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16
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VAAaI kzJwJH Health Herald and Tes
timonials Free.
DR. BOYNTON, Dept. 2, Lawrence, Mais.
111 Opium, Whiskey and Drug Habits treat
k 1 ■©a at home or at Sanitarium. Book on
Subject Free. DR. B. M. WOOLLEY,
13 Victor Sanitarium, Atlanta, Ca.
“PEOPLE WILL TALK.”
This little collection of stanzas
which appear elsewhere in- this issue
is a very valuable one and every one
of intelligence knows that it is all
true to a certain extent. Also every
one of intelligence knows that this
“people will talk” question, like every
other question, has two sides.
It is because “people will talk,” that
one must often go slowly. “To the
demnition bow wows with public opin
ion,” is food for little minds and co
lossal conceit.
Nobody knows better than the em
ployees of public institutions how we
are sometimes guilty of little acts,
seemingly innocent enough in them
selves, but are not regarded so by out
siders and how often unpleasant re
marks are made, casting reflections on
the school. And these reflections, as
a matter of course, have their influ
ence. Whenever there is any doubt
as to the absolute propriety of this,
that or the other, wisdom says i-iat
the this, that or the other should cer
tainly be weighed carefully from ev
ery standpoint, and the public opinion
standpoint should come in for its share
in the weighing.
Nothing is truer than the statement
that our character is our own and can
be changed by no w T ord of mouth, nor
by anything else save our own acts.
It is equally true, unfortunately, that
our reputation is an entirely different
proposition. This is by no means ex
clusively ours, but rises or falls, not
by w’hat we really do, perhaps, but by
what others say we do.
The thing to do then, is to avoid giv
ing the “people who will talk”
grounds for criticism. Avoid all ap
pearances of evil and if a thing seem
ingly absolutely harmless in itself is
at all liable to cause comment, hence
confusion to you, then to use an ex
pression chosen from vulgar vernacu
lar —“cut it ont.” —Cave Springs
School Helper.
♦
THROUGH A KNOT HOLE.
An exchange tells about a man who
was afraid of thunder and crawled in
to a hollow log during a thunder
storm. The thunder rolled, the rain
poured down in torrents, and the old
log swelled up until the poor fellow
was wedged in so tight he could not
move. All his past sins began to pass
before him, when he suddenly remem
bered that he had not paid his news
paper subscription. He said this made
him feel so small that he crawled out
of the log through a knot hole.
$
HALLOWE’EN.
(Continued from Page 13.)
ert Burns when he penned his immor
tal poem “Hollowe’en.”
Hallowe’en is one of the most popu
lar occasions and has its own peculiar
attractions. We love it for its bright
ness and wholesome fun. We love it
for its quaintness and we love it for
the very mystiries it is supposed to
unfold. In fact, we love it —well, we
love it, because it is “Hallowe’en.” —
A Mute in School Helper.
DAY of WRATH
VARNER'S WONDERFUL BOOK
Issues in Turk-Italian War
Soon to Startle the World
WM. IVERSON VARNER, Athens. Ga.
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Parables of the Kingdom (New)._ .75
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