1WSIMB mmmmmmmfmmmmmm EVENING LEDGER ooti tll tEotoarti jHen 3!ff BY JOHN P. GARBER kSSBJ kSiSf $ 1 SUPERINTENDENT OF THE PHILADELPHIA PUBLIC SCHOOLS !7'Ht5 S THIS still only a prophecy or is it a ful fillment to you and to me today ? Much depends upon what has been our quest, much upon the wisdom and zeal with which we have pursued our plans. The New Year found us vi sioning only noble things. Our strength was great, our gaze was high, the songs of promise were ringing in our ears. The paths we took were narrowed toward our goal, our acts were wise, our zeal drooped not before the summer's heat nor withered in the winter's cold. And yet we failed. Today, perchance, we stand unmanned before a shattered hope. But have we lost? The times we fail should point more truly toward the aimed-for goal. The strength that comes from well-spent effort should help us surely win. The peace y Hutumn'o fmCto arc gathered in Hutumn'o fmCto arc gathered in Hnd the birdo have talicn wing. CQbat of plcaourc'a left to win Hftcr oong and harvesting? Winter hath its own delight, 6arnering in ficldo of onow Berries red and bcrrico white Roily and the ttiiotlctoc. Come, Oh! cotnc along! OCTintcr's windo ohall awcll our song, OTbilc with shouts and merry din Cotneo the ulctidc harvest in! Hgc bath reaped ito youth and prime Hnd the blood otiro cold and thin. Hbat for Hgc bath winter-time? BQbat of pleasure's left to win? Harvests still of rare delight, jfoye that once it used to hnow, Berries red and berries wbitf Roily and the mistletoe. Come, Hgc, come and sit CQhcrc the cheery hearth is lit, CQhilc the young with merry din Drag thculctidc harvest in! Com Daly At least this we thought when the year still was in its youth. But we are wiser now. We know that the end is but the beginning, and that the peace of such possession but reaches out to a more extended good. Each increment of skill and power but opens much beyond ; each stage of knowledge but lifts to a higher plane; each added grace of heart but brings a keener sense for more. YEAR of growth has left us only with a great de- : of honest trial is still worth while. But we tried and won and yet have not rejoiced. The good we sought seems empty, now that it is won. Our choice was colored by our selfish view. We set our hearts upon the means, and not upon the end on that which of itself contains no good. Not that our choice was wrong, but that we chose a part, and not the whole the shadowed valley when we might have had the mountain view. We thought we strove for substance, but find it but the shadow of that we sought. UR success seems empty and we live amidst our disillusioned plans. But have we failed? Not if our longings still are for the better things. We take new courage in the promised peace of His good will. Again go back to the entering of the year. This time we seek the things that make for peace the gifts of hand, and head, and heart the grace of spirit that reveals, refines, reshaping all the life. Here surely we shall find our peace and be content when we have grasped the golden good. sire to grow. We are satisfied only because of the longing with which we now are filled. Is this unrest the final act of peace ? Is the desire for growth, after all, the best reward for liv ing true? Is it the developing cells of the growing boy that make him so constantly over flow with joy? Is this also a natural law in the spiritual world? On earth peace, good will to men. We may not have realized it at the beginning of the year, but it is now clear that here is an unbreakable bond. The good will to men and the peace we sought are inseparably one. IT IS the consciousness of desire to serve that brings us peace. Here alone we reach the good without alloy. Here we reap the harvest of richest returns. Spending in spiritual things is an investment that grows by leaps and bounds. There are no limits in these diviner fields. Here earth merges into Heaven, and we sail upon the Crystal Sea. This is the pay of the parent who serves the child. Herein is the highest reward for teacher, brother, "elder brother," friend. Divine unrest, desire to serve are the essence of substantial things. Thus the message of the an gels becomes both a prophecy and a fulfillment. So our hearts tell us on this Christmas Day. esni ill jra&fiw A - J? flpp n ... r ituffiirtMa