PLAYING 1 remember when in boyhood, Yust a step advanced from toyvhood. When in through the schoolroom win- dows float sweet the wild birds’ call, I would close my desk at dinner, Like a hardened little sinner, And the after-nooning found me playing hookey from it all. What fo us the far-off sorrow Of the whipping on the morrow, or the day seemed all the future—'twas a hundred hours long, ‘And each hour we were enjoving By the wood and pool—just boying, ‘While the wild birds caught our laugh- ing tones and wove them into song. THE MAN AND THE SNAKE HOOKEY. And to-day a robin twittered Through the window, and my littered Desk became the ink-bespattered one my schoéldays used to know, When the voice of spring was crying And some voice in me replying To its every note and echo—and some yearning bade me go. But a stern duty fetters Me to these unanswered letters While through half-opened shutters sweet the wild birds ery and call, And I'm wishing, wishing, wishing, I might steal ofi somewhere, fishing, Lock up every care and worry—just play hookey from it all. i : J. W. Foley, in the New York Times. All round the circle of the hills, the dazzling sky pressed down unclouded to the toueh of the parched rim-rock. Between the hills the shallow basin lay baked and breathless. Over it the tense air quivered with heat. Within, no bird fluttered nor water purled nor green plant raised its head. Only the desert children, sage-brush and grease- * wood and long-spined cactus, gray but never dying, lived on there in the drought, sterile and forbidding as the land which gave them birth. Everywhere was silence upon the place, everywhere was immobility, save where the man lay and where beside him the bound snake whirred and writhed and rattled in the impotent fury of fear. . The man lay stretched on the hot earth, stark naked, his face turned to the sky. A buckskin thong passed across his throat and was drawn taut betwen two roots of sage-brush. The noose which held his ankles was se- cured about a clump of greasewood and both arms thonged at the wrists, stretched wide as in crucifixion, Heavy bands of buckskin spanned his body so that to the prisoner there was left but two possible movements. lle could turn his head from side to side, facing on the one hand the snake. on * the other the miniature forest of sage- brush; and he could clench and un- clench his pinioned hands. In this last freedom the final in- genuity of savage captors had found expression. With the left hand tight clenched, the snake's wild stroke fell just short of its aim. Should sleep or insensibility relax the fingers, the reptile’s head might overlap him. Since early morning, through the increasing heat of the day, the man had lain there, grim and silent as the gray hills around him, save when now and then he raised his hoarse voice in defiant shouts. The snake, on the other hand, struggled and fought un- ceasingly against the cord which held him, striking impartially at it, at the just removed fingers or at the wooden stake to which the cord was tied, grovelling his body in the sandy earth, writhing and tugging with protruding tongue, and all the while translating in whirr and hiss the blind fear of his captivity. Sometimes the man turned his head to watch; once or twice when the . snake's movements flagged he slightly stirred his fingers in the sand, the ruse each time rewarded. by the swift spring and fruitless stroke. But mostly he lay still, all his mind bent on endur- ance. The man had been placed there to die. He knew it and the knowledge tinged his thoughts with a strange curiosity. There were three ways in which death might reach him: through the snake, through sunstroke or by the weary route of thirst and hunger. The second and quickest of these ways the light mountain air, vibrantly hot though it might be, rendered improb- able. For the snake, it was part of the man’s torment that at any minute he might stretch forth his band and by the movement invite an end, brief indeed but horrible to the mind. doubly horrible to the strained imag- ination. There was one other chance. An unexpected rain-storry, a heavy night dew in that barren place, would so stretch the slender buckskin thong which held the rattler that m: led he might reach and strike his victim. This was the element of uncertainty in the grim problem. This it was that sent the man’s eyes searching the hare horizon with a look half dread. half longing. On one of these weary journeys of sight a tiny speck of black above the western hills attracted him—a steady pin-point in the dazzling blue. He shut his eyes a moment in order to look again the more intently, and when he opened them, lo! the dark points were two. He watched them uncom- prehendingly, as slowly and steadily high in air they moved from west to east. When at last in mid-heaven the sun's sheer strength beat down his gaze, he was the lonelier for loss of this one sign of movement. The sense of heat had by now grown into anguish. The man’s exposed body drew and quivered beneath the sun's rays as though each inch of it were endowed with a separate life. Unseen insects brushed and fluttered upon it, leaving beneath their light pressure a traf like fire on the blistered surface. The snake lay prone, exhausted al- most beyond striking. The man, not- ing it, smiled grimly and scraped his fingers noisily in the loose earth. As the snake whirled to front the chal- lenge, he curled his hand close with ¢ taunt for its futile effort. He was thus engrossed wien sud- denly across his face swept a sense of delicious coolness. Ile turzmed his | head; close above him almost within touch of his free hand, a great black pird, carrion in every movement, hov- | 1 . . { ered on steady, outspread wings. Its | : By E. MIRRIELES. : : : : $9923399539030920909223929 3 CCECECECEEECECECEECEetecee L shadow fell across his face; its eyes, beadlike and listening and greedy, looked straight into his own. For an instan: they stared thus, man and bird. Then with a cry the man flung himself against his bonds, strug- cling and straining at them for es- cape from this new horror. On his body, dry till now, the sweat poured forth in streams. Blood gushed from his nostrils. With shrieks, with oaths, with stumbling words of prayer, he fought against the fate which held him. Not once but many times the strug- gle was repeated. When at last, ex- hausted, his convulsed body fell back to quiet, the bird was gone. Shudder- ingly the man raised his eyes. Far up, half lost in blue, but ready, tire- less, it hung above him. “God!” breathed the prisoner, “God!” and turning his blanched cheek to the sand, he fell into a sort of sleep. All through the waning day he slept, through the approach of night and the swift desert change from heat to eold. When he awoke the first pale amethyst of dawn was in the sky. The snake was sleeping, not as snakes are wont to sleep in freedom, head tucked to tail and sinuous fold lapping on fold, but with his swollen body back-thrown and stiffened against the stake which held him, caught mid-struggle by insen- sibility. The man turned his head to face Lim. “Hey, rattler!” he calied cheerily, and scraped some grains of sand toward the recumbent body. But when he saw the start and shudder with which the creature woke, the anguish of returning consciousness, suddenly he was sorry for his act. When the snake, writhing round, struck at its cord quivering iron head to tail, he would have given an hour of his own rest to have restored the sleep which he had broken. The sun rose presently. Again the weary panorama of the day unrolled before the eyes of the two victims. The snake was quiet, weakened by his long struggle. The man, strengthened by sleep, restored by the night's cold, held himself strongly in hand. Sometimes, indeed, the growing heat drew from is lips a broken sigh. Sometimes birds, many now, swooped low around him with hoarse cries and flapping of heavy wings; at such times his whole body grew tense beneath the stress of almost uncontrollable disgust and terror. But he lay still, Not for his reason’s sake dared he again give way to the expression of fear. It'was a comfort to hith in these moments that the snake showed no apprehension © of their gruesome neighbors or eyed them only with the avid eyes of hunger. Watching the indifference of the reptile, the man feared less. Fixing his eyes upon if, he could hold hard to sanity and to endurance, though around him perched and hovered the vulture ministers of death. : But as the morniifg passed a new anxiety should die first? It seemed to weaken with every hour and the man trembled. Ile spoke to it soothingly at times and had, or believed he had, | the power eof quieting its paroxyms. | In his fevered mind he searched halt- ingly for some knowledge of its needs. Would it live longer for the taking of life? And if by stretching out his hand he could delay its end, what then ! of the lengthening of its pain? Jefore | his dimming eyes, the snake loomed, | now a refuge, now a menace. A dozen times, he half relaxed Lis hand only | to draw it quickly close again. Once | when the snake fell in its spring, seem- ingly dead, he thrust the fingers wide with a ery of utter deprivation. When it moved again he drew them in, the instinctive love of life still strong upon him. A buzzard had risen at his ery and perched on the sage-brush at his head. He studied it quietly for a while, its coarse, draggled feathers, its filmed, eyes and cruel beak. When the scrutiny Lad grown intolerable, he strove to shout to scare it from its place. His voice came dry and breathless, scarcely a whisper, and the bird swayed back and forth unmoved. Ie closed his eyes after this and for a long time lay still, only rolling his head from side to side that the vultures might not light upon his body. At last, when the sun lay low on the horizon, he ceased the movement and again looked about him. Overhead a cloud of birds, scared by the sudden quiet, hung high in air; swarms of ants and lesser insects crawled and fed upon his arms and body; the sage- brush all around rustled with pungent | dryness and to the west the sky burn- { dryness and to the west the sky burned hard and bright as burnished copper. For a long time he waited. Then, | with a sobbing breath, he flung round, | straining his body against the cords which held him. The snake too had | | | | | | 1 1 | | moved. The throng that bound it was drawn taut and painfully it had thrust its swollen head across its finegrs. It lay thus, outstretched, not striking, its glazing eyes on the man’s face. And while they lay so suddenly there came to pass the impossible, the one uncounted chance. From far across the desolate sage-brush desert sounded to them the barking of a dog. : It came nearer and with it the creak and grinding of heavy wheels. The man strove to ery out and, fail- ing, gnawed desperately at his baked lips and tongue. hen the feeble trickle of blood which paid his ef- forts had moistened his dry throat, he raised his voice in shrill nd ter- rible cries. Above him at tle sound the startled birds swirled to the west. The snake, too weak to spring, had yet dragged himself to a coil, his flat head raised in air. Between the cries the man could hear the abrupt stopping of the wagon, voices. Next instant the dog's moist breath whiffed on his forehead and a man’s face bent to his own. . There was a sudden tightening of the buck- sking thongs as a knife passed be- neath them, its cool blade searing like fire on the blistered flesh. Hands dragged him from his place. “A man on either side he was held erect.” Through a maze of pain and weakness; he could hear the comment of his rescuers. “Alive, all right!” v “God! He'll die on our hands.” “Carry him to the wagon!” “Look out! Step wide of the rat- tler!” Hands beneath his shoulders, they bent to the task of lifting him. The sufferer sent out a groping hand in protest. He swallowed hard, strug- gling to speak. Ilis naked foot thrust. close—perilously close—to the fanged head of the snake. “Turn him loose, t00,” he command- ed.—San Francisco Argonaut. MAKING OVER A MOUNTAIN. Helena Objects to Great Big Bald Hill-——Will Make a Park on It. The strangest and most interest- ing park project ever undertaken in this country is to be found at Helena, Mon., writes John H. Raftery in, the Technical World Magazine for July, where the citizens are engaged in transforming the bald slopes of a conical mountain which towers nearly 1400 feet above the city into a for- esi park. There is no spring, well, brook or pond upon the bare sides or rocky summits of this singular park; nor will it be possible to raise water from the valley for the irrigation of the trees, shrubs and flowers, yet the ex- pert foresters of the Federal bureau who spent last summer planning for the planting of the park are agreed that several varieties of evergreen will flourish there without water or attendance. A spiral footpath has been graded from the city to the summit of Mount Helena, and there an ornate pavilion has been erected upon the highest point of rock, 1400 feet above the main street. In the cliffs of the peak there are two spacious natural caves, which will be tenanted by specimens of the native bears, lions and other carnivora off these mountains. Parks enclosing herds of deer, an- telope, moose, elk and buffalo will be added as the present limits of the tract are ¢xtended upon the desert lands which lie back of the mountain. A Century Ago. Few persons to-day stop to realize how different things were in this country century ago. Here are a few things to thin- of: Merchants wrote their letters with quill pens. Sand was used to dry the ink, as there was-no blotting paper. There were no street letter boxes; letters had to be carried to the postofic~. It cost eighteen and one-half cents to send a letter from Boston to New York, and twenty-five cents from Boston to Philadelphia. Every gentleman— Washington, for example, wore a queue; many powdered their Mair. Imprizonment for debt was com- mon. Virginia contained a fifth of the whole population of the country. The Misissippi Valley was not so well known as the heart of Africa now is. Two stage coaches carried all the travelers between New York and Bos- ton, and six days ere required for the journey. There was not a public library in the United States. A day laborer re- ceived two shillings a day. Stoves were unknown. All cook- ing was done at an open fireplace. Many of the streets were unnamed, and houses were not nambered. Government Had No Objection. The late Nat Head, once Goovernor of New Hamshire, sometimes sur- prised those who approached him to gain his political influences by his witty parnying of their requests. Colon-:1 Barrett, an estimable of- ficial upon the Governor's staff, died, and with unseemly haste his would- be successors began to push their claims, even while his body was awaiting burial with military honoris. One candidate, somewhat bolder thar , ventured to call upon Governor Head, thinking to ascertain the bent of the Governor's mind upon the important ques.ion. “Governor,” he asked, not to speak i: a manner too postitve, ‘‘do you tuink you would have ¢ objec- tions if I was to get into Colonel 1 Di rett’s place?’ The answer came promptly, “No, TI don’t think I should have any ¢’ jections, if the undertaker is willing the confused exclamation of men’s | Search For New Foods ALL THE WORLD LEVIED UPON FOR PLANTS AND FRUITS Where Many of the Present Staples Originated---Peru Gave the Potato, Tomato and Lima Bean---Successes in the Quest For New Salad Plants--- Japan Has a Promising One in Udo---A Delicious East! g Indian Mango Soon to Come From Florida. J USES eSeseSESeSeSeseseseseS esas esesSeseSeseseses 2s” The recent agitation on the subject of preparing meats and meat products has turned popular attention more strongly than any other cause to an interest in a vegetarian diet, and this in turn has induced individual curios- ity as to the origin of the vegetables which we know best in this country, writes the Washington correspondent of the New York Evening Post. Every- one knows, of course, that potatoes are the mainstay of the Irish and rice of the Chinese. If there is a failure of the wheat crop, there is famine in India and the sympathy of the whole civilized world is drawn upon to sup- ply the wherewithal to tide over the year’s deficiency. England must main- tain a great navy to prevent its being isolated from its bases of food supply in case of war, as much as for the protection of its colonies. Taking lesson from these patent facts, this country, in spite of the unusually wide range of its products and its practical immunity from harm on this score even under stress of war, has undertaken, through a bureau of the Department of Agriculture, to search the whole world for every sort of growing thing which has possibili- ties as a food product. Having found such a plant, it has been imported here for development in the Government's faboratories and subsequent distribu- tion to such Government experiment stations’ or private growers as could develop it more scientifically for: the climate to which it is best suited. Many persons consider Ireland the home of the potato, which has become such a necessary part of the average American's diet. The plant came to this country from the highlands of Co- Jombia and Peru, a section of the world which has furnished a number of the best known and most widely cultivated vegetables of the present time. The to- mato was introduced from Peru back in Civil War days, when ignorant peo- ple had an idea that it was a poisonous plant. Agricultural statistics of the past year show that superstitious fear of the tomato has disappeared suffi- ciently to encourage the growing of this popular food on 50,000 acres. The J lima bean is another vegetable of popu- lar consumption which came from the same South American country, having been introduced here about eighty-five years ago. Certain sections of the country have come to grow lima beans in such profusion that farmers have been able to obtain special railroad rates for sending their crop to city markets. © Thousands upon thousands of dollars invested in the orange groves of California and Florida obtained that opportunity for investment in conse- quence of the introduction of orange cuttings from Brazil.” England is giv- en credit for having provided this country with asparagus, while celery came originally from Southern Europe, and rhubarb from Central Asia. Still unsatisfied with all that other countries have given us in the way of food supply, the aggressive agricul- tural scientist of to-day has been tour- ing the world and exploring its far- away corners and uninhabited desert and forest nooks for what may turn out to be only a slip of a plant or a sample of an undeveloped fruit. Each, liowever, brings to the explorer the cerm of an idea by which he hopes to develop the new plant, through Govern- ment aid, into a staple of both food value and financial profit. Descriptions have been given in the Evening Post's correspondence. of the Jast six months of some of the note- worthy novelties brought to this coun- try in this way, including durum, or macaroni wheat; chayote, the new del- icacy of the egg plant variety; the ecac- tus cheese, which is so nearly like the ordinary cake chocolate as to be read- ily mistaken, except for its slightly tart flavor; new varieties of tangerines and other specimens of the orange fam- ily, and of grazing plants which will grow in the semi-arid parts of the West where there are less than six inches of rainfall. In each of these in- stances there has been an accomplish- meat worthy of note, but the list has not yet been exhausted. Other plants and fruits are being developed along the same lines, and descriptions of some of them will be available before long for the information of the public. At the present moment it is possible to give some brief facts about several ex- periments which have progressed far enough to indicate a gratifying success in as great measure, probably, as those just mentioned. ; Salads have come to be a part of the principal dally meal for most persons who live reasonably well, because of the many kinds which ean be prepared at small cost and which add so much to the enjoyment of the repast. But there is a continual, longing for new kinds of salad, and chefs are puzzling their brains to arrange new combina- tions. To meet the demand has been one of the tasks which the agricultural explorer has set for himself, and al- ready he has succeeded to a degree. In Japan he Las found a vegetable, called by the Japanese udo, which is as com- nion there as celery is here. - It is so enjoyed by the Japanese that they im- port the canned article to this country rather than do without their accus- tomed food. It cannot take the place of lettuce for variety of uses, but may be adapted to a palatable dish by the addition »f certain sauces. It has not yet been given a distinctive America name, but it grows iu thick blanched shoots of two feet or mere iu length, and prospers splendidly. By slicing the shoots into long, thin shavings and serving with a French dressing, there is presented a silvery looking salad with unusual crispness and a new and distinct flavor. Some day epicures will cherish the name of the explorer who brought to this country the original mango, the fruit which has. become a fad with numbers of Florida orange growers in sections where there is a suitable soil and little or no frost. There have been mangoes sold in this country, but they have not been of the true, high-grade stock which has given the fruit its fame abroad. It was in 1889 that the East Indian Mulgoba mango was intro- duced into Florida. It prospered for several years until the great freeze of 1895 killed all but one tree, and that was saved only through the exertions of a horticuliuralexpert on the ground. Thousands of grafted trees now grow- ing in Florida owe their start in life as fruit producers of the first grade to this one lonely tree which nearly suec- cumbed to the frost eleven years ago. The experiment has reached such a stage that the marketing of a crop is expected by another season. Mangoes offered in delicatessen shops to-day are disdained by the experts as unworthy of the name, which will be lived up to by the new variety. The Oriental mango is known as the most luscious fruit that grows, having no more fibre than a peach, but being much more richly flavored. Another inducement to cultivation is that they will grow on soil of no particular value and con- tinue bearing for years. This, in addi- tion to enormous crops, is likely to re- sult in general introduction in such sections as afford the proper climate. In this same general class is a fruit called mangosteen, which the Depart- ment of Agriculture experts lope to propagate as a new industry for Porto Rico, Hawaii, the Panama Canal zone, and perhaps some other localities. Some specimens are already growing in Hawaii, as in Jamaica and Trini- dad, but it is not entirely acclimated as yet. The mangosteen has a delicate flavor and attractive appearance, but lacks a sturdy root systems which will make it commercially practicable. To discover a representative of this spe- cies which will provide the toughness of fibre required and on which the del- icate mangosteen can be grafted, is now the work of the investigators. The fruit has a white pulp, more ten- der than that of the plum and an al- luring flavor which is hard to deseribe. The rind is of a purple brown ‘shade that distinguishes it from.otlier fruits of similar variety and marks it as dis- tinctively as the red-skinned banana is different from the ordinary sort. These several experiments in fruits contain great possibilities to the fruit growers of America as well as prophe- cies of new delicacies for the gratifica- tion of the increasing thousands of well-to-do citizens whose material pros- perity develops the market for new food products. All parts of the world have been levied on to provide new sensations for agricultural and horti- cultural America, and as quickly as re- sults are attained they will be made known to those who can carry on the work most successfully. Usually the State experiment stations are given this opportunity, since through them the general public may be supplied most satisfactorily. . Because of this co-operative plan, by which the work of the Government ex- perts is made available to every grow- er and experimenter in these lines throughout the country, there is al- ways a, large majority of the National legislators who are willing to vote the necessary funds fordeveloping it. What no individual grower could afford to attempt on his own responsibility and expense, the Government can and does do in the interest of all its citizens, Stones Are Plentiful. But Large, Per- fect Pieces Are Costly. Cameos are cut from the stones onyx and sardoynx, which are said to be so plentiful on the Uruguay River in Brazil that ships often carry them away as ballast. Nevertheless, perfect pieces of large size are costly. A piece suitable for a large portal costs about "$75. This stone is preferred for cameos because of its hardness and durability ald is suitable for such work owing to the fact that it comes in layers of contrasting colors, as black and white, black and cream or red and white. When the cut figure is sunk into the stone instead of being raised the cutting is called an intaglio. The cost of these gems is due to the time and skill required in the work. Formerly a small gem might occupy an artist for a year or more, but with modern appliances the work can be done more rapidly.” Still the ancient work bears (he palm for artis- tic excellence. } The cutting is now done by hold- ing the stone against a revolving drill, whose soft steel face is covered with diamond dust. No steel is hard enough to cut the st The utmost patience and caution and delicate handling are required, as the slight- est slip may spoil the work.— Chicago Tribune. Chuggity, Chuggity! Chuggity, chuggity, automobile, Ran over people and made them squeal. Crushed ’em and hushed ‘em, laid 'em out ead, . At the flat rate of ten dollars per head. Visual Demonstration. Jeéennie—* ‘Did you hear of the awful fright Jack got on his wedding day?” Olive—‘‘Yes, indeed—I was there and saw her.”—American Spectator. Had Been There Before. Hubby (at ’phone)—“Mary, I'm going to bring a couple of lobsters home for supper.” Wife— “Don’t, for goodness sake! We haven't got a thing in the house.” —Boston Transcript. Prudence in Pleasure. “How are you epjoying your new automobile, Mrs. Sububs?”’ “Oh, very much as long as we are careful not to get on a road too far from a trolley line.”’—Baltimore American. Disappointing. Mrs. Justloking— ‘Have you any hand-embroidered waists?” Salesman (who has waited on her before) —“I'm very sorry to disap- point you, madam, but we have.’'—: Chicago News. The Same Color. “Jane, I ,can hardly believe my eyes. You are making the bread without washing your hands.” “Well, ma'am, what's the differ- ence? It’s only brown bread.”’— New Orleans Times-Democrat. Museum's Blue Monday. “Where’s the boa constrictor forty feet long that you've got painted on - the sign out in front?’ demanded the visitor at the dime museum. “This is wash day, and we're using him for a clothsline,” explained the Circassian beauty.—Chicago Tribune. Awful! “That was a fierce fight you had with Cholly,” said Knox. ‘He @laims he licked you.” ’ “Oh, the Boastah!’’ exclaimed Gus- sie. “I admit he wumpled my cwa- vat dreadfully, but you should have seen his collah!”’— Philadelphia Press. Back From thc Honeymoon. Ail Te, Maud—" “When we get back let us try to create the impression that we are not newly married.” Jack—‘‘All right; you had better carry the bag and the ¢rug-strap, then.”—London Scraps. Attracted Attention. Bacon—‘ ‘They say that the aew congressman attracted a good deal of attention when he entered the House of Representatives.” Egbert— “Why, he never opened his mouth!” : ‘““No, but his shoes squeaked.”— Yonkers Statesman. : Where Ignorance is Bliss. Rising Young Statesman—But there is another matter, just as im- portant, that has been overlooked. I am going to introduce a bill for the rigid inspection of bakeries.” Constituent—‘‘Predmore, for your own peace of mind, I advise you not to do it.”’—Chicago Tribune. He'd Been There, Too. Bacon— ‘Been away?” Egbert—'Yes; been up to Jay- ville for a couple of weeks.” ‘Oh, have you?” “Yes; greatest place in the world for an appetite!” ; “But what good does that do you? Stopped at Spavin’s boarding house, didn’t you?”’—Yonkers Statesman. Equally Painful. “Huh! What do you know about war? Did you ever hurl yourself into the ‘imminent, deadly breech’ or ‘seek the bubble reputation, even in the cannon’s mouth?’ ”’ “Well, no; not exactly. Not to any noticeable extent. But, I have taken home unexpected company to din- ner.” —Puck. Of Little Consequence. “Well, well,” exclaimed the first summer girl, “where did the engage- ment ring come irom?” > “From Biffany’s, of course,” re- plied the other. , “Qh, I don’t mean that. Who ie the man who gave it to you?” “Oh! Why—er—really, I've for- gotten his last name, I just call him ‘Shorty.’ ”’—Catholic Standard and Times. . : I I ———— felt th: surely gave e: form a -straigh plished that H ward | true t as a m do and is noti Himsel accomr have e will be often i not yi “My ti not ye ripe,” Himsel permitt from t Men t force. at ‘tha kingdo Roman leader, He wo saying. world.’ knew come ¢ was th His hc when | His life to me, fully e; victions deepen a grea sounds is thy Reveal is in th pacity: to do.” speakin true in the joy that me we mus the opi coward. who ar world low me is the do, not world their d sequenc glory. Jesus tunity saw it high cc the val that w these I We ha: sadness at the have h large a after a for this into th would |, but for Jesus t matter ‘think t these cl faced tl strengtl nized t! the cro career. fore ha Him, nc but to deed an God an Him. I said tion, 1 meditat. with na: growing mind H He was fore Hi not hav age of five, not met. 3 might h of His ¢ and by gatherir strength God anc about tc and jea pride, Vv and the and spi Jerusale knew H about to to glori thinking and nov illustrat the trut He.was He tho: time wa suprema3a acknowl earth a And hov we not ideal of turning Mahome Truth, b supreme
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers