The Second Ate - Adventist Digital Library
Transcription
The Second Ate - Adventist Digital Library
NSTR UCTOR H. A. ROBERTS It Takes a Genuine Christian to Practice This Highest Precept of Christ -The Second Ate By DAVID LIN I. F. NEWS : Come muse with us Thursday, August 21, at 7:45 P. M., at Sara Holmes', 304 Carroll Avenue, Takoma Park, Maryland. Kroner Eney will be chief muser, and his topic is 'A Midsummer Muse.' Come and be a-mused !" "What's a 'Midsummer Muse' ?" I wondered, as I read this announcement of the Takoma Interdenominational Fellowship. Few, indeed, of the twenty-odd young people who assembled in Sara's cheery parlor knew what Kroner had to present. When the meeting finally got under way, after Scripture reading and prayer, Kroner whipped out his note pad and launched into the headlines—the war. "Which of you men are of draft age and have received your questionnaires ?" T VOL. 89, NO. 41 Several hands went up. Tom, Guy, and Bill were then asked, "When you received your questionnaires, what were your reactions ?" Tom, a thoughtful bespectacled student Boston bound for a theological training, was a pacifist. To him, war was crime. His reaction : highly negative. Guy's response was different. He believed in military training. He had received some, and would like to have more. A willing warrior was he. Bill, a calm blond, tall of stature, just did not quite react. He was made of inert stuff. If he had to join the Army, all right. It would be good experience. Kroner was delighted with the variety of responses. And after analyzing these attitudes, he pro- ceeded to give his own. His delivery was pleasing. He slumped occasionally in his chair he entered the oughtful phases of s subject, pulling up nto position as he came to a new turn of thought. We followed him closely ; he had something to say. The boys in camp, the morale on the battle front, the duty of the folk at home; the experiences of the last war, the dark side of Army life, the sunny side, the many opportunities open to the clever lad—these Kroner explored with unusual thoughtfulness. His was a crisp and natural flow of good English, unavoidably padded with American colloquialisms. He was a poet, and made use of snatches of rhyme to give color to his thenie. Being a young lawyer, moreover, he had good arguments to bolster his ideas. As he drew his remarks to a close, a lively discussion ensued. Bob, a lad who is looking forward to the medical profession, moved up from the far end of the room and took his place by the door. He had something to say, and said it. He had his opinions about war. He was against American participation in a European conflict; he— "Do you mean," Kroner blurted impatiently, "that there's nothing worth fighting for ?" Bob fumbled; and before he could muster an answer, Tom, the ministerto-be, stepped into the breach. "I'm afraid," he began, "that Kroner is fundamentally mistaken on this point, upon which Bob and I are agreed." Kroner cocked his ears. "Whatever is worth while," Torn continued, "cannot be defended with force." "Tom !" George, who had so far sat in silence at the window, had the floor. "If someone came to take away your necktie, would you let him have it ?" OCTOBER 14, 1941 LET'S TALK IT OVER AND sakes !" exclaimed Aunt A--1 Sally, deftly catching a snowy napkin which the vagrant October breeze had snatched from off a plate of spicy cookies that she carried. The drifting leaves fallen from a giant maple that dominated her neighbor's yard made a crisp brown carpet underfoot as she hurried up the driveway. The sociable back door that usually stood open was closed. "Don't look like Marybelle's at home," mused the visitor as she knocked. But in a moment Marybelle appeared in answer to the summons. "Oh, Aunt Sally !" she exclaimed. "However did you guess the kind of cookies we like best of all? Do come in and sit down and talk to me while I finish the ironing." But in a very few minutes the visitor discovered that Marybelle was not her usual sunny self. "You don't want to tell me what's wrong?" she questioned. "Oh, I can't !" choked Marybelle. "It's really nothing—only—" "Somebody's hurt your heart," declared Aunt Sally shrewdly. Then the tears came in a flood. "I don't think I've ever been so hurt in all my life," sobbed Marybelle. "I've always known that Irene Burke had a loose tongue. We grew up in the same community, and when we married and settled down in our own homes, they were in the same neighboa-hood of another and far-distant city. Many's the time I've heard her blast this one and that one into a million pieces, and I've known that I have been her victim more than once. But she has so many good points that I've tried to overlook this fault, and I've always defended her and insisted that her bark is far worse than her bite. But, now, I don't know whether it is or not ! Oh, I can't repeat the unkind things she is saying—it wouldn't do any good. But it seems as though she has stabbed a sharp knife into my heart, and is slowly turning it round . and round !" "The tongue can no man tame,' quoted Aunt Sally; 'it is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison.' " "Yes," sighed Marybelle, "that is more than true. Last week's Sabbath school lesson was good for me. At first I was inclined to apply every text to Irene, but finally I took myself firmly in hand, and determined to see that every word that I speak and every meditation of my heart shall be acceptable in God's sight, no matter what others do or say. The thought VOL. 89, NO. 41 that no 'man' can tame the tongue came home to me with special force, too. Only God is strong enough to control this so-small member of our bodies. I mean to give mine entirely over to His keeping." "That's the only safe thing to do," mused Aunt Sally. "If we could remember to put the things we want to say through the three sieves before we say 'em, how much better 'twould be." "What 'three sieves'?" queried Marybelle. "I was at Mrs. Haskin's the other day, an' Louise came flyin' in from school. 'Oh, mother, mother, you should hear what they're sayin' about Betty Lane ! Why she's—' " 'Just a minute, daughter,' she said. `Let's put this through the three sieves. Is what "they say" truer " 'Well, I don't know,' confessed Louise, 'but, oh, it's terribly interestin'.' " 'Is it kind?' persisted her mother. " 'N-o-o,' she confessed. 'It isn't really kind, but you never heard such a—' " 'Is if necessary to repeat this story about Betty? Will it help her or anyone else ?' " `No, of course it isn't necessary,' acknowledged Louise slowly, 'only I thought—' " 'Daughter,' said Mrs. Haskin, `whenever some story comes to you about another person, remember to put it through these three sieves, an' you'll save yourself an' others much grief. Be sure the story is true, that it is kind, that it is necessary that it be told, before you allow yourself to repeat it.' " "But suppose, Aunt Sally, that years ago a person did something in a moment of youthful rashness and inexperience that really was wrong, and that brought his good name and his good reputation into question. And suppose he has repented of what he did, left no stone unturned to make everything right, and now, by the grace of God, is striving to live a consistent Christian life. Can't the past ever be forgotten? Must it be held against him no matter where he goes? And must gossip hang it like a millstone about his neck to hinder him in whatever he undertakes to do?" Marybelle spoke out of the fullness of her heart. "Yes, to your first question," Aunt Sally assured her ; "no, to both the others. But there are some people who seem to dote on keepin' a collection of skeletons of unsavory experi- ences in the closets of their minds, an' in bringin"em out to scare or discourage those who were their unfortunate victims; an' if that don't work, then they rattle the dry bones in an effort to arouse prejudice against 'em. I don't allow they do this purposely-not exactly, at least—but they so love a bit of juicy gossip that they can't resist passin' it on, an' that's the way it usually works out. As the minister at my church said not long ago: `There's twice as many itchin' ears as there are gossipy tongues, an' they would be cured quickly if there were no gossipy tongues.' " "I suppose this is just one of those things that we must tolerate so long as we live here on this sin-cursed earth," sighed Marybelle. "Yes," smiled Aunt Sally, "that's about the way it is, an' we must do our best, with God's help, to go about our business an' just 'pay it no mind,' as the Texans say. "Once there was a woman who spread gossip about her pastor all through the village in which she lived, an' the whole countryside heard it. Came a time when her conscience got to troublin' her, an' she was convicted of her sin an' came to the parsonage an' confessed an' asked to be forgiven. The pastor said : 'Of course, I will forgive you, an' that gladly. But I am goin' to ask you to do one certain thing. Go home an' kill a white hen. pluck out the feathers, an' bring them here in a basket.' "She followed directions, an' when she returned, the pastor said: 'Now go through the village, an' at each street corner scatter a handful of the feathers; then take those that are left to the bell tower of the church an' scatter 'em to the winds. The woman did as she was told, an' returned to the parsonage. " 'Now,' said the pastor, `go back through the village an' gather up all the feathers you have dropped. Be sure that not one is missing.' " `But,' she protested, 'that's impossible ! The wind has scattered 'em over the fields and everywhere !" " 'Just so,' he told her, 'I want you to realize that while I forgive you gladly, you can never undo the damage your gossip has caused !' " "Good-by, Aunt Sally." Marybelle smiled now, as her guest made ready to leave. "Thanks for the comfort, and for the three sieves—and, oh, yes, for the cookies ! Hereafter I'm going to strain everything I want to say before 'tis said !" THE YOUTH'S INSTRUCTOR, OCTOBER 14, 1941 ONE YEAR, $1.95 Published by the Seventh-day Adventists. Printed every Tuesday by the Review and Herald Publishing Assn., at Takoma Park, Washington, D.C.. U.S.A. Entered as second-class matter, August 14, 1903, at the post office at Washington, D.C., under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. The discussion was warm. It flared first mile and turns the other' cheek after the up in heated debate. Two camps were mile left. one has been smitten, it is not to deformed, with moderators in between. prevailing rive any direct benefit. He does it Tom headed the "let-him-have-thy- force can b because it is essentially Christlike. cloak-also" party ; George and others how can Christ's e applied? He does it to preserve his Christianity. did not believe that that policy would And if it cannot, then Christ is wrong, In other words, it takes a genuine work. Kroner sulked. Christian to practice this highest preunreasonable. "Has it ever been tried ?" Guy chalThis is no trifle. For the most dis- cept of Christ. lenged. This brings us to the threshold of tinguishing part of Christ's teachings Yes, illustrations were cited, prov- is this revolutionary precept of per- an answer. That is, if it takes a genuing to our satisfaction that this prin- fect love—love toward haters as well ine Christian individual to practice ciple has worked with individuals. as lovers, enemies as well as friends. Christ's teaching, a nation must be Would it work with nations? So went It is the core of genuine religion. And truly Christian to do the same. But, the discussion, with almost everyone if the core is rotten, the whole is prithee, who can, in this present world taking part, women included. order, find a "Christian" nation in the spoiled. What a challenge ! 10:30 M. The contest of ideas In the course of the evening's dis- truest sense of the word? surged like the seven seas. Kroner cussion, Tom had made the further Christianity is an organic unity, a signaled a halt, and we stopped re- observation that when the Christian symmetric whole. It must be applied luctantly. After a few items of busi- yields his cloak as well as his coat, in, its entirety. If a nation wishes to ness, brief prayers in a felpractice the highest precept lowship circle, and tasty reof Christ, let it begin with freshments, we parted in the the first essentials. For it is best of humor. not fair to say that one preThe iqIphaGet SUCCCii The "muse" was over. But cept will not "work" when I kept musing. the others have been ignored. By GRENVILLE KLEISER Does it work ? Therefore, before asking Ambition to do and to dare, A means My thoughts turned to the whether a nation should go to nobly aspire and to play the game square. experience of a Christian the "second mile," let it be means to Battle for that which is right, B to keep bravely climbing though rugged the height. farmer in China. He was asked whether it has observed toiling one day in his field, God's commandments. For the Courage to face a hard task, C means to be self-dependent and few favors ask. when he was surprised by if it has not met the minimum the gruff voice of a man in Decision to know what to do, requirements of God's law, D means to have a clear purpose and see the thing through. uniform—a soldier on his why hope for the maximum Efficient in thought and in deed, way home with a heavy bag. attainment of perfect love? E means to work in a way that is sure to succeed. "Carry this to the next This only partly answers the the Faith that can see far ahead, F means village for me, or else—" challenge. that quickens the mind and ignores foolish dread. He unbuckled his belt and The question remains, If the Grit to maintain a firm hold, G means held it in a threatening posithe nation has fully observed in face of obstruction to be strong and bold. tion. God's law and is invaded, the Health that you guard every day, H means The farmer slung the bag what then ? that keeps you alert and robust on the way. across his shoulder and folThis is met by two conmeans Improvement in all that is true, I that is ready to learn ways and means that are lowed. The two trudged sistent observations: First, new. silently toward the village. when a nation is willing to means the Judgment to plan for the best, J There the farmer placed the that knows how to act when you're put to the test. go all the way with God, it bag on the street and wiped needs fear no aggressor. the Knowledge by which you acquire K means position and power and worthy desire. his brow. For the promise of God to "Is this where you stop ?" the obedient nation is: means the Loyalty true in its aim, L through sunshine and gloom to be always the same. he asked the soldier. "It shall come to pass, if the Money you make and you save "No, I'm going to the thou shalt hearken diligently M means in times that are thriving for times that are grave. town beyond." unto the voice of the Lord means Nobility, largeness of view, "Oh, if that is the case, thy God, . . the Lord thy N broad-minded and kindly in all that you do. I'll be glad to carry your God will set thee on high Obliging with those whom you meet, 0 means bag all the way." above all nations of the in everyday speech to be always discreet. The soldier stood aweearth." "And all people of the the Patience to long persevere, p means struck. He was uneasy; earth shall see that thou art intent upon progress and free from base fear. coals of fire were being called by the name of the means the Quest for the lofty and true, Q to build the fine qualities latent in you. heaped on his head. Lord ; and they shall be The Christian farmer won afraid of thee." "And the Resourceful whatever the need, R means to be always ready in word and in deed. a soul for Christ that day; Lord shall make thee the means the Silence that guards well the tongue, for he remembered the words, head, and not the tail; and S in praise of which wise men and poets have sung. "Go with him twain." thou shalt be above only, and means the Tact that is ever alert Yes, it always works. But T to say the right thou shalt not be beneath." thing and never to hurt. .did Christ mean that this Next, in the case of SenUpbuilding the best things of life, U means principle should be practiced nacherib's invasion, God to acquiesce freely and avoid senseless strife. in the dealings of one nashowed that when Israel was means the Vision that pictures success, V that aims at achievement and seeks nothing less. tion with another? humble and acknowledged In a gathering of students her trust in God, He intermeans the Wisdom that prudence inspires— w a faculty rare that the world most admires. in Peiping, China, I first enposed in a marvelous way, -countered the problem. One the Xcellence marking each day, and demonstrated that the X means crowning the work that is done the right way. student wanted to know how God-obeying nation ought means You are progressing aright, Christ's "second mile" teachneither to resist nor to yield Y that thethat torch of ambition is always a-light. ing could be applied in to a hostile force, but rather means the Zeal you display in the race, z China's diplomacy with forto lean on His mighty arm despite every hindrance to still keep the pace. eign powers. "Yield one for deliverance. For an exHere is your alphabet, learn it by heart, step, and they'll take ten," amination of Isaiah 37 reAnd highly resolve that you'll fill well your part. -has been her past experience. veals that Israel was asked :If she should meekly go the to yield (Turn to page 13) P. as PAGE 3 H. A. ROBERTS #atvait gnfatheteti By LILLIAN REMICK OOD morning, madam," was the polite salutation which Mrs. Howard received upon opening the door in the middle of the forenoon. "I represent a group of earnest Christians who are out collecting funds in the neighborhood for home and foreign mission work. We invite you to do your part this morning. This little book explains—" And the young man continued his Harvest Ingathering canvass. Mrs. Howard was much impressed by the young man's sincerity. She asked him several questions, and then went to get her purse. She returned in a moment and said, "I'm sorry, but I have no change' this morning. Could you come back later ?" The solicitor could see that she was interested, and he felt an urge to help her in some way; so he spoke softly: "Mrs. Howard, my co-worker is just coming up the street. Would you like for us to have prayer with you?" The woman quickly answered : "I would appreciate it." And so it happened that three earnest prayers ascended to the throne of grace before the boys went on their Harvest Ingathering way. This unusual experience left a deep impression on Mrs. Howard's mind. As she sat by the fireside that autumn evening, she mused half aloud, "I wonder what church they represent? It was foolish of me not to ask them." "Who?" asked Mr. Howard, looking over the top of his evening newspaper. "Why, the two boys who were here this morning. Oh ! I forgot; I haven't told you about them." She then related the incident, concluding with, "You haven't any idea G PAGE 4 As the Harvest Ingatherer Goes From Door to Door, Angels Accompany Him and Bless the Contacts He Makes what church they came from, have you ?" "No, but I imagine it would not be hard to find out." However, Mr. Howard's prediction proved to be wrong, for none of their neighbors remembered the name of the mission organization that the boys had mentioned. Mr. and Mrs. Howard were at a party one evening a few months later. Most of the men were playing cards, and the other guests were noisy. The air was blue with smoke. Mrs. Howard felt uncomfortable; something seemed to be advising her to leave the place. After a mental struggle, she decided to ask her husband to take her home, regardless of the opposition presented by her hostess. Soon they were out in the cool night air. "Whatever came over you, Mary Howard ? I never saw you have such a queer notion before. Imagine leaving a party at nine-thirty !" "I don't know what it was myself, John, but I was simply uncomfortable in there. I couldn't help thinking of Jesus—would He go to such a party? You know, ever since those soliciting boys visited me, my ideas have changed about a great many things." Mr. Howard, who was not strongly religious, let the matter drop. He, too, had noticed this change in his wife. He had seen the Bible lying open on the table several times lately when he returned from work, and the children had been sent to church more faithfully on Sunday than they had been heretofore. Several years passed, and no more was heard concerning the young solicitors and their beliefs. One morning Mrs. Howard answered the doorbell and found a middle-aged man there. "Good morning, madam. Have you visited the tent meetings down on Holt Street ?" Mrs. Howard said that she had not heard of them. The visitor then told her that religious meetings were being held there every night and on Saturday morning. "We should very much like, madam. to have you come and hear the great Bible truths which will be presented and the mission stories which will be told. Would you like a car sent round for you and the children Saturday morning?" "Thank you for your offer, but you need not trouble about the car ; Saturday is my husband's day off, and he will be glad to take us." "Well, good-by, niadani ; we shall be looking for you." "Thank you for the invitation. Good-by." It was a custom of the Howard family of five to go to the beach or out into the country for an outing every Saturday. This particular "next" Saturday Mrs. Howard had her work done early and was planning tp attend the tent meeting when the telephone rang, and Mr. Howard was called to work for the remainder of the day. Thus the family did not have an opportunity to visit the meetings, after all. A few weeks passed. One morning a strange magazine called Signs of the Times came in the mail, but no explanation was offered regarding who was the sender. Mrs. Howard read the first copy of the magazine, and found in it some of the same things which the two young Harvest Ingathering solicitors had mentioned long before. She was overjoyed, and read and reread the magazine as it came each succeeding week. Then, as suddenly as it had started coming to her, the paper stopped. Mrs. Howard's curiosity was truly aroused by that time, but more than that, she knew that she had found the truth as taught in the Bible, and she wanted to hear more of it. She did know that these people who kept Saturday were called Adventists, because the magazine had called them that. Inquiry after inquiry was made, but no one seemed to know where there was a church, other than the Jewish church, whose members observed Saturday as the Sabbath instead of the first day of the week. She even wrote to an aunt in New York, but the only satisfaction she received was word that "these Seventh-day Adventists are a church of fine, upright people, but they do not have the true light." The people in the next house moved, and it was empty (Turn to page 52) THE YOUTH'S INSTRUCTOR MEISEL FROM MONKMEYER The Opportunity to Secure a Christian Education Brings to You Not Only a Privilege but a Challenge e ,2anotioe Li-inn/11y yain ff By ROSE DRUMMOND "I wish there were some wonderful place Called the Land of Beginning Again." N OTICE, every youth ! This land has now been found! Where? In Seventh-day Adventist educational institutions. True, these institutions do not represent the fanciful utopia (the word means "nowhere") that highly intellectual but impractical transcendentalists of the past century hoped to build ; neither do they represent a socialistic state such as so many nations are trying to establish today; nevertheless, this wonderful land is found, and best of all, it is yours. For years these educational institutions from Canada to Florida, from Massachusetts to California, and out over the whole wide world, have been planning and building for you. For years, also, well-organized faculty OCTOBER 14, 1941 groups have been gathered and year by year have been perfecting their training. Mr. Farm Manager, with his bronzed workers, has been laboring under hot suns ; Mr. Carpenter, Mr. Printer, and a host of other diligent workers have been bending every effort to have this wonderful land ready for you on that momentous day when you arrive. All this has been done that you, every youth, may have that unique education of head, heart, and hand that these institutions provide. The halls which so lately knew only the hum of the sander or the whistle of the lone painter now resound with the tramp of eager feet, and record the thoughtful planning of matriculation and studious days. You file into or- derly assembly halls, fill spacious chapels, sing inspirational songs, and hear expert counsel. All is grand ! Professor English looks so distinguished the first morning as you find your way into his class ! His clever wit and chalked maxims win you to him immediately. Then there is Doctor Science. He stands in an unreal world of test tubes, microscopes, and mysterious slides. All is alluring ! You finally find Madame French's name on a door, and you enter with some misgivings, but are soon put to ease by a charming, smiling woman who assures you that you can "get" even French. Miss Librarian is most thoughtful, and really seems to know your needs before you can express them; Mr. Shop Boss shows you to your industrial duties with a smile; the deans of the dormitories are much more human than you had dared to hope they would be; and the roommate you fall heir to is highly congenial. Surely school life is great ! You never dreamed it would be so much fun. Days lengthen, however, and the newness wears off. The work grows more taxing, and at last comes the crash ! Nostalgia.—It is nine o'clock in the evening, and study period ! Your roommate appears in the dean's office and announces with concern that you are not well and are going home tonight. The dean rises with the question, "Homesickness? Let us go and see." As they step to your door, you are hastily gathering your belongings from here and there and are throwing them into your suitcase in miscellaneous fashion. Studiousness.—Your much-admired Professor English is becoming really boresome ; he continually harps upon "mastering the fundamentals ;" and Doctor Science has a bit of flint in his eye as he hands you back a "nickel" quiz. There is a flush of defeat on your cheek as you crush the offending paper in your hand, and sit half listening to "a lecture," as you term it, on the need of application to one's work, the folly of just "getting by," "cheating yourself." You never dreamed that genial gentleman could be so stern. Thoughtfulness.—Then comes the day when you carry some of your campus levity into the library reading room, and Miss Librarian drops a "Silence, Please" card at your table and looks at you with deep disapproval. Why be so fussy? There are only a few in the room. Checked again! Efficiency.—The smile is gone from Mr. Shop Boss's face as he confronts you at your bench with a piece of careless workmanship, and leaves you with some pointed and unappreciated advice on the virtue of keeping your mind on your work, on perfection in detail, and striving for efficiency. Co-operation.—You turn to your room and find it (Turn to page 13) PAGE 5 lessons which she had learned front her mother, lessons that covered a wide range of interests ; but above all she stressed old-fashioned courtesy. Many times I did not heed the lessons, and even now I find them difficult in practice; but they are there, forever stamped upon my memory, a standard worthy of my greatest effort. On a July day we laid her to rest in the cool earth of a beautiful green hillside. And during the intervening years I have had opportunity to appreciate the wisdom of her teaching. EWIN G GALLOWAY "All Things Whatsoever Ye Would That Men Should Do to You, Do Ye Even So to Them" otitteiy and y'ou By SHIRLEY JEAN TUTTLE HE was a charming little woman with hazel eyes and snowy white hair. Wherever she went she won the hearts of all whom she met. Her religion was a peculiar one, so many people thought, but they had greater respect for it when they learned that she really believed what she believed. As a girl she had been plain in appearance, and much sickness had stood in the way of an education, for in the days just following the Civil War, going to school was not the simple matter that it is now. An early marriage increased her problems and brought more of sorrow than joy. But as the years went by, the virtues of love and faith within her soul found S PAGE 6 their way to her face and stamped it with a serene beauty which added to her attractiveness. Her friends were drawn from all walks of life. To her the rich were not rich and the poor were not poor. She had no fear of the one and no distaste for the other, for all are loved equally by God. Her manner was reserved; yet young and old alike admired and loved her, for the courtesy which was as natural to her as speech showed itself in her face, her voice, and, above all, in her personality. To me, for many years her only grandchild, was given a great share of her love and tenderness. Almost from the earliest hours of my life she was my teacher. She passed on to me the In a prosperous Northern city there was a church which prided itself on loyalty to the standards raised by its founders. Throughout the years it had steadfastly adhered to the precepts of its first pastors, and any threatened departure from long-established faith was met with firmness and authority. Perhaps that explains why there was so little of the spirit of worldliness manifested in the faithful few who came to meet Sabbath after Sabbath in the little white church on the hill. Yet that church never grew. Instead, its membership dwindled to a mere handful. Visitors came to the services, departed with a few polite remarks at the close of the worship period, and seldom returned. Instead of carrying with them enthusiastic reports of inspiration received and courage gained for their onward walk in the Christian way, as well they might, or of the soul-saving truths to which they had listened, they came away with amusing accounts of how Mrs. A interrupted the speaker to correct a statement that he had just made, or of how two members had indulged in a lengthy argument over a trifling point. On one occasion guests from a church of another faith were present. When they quoted the views of their pastor on a disputed subject, a young woman exclaimed, "Why, what a ridiculous thing for that minister to say !" And the very real concern which the thoughtless girl later felt for her rude remark failed to erase it from her memory—or theirs. There came one day to join the church a devout Christian woman of foreign birth. She was cordially welcomed to fellowship until it was discovered that neither her heart of very real gold nor her difficulty in learning English prevented her speaking her mind frequently and forcibly. Then there was trouble indeed! Like a flock of enraged fowls, the rest of the church rose in the air with one accord, settled upon the newcomer, and silenced her so effectually that she left the church. How many congregations are split into factions, how many friendships are wrecked, in like manner ! Said Paul: "Let your speech be alway with grace, seasoned with salt. that ye may (Turn to page ro) THE YOUTH'S INSTRUCTOR II /02 • • 11 od, Ln tAe AlotnLnyBy DOROTHY W. GREEN NE Sabbath, while the dew was still on the grass, I left my room and went out into God's out-of-doors to worship Him in the stillness of early morning. A haze of misty, veillike clouds hung over the azure skies, allowing only a faint, soft glow to light the newborn day. Soft spring breezes played idly with the. tender green foliage on freshly dressed trees; coquetting birds flitted here and there, chirping a cheery welcome to the beauties of the new day. Lavender and white lilacs gracefully nodded their sweet-scented heads ; red and yellow tulips stood at quiet, regal attention; and fresh, fragrant grass lay invitingly at my feet. From the depths of my heart, thrilling with the joy of living in a world made so beautiful by a loving Creator, came these well-known lines: "0 world, I cannot hold thee close enough! Thy winds, thy wide gray skies! Thy mists that roll and rise! 0 World, world, I cannot get thee close enough! "Long have I known a glory in it all, But never knew I this ; Here such a passion is As stretcheth me apart. Lord, I do fear Thou'st made the world too beautiful this year." Then I thought of the words of the psalmist, "The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God." Walking aimlessly along, I saw two young red squirrels frisking from tree to tree. They would stop a moment to jump mischievously into the air, and then scamper up into the lower limbs of cottonwood or elm, there to sit, jerkily waving their bushy tails and blinking inquisitive black eyes at the visitor who had invaded their playground. How like little children they seemed, as they played what I imagined might be hide-and-go-seek with each other; and yet how like industrious adults they became as they breakfasted on some nuts which they had wisely hidden early in the fall. Then my eyes caught sight of a turtledove dressed in soft gray feathers as it dipped down from its perch on an evergreen to pick at twigs on the ground. He was evidently searching for something which he might add to the little nest which he and his mate were building. For some time he stood pecking industriously, almost disgustedly, I thought, at a weed stem almost a foot long. And then his shining red eyes caught sight of me. A frightened look flitted across them, and he quickly flew several feet away, alighted, and began to walk meekly about, looking at me still, evidently watching for my slightest move. A few feet beyond, I saw a brownand-tan-speckled sparrow not much bigger than a small handful, busy with something on the ground before him. As I quietly drew closer, I saw four or five small sprigs of grass in his little beak. He gave me one quick, furtive look ; then, like a flash, he flew across the street straight to the eaves of an old-fashioned white apartment house and disappeared from sight. Instantly I knew a secret—under those eaves was a tiny nest in the making, in which soon would lie several diminutive eggs kept snug and warm by the downy breast of a devoted mother sparrow. For several minutes I waited for the little fellow to return for more material with which to build his secreted nest, but he flew out and alighted near the house instead of coining my way. Evidently, after he noticed that I had moved on down the walk, he returned to the place where I had first noticed him, because when I started back, I saw him dart hastily from that very same spot and lack to the eaves of the big house across the street. As I c about t friends, came to thought for lilies of the fiel ow ; they toil not, neither do they spin: and yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these." And, "Behold the fowls of the air : for they sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much better than they?" I looked up into the heavens and said, "Oh God, why do we mortals toss restlessly upon our pillows, losing essential rest, while we worry and fret needlessly over how our future wants or the needs of our loved ones will be supplied? If we are sure that we are doing our part to obtain these necessities, why do we not claim the peace to which we are entitled ? Surely, Thou who dost watch over the sparrow will care for those whom Thou hast created in Thine own image and for whom Thine only-begotten Son gave His precious life." I received from that Sabbath morning's walk a satisfaction that can be found only when one is alone with God, surrounded by the wonders of His creation. And as I sit here reliving those moments, thoughts of other mornings rise out of the past. thrilling me with the poignancy of their charm. I remember a lovely morning several years ago, when I looked out of the window of my upstairs bedroom upon a scene of serenity which almost defies description. The sun had not yet climbed over the horizon, and everything was so still that it seemed to me that the breeze dared not flutter the dainty leaves on the trees for fear of disturbing the early-morning calm. The palm trees which bordered the eastern side of the spacious lawn 6. MARSCHALL. ARTIST "0 Lord, in the Morning I Will Direct My Prayer Unto Thee" OCTOBER 14, 1941 PAGE 7 stood in submissive reverence, their long, spired limbs drooping gracefully toward the ground ; and crepe myrtle shrubs held out their great bunches of fragrant pink frilly blossoms as an alluring temptation to the droning honeybees, which had already begun their day's work. Out on the telephone lines, which seemed to be in the very treetops, sat two pairs of turtledoves, billing and cooing to their heart's content; while from some place near by came the doleful cry of a mourning dove as it called to its wandering mate. Before this picture of calm and loveliness I fell to my knees; and as my eyes sought the clear blue of the skies, I whispered, "0 God, Thou who hast made this beautiful world, who bast given Thine only Son that I might have this foretaste of Paradise, and who hast guided my life during the years of childhood and obstinate adolescence, accept my crude, humble prayer of thankfulness." After spending a few moments in silent meditation, while my being thrilled in response to the harmonious glory before me, I rose feeling that I had indeed been with my heavenly Father. From out of memory comes the recollection of another morning. When I awakened, I saw the outside world tinted with a delicate lavender glow from the eastern sky. Eagerly I dressed and went out into the unusual splendor of that dawning day. Every leaf and every limb, swaying contentedly in the balmy breezes, was tinted with lavender ; and even the colors of the phlox, nasturtiums, chrysanthemums, and cupa de ora (a flower from Mexico, the name of which means cup of gold) reflected that same hue. While I stood enchanted, an irresistible wave of thankfulness swept over me ; and I cried out, "0 my Father, make my character as beautiful as this morning; give to my life the power to change the lives of others as this morning's light has changed the appearance of all nature." Somehow I felt that God and I stood alone that morning, and my wayward heart was drawn closer to His great heart of love. Still the memory of the clear, inspiring glory of another morning rises before me. I was watering the flowers in the back yard, when my eyes wandered to a large, spreading tree. Its long, slender branches covered with gray-green foliage waved quietly back and forth as the cool wind hummed a soothing tune. That tree, which stood guard over the little stucco home, had at some time in its life been thrown ruthlessly to the ground by a cruel, twisting, biting tempest, and about six feet of its massive trunk lay prostrate. But from that fallen trunk grew the spreading, sturdy, friendly tree, proudly holding its head high. And I pondered over the thought that there are few people who have not met terrific storms in their lifetime. Some, like that old tree, have fallen in what seemed then to be utter defeat. But, courageously summoning all their will power and deter- mination, they began to build on what was left of life, finally reaching the acme of noble, joyous service. And another morning I awoke to find the world cool and fresh and dripping. A spring rain had fallen during the night. Each blade of grass and every tree and shrub and bush was a brighter color than heretofore. Even the skies appeared to have been washed clean of all the dust of the previous day. The sun was not yet up, and a hush hung over the world. As I sat in the window looking out upon a rock garden in which stood yellow daffodils with their faces upturned toward a queenly willow tree in her new soft green dress, my heart was thrilled with happiness ; and I repeated to myself these beautiful words written by William L. Stidger : "I saw God wash the world last night With His sweet showers from on high And then when morning came, I saw Him hang it out to dry. "He washed each tender blade of grass And every trembling tree. He flung His showers against the hill, And washed the billowing sea. "The white rose is a cleaner white, The red rose is more red, Since God washed every fragrant face And put them all to bed. "There's not a bird, there's not a bee, That wings along the way But is a cleaner bird or bee Than it was yesterday. (Turn to page ro) Without. a love for books The ri.c...hesk.rcat\ is poor! O F good cultural and inspirational books there is also a great variety. Suppose we begin with Ruskin. With a little effort anyone can soon learn to like his works, which are among the greatest and the best of modern prose writings. "Ethics of the Dust" is perhaps the simplest of all his writings. Next in general interest is "Sesame and Lilies." His "Crown of Wild Olives" furnishes profitable reading. Perhaps his most brilliant work is "Modern Painters;" and do not fail to read his "Seven Lamps of Architecture." You will find some of Ruskin's prose writings so charged with poetry and beauty that the reading of a few pages of them is like taking a bath in an ocean of loveliness. "Culture and Anarchy," by Matthew Arnold, though it requires close study, is one of the very best books for readers who wish to cultivate the aesthetic and refined. When you have mastered these you will be ready to read Carlyle's "Inaugural Address." In fact, if you learn all about reading that Ruskin means to teach in his "Sesame and Lilies," I think you will be able to read, in part at least, Carlyle's "Heroes and Hero Worship," PAGE 8 and his queer philosophy of clothes, "Sartor Resartus." A few excursions into the delights of literature will serve to develop your taste and whet your appetite for that which is best. That which focuses one's attention on the trivial, the sordid, the unclean, which weakens one's faith in God or humanity, which is untrue to the great laws of life, must be left out. Before beginning any book in any department of literature one should be reasonably sure that the reading of it will make him more kind, more sympathetic, more fair-minded. If it is not a book that will help him to understand better his relation to his God and his fellow men, it were better that he leave it unread. The lover of philosophy will read many of Emerson's essays with great delight. His best writings belong to the earlier half of his literary activity, and are found in his written essays and addresses. Oliver Wendell Holmes is another well-known modern American essayist. I like best his "Autocrat of the Breakfast Table," which, aside from its conversational essays, contains some of his best poems. THE YOUTH'S INSTRUCTOR CHARTING 1/ 4ut Ottt_le 1 A - tet17A By EDNA F. PATTERSON, M.D. HEN Magellan first sailed around the world in the year 1521, he had no special instruments with which to chart his course across the trackless, rolling ocean. He had to depend upon the sun, moon, and stars, which were at times very uncertain. Today the navigator has in addition to his compass a nautical almanac, a sextant, and a chronometer, by which he can accurately determine his course, instantly determine his position, at sea. When we embark on the ocean of life, we start out, not as experienced mariners or graduates from a naval academy, but as helpless little babes with no log of instructions attached for individual care. The babe is completely dependent upon others during his first years, and must be constantly in the care of a pilot who will guide this new life out of the harbor of infancy. If the mother has had the proper medical supervision, the child is free from inherited diseases and is perfectly sound, mentally and physically, and starts upon its journey without handicap. Immediately, however, there begins a battle with unseen enemies. Disease germs are ever lurking in the background to attack this little life which as yet has had no chance to build up an immunity or resistance to infectious diseases. Many another life is sacrificed to poor diet and accidents, so that more than 100,000 babies die during the first year from preventable causes. How essential it is, then, that the doctor-pilot should be regularly •consulted. During this time he can immunize the child against diphtheria and smallpox, and can also prevent many serious handicaps of later life. As the child continues to grow, he is constantly trying out his new-found powers to see just how much he can do. He has muscular strength and tireless energy, but he has not learned how to correlate or control those six hundred muscles which constantly urge him into action. Some accidents are sure to follow. He climbs to the topmost limb on the tree, never realizing that he might miss his step or that his chubby fist might lose its grip. He rambles over the rocks and explores old barnyards, entirely unconscious of the deadly lockjaw germ which is hiding in the rusty nail or the old tin can. When the first line of defense—the skin—has been broken, general infection comes easy. How he loves the old swimming hole; the darkest and provided which are entirely adequate to bring the voya er fel through, ny a if they are 6144 A young man young critoma the glow of h th has been robbed \ f this price! i trealikk im.s infe tious disea )1vhich has leaf sc that last a time. Often a ( illiant future has bartec away for that first cigarette, the social W OCTOBER 14, 1941 R. M. ELDRIDGE. ARTIST "Jesus, Saviour, Pilot Me Over Life's Tempestuous Sea" deepest spot is always the most allur- glass, or an unguarded evening of ing to him. • pleasure. The habits formed during Childhood reckons not with the this time are the timbers which go to possibility of failure; its one object make up the character for all time. is to gain a desired goal. So, in the We are living in a day when it most active time of life, the playtime, seems that youth must give expression the parent-pilot must always stand on to its desires. Self-discipline and guard. The parents can guide the self-control are no longer popularized. little craft safely past most of the Self-destruction is following in the hazards which it meets day by day, wake of "I like it." Every year 30,000 but in addition to this, a special ex- young people between the ages of amination is necessary at times to twenty-five and thirty—the very make sure that there are no enemy flower of the United States—die from submarines lurking near. These may preventable diseases. This means a appear as some mental maladjustment financial loss to the nation of $75,000,or some glandular disfunction, such 000 annually. One social disease alone as an overactive thyroid gland, for claims a million new cases each year. instance, which will cause him to The care of those who suffer total have a bad disposition. blindness, resulting from this one inIf one has passed the channel of fection, costs us $1o,000,000 a year in childhood safely, he cannot relax and cold cash, to say nothing of the heartsay that he is out of danger, for imme- aches and suffering. Yet the cause diately he is thrown into the whirlpool of this disease has been known for of adolescence. This is a time of many years, and its transmission could marked physical and mental changes. easily be prevented by proper regard There come surging through the body for the body temple. emotions which are new and strange. A beautiful young woman of sixToday the world is waiting to be con- teen years came into my office for an quered, and possession of the ability examination. She was advised reto conquer it is beyond a question. garding her habits of life and the Tomorrow all these rosy dreams lie in results which were apt to follow. She ashes at the explorer's feet. How tossed her head, and there was a strange life seems ! No one under- twinkle in her bright-blue eyes, which stands. The problems of the future seemed to say, "Well that's what you seem so huge and forbidding. How say. I'm not old-fashioned. I must gladly would this youth glide safely live my own life." This was the back into the harbor of childhood, but, sowing time. A few months later she no, life does not allow us to backtrack. returned. This time her head was Many a craft has been shipwrecked bowed, her eyes were brimming with in the eddying currents of adolescence. tears. Yes, she was reaping what she But a chart and a compass have been had sown. No longer was she a sweet, PAGE 9 innocent girl. She had gained an experience, but what a price she had paid ! Her whole life was saddened, and the prospects of a normal, lovely young womanhood had been blighted. Sadly she confessed, "The price is too great." How vitally important it is, then, during this sweetest time of life to "keep the heart with all keeping." Guard well the five special senses of sight, touch, taste, hearing, and smell, for these are the avenues of the soul. One is wise who will ask counsel of a parent, a teacher, a doctor, or a minister. They have traveled the path before you. and will be a shield from many a storm of temptation. After the hazards of adolescence are well passed, and one comes into the earning years of life, he must still be on guard against the torpedoes and blitzkriegs which seem to pounce upon us out of nowhere. One is suddenly attacked by tuberculosis, or the nervous system goes to pieces without warning. The eyes that have given good service refuse to function and perform their usual duties. Termites have been quietly undermining the body's resistance, and these are the final results. That cold was neglected, that attack of influenza went untreated, the candle has been burning at both ends. It does not pay to crowd a little more into the program of the day than nature can stand. Some of the barnacles which may attack your ship on life's ocean are malnutrition, anemia, overweight, and cultivating a taste for injurious articles of diet. One may ask, "With all these hazards to meet, what chance does a person have of escaping?" We can definitely assure you that with a little consideration on your part, nature will be highly responsive in bringing your baby craft safely through the peiris of life's ocean. This is a new day in medical science. With the newer methods of detecting and curing disease, many a young person has been saved from a serious illness. Some of the instruments used by the doctorpilot for taking bearings are the stethoscope, the blood-pressure machine, the X ray, and the microscope. How quickly these instruments may be utilized in clearing up some hidden pain ! That little early-morning cough says, "X ray the chest at once!' The cause of that pain in the lower right side can be quickly determined by a white blood count. That constant headache may mean high blood pressure. A few simple rules worth remembering are: 1. In treating open wounds, use some antiseptic and sterile dressings. 2. Do not try to open that boil on the face because it is "just a little one." Infection travels fast. 3. If you feel a cold coming on, go to bed and assist nature in her task of curing it. Too many have tried in vain to "fight it off." 4. Watch your weight. Too rapid gain could mean trouble. Loss of weight is a danger signal that something is wrong. 5. Shortness of breath upon exertion means that the heart or the lungs are in trouble. Anemia also may cause shortness of breath. 6. Do not take a laxative for that pain in your stomach until you have seen your doctor. 7. Once a year—preferably on your birthday—go to the doctor's office for a full physical checkup. You can see only the outside of your body, and you may feel all right, but it will be gratifying and reassuring to have that, "Just fine," said to you by a competent physician. 8. Above all, keep a buoyant and calm attitude in this changing world. A confidence in the Eternal will help to tide you over many a crisis. "Jesus, Saviour, pilot me over life's tempestuous sea." PAGE 10 "Lord, in the Morning" (Continued from page 8) "I saw God wash the world last night. Oh, would He had washed me As clean of all my dust and dirt As that old white birch tree !" Oh, into my mind rush the memories of so many beautiful and awe-inspiring mornings that I can scarcely choose from them; but as a last one I shall tell of one which I saw during this past winter. All my life, theretofore, had been spent in the South ; and the soft, white snows of the northern winter were an entirely new and enjoyable experience to me. On that particular morning as I stepped outside, a sight which sent a delightful thrill through my entire body, met my somewhat sleepy eyes. The sun had not yet appeared. There stood a world of silent, sparkling white, enshrouded in a haze of misty, lazy fog, reluctant to bestir itself from its resting place. The trees, which ordinarily seemed to shrink when the cold winds blew, because of their gaunt, brown nakedness appeared to have straightened to their full height, and to be holding their heads up proudly and stretching their arms out gracefully, as if to call attention to the beauty of their pearl-covered robes. Inez Littlefield Thaxton must have seen and appreciated just such a scene when she wrote: "God, cover my heart with a blanket of white, Just as you did your world last night. Yesterday the earth was a dirty place. First, you sent rain to wash its face, Then soft snowflakes came drifting down, Until a white blanket soon covered the ground. Today the world is a fairyland Painted white by a master's hand. "Dear God, on tiny heart please do as much. READ WITH PROF IT "God has made men His stewards. The property which He has placed in their hands is the means that He has provided for the spread of the gospel." Read "Patriarchs and Prophets," chapters 49, 50, and 51, and then answer the following questions: 1. By what two things has God maintained the principles of righteousness in all His dealings with His creatures? 2. What would the unconditional pardon of sin show? 3. What two sins are no less offensive to God than open apostasy? 4. What was necessary in the experience of Israel before a permanent reformation was possible? 5. What two great truths was the system of tithes and offerings to impress upon the minds of men? 6. What would be the twofold result if the people of God were liberally sustaining His cause by voluntary gifts, instead of resorting to un-Christian and unhallowed methods? 7. On what condition was God's great blessing promised? 8. What do many urge with great enthusiasm? Why has God purposed a diversity of conditions? Take out all hurt by Thy healing touch; Purify, cleanse me, make white within. I want to be free of all hate and sin. 0, cover my heart with a blanket of white, Just as you did your world last night." My friend, are you missing the most heartening encouragement that God holds out to humanity, by slumbering away those gem-studded hours when a new day is dawning, when all nature is at its loveliest, and when the Creator of the universe is most ready to commune with mankind? Until you have felt for yourself that surging wave of thankfulness and adoration which results .from meeting your Maker alone amid nature's loveliness, you cannot know the joy of real communion with God. "My voice shalt Thou hear in the morning," sings the psalmist. "0 Lord, in the morning will I direct my prayer unto Thee, and will look up." Courtesy and You (Continued from page 6) know how ye ought to answer every man." And Peter admonished the believers thus : "Finally, be ye all of one mind, having compassion one of another, love as brethren, be pitiful, be courteous." Seldom can a group of imperfect mortals see eye to eye in alt matters. The habits and opinions of each are molded by influences of which the others can know little. How much strife over insignificant matters could be avoided among us who should be "all of one mind" in effort and purpose, if we would accept as our aim Peter's exhortation to "be courteous." A busy physician once said, "One half the practice of medicine consists of being nice to people." There is that in the human voice, and in the words it speaks, which can lull a storm-tossed mind to rest, or unwittingly torture it beyond endurance. In the ceaseless hurry and commotion of life, the rough and jagged edges of our natures, like sharp stones, are continually, though unintentionally, bruising those with whom we come in contact. An ounce of courtesy is worth a pound of apology, but how seldom we remember even to apologize ! The truly courteous person necessarily possesses qualities of good sportsmanship. He must have an unselfish spirit, a sympathetic and an understanding heart. If these characteristics are not a part of his daily life, then all outward politeness is a mere cloak, which under trial will certainly slip off, to reveal his true self. It takes a patient spirit to maintain never-failing courtesy. We all have frequent opportunities to learn the lesson of a soft answer. There is no room in the heart of the Christian for a spirit of retaliation. Whatever experience may come to us, we must be able to "take it" with a smile. Then there is the courtesy which we owe to strangers. A young woman who was spending several months in a strange city was asked to take a friend's little boy into the cradle-roll department of the nearest church. Upon their arrival they found a small group of mothers present with their children, all of whom were busily engaged about the sand table. The young woman tried to seat her small charge on a bench with several other children, but found that he must stand, for there was no room for him to sit with the rest. Not a mother present went to the rescue, and not one spoke to the newcomers, though several stared curiously at them. After ten minutes in (Continued on page 12) THE YOUTH'S INSTRUCTOR U. M. LAMBERT ,eittlecTaxo Spoil the Vine3 By JEAN CLIFTON OTHER," said my eight-yearold daughter, "who is this nicelooking boy?" I glanced over at the couch where Mary Nell was sitting and peering into an old picture album. She had been delighted with the old pictures of her daddy and me and of relatives and old friends of the family, but she had always ignored pictures of people whom she did not know. My curiosity was aroused by her question; so I asked her to bring the book over, that I might answer her. "He seems so happy and smily, mother. He must have been nice," Mary continued as she came over to my side. I looked at the picture and saw a lad with curly dark hair and a sunny face. My thoughts went back to grammarschool days, and to a mischievous, goodnatured lad who was in the same grade as I. He had teased us all, but had never treated anyone unkindly in those days. He was unusually thoughtful of younger children, and had a way of engaging the good will of his elders by being polite to them. He was unquestionably our leader, and we had childish confidence in him. "Well, mother, who is he?" came an impatient question, which brought my mind back from bygone days. "Oh," I said hastily, "that is Dick Brown, alias Tom Jones, alias Bud Williams, and probably several other false names." "What was his real name, mother?" "When that picture was taken, his name was really Dick Brown," I replied. "Was he nice, mother? Oh, of course, he was. I can tell, because his eyes are kind and he is smiling. But why isn't he one of our friends now?" "He was nice, dear, but sometimes little foxes spoil the vines, and then nice, kind eyes become morose and desperate, and a sunny expression becomes hard and cruel." Mary Nell was only becoming more curious, as I could tell by her next words, which came all in one breath. "What kind of little foxes? And tell me all about him. Anyway, I think he's a nice boy, 'cause he looks out at me all smiling." "Well," I hesitated, "mother is really busy now, and—" Little Sins Are Like Little Foxes— They Spoil Our Lives OCTOBER 14, 1941 "Please mother," Mary Nell interrupted. "I will help you with the dishes later, but now tell me about the little foxes, and why he had so many ail— al— oh, you know, all those names." And so we both sat down, and I told her the story of Dick Brown. "When mother was in the fifth grade, Dick Brown moved to our town. He was older than the rest of us, but he was not doing very satisfactory schoolwork. Nevertheless, we liked his sunny disposition, and he quickly gained leadership among the children, and even the grown people enjoyed his company. He was always thoughtful of those about him, and I think this helped all of us to overlook any faults he may have had. "The first time that I remember being disappointed in him was when we were in the eighth grade. "One day grandma and I were climbing no the hill to our house, and since it was very warm, we decided to stop and ask Mrs. Brown for a drink before starting up the steep stretch. When we knocked at the screen door, it was opened to admit us, but there seemed to be a great deal of confusion inside. "'Mom, Dick took the money out of my bank. Please make him give it back, 'cause I was savin' it for a new tire for my bike.' "I recognized that as the voice of David, one of Dick's younger brothers. "'Well, Davy, you will have to learn to put your money away. You know that dad always hides the tithes-andofferings box. Anyway, Dick will pay it back.' Mother Brown's voice sounded both exasperated and embarrassed. "I glanced at grandma, and, as I feared, she was going to take a hand. "'Martha, how long has this been going on?' Grandma's voice was reproving as she spoke. 'Do you realize what will be the result to that boy in the future if you don't nip this in the bud? Now mark my word, that young man will come to a bad end, I tell you. I've never seen it fail yet. If you give a lad a free rein, he will get away and cause his folks a heap of worry. Now, if I were—' " 'Oh, he will be all right, and I'm sure he will return the money,' interrupted the loyal mother; but I noticed that she had a worried look on her tired face. "It was not very long after this episode that I learned from other children that Dick always bought candy or milk shakes with his Sabbath offerings. "About this time his leadership began to weaken. Although he was as jolly as ever, we began to lose confidence in him. The boys did not trust him as they once had, and the girls were becoming disgusted with him. "Finally grammar-school days were over, and we all entered high school. We still enjoyed Dick's ready humor and his willingness to aid others in any way he could. He was not doing very well in school, however, and there was a strange bit of news being spread about which we found almost impossible to believe. It was claimed that Dick was taking empty milk bottles from doorsteps and selling them for cash. We now had to admit to ourselves and to one another that he was gradually becoming more and more dishonest. "Dick finally dropped school and obtained work away from town. This was a relief to us, since we believed that when he earned money of his own, he would no longer need to obtain it by dishonest methods. He came home occasionally, and seemed quite prosperous. He called at our home and on other old friends, and told how busy he was and how proud to be working and making his own way. We were all satisfied that he was at last on the right track. "We were sadly mistaken, however, and the fact was soon clear to us. The little foxes were growing up and becoming larger and more expert now. Apparently, he had made many promises to the woman with whom he boarded that he would pay his bill for meals 'the very next pay day.' Because of his charming personality, she accepted his clever excuses time after time, and in a few months he had run up a big bill. Finally, she became desperate, and at last obtained a court order which forced his parents to pay his bill. "Well, from then on Dick became involved in more serious troubles. He found it easier to PAGE 11 secure money dighonestly than to work and obtain it. He seemed unusually clever about avoiding actual difficulty with the authorities, and this encouraged him in his dishonest ways as he steadily became less trustworthy. "In a few years we had almost forgotten him. Since his family had moved from the community, he seldom came to our town. Then he was brought to our attention rather unexpectedly. Several checks had been picked up in the county made out for large sums of money, on which Dick had forged the signature. He did not escape from the proper authorities this time. We later read in the newspaper that he had been convicted and sentenced to a term in the State prison. "Since that time he has been in prison in several States and for far more serious crimes. The last time I saw him, he did not look like this picture at which you have been looking. He was nervous and had acquired the drink habit, he smoked incessantly, and acted rude. His eyes language was were brooding, and profane. I could no longer believe that this was the boy to whom we had all looked as leader. The little foxes had spoiled the Nine. One who had possessed a rare talent for gaining friends, and who might have been a mighty influence in some good work, had let little dishonesties creep into his life. Now he no longer has desirable friends, and is a burden to society." Mary Nell had a thoughtful expression on her small face. Suddenly she looked up and spoke. "Mother, yoti remember how I cried a long time ago when we went to the grocery and you made me apologize to the grocer for taking some penny candy? I felt so angry when you made me take the candy out back of the store and throw it away! And then when we got home, you sent me back with my pennies from my bank, and I had to pay him ! I was so ashamed, I hated to go in that store for a long while. But I'm glad now that you punished me. My, I would not like to grow up and be a thief !" "That, my dear," assured her, "is just why mother .punished you. I really believe that if Mrs. Brown had punished Dick the first time he took the money from his brother's bank, his story might be an entirely different one. The little foxes would have been driven out, and Dick would have grown up to be an honest, respectable, and respected man. After all, honesty is always the best policy !" Couriers of the Air ARRIER pigeons do not always fly an air-line course to their intended destinations. A press item has just carried the story of one bird that suddenly made up its mind to visit the Hawaiian Islands. On June 10, a carrier pigeon from Portland, Oregon, alighted on the deck of the Matson liner, "Lurline." The vessel at the time was 800 miles out of San Francisco bound for Honolulu. Despite its long over-water journey, the bird was in the best of health and apparently C PAGE 12 not at all fatigued by its experience. It completed the trip to Hawaii in real comfort. No one knows when carrier pigeons gained their first measure of fame as couriers. History can go back twentyfive hundred years at least in recounting the exploits of these fleet-winged messengers of the skies. Beyond that is nothing but fanciful tradition. Carrier pigeons have written their share of history in those twenty-five centuries. They operated the first regularly scheduled "air-mail" service in New Zealand two decades before airplanes fostered a similar service. Special airmail stamps were printed for use on the messages carried by those feathered pilots of the late nineteenth century. They carried hundreds of messages out of beleaguered Paris during the FrancoPrussian war of seventy years ago. The pigeons of Paris operated an air-mail service, too, but not on the same methodical time schedules as did their New Zealand cousins some years later. Enrico Dandolo, one of the most celebrated Venetian doges, used carrier pigeons to send back tidings of his victories in the Crusades in the years between 1201 and 1203. At one time the arrival of these feathered carriers became the occasion for general rejoicing and festival making by the citizens of Venice. Ever since then the pigeon has been held in high respect by the people of this Adriatic port. Cyrus the Great employed carrier pigeons to transmit news and military messages throughout the Persian kingdom in the sixth century before the Christian Era began. History affirms the fact that Cyrus was the first to train pigeons for use as couriers. But then, history itself does not really know when the carrier pigeons first flew the sky lanes of the world.—Jasper B. Sinclair, in Our Dumb Animals. Harvest Ingatherers (Continued from page 4) a church publication. None of the visitors were greatly impressed. Late that summer Mrs. Howard saw in the paper a notice which said that evangelistic meetings were being held in the Seventh-day Adventist church at Winchendon, and visiting speakers and special music were mentioned as special attractions. The public was cordially invited. She called Mrs. Powell and asked her if she would go with her to the church. Mrs. Powell readily agreed, and accordingly that very evening Mrs. Howard cautiously broached the subject to her husband. "John, let's not go to the movies tonight. There are some meetings being held in that small Seventh-day Adventist church that we once visited, and I should like to attend." "I don't care to go, Mary, but Fred and I will drive you and Ethel over, if you wish, and then go to the show while you are at church. We can pick you up afterward." "No, either you go with us, or we won't go at all." The Powells came to call that evening, and after much debating, the women persuaded the men to attend at least one service. As he drove over a rough road, Mr. Howard wished that he had never agreed to go ; however, they arrived at the church in due time and found a large group gathered. The people were friendly, and made the visitors feel welcome. A number of familiar hymns were sung, the words to each being presented on beautifully colored slides. Then the young minister hung up a large chart which showed a picture of the image of Daniel 2, and began his sermon on prophecy and its fulfillment. The visitors had never heard anything like it, and they were deeply interested. On the way home Mrs. Howard remarked, "I don't see how that speaker ever learned so much about the Bible. And it is simply remarkable the way he makes everything so clear by proving his statements with verse after verse from God's inspired Book." "The series of lectures is just beginning. We must go again next week," added Mr. Howard. The Powells did not continue attendance, but every week thereafter, Mr. and Mrs. Howard and their two sons faithfully attended the meetings. They drank deeply of the great truths presented by the young preacher, and at the close of the effort they were baptized. Four stars will shine from the heavenly crowns of two young Harvest Ingatherers when they reach the city of God, and how joyfully they will greet those whom they were instrumental in winning to the Master's service! for the first time in fifteen years. In a few weeks a young couple, Mr. and Mrs. Powell, came to occupy it, and became close friends of the Howards. Every Thursday night the four went to a near-by city to the theater together. On one such ride to the city the conversation turned to religion. Mrs. Howard had never heard Mrs. Powell express her religious convictions, and she was interested to know about them. In the course of the conversation she asked, "Don't you think people ought to keep Saturday instead of Sunday ?" "Why, you must be a Seventh-day Adventist." was the quick response from Mrs. Powell. Courtesy and You "Is there such a religious group near here? Do you know whether they print (Continued from page lo) a small magazine called the Signs of, the Times? Do they send solicitors around such a subzero atmosphere, the stranger with cans for mission offerings, and do removed the child from the bench on they hold tent meetings?" which he had remained standing, and "Yes, to all your questions, Mrs. How- they departed, still without a word from ard," was the answer. "A small church any of the preoccupied parents or the is located in Winchendon. Frank and I leaders of the department. attended it for some time, and even took Some weeks later they attended anbaptismal-class studies, but we were so other and larger church. Remembering busy that we dropped out church from her previous experience, the young our program, and we have not attended woman was almost overcome by the for several years." friendliness of all whom she met. "I want very much to visit that church," "Why!" she exclaimed later. "even the exclaimed Mrs. Howard. "If John does ushers shook hands as I went out, and not have to work next Saturday, will you one man made a special effort to borrow go with us?" a lesson quarterly for me!" "Why, yes, we'll try to go." Many a person with little actual interThus it happened that the company of est in religion has been drawn under its four went to church the following Sab- transforming influence by the tactful bath. Mrs. Howard was rather disap- efforts of some friendly Christian. A pointed, because the minister was absent talented young Danish girl came to and the deacons took turns reading from America to engage in work for which THE YOUTH'S INSTRUCTOR said that it couldn't be done; But he with a chuckle replied That maybe it couldn't, but he was not one To say so until he had tried. So he buckled right in with a bit of a grin. If he doubted a moment, he hid it. He started to sing as he tackled the thing That couldn't be done, and he did it." "SOMEBODY she was particularly fitted. Although she had been reared in a Christian home, the gay temptations of life in a large city gradually overcame her. At times she tried to study, to pray, but religion was no longer a pleasant subject, and after each effort she yielded to a greater distaste for it. After several years she was transferred to another city. There, near her studio, was a little brick church, and one lovely Sabbath evening she attended a prayer service. The brief sermon failed to interest her, and she afterward confessed that she thought some of the personal testimonies "were crazy," but the courtesy and the friendly spirit which surrounded her from the moment she entered the chapel, broke down all barriers. She continued to attend services there, at first because she was lonely, but soon because the message of salvation brought back hope to her heart, and she rejoiced once more in a sincere and lasting Christian experience. The most efficient of modern business houses require that their employees have a pleasant personality and a friendly manner. During the Christmas-shopping rush the clerks of a small store were heard to say, as they handed each customer his parcel, "Thank you. I hope you have a pleasant Christmas." Sometimes the words sounded a trifle stiff and stilted; nevertheless, they added the friendly touch to a simple business transaction, and the customer carried with him a bit of holiday warmth as he stepped again into the cold winter air. Surely the Christian, inspired to reflect the beautiful life of his Master in a cold and drab world, should be equally gracious to those with whom he comes in contact. The great gospel commission can never be successfully carried out by individuals who have not learned the lesson of a love that is ever courteous and thoughtful of the comfort and the happiness of others. "Therefore," said the Greatest of teachers more than nineteen hundred years ago, "all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them : for this is the law and the prophets." "The Land of Beginning Again" (Continued from page 5) as you left it—untidy. The note on the table reads: "This is a game two can play better than one." (Signed) "Ann." What a snobbish note! You never thought Ann would be like that. She knew you had so much to do, and had overslept. To be sure this was not the first time you had failed to do your share of the "housework," but it is a pity she could not have helped out just this once, as it was inspection day. Good Sportsmanship.—You start for the tennis courts, wondering why no one has asked you lately to join in a "doubles" game, and meet a group returning to the dormitory, tired but happy, and congratulating one another. Those who have won are praising the losers' fine play in the early part of the game, and the losers OCTOBER 14, 1941 laughingly promise to give the winners a "good trouncing" the next time. They hardly notice you, and you are a bit fearful to yourself that you do not take defeat gracefully, but, anyway— Self-pity.—Gradually the joy vanishes from your everyday living. Everybody but you is out of step ! Someone is always "nipping" at your heels. You have no freedom; in fact, you now remember saying lately, when you were cautioned about a growing friendship, that "all that this college lacks to make it a prison is the ball and chain;" and your moody thoughts roll your grievances into as ponderous a weight as one of last winter's snow men. "All these things are against me," comes the cry of your heart, when suddenly, because fundamentally you, every youth, are honest, you recognize the symptoms of a growing "self-pity." It is an astounding revelation! "Where do we go from here ?" you ask yourself. Just where you are you take yourself in hand and fight the greatest battle of your life—the battle with yourself. Reflection.—Why did you not pay attention to Mr. President's chapel talk the other day on this cry of your heart, "All these things are against me!" You remember now that you felt no need then of counsel, and on the sly had "crammed" a bit for a quiz. What had he said? You remember you almost smiled at his earnestness, but now you must know for yourself. Alone, you set your mind to gather up the crumbs of thought which you only half heard. You feel a special kinship to that grand old man, Jacob, who had had so much to battle with within his own make-up. You see him standing dejectedly at his tent door, and can almost hear him speaking to his sons as they ask his consent to take his beloved youngest, Benjamin, with them on their second journey to the land of Egypt to buy bread for their faminestricken families. Even now, though he is an "overcomer," "a prince with God," in a moment's lack of faith he is pouring out to the All-Father beyond those quiet stars that shine down above Canaan, the same wail that comes repeatedly to your own lips, "All these things are against me !" You read on and on, and find that hard as "all these things" were at the time, they led to the saving of his life in the end. There is the lesson for you! A mask has fallen from your eyes. Your fits of loneliness, your demanding boss, your exciting instructors, and even your roommate, are trying to save you from yourself. There is no time now for selfpity. You find the solution to your problems within the compass of your own adaptability, of your own self-mastery. Scraps of quotations that you have learned crowd through your mind with a new meaning. "Sin originated in self-seeking." "Just stand aside and watch yourself go by; Think of yourself as 'he' instead of That our daughters may be as cornerstones, Polished after the similitude of a palace." Conclusion.—Do you fail? "quit"? "give up"? No, never! As does the camel, you determine to take the burden of the day kneeling; have it adjusted, kneeling; and have it taken off, kneeling! Be daily grateful for the opportunity to live and grow ! Truly you have found— "The Land of Beginning Again, Where all our mistakes and all our heartaches, And all our poor, selfish grief Can be dropped, like a ragged old coat at the door, And never put on again." The Second Mile (Continued from page 3) not only her territory, but the honor of God. They were to acknowledge that the gods of Assyria were mightier than the Lord God of hosts. Herein lies the difference. The nation which is called by God's name dishonors Him when brought under the sovereignty of an idolatrous power. Not so with the Christian individual. With him God is honored in the "second mile." For then the Christian yields, not his allegiance to Christ, but merely his services or his property. God's sovereignty over him is not only preserved in nonresistance, but evinced. Christ is glorified in the follower who is ready to suffer "the loss of all things" that he may "win Christ." May we not, then, conclude that when Christ taught the "second mile" He meant it primarily for the individual? If it ever be applied to a nation, let that nation first comply with the foundation principles of Christianity, and then be ready to yield all save the honor of God. Answers to Current Events Quiz 1. Panama. 2. It became an empire. It has been a republic only since 1889. 3. The Civil War. Congress levied the tax in 1862, but it was discontinued ten years later. 4. (c) Land of the Aryans. 5. Switzerland. 6. Mount Ararat, landing place of Noah's ark. 7. Homer Cummings, Frank Murphy, Robert H. Jackson. 8. Women's suffrage. 9. Not Joseph Stalin, but Mikhail I. Kalinin. 10. Free land. SABBATH SCHOOL LESSONS 'I1 1, "I have to live with myself, and so I want to be fit for myself to know." "Self-abnegation . . . the principle of the Messiah's kingdom." This honest self-appraisal finds that— "Thou art weighed in the balances, and art found wanting." You find yourself to be your own worst enemy. How humbly grateful you are for "all these things"! Again you open your Bible to the Psalm's, and read David's words : "That our sons may be as plants Grown up in their youth ; SENIOR YOUTH IV—The Place of the Spirit in Victory (October 25) MEMORY VERSE : Zechariah 4 :6. LESSON HELP : "The Holy Spirit," W. H. Branson, pp. 57-78. THE LESSON 1. Give some of the names that are applied to the Holy Spirit. John 14:26; Rom. 8:9; Gal. 4:8. NOTE.—Other appellations may be found in Hebrews 9:x4; 10 :29; r Peter 4:14: Revelation it x; x Thessalonians 4:8; John i4:i7; and Zechariah 4:6. PAGE 13 2. Of what does the Holy Spirit convince the sinner? John 16:7, B. JUNIOR NoTE.-The margin of the word "reprove" is "convince;" therefore, one of the chief functions of the Holy Spirit is to convince of sin. The chief instrument used by the Holy Spirit in "convincing of sin is the divine law of God as contained in the ten commandments. . . . When this divine law is brought into the conscience by the Holy Spirit, and the sinner is thus led to see himself in the light of its precepts, he is immediately convinced of his sin. He sees by the law what purity and holiness mean."-"The Holy Spirit," W. H. Branson, pp. 57, 58. IV-The Lame Man Healed 3. Besides convincing the sinner of sin, what other work does the Holy Spirit do? John 3:3, 5; 6:63. NoTE.-"It is through the operation of the Holy Spirit that a new life is engendered in the soul and the man becomes a 'new creature.' This new life is the life of Jesus."-Id., p. 62. "When the Spirit of God takes possession of the heart, it transforms the life. Sinful thoughts are put away, evil deeds are renounced; love, humility, and peace take the place of anger, envy, and strife. Joy takes the place of sadness, and the countenance reflects the light of heaven. No one sees the hand that lifts the burden, or beholds the light descend from the courts above. The blessing comes when by faith the soul surrenders itself to God. Then that power which no human eye can see, creates a new being in the image of God." -"The Desire of Ages," pp. 172, 173. 4. How intimate is the Spirit's union with those who are born again? 1 Cor. 6:19, 20; Eph. 5:18. 5. By what illustration did Jesus show God's willingness to give the Holy Spirit to those who ask? How does the Holy Spirit aid us in our prayers? Luke 11:13; Rom. 8:26. 6. What help will the Holy Spirit give the newborn person when he is in need? Isa. 59:19; Eph. 9:16-21. NoTE.-"If we look to Jesus, and trust in Him, we call to our aid a power that has conquered the foe on the field of battle, and with every temptation He will make a way of escape. When Satan comes in like a flood, we must meet his temptations with the sword of the Spirit, and Jesus will be our helper, and will lift up for us a standard against him."-"Testimonies," Vol. V, p. 426. The margin of "lift up a standard against him" in Isaiah 59 :19, is "put him to flight." 7. How does the Spirit help in daily Christian growth? Rom. 8:2; 2 Thess. 2:13. NOTE.-"The work of sanctification is a great and continuous work. It begins at the time of the new birth and does not cease until life's race is finished. As long as we are in this present evil world, just so long will we be surrounded by the foul miasma of sin, and so long will we need to rely upon the Spirit for protection and succor. Daily are we to continue the growth in grace and the knowledge of the truth. The newborn babe is to develop and grow until he becomes 'a perfect man ' measured by 'the stature of the fullness of Christ.' "-"The Holy Spirit," P. 74. 8. What is the fruit of the Spirit? Gal. 5: 22, 29. 9. What message is being proclaimed to all the world at this time? Rev. 14:6-12. 10. Through what power will this work finally be completed? Acts 2:15-21; Joel 2:23; Zech. 10:1. NOTE.-"The work of warning the whole world of the approach of the day of God and of the opening of the judgment cannot be accomplished by the few men and women who accept the message and who constitute the remnant church. There must be divine leadership. . . . And this is what God has promised. He will send upon the remnant church the Spirit in the form of the latter rain and, like the disciples of old, they will go forth to labor 'in demonstration of the Spirit and of power.' . . . God will not leave to unaided human beings the task of presenting His last appeal to lost men, but the Spirit, now fully restored to the church, will take full control of the work."-Id., pp. 119, 120. 11. What work are the angels in heaven carrying on now? Rev. 7:1-4. 12. What power has an active part in this sealing work? Eph. 4:30. PAGE 14 (October 25) LESSON SCRIPTURE: Acts 3. MEMORY VERSE: "Faith in His name hath made this man strong, whom ye see and know." Acts 3:16. LESSON HELP : "Acts of the Apostles," pp. 57-60. PLACES : The gate Beautiful at the temple at Jerusalem ; a porch of the temple. PERSONS: Peter, John, a lame man, the people. Setting of the Lesson "A short time after the descent of the Holy Spirit, and immediately after a season of earnest prayer, Peter and John, going up to the temple to worship, saw at the gate Beautiful a cripple, forty years of age, whose life, from his birth, had been one of pain and infirmity. This unfortunate man had long desired to see Jesus, that he might be healed ; but he was almost helpless, and was far removed from the scene of the Great Physician's labors. His pleadings at last induced some friends to bear him to the gate of the temple, but upon arriving there, he found that the One upon whom his hopes were centered, had been put to a cruel death. "His disappointment excited the sympathy of those who knew for how long he had eagerly hoped to be healed by Jesus, and daily they brought him to the temple, in order that passers-by might be induced by pity to give him a trifle to relieve his wants."-"Acts of the Apostles," pp. 57, 58. QUESTIONS 1. To what place did Peter and John go on a certain day, soon after Pentecost? At what time did they go, and for what purpose? Acts 3:1. NOTE.-The ninth hour was three o'clock. Peter, James, and John were three disciples who had been very close to Jesus while He was preaching to the people on earth. They had been with Him on the mount when He was transfigured into a being of light and glory. They had gone into the room with Him when He called to life the little daughter of Jairus. They had been with Him when He prayed in the Garden of Gethsemane. They had visited the sepulcher very early on the morning when Jesus rose from the dead. John was called the beloved disciple. Jesus, after He rose from the grave, had sent Peter a special message. These disciples, with the others, had watched Jesus ascend to heaven, and afterward they were very faithful to His teachings. Peter had preached a wonderful sermon on the day of Pentecost, and about three thousand persons were converted. At one time, when each of the twelve was seeking the highest honor and place, they might have been regarded as rivals. Now they walked together. 2. Who sat at the temple gate through which they passed? Why was this man there? What did he ask of Peter and John? Verses 2, 3. NoTE.-The gate Beautiful was no doubt the one on the east of the temple, and the main entrance. The great wall surrounding the temple had nine gates-four in the north, four in the south, and one in the eastern wall. This eastern gate was of fine brass, and the most beautiful of them all, being seventy-five feet high and sixty feet broad. 3. How did Peter reply? What did the lame man evidently expect? Verses 4, 5. 4. What could Peter not give the lame man? Instead of giving alms, what did Peter tell the lame man to do? What was the immediate result? Verses 6, 7. NOTE. "Such as I have give I thee." "If a man has money, he can give money. If he has truth, he can impart truth. If one has courage, hope, love, goodness, he can infuse them into other souls. If he has strength, he can use it for others. . . . Peter gave the lame man two things, each of which was worth far more than silver and gold. He gave him the power to earn his own living. . . . Then Peter bestowed a far greater gift than this,-he brought him to the Lord Jesus, into the Christian life. Jesus in all His healings gave the higher blessing with the lower. He always did more than heal the body. That was the lesser part of the eure."Peloubet. "The Greek words [ankle bones] are those that a doctor would use in describing a patient, and make one of those minute coincidences which go to prove that Luke the physician was the author of the Acts."-Lindsay. A story is told of a beggar who held out his hands to a passer-by for a piece of money. The man searched his pockets for a coin, but found nothing. He then said: "I am sorry, brother, I have nothing for you." The beggar's face lighted with joy. He said, "You have given me more than money, for you called me brother." 5. How did the lame man show his gratitude and joy? Verse 8. 6. What caused the people to wonder? As the man who had been lame clung to Peter and John, what did the people do? Verses 9-11. NOTE.-"They were astonished that the disciples could perform miracles similar to those performed by Jesus. Yet here was this man, for forty years a helpless cripple, now rejoicing in the full use of his limbs, free from pain, and happy in believing in Jesus."-"Acts of the Apostles," pp. 58, 59. 7. When Peter saw the people wondering, what question did he ask? What did the people seem to think as they looked at Peter and John so earnestly? Verse 12. 8. How did Peter divert the attention of the people from himself and John to Jesus? Verse 13. 9. What did he boldly say the Jews had done? Who was the murderer to whom Peter referred? Of what great fact were the apostles witnesses? Verses 14, 15. 10. By whom and how did Peter say the miracle of healing had been wrought? Verse 16. 11. Even while administering a sharp rebuke to those who had brought about the crucifixion of Christ, how did Peter show his regard for them? Of what were the sufferings of Jesus a fulfillment? Verses 17, 18. 12. What did Peter call upon the people to do? Who would again be sent to the earth? Verses 19, 20. 13. Where would Jesus remain until all things were finished on this earth? Verse 21. 14. What had Moses said to the fathers? When that Prophet (Jesus) came, what should the people have done? What fate awaits those who refuse to hear Him? Verses 22, 23. 15. Who besides Moses had foretold what would come to pass? Verse 24. 16. Whose children were these Jewish people? Whom did they claim as their father? What promise had been made to Abraham? Verse 25. 17. What special privilege was given to the Jews? Verse 26. Can You Tell Anything that is of greater value than silver or gold? Who the murderer was who is mentioned in Acts 3 :14 ? Why there was no excuse for the ignorance of the Jews concerning Jesus? What will finally be done with the sins of which we repent? Ai 1 "um. N S T R U C T 0 R Issued by Review and Herald Publishing Association Takoma Park, Washington, D.C. LORA E. CLEMENT EDITOR ASSOCIATE EDITORS C. L. BOND J. E. WEAVER S. A. WELLMAN FREDERICK LEE This paper does not pay for unsolicited material. Contributions, both prose and poetry, are always welcomed, and receive every consideration; but we do not return manuscript for which return postage is not supplied. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Yearly subscription, $1.95; six months, $1.15; two to four copies to one address, one year, each $1.75; in clubs of five or more, one year, each $1.70; six months, 95 cents. Higher in Canada. Foreign countries where extra postage is required: Yearly subscription, $2.55; six months, $1.45; two to four copies to one address, one year, each, $2.35; in clubs of five or more, one year, each, $2.30; six months, $1.25. THE YOUTH'S INSTRUCTOR I N a few short years they will gather a wealth of information about language, history, mathematics, and the sciences. They will learn how to make a living, but will they have the health to enjoy it? For a number of years members of the Junior Life and Health League have been learning how to live for long life and happiness. In the October issue of LIFE AND HEALTH Veda S. Marsh, R. N., known to thousands of children as "Aunt Sue," tells in her column for boys and girls how the heart beating normally 88 times a minute will slow down to 78 during a brief rest period and will rise to 120 during strenuous exercise. That one lesson learned in youth might add many years of service and enjoyment of the good things of life. The young people will get most out of this school fundamentals of healthful living. The regular subhealth instruction if they have a copy of LIFE AND scription price is $1 a year, but Seventh-day Adventists HEALTH at home to refer to from time to time. For may have only a few cents they can have that which may save you many dollars in medical expense while learning the Life and Health FREE with every new or renewal yearly subscription at 75 cents, entered before December 25, subscribers will receive a vitamin chart showing the sources, functions, and special uses of the vitamins; also, a menu service mailed monthly throughout 1942, giving suggestions for every meal with emphasis on foods in season and recipes for special dishes. One Year, Only (In other countries which require extra postage, $1.10. Price in Canada, 90 cents.) ORDER FROM YOUR BOOK AND BIBLE HOUSE THE LISTENING POST is higher thair. Grand Coulee Dam, but the latter is nearly four times longer and has nearly 50 per cent greater capacity. O BOULDER DAM O THE London Daily Mail recently estimated the cost of a single night raid of 300 bombers over the Ruhr as follows : "Gasoline and oil $13,280; losses, allowing three planes shot down, $240,000; bombs, $720,000 ; maintenance on planes, $210,000. Total $1,183,280." O TODAY Americans have an average life span of 62.5 years. Since 1900 the life expectancy of the average white American citizen has increased thirteen years. Female life expectancy is greater than the male, as it was forty years ago ; however, women have gained an additional year on men. Life expectancy for females is now 64.5 years, compared to 60.6 for men. In 1900 it was 51 years against 48 years for the males. If this trend continues for a few decades, for the first time in the history of the nation, we may have a majority of women. • A NEW domestic source of aluminum for the United States has been unlocked after years of research and experimentation in alunite, a white rock with a gray or pink tint, of which there are huge deposits in southern Utah. It is also found in smaller amounts in Arizona, Colorado, California, Nevada, and Washington. What is known as the Kalunite process, recently perfected and patented, produces alumina from alunite at a cost of $35 a ton, which means metallic aluminum at 11.86 cents a pound. Experts say that the metal produced from Kalunite is equal in grade to that produced with Bayer alumina, the process used by the Aluminum Company of America. O THE first science workshop for the young people of the United States, sponsored by Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, was recently opened in New York City. Here 80 future scientists, selected from more than 6,000 members of the American Institute of Science and Engineering Clubs throughout the country, carry on their own research projects with equipment and facilities rivaling those provided in large universities. The young scientists are given free rein, even to arranging their own work hours. The workshop, it is hoped, will provide material for manufacturing firms in search of young people of special talent to fill research and engineering places on their staffs. O JULIO CESAR BERRIZBEITA, nineteenyear-old Boy Scout, used 102 boots in hiking 20,000 miles from his home in Caracas, Venezuela, to Washington, D. C. The hike began three years ago in July, 1938, when Julio and five other Venezuelan Boy Scouts left the Plaza Bolivar in Caracas, determined to walk to the United States capital. Because of hardships experienced, it was necessary for his companions to return to their homes soon after the start of their journey. With 100 pounds of equipment on his back and armed only with a hunting knife, Julio plunged into the Central American jungle, and to reach his destination walked through nine countries. Before he reached the United States border he could speak no English. However, three months later he was speaking clearly with but a slight accent. PAGE 16 • No single catastrophe in the United States last year approached the daily average of almost 100 lives lost in automobile accidents, according to a booklet recently issued by the Travelers Insurance Company. Statistics show that 35,000 persons were killed and more than 1,300,000 others injured during 1940. O THE United States Navy has announced that it will award the naval ordnance flag to those industrial plants in the United States that are up to or ahead of their schedules on Navy orders. The emblems on the flag include an anchor and two crossed "Dahlgren guns." O CHINA'S most venerable wooden building—a Buddhist temple which has stood wars and weather for more than 1,000 years—is in a mountain fighting zone of Shansi Province, and at present its fate is unknown. O THE provincial government of Quebec, Canada, has hired an expert to teach members of the Quebec Retail Merchants' Association modern methods of merchandising and accounting. O THE United States is now producing more than half of the steel produced in the world, and it is better steel, and of higher quality, than that produced elsewhere. O THE Duke and Duchess of Windsor are spending six weeks at the duke's ranch in Alberta, Canada, vacationing from their duties at Nassau. 1. Since the war began, shipping which totals 420,000 tons has been transferred from United States registry to that of a small Latin-American nation, which now has the sixth largest merchant marine in the world. Name the nation. 2. Brazil recently celebrated the 119th year of her independence. What form of government did that country adopt when it first became a free nation? 3. The first income tax in United States history was Imposed to help pay for a war. What was the war? 4. Does Iran mean (a) desert land. (b) land of oil, (c) land of the Aryans, or (d) nothing in particular? 5. The country with the greatest per capita consumption of cheese has strictly rationed that product recently. Name the country. 6. A mountain on the Soviet-Iran border was the scene of a well-known Biblical event. What is the mountain? 7. Francis Biddle, recently appointed Attorney General of the United States, is the fourth man to serve in this capacity under President Roosevelt. Name the other three. 8. Twenty-one years ago the Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States went into effect. For what did it provide? 9. Who is president of the U. S. S. R.? 10. What does Thailand mean? (Answers on page 13) O THE vitamin C content of an apple peel is from three to five times that of the flesh of the apple. O PEOPLE under shelter are practically "immune" to lightning. Approximately 90 per cent of the four hundred odd annual deaths by lightning occur in rural districts and open spaces where the exposure hazard is greatest. O "GRAVEYARD cleaning" is an annual custom in which whole communities of the Upcountry in South Carolina participate. A huge picnic dinner is served on the church lawn ; then members and their friends descend on the graveyard to dig up the weeds and set the sagging tombstones straight. O RECENTLY Switzerland celebrated her independence day. Above a fjordlike arm of Lake Lucerne a little group of serious-faced men gathered around an unlit bonfire. Just at midnight three men with torches shouldered through the dark crowd, lit the fire, and then in rapid succession other men lit torches from the fire and ran with them into the night. Six hundred and fifty years before, representatives of the three "forest cantons" of Uri, Schwyz, and Unterwalden had gathered in the same glade to light a fire symbolizing their confederation against the House of Hapsburg. To celebrate their independence day the Swiss every year build huge bonfires instead of shooting off fireworks. O IN 1883 officials of the large railroads in the United States met to discover some method of establishing a time system that could be universally used by all American railroads, to avoid confusion for travelers going long distances on different roads. They adopted a system based on the idea that 24 standard meridians should be established 15 degrees apart in longitude, starting from the meridian of Greenwich, England, and extending around the globe. In 1884 an international conference on standard time which met in Washington, made the same recommendation to the countries represented. Since then, the four time zones, Eastern, Central, Mountain, and Pacific, have been used in this country. O SOME years ago Dr. Samuel Guy Inman, specialist in Latin American affairs, formed an intimate friendship with a brilliant professor of sociology of the University of Buenos Aires. This man's 65,000-volume private library contained books of outstanding worth. He himself had written seventy volumes, proving thus that he knew how to put his learning to practical use. One day Doctor Inman asked his friend, Dr. Ernesto Quesado, what he planned to do with his great collection of books. After a long discussion the good professor decided that he would like to present the library to one of our universities in the United States, provided the institution would give it a separate place, retain it intact, and appoint him in his declining years as its keeper. Doctor Inman returned to the United States and tried to place this valuable gift, but he was unable to do so. Boards were either apathetic or slow to act on a proposition that would mean considerable financial outlay. So the New World lost the wonderful collection, and the library today is housed in one of the most magnificent buildings in Berlin, owned by the German government.