Newspaper Page Text
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* 0 GEORGIA. 0 0
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Brief Summary of Doings
Throughout the State.
by ® a,n by
At „ Washington .while Mrs. W. H.
Danner , . town shopping, , . her ,
was in *
j.. , , . , ,
tai of Min Wl o wqs e m g an
the two-year-old baby, took down an
old gun from the wall and while play
ing with it the weapon was
ed, instantly killing the younger child.
The tvro children were alone when
the accident occurred.
* t>
Pays Remarkable Dividends.
The South Atlantic Car and Manu
facturing Company, of Waycross, has
made a remarkable report to the board
of directors, which shows a net profit
for the nine months ending June l of
over $69,000.
The actual paid in capital stock of
the plant was only $97,000, and ii is
considered remarkable that the pro>3
should almost equal the capital stock
the first year.
is * *
Steamship Arrived Safely.
Savannahians crowded the wharf
Iasi Friday morning at 8:JO o’clock
when the steamship City of Memphis,
ef the Ocean Steamship Company, ar
rived. The officers of the ship were
surprised by the assemblage, for they
did not know of the anxiety that had
been created in the city by the report
that wreckage from the City of Mem
phis had been found at Cape Henry
Captain Dreyer said that they had a
very pleasant voyage, with absolutely
nothing out of the ordinary to bap
pen.
* * *
Report of Pension Commissioner.
Commissioner of Pensions J. \V.
Lindsay has prepared a statement
showing that during the present year
$862,760 has been spent by the state
m pensions and that 16,625 persons
have received pensions. Commission
er Lindsay recommends that thx leg
islature appropriate $870,000 for pen
sions next year and that the payments
be made quarterly instead of annual
}y. He also recommends that pay
ment be made through the ordinaries
of the counties on one voucher ior
each roll and that one warrant cover
the whole sum.
♦ * ❖
May Run Trains Into Atlanta.
There is a rumor current that the
Atlantic and Birmingham Railroad is
making arrangements to run through
trains from Brunswick to Atlanta, go
mg over the Central Railroad from
Montezuma.
The Atlantic and Birmingham prob
ably runs the finest and most modern
trains in the state. The new' cars
Recently placed in service are model
of beauty and comfort, being lighted
and ventilated by electricity. All
have the broad windows that make
their sides appear to be almost of
nolid glass.
* * *
To Hold Farmer's Institute.
the farmers of the twenty-seventh
senatorial district, comprising the
counties of Newton, Walton, Ocv-nee
and Rockdale, will meet at Salem
t amp ground, in the western part of
Newton county, the hitter part of July
for a two days’ farmers’ institute.
The meeting will be under the di
•rection of Hon. Harvey Jordan, state
director ot farmers institutes. Hon.
R. F. Redding, director of the state
experiment farm at Griffin, will
or' lectures on agricultural topics.
Mrs. W. H. Felton and other well
known Georgians will he present
deiiver addresses.
* * *
Coming Convention of Farmers.
The Georgia State Agricultural
oiety will hold its annual meeting
year at Hawkinsville. lhe
promises to be one of the most
esting in the history of the
Hon. Martin Y r . Calvin, who is
secretary of the society, talks
siastically of the prospects for
splendid session.
The dates of the convention
August 17 and 18. The program
not yet complete, hut will
addresses by leading lecturers on
portant topics. Reports will be
from the vice presidents on the
ganization of farmers in their
tricts. The annual address of
dent Dudley M. Hughes will also
a feature.
Secretary Calvin speaks of the
ing meeting with enthusiasm and
diets one of the most interesting
sions the society has ever held.
indications are for a very large
tendance.
* * *
Fich Picked Up in Plenty.
Ross lake, near Sycamore, in
win county, ran dry the past
and the people of the section
ing have caught over 5,000 pounds
fish left helpless on its bottom.
This lake has a subterranean
let, through which the water
> 11 ■ II Mil
at Interval* of from three to five years
and after a few weeks returns. The
j last time the water ran on; was in
,1901,
Y-.’hen the waters begin to escape
| the fact is known by the dull roar
as they break into the underground
I outlet. It requires several days for
the lake to run dry and by ihis Gme
everybody for 20 miles around has
been notified and an immense crow*
assembles to catch the fish.
the lake is a large one and , a sulen
did ,. , fishing „ , . ground , under ordinary cir
cumstances. This year the catch when
the waters emptied was larger than
. usna) probab i y exceeding the figures
] , r j ven
* *
Many New Counties Wanted.
, Many Georgia towns are anxious to
have ne v,-counties established around
them, oi which they may become the
couuty seats.
The number of counties is, at pres
i ent. lhnited to those now r in existence,
1J7. but reasons have arisen to make
the establishment of new counties de
sirable, particularly in the southern
part of the state where some counties
are so large that many farmers have
ro drive from 20 to 30 miles, some
times farther, to reach the county
seat.
Among the towns which are anx
ious to become county seats of new
counties are Cordele, Dooly county.
Tifton in Berrien county. Ashburn
j n Worth county. Hazlehurst in Ap
pijxig county. Millen, which is located
in Burke, Screven and Emanuel coun
t j QS V’illa Rica in Carroll, and Win
der, which is part in Jackson, part
in Gwinnett and part in Waltcn. coun
ty. In some instances, it is said, good
reason exists why new counties should
be created, and an effort will be made
to have the legislature pass a con
gtitutlonal amendment which will per
mit of changes In this respect.
* * *
Swing Chokes Child to Death.
Annie Parker, the little 20-months
j 0 iq daughter of James Parker, of Gi
j-ard, section master of the Mobile
and Girard railroad, met death Jn a
peculiar manner at. Columbus Sunday
afternoon,
The child, while playing about the
yard, went under the houBe. A swing
b ad been suspended under the house,
waB hanging low. as it was used
by children. In some manner the lit
tle girl fell across it. Her throat rest
ed across the cords forming the edge
Q f t he swing, and her feet barely miss
e d touching the. ground. The little
one did not have strength enough
to change her position, and although
sbe struggled frantically, her feet did
not. touch the ground, missing it an
j ncb or so. The weight of her Ixxlv
so pressed her throat against the cords
as to prevent her breathing, and
slowly choked to death.
*
j Hog Tries to Devour Baby.
Near Ty Ty, while Romy
% , as away a t work. Mrs. Williams
a uttle distance for some wood,
ing i her child, about one year old,
j ( { n| , j n tbe door
; Returning, her attention was
ed by the child’s cries, and she
horrified to see a large hog seize
child by the arm and run off
She attempted to follow, but was
overcome that she was in a
j ng condition. A lady living a
i distance away, attracted bv her
fo n owe d the hog. and by strenuous
forts rescued the child.
When overtaken the animal was
r0 cL)usly tearing the child’s
w j tb jt s teeth in an effort to get at
breast,
-phe child w-as severely
about the head and face and its
lacerated, but there are no
injuries. The animal was later
lowed and shot.
♦ * *
Premium List for State Fair.
The premium list which has
] adopted by the Macon F'air
[jon for the state fair from
19 to 28 provides for premiums
amount to $13,905.50. The list is
of the best ever offered by the
elation, the awards ior agricultural
hibits and racing events being
proportioned. The following
: items of the list:
| Agriculture, $4,350; horticulture,
j cattle, swine, etc.. $2,211; dairy
apiary, $188; horses, mules, colts,
$336; floriculture, $144; mines
minerals, $400; poultry, $600.50:
arts, $205; woman’s department.
races. $5,125.
A special premium has been
by R. L. Warthins for the best
imen of native persimmons, the
to be $10 for the fir3t best and
for the second best.
Inquiries from exhibitors are
received daily by Secretary
and the meet this coming season
ises to he the most successful in
history of the association.
* * *
Legislate Against Boll Weevil.
Legislators and farmers will
interested in the terms of the
which is to be introduced at
session of the legislature,
i to prevent in so far as mav possible
j the introduction into Georgia of the
Mexican Loll weevil, which has prov
en so destructive to cotton in the
i trans-Mississippi territory.
This measure was drawn and ap
| proved at a recent moofing of a com-,
| mittee composed of the state agricul
tural society, the state horticultural
society and the Georgia Peach Grow
ers’ Association in Atlanta. The leg
islaiure will be strongly Urged to pass
the . its . • •
measure at. coming session.
■
Tne bill provides, .. among other
! things, that “it shan be unlawful for
any person to bring into the state of
Georgia or to have in possession for
any purpose, any living Mexican fiol!
weevil, or any cotton bolls, pints,
squares or seeds containing the adult,
pupae, larvae or tifFtr sta-e of said
Mexican boll weevil. Violation of
this section shall be considered a mis
demeanor and shall be punishable as
such.
I “No cotton seed, syed cotton ,cot
] ton seed hulls or cotton lint in bales
or loose shall be brought into this
.ate from any point in the states of
, Texas or Louisiana, or from any point
is any other state or country where
in the Mexican boll weevil is known
to exist, without having attached
thereto a certificate signed by a duly
authorized state or govermnen'ni en
tomologist stating that such cotton
! geed seed co tr OI1 cotton seed hulls
or cotton lint was grown in .and ;hat
shipment of same originated :n a
locality where by actual inspection by
said official or his agent .the Alexi
can bo ] weevil was not found to
exist,
GOVERNOR OF FINLAND SHOT.
Assassin Commits Suicide- -R«ssia« Op
pression Ceuse of Deed.
A St. Petersburg dispatch says: Gen
eral Bobrikoff, governor general of
Finland, was shot and mortally wound
e< ^ a *- H o’clock Thursday morning
at the entrance to the Finnish senate
aT Helsingfors.
The assassin, a man named S Tiau
mann, a lawyer and son of Senator
Schaumann, immediately committed
; suicide.
Bobrinkoff, who was appointed gov
j e himself rnor general of unpopular Finland in by 1899. made
very his se
vere measures against the press of
Finland and the stern manner in
which he followed out the policy of
I R ussia toward® t.lie Finns,
j Th<; in last March recorded of this act. of Bobrikoff when
was year, he
issued a proclamation forbidding the
j usual People hours. to darken • • People their windows who ar. “un
chose to
to bed before 10 o’clock at night
w’ere subject to heavy fines. This step
,
1 was ^ U€ neglect of the Finns
to illuminate fcheir houses in nonor of
i the beginning of the war with Japan.
j
j GARRfiyON ALLOTMENTS MaDF.
Secretary of Viar Taft Approves Appor
! tionment of Quartermaster General.
Secretary Taft has approved the al
loiments made by the quartermaster
general of the funds for barracks and
quarters at various army posts ain
| forts to be expended during the fiseti
year*beginning July 1. The following
amounts were allotted to forts cm the
i coasts:
: Fort, Monroe, Va., $137,000: Fort St.
i Philip, Lt.. $56,000; Fort Barrancas.
Fla., $3,750; Fort Moultrie, S. C.,
] $168,650; Fort Screven. Ga., $59,600;
Fort Caswc'-i, 2, T . C., $9,500.
( The following amounts were allotted
to interior ports; Fort George H,
Thomas, Ga., $11,250; F’ort McPher
jon. Ga.. $68,600.
I
LON it ST im IN THE SOUTH.
Irolley Road From Atlanta, Ga., to Ander
son, S. Being Projected.
j projectors of a trolley car line
f rorn Atlanta, Ga.. to Anderson. S.
G., met in Atlanta, Wednesday morn
ing and took steps for another survey
of the proposed route, The line has
* 3een chartered by the secretary of
i state and the men at the head of the
j company have already had a route sur
veyed.
: The trolley line will be 140 miles
lon ^ antJ connect at Anderson
I with a trolley line from Greenville,
j making the whole line 165 miles in
i length. This will be the longest tr*i
Iey car Ih ® BoaGs.
j TO WAR ON BOLL V.EEVIL,
:
Committee From 6eorgia Societies Meet
to Draft a Stringent Law.
A committee, representing the Geor
gia State Horticultural Society, tne
Georgia Peac-h Growers’ Association
and the Georgia State Agricultural So
ciety, met in Atlanta TliurSf* - *? ” >r the
| purpose of drafting a bill, to be pre
: sented at the coming session of the
j legislature, looking to the enactment
of suitable measures for preventing
the introduction of the dreaded boll
\\" evil pest into the state.
SERMON FOR SUNDAY
i
|
ELOQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED,
‘•CHRIST’S CIFT OF LIFE.”
Kpv. (Jfoi'se It. Lunn Preaches From |
Text Which He Hectare* 'Shows in |
a
Compact Form the Predominate Aim
of .Jesus—The Larger Life. .
Brooklyn, X. Y.—Sunday night, in the
Avenue Presbyterian Church, j
Rev. George K. Lunn, assistant pas- ;
preached on “Christ’s Gift of Life.” |
text was taken from -John x:10: "I
come that they might have Ine. ’ Mr. i
said: ;
I sure that I do , exaggerate when , ;
am not
say tiiat no words ox our Lord are more j
significant than these words of !
text. We have in a compact form a
of the purpose ox Jesus Christ. |
is subordinated aim. Jesus to Christ this great has and ;
come |
the world to give that life in ever in- I
abundance. This is not a conclu- !
of mine worked out after special in- i
it is the simple and dear and !
statement of our Lord Himselx. 1 i
upon His word as a finality. And 1 :
in this verse a fuller and richer ex- j
of the purpose of Christ than is |
anywhere else m Scripture. i
What, then, is the life which Christ j
to give? It is the life of fellowship
God, the Father; a fellowship begun
earth and continued throughout the
of r eternity. , *, It ri ' the j life • r % spiritual • . ,
is or
with God.- united to Him n. .
thought, in purpose, in all our varying ac j
tmtiee. It is tne largei lite which tou- j
our present life enriching-it with ,
the holy purposes of God our feaviour, ,
us by its power intq the punned at
ot noble deed* none for His
sake xn other words, il i* the Me ot
which our Master spoke wueu He said , oat
to lose it was a calamuv, ever taou-.i a
man should gam the whole worm.
I think I am right in saying the t 1 - a great
many people Lord interpret the worm; and work
world, our as altogether, applying chiefly to the ocher
regard the nofc religion but chiefly. They j 1
of Christ as an insur
a nee of safety for the next world rather
than a definite program ox activity for the
present. They think more of the saving
of the soul after death than of saving the
life before death. No stronger illustration
of this thought can be found than the
large numbers of men who delay their de
eision in reference to Christ to some more
convenient season. They say, not now,
but at some future time, I will settle the
great God. You question of find my soul’s who relation will to
cannot a man not
express some wish to lead a better life;
but in nearly every case they see no need
of an immediate decision. In my pastoral
work I have come in contact with this ex
perienee endeavored time and again. Anti as I have
to understand what is the un
denying cause of so much indecision re
garding religious things, I find that most
of it can be traced to this fundamental
misinterpretation Christ of the words and work
of Jesus our Lord. Yon may ex
press this in many wr.y% but at heart the
point is this—the saving of the soul after
death, instead of saving the life right here
and now; the gaining-x>i heaven hereafter,
rather than entering into heaven now.
And because of this interpretation men
feel no immediate necessity of getting
right with God. So long as they aie rea
sonably sure of life here, they are willing
to delay the great decision of the soul.
Against this view of religion allow me to
bring the message of the Saviour, "I am
come that they might have life and that
they might have it more abundantly.” You
cannot read the gospels without coming
into contact with this purpose of Christ at
every word life. turn. We Repeatedly struck Jo you find the
are with the fact
how constantly the, word life was on the
lip« of Jesus It is a word which gives us
ine very heart ox Jesus teaching. He was
always praising, always promising nfe. “It
1 iou wiit enter into hie keep My com
mandments he that he.ieyctn on Ale
hath life, As the Father hath life m
Himself, so hath He given to the bon to
X ne ni Because 1 live ye
shail \ vi five aiso. i Ye will not come unto
Me thiit }c might Iihac life. li.\erywherG
we find this same eager pleading with men
to enter into life and we further find that
Jc.sus Identified me with goodness, lo
Jesus hte consisted in goodness. AY icked
ness is death. The soul that sinneth it
.shall die is not so much a threat as t,:e
statement ot a great truth For the sin
nmg soul uies by reason of the very fact of
its sinning, there is no Ine tor the hu
man soul but m righteousness. Jesus,
therefore uses language which we may
.,ust,v call violent when He referred to t ie
btc possibility Better of a mans losing his
to cut oh the offending hand
or foot if it hinders the a waring soul.
Better, to p/uck out the eve which causes
stumbling u by that means the real life oi
God may be.gained. I have called this
language yiq.ent and such it is. Not that
Jesus anticipated any litera uitcrprota
turn and literal following Uhe forceful
illustration is used w emphasize a terrible
and an eternal truth, lhe very possibility
<n a man s fading to enter into the life ot
fellowship with God, was a thought which
brought strong tears to the eyes of the Sa
viour of men. I tell you that in these days
mental we are sympathy harboring m our hearts a senti
condones which.overlooks sin and
iniquity and seeks to apologize
for tne stern words ot the Saviour. There
was no doubt a ringing doom against sin.
But it was not the doom oj a. tnreat.
Jesus never threatened. He revealed
wiiat sin is; its very nature is death. The
open door of hie in God is before men.
To pass by that door does not mean that
God wnl auntrarny punish, out that the
very passing it by is death. The issue ol
sin is doom, exile into t lie night, the
eclipse of desolation and abandonment.
Does there move in your hearts the sus
picion that such a doom is exaggerated and
overdone? When that suspicion comce to
ine, and it often comes, I remember the
words of a sainted preacher: “When I am
tempted ro think that the doom is over
done, T must remember that the Son of
God, my Saviour, with an infinite insight
into all things, superlatively sensitive,
knowing Saviour, the inmost heart of life, He. our
pronounced the doom to be uc just, juov.
J his t hnst, who gave Himself ior ue, who
loved us, told us in words—I venture to
say for the loving deliberately words, of appalling terror— that
sinful. and for the de
Jiberately unjust, there is no place but the
night, place no place but the outer darkness, no
but ultimate separateness, no place
but ultimate forsakenness and abandon
ment. These are my Masters words, and
against them I will rear no petty imagina
tion of my own; 1 will rather silence mv
own imilkimincd suspicion and humbly and
quietly take my e with Him. The
wages it of is sin the <* the night night.” hereafter. It is the night
now; The es
senee donment. of tin is; death; it is exile; it is aban
Jesus words were violent, but
He s not seeking to produce fear. but
t<> reveal fact.
Now to all qf us who mil this fact sq
£. 5' mil Jesus peace. iit tiiis The k; wo: f
ago have their ; :rea nihr,.,.
for we can see. n.- h
their fullei anu more proioanj
As He spoke ot rattier in
mate term.-, cutter l'( entment
their hearts. As lie life7or ar ,
hngness to ay down His 1 '
they retorted: 'He hath demon H, 1
mad; why lie a
would have spokei al ye Hunt p 03t j.‘
living then. But nxewi.se had -vp
centuries now in the jj.,u
forsaken, past, v.i look uu<m
crucified Christ thc'fivin* and ,•
His face the glory of
God. For the "sufferings o r C
the true representative symbol ^ “
tarnation cf what goes and
God. From on rer^i mu
them God wishes t
learn the redemptive that sin is suffering put away ‘only l ‘b
which He Himself is of * T
which Christ. His ‘dadlv 1 inn
pression. endured before represmatatwe
If the eves
is this truth which ive?
0 f the test their power it wan p ,|
am corne ti ye it have life” 3: *j
mi j s
self the life which He eel is to impart,
and the Father are o 1 lie words
the historic Chris! w
to I
then are being repeated now 0 UR b
indwelling, immanent Christ T Iih
word immanent. It is a theo-o p-V Cel i
but it is splendid i
a word
meaning. His name shall b» calk i I
nuel, God with us. the inside God tC
manent God. It is lie who savs L r
unto Mc a]1 ye that labor and ,,
Ia(kn and } will give you rest f •’ h ,s
“T ' 7
M , .10 S»l\ 1 din im lOlllG xv,- Lllcli \G
*i 15, TTlPThf 1
* i. f
v#i . v
dantlv.” it is He who speaks
feomnv and says with . -Come with voiu J
s ; ianie ( . omP vour sadness heaver and f
, (ointnien t, come with vour 2 '
discouragement with and I will give ther- vW
( ; 0ll us! now to give us ^
, Jo d witi, ns. now/to forgive our
w ;th us- now. to give us heaven in
, .. C1 . at cd labor for Him.
, would that these words of Jesus Tt
we heart, arc considering have might live m in' )
as i try to them live
heart, as wowis spoken now. Fatherf to-night, j
the ever-living, ever-loving
common it is for us to think of Gr»i
Father as far removed! It may be heel
of our training, but however we may
count, for it, the fact remains that, man
us fail to realize that God is dealing 1
ns now just as intimately and just as
ciously as He dealt with the great pro,
of old. How many of us carry abotu
us the sense of God? Do we have the
viction of God’s abiding nearness whe
we are? If not, the greatest ble ■
life has been missed. There is
more needed to-day than a truer, It
more Scriptural idea of God. Went:
realize His the abiding old nearness. of But we
to forget idea an unappr
able God. I recall the words of fi
Drummond, that great teacher, who
ing his short life, won so well,” many me:
Christ. “I remember very he
"the awful conception of God I got
I was a boy. 1 was given illustrated, a bool
Watts’ hymns, which was
among other hymns there was one a
God, and it represented cloud, and a great the:
scowling of that cloud thunder there piercing in
was a
That was placed before my young imai
tiou as God. and I got the idea that!
was a great detective, playing the
upon my actions and, as the hymn i
writing now the story of what little
dren do. That was a bad lesson. It
taken years to obliterate it.” And l
most of us have had to go through a
ilar experience before we have beenr
the terrible God of childhood,
away God of childhood, and come int
spiritual conception of the every?
present God of the Bible,
Now it is this everywhere-present life
our Father, who seeks our to sav
He wants our fife now, for without
| 15fe ig a H v [ ng death. With heaven God, now] !i
gr0 \vtli, development — God its
- heaven hereafter. Without
u-rioralion. atrophy, death. Here coal a: e,
f ac ts which our own exnerience there]
! ,. s U . ue . We „ ee d to realize, God;
that there is never a time when
, Father is not near us to lead feel us thes« into,
];f e [ u the hour when vou when
. divinity within you, in the hour
j . science speaks and says, be a nobler hod I
.> D P , irer a truer man in that
j s 0od w hieh worketh in you.” W
it was but ’vesterdav * ' that you spots
, nikitJ(1 wdr d that wounded a uev
heart> or gained vour point in busmes
ruining vour fellow man. or commit 1
i fin that i eaves a blot on the scutchcci,
afterward, unless your heart is am
| ( j eadi you heard a still small voice p
. jn< . Avith you to repent vour evil wsv
j ]ivo a better, higher life. It wax'
] whioh Multiplied worket h in the vou.” experiences in «
are andnu
; (io d is sneaking to our souls,
vs ltave * nevei . beard the voice. ia«
we j )u t we hear not. We have crowds eyesh
to geo There beautiful are great violet, a
| tvample upon Die of J
thinking that thev have one heel
>AveetesS thoughts £ under their f
! .„, c mvriad . s stolid eyes which Gods oo
; ' not
| ward t0 the slars but see rim
iu Uie robe d beauty of the sky. the nG
I I ; multitudes who stand beneath
cent F] ue va , d f 0 f heaven gazing
Mnne g0 rgeous sunset, never dream'«
God lighted the fire. And beyond wa
, are they who fail to feel the preset)
,; od t he ordinary experiences oi
m life.
Mv friends, God wants our e®
j thing youi" with your life. Let your God
talent, your service be for
j i Father He not so concerned to *' Gou j -
SO ul as to save vour life. Give
] jife and He will sanctify your soul,
j j Artificial
The True utitl the
\ It ]not difficult to distinguish )
t-hc true and the artificial, The mop
' is the sure one. When conscience is
j tive and the will submissive, doubt about ‘; j
consistent, there is no *irigs
sniritualitv. When : il the Lin soul Y, ami 1
, light to do Thy will. O. God;
does delight to do God’s will. o r U' 7 '"
will of God from firm resolve, there
no doubt. When one - loathes sin w®!
to leave it—all sin, all kinds ot siff
against the body, sin attains., inst the Christ squ>
• t 1 ]'”
against the neighbor. «in aeaiu -
the Father—there is no difficun.y
mg mg a a decision decision as to the genuint •
Christian character. It is no m.'-.'w Bis**
garden of the Lord is there.— 0 !
I H. Vincent.
Xlakin" Vonr TfwV’ pl • Over
If you were not bo with a cool
per. make your tempe over 7 If chet not
and patience and amiability are , ,
ural, cultivate them as a seeonc 1
No one can be really happy and wiiat
able and fault-finding, and dearer- t J
he renders his nearest c»
unhappy. Determination van fo
these faults, and a disposition as
pricics as a bramble bush can
sweet -and tranquil and lov.
imagine you j must accept the n-’-‘ j
herited without iittcmp ’
re arn - 1, veu
o te on. If i. is VV ■
make it over,