. "Well." said the bishop, "I'm it The law suit for his property goes Drive on." J
sum
strengthening the existing bonds of fellowship; but it their love unspoken he goes East os-
can be said that from his visit there will surely result a tensibly to recover the legacy he ex
renewal and a cordial indorsement of these bonds of
THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK
GIVE AND GROW
Everything that Is given away comes back. Everything that Is taken, shrivels the taker and leaves him poor. One of the greatest laws of nature is generosity unselfishness happy giving. Those of the world who have given most hae also secured most and grown the greatest. Only givers are ever heard of, or loved. Once there was a chap out in Pennsylvania whose parents lived on a little patch of ground and raised vegetables. They wanted him to become a minister. But the boy didn't look very favorably on the ministry business. He was fascinated with the things right under his feet the little garden. It stimulated his Imagination and. as his imagnaticn was stimulated it grew and as it grew things began to happen. It's a simple story, but too long to tell in detail here. Just the essentials : The boy was Industrious. He sold a few vegetables and then some more and then some more. Today he is known the world over as the founder of the H. J. Heinz Company. But the big thing about the success of this boy and man was this: He never went to a store where his things were sold that he didn't make suggestions as to their selling. He was so loaded with ideas and was so helpful In their presentation that everybody was happy when he came around. i Heinz was a great stickler for service all his life. He believed that the way to get was to give and to give very much more than you expected to get. So he grew very successful and very famous and very wealthy. That is the way with the man who renders service it always works. You can't give without getting. And the beautiful thing is that you always get more than you give.
