Show l Every Day Philosophy We Ve can not escape history f fLet Let none falter who thinks he is is' right Dare to be true nothing dm can can need a lie Come what will I will keep my faith with friend and foe No man is good enough to govern another another another an an- other man without that others other's consent Gold is good in its place but living brave and patriotic men are better than thant t gold sAll rAll s- s All that I am and all th t T r hope to tobe tobe tobe mother Abraham Abraham be I owe to my angel mother Abraham Lincoln r rt t Joys are liMe soon soon skirted skirted- v t that that ht we we uch on the voyage sorrow the VJ FY F- F t Y sea sea that we sail on Man is a good deal like a fish You ll know the fish would never get into very t serious trouble if it kept its mouth shut The reasonable man has long since a agreed that intemperance is one of the greatest if not the greatest of all evils among mankind J The earth today presents a rich gift I of heaven thereby establishing a happy alliance and a close union between God j and man between heaven and earth M Man n is born to expend every particle i of strength which God Almighty has i him in doing th the h j work he finds he heis is IS fit for to stand up to it to the last J i J J j. j breath of life and do his best r t. V It is told of Horace Greeley that he once said to I I have made plenty of mis- mis t. t r rr a akes es s in my life but they were ere always f uA new new EW ril stakes Mistakes Everybody blunders it itis itis f is IS the wise WIse person person t that at does not blunder in they the same way twice 1 I Every duty even to the least duty involves involves in in- j the whole principle of obedience The commonest life may be full of perI per per- The duties of home are discipline discipline discipline dis- dis I for the ministers of heaven How frail a thing is health and what a thin envelope protects our life against r ng swallowed u up from without or disorganized disorganized dis- dis 1 organized from within Life withers ers t t. t t. L and the beat of a passing wing breaks break's down it is the widows widow's lamp which the slightest blast of air extinguishes What a noble weapon is silence It turns aside the tempest of anger J Before it hatred and malice are abashed if not defeated slander and detraction detraction detraction de de- traction are hushed in its presence the babble of idle gossip soon grows tired in the face of its rebuke If we could but keep silence the the- world would be berid be beri berid ri rid of half its evils I |