Downers Grove Reporter, 30 Dec 1897, p. 6

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.‘ . "Iat at IIL“ nu hunt”. “to”. M dull to” II- “hm ,u-lM-mtnlnnuom. f ‘ficcu'! van to I... nymu not: : M .1 un. David." a. cu! My mm (in mg m. "went-dummnunou .h an" pot-ted mark, "l mu: R I n- W In luv! you no Mani-c or d m- u..lno,udunool u h hum could he wont II-nll . wide! I'll an: “Your ”firâ€"Ila; "a no aloe- lwun two any: mum- unfllulnhkAJI-cr noun! ‘ "1 m you like! DI”! MM.” “M - Mk, all" mummy. "h to I. antic. for you an.” n- “ Why. "You how I do. But I "h M- u all; I met didâ€"l ‘d-ll l are but III. and n H va- 1 an.” um: unborn; m “to would take no for an answer Cl has so alone." ' My, car. you are 1 ma. hard but.“ an m- um... um n ; m all, I. 'u I. onlove': -. ‘ III none In Nu In deu- - “-0 lot India hull with DJ- aluminum- m. Bullish aid. “00 I: ”mm at m to con. un- ~ I that your latter and to my I"! nunâ€"u could In" have “I h u to It". hon-fly inn-mutants!!- Mn mu." ,. “Pan uranium: Hui, you mean. put." put - botany. unruly. "1 c In I- In." well what he 4 apt, «4 took beau” he 1"! lull-I, .1 den-'5' cried III! M. to than all an: In untold ”2:. m. mm to n- ' Mud mm m»... to Mac. Loan non-on “hm-unison arm “I!!! and thrown emu m. I all: tire of W too am to . “you. YOIIIW l “'6'! M the I!!!” I hope you will "to :o . most It. lamina keep ‘flmtmx'vetotnernnm .m m1 7 beyond Mr mute-m “poem: tn... I. I L__ .n_._4 AA o“ 4."!!! the by. Joe Benlmm works for m. naval. does he 1:01?" mm mm- ,hlo asked. “Yet. he does. " e. 'wonder could you do something? :4»: Juan is In the moat dreadful Mk about him. " I I'll go round and m it you hum answered; “but Beuham' a in “M brute. and will drink all he‘ ”I”! hold 0! to the end 01 the chur' fit. I don’t know whether you have W “Iced 11.11133 Dhnndlle. but How It seems to me that. almost mu the women prefer to mrry' Ole Iron; men, and vice vem. Look City own mother, for Innunce: a m cmture did not live, but she tamer the rlght wife (or my (other, on! nobody new It better than hIm- .I. You. All the know u. too. She m '3' to tell tiller that when low-c tn- Gnveloigh Hall to Dov- mum lV.â€"-(Continlled.) __ ”or mum Joe came home _ , -Ild knocked her about, and one aucti- mono». who couldn't bear it II! We; want And fetched a police- m-ud Joe was touched oil, to poor 33.017. unuttenhle dismay," Miss H 10 replied. .Wl‘ Janet!" murmured Dorothy. it"!!! the by. Joe Benlunn works for to. David. does he not?" mm mm»- .hlo naked. “Yet. he does." Princou Lonle Lox-inn!!! By Jove. I don’t envy Monsieur to Prince! Not a bit of itâ€"~not oven for half a million 0! money. And no to keep out of his way. Well, 1'" obey that command with all the pleasure in life. And To: not to marry before l'm forty-=â€" that's what it amounts to practically. Well. I don't know that I mind that very muchâ€"410 X? All! well. I don‘t‘ so much know about timtâ€"~l-â€"â€"" and then he stopped short and tell Into a sort or dream. a. dream oi himself walking along 3 country road and be- t. f‘: wonder could you do something? aide himâ€""and. on! damnation," said Poor Janet is in the moat dreadful Dick Ayltnor aloud, “what did the Mk than! him." .4... ‘- “h _ om brute want to write to me for?" In undo the [mien Inn-aka “hunk. that tho old aavage night not from not. apnea do that at any moment. when he would have no other course open to MII hot to exchange Into a regiment aerviu in india. and live on Ila Day. So that. after all. what waa the (nod of hla depending too much on his uncle. -who wonldl if his wife hunched to die, a-nredly marry again on the chance 0! having an heir who would cut hill not at his heritage? All the aim, Dick Alynar did not think that there waa the meat chance at his uncle‘s wife loving the way clear for a alumâ€"her ladyahlp was at last Inu- yuan younger than he loud. and was a woman oi awes- aivcly pod health. which ahe kept in Intact ordar by living by line and rule; and he reminded hinaeli that hayond WI: hla allowanea and handy having another heir. Lord Kilns Ila lhaolntoly powerless to have on. and or atone away no- hillâ€"tho My nut u with than Q}. ta th'a hair who was to new il- mmm was In mm. M: m My duo'- on In «a; is Ileant to lam to plane him-fl. In in uncle could go to the Mm n scum. Mm all. I! he did lam her or nay oth- er 3m tho: he to mm. m M: “eh m up I'D-Cl var It. win cold he do? He could, and probably would. no. Ila allonlea l-medhtely. But (in he no absolutely no 31::th SIT rm: to 1'"! him have to we; but u for '3qu all his In". all and. elm. to :1! "m or m”â€"â€"vhy. «to lie: was simply pre- pouemo. and net m It me at me u a mum chI could lat be consider“ for n lone-t. After an. bacon“ on but warmly. In Nov. 1 any n well any hon that Dick My." had and. up II. and to carry the mu. cm of III. the... II Ila-t. be hour or u lil.l In mar. but I. In“: to do I: all the mac. n Now. chh Aylmer was utterly lg- nonnt of the clmumstancu In which the little [III of IIII dream was ulna-d. She might have I dowcr. It mlght b: lam org-nu, he dld not know; and on tho other Mud. It was more than llhdythhtthehtdnotnomuchua may I. the world. Somehow. II- thongh ho hul lover Mon wlthll the mm of 0-1va “all, he had 1: Ida that it who O ulna without Inch Iona behind It. True. the bed: In trout o! the ho... want any with flower- and Ihrhouo wu km and a! I out“. umnnco. But tho hodge- ‘ whlch shirt“ tho mun; nudow won IDI- too wall hm; tho emu-co at" M 3 out at punt badly. and land app-natty not wot! and to tho uncu- dty: the an" who not very well hunt. I“ 31mm he the!“ that Dorothy 801°60'- dowar would to but A thing at huh" Input-loo counted with bl- ncio'l an at who: Dick‘s wm oust-t taboo-0.94M. . He struck a match and set lire to the I letter: then a sudden thought occurted 9: to him and be crushed the than out and locked the letter mamm- away in his dhmtch box. "I may find that re- mark about marrying min useful." he said to himself.» “Anyway, heat to ' keep it." But though be bid locked the letter “my he could not put the thought“): * u any from him as easily. Indeed. ll. Item comlug hack to hlm again and Again. partlculnrly that one ham-table antenna about him mduns till he was tony helm-e he need expect his uncle to hear of his marrying under a cer» tllu amount of dowel- with the hrldc. Dr. Pimin, being In a church In Edinburgh, when the preacher was not only emphatic. but shed tears coâ€" piously, wag moved to Inquire of a countryman. who at by him. whnt n w. til about. "What the devil nude ill: greet?“ In: the Inquiry. "Faith,"_ laid ti. “I, slowly 0.1qu around V “n :- mammal? u:- ... Mwflwuflhhum‘ "an. the road. There In undoubtedly a great deal to be said in iavor of the opinion that a coaalderahle portion at the tilnenn in this eontry is caused by the unpleas- a’nt habit of eating too rapidly. or course we all hnow. and have nt tinea a very painful experience oi. the fact that thin in a high pressure age. and all is done at am speed, but thla surely ought not to he the cane with our meals. it in interesting. but not pretty. to watch the business man when he goes into a reatatlrant‘ tor hh luncheon. it is with Mini looked upon in the light 0! a duty and not a pleasure. He muet eat. and he feels that he has only a few minutes to devote to the operation. an that he may he back at hie omce with all non- llble speed. He attacks his food nav- ‘agely. gulp- down hia heel-pr wine. and when the last and rites are over he pays and boltsâ€"in fact, it la a ease oi bolting from beginning to end. Ev ery doctor will tell you th‘ people should eat slowly. and occupy me time pleasantly with conversation. in this way we shall live longer and en- joy better health and greater ahility to cope with the wormâ€"New York hauler cult. Ila ted the. Mum". bland Ilth tho-m and untamed than to tear. to their Matt'- mtent. bl: dn-ul chur- ud otherwlu Injur- the mrnltm. tutu: "My dog alo- um '1 chain; It I have then mud- on today. they wovld be torn um;- to-onov. no I wow-c l mm but rub the Int-announce.” on. of Frederick’- don. Bic-ho. Attained bur toflc ukbflty. It I: Itnted "at the It“ took an» with Mu on the cum- mln o! 1746. One day the Ilu. ad- I'lldl. on a moot-tuner. In nur- prtned no pursued by the Austrian. It. took «(on under a bridge. a“. wrapping nit-he I. III- rlolk. hold M. to Nu m. The «union: do; moo-ed fully con-clout of the peril of MI uuter. and though of I nervous tum-oat and dupe-ed to burl at the “latent dtsturbure. be rental price!!! quiet not" the Amtrinnn ht! pas-ed. At the battle of Bohr. niche 'u ute- captive with the Hun m- ”, Do .60! Jay tilt! the (10‘ Ill!!- !eu Ipol halt-a restored to ht. luster that the this on: were flooded with tan. Tnveten visit the tomb of that hm don In fmt o! ‘Ie palace It san- Send me lat Ito-es. ml having cum-"ed noon It the um M tho mun I“ In no... Frederick th- Gum‘s undou- lot do:- unonntod to A motion. He al- ways had In or III lulla- ("130an about lulu. lupin. upon cum and show!“ on the couches In bl- roan. During In. Int lllnen he uud to w on the (mm it an: flout! and il- wuyl had I do. It NI side occupy!“ "Bum! Interlaced" mud growled out between his strong teeth. u he stood loaning our the sale. Iltchll‘ the ntmtln; dog-«rt “001-; than, 0! course." I And Dick drove sally along. getting ‘inore and more light hearted as he went; for was he not getting nearer and nearer with every stride of old Derby's leg- to her? But he did not get to the hall without being further watched. Scorce’waa he put the and of the village before he met David Ste- veneon, wearing the light clothe: Ind unite" of 3 country gentleman who looks after his own farming. and David would at him munierouaiy. ihppliy Dick neither haw hie rival nor his black looh. and drove on, flicking like. I schoolboy It the hedge- u he used. 1 The good woman watched him as he drove along. "Another of “em utter Ill-s Dorothy." she said lo herself. “Thank you very much," said Dick. pleasantly. "Miss Dimsdale. she do live at the Hall." the woman replied. “And Miss Dorothy. she do live with her." “Why. yes. sinâ€"yon do go along that road and take the first turn to the right and then yo do come to It," she re- piled. “All. thanks. By-the-bye. what In the name or the lady who llves there?" he asked, carelessly. However. he did not let that trouble him much. and he drove my!) aim between the sweet wild hedgeroweJeeL ins u it the son September air. just tempered with a breeze oi! the sea, was air or an Arcadian land, and such objectionable persons an aristocratic re- lutiohn did not exist in all the worm. And then when he reached Graveieigh. the long straggling village street with its quaint old-world shops and its odd llttle postofllce, he pulled up the good horse and stopped to make inquiries. "Can you tell me where Gravelelgh Hall is?" he asked of a respectable woman. ‘ omhoulnlnollhbph' Anton! by Jov'o. ho remind“ Elite?! thif he had lemon». or more comedy he had never known. what the old lady's home win. Domthy Ind calla! her "nun .” and he hit! nut-ally aid “your aunt." ind he had come may without know- n: tht her noun and atom were, whether the was wife. widow or lllld. (To to continued.) Var. Take my hand, and we will walk through this bower of the sen, whlie i show you that even exquisite coral is not north! of being compared with the richer jewels of 1 Christian cool. The first thing that Itrikes Inc in look- In; It the coral in its long continued accumulation. it is not turned up iilre icotepnxi, hut in an onthutting and an ‘outbrnnchtng of ages. In Polynefln there nre reef: hundreds of feet dean and one thousand miles long. Who built that! reels. these islands? The ”Wilma. the cornllinel. They were not melt worker: who built the pyra- mids on were thus muons, the-e crea- ture. of the no. What mull creo- tlono amounting to what not Ism- puo-f Who can minute the ice! 91'9- thn time than the mom all the other beautiful things he in! ever hem-d of, and cries out In ecstasy of admiration for the superior ml- ltm of our religion: "No mention an" be mule of coral." Nothiag so impresses one with the hot that our God loroa the beauti- tIL The most beautilul mrni ot the world never comes to human ohsoru- tioo. horm- and sunset. ho hangs up for nation to look at; he nay gm- the grass, and round ths dew into pearl. no set on tire lulu-Mi foliaga to plea-a sorta! sight. but than thousand- ol mile. of coral Ichiovaooat I think he II! had built lor'hh ova delight. In those galleries I. alone coo wall. The music 0! thoss he”, played on by the hours of the win, he only can hear. The not of tilt. white and tho bloom of that (rt-son he alone can nee. Having gar-lured thin world to please the huâ€" man race. and lifted a glorious heaven to plane the slgelic lntslligeucsa, I am glad that he has planted these gar- am of the deep to plm himself. But here and there God allows speci- ; Inns of submarine glory to he brought I. no set before us for sublime coo- te-piation. While l speak. these great nations of loophytes. mum-luau and ladrepores. 'llh tentacles (or trowel, an building Just such coral as we Ind In our text. The diamond my in more rare. the crystal may he more spark- ling, the chryoopraoe may be more shine, but the coral is the long. deep. everlasting hlush of the sea. Yet Job. who understood all kinds of precious stones. declares that the beauty and value of the coral are nothing com- pared 'tth our holy religion. and he picks up this corslllno formation and looks at it, and lungs it aside with oven ho guessed by tho-e who line only seen it above um. nod alter “0 WOW”. Which are its sculniorl. and architects, hove died and the chic! glories oi thew BHDMIM flower! have expired. Job. to my text. did not moon to depreciate this divine ”MPH!“ In the coral reefs along tin In coats. No one can ottord to do- Drechto these white pollen of the coop, built under 004'- direction. He never changes hi. pho- tor the build- ln; o! the inland. and atom: Ind tor mounted thousand. at you: the coral sud-u, And the cont anion. and the coral imminent: go on ad not i clam you tint you will pious God no atom your-cit it you will co into the minute cumin-lion o! the comb-their foundation. their plant- flu. (half lulu, thelr pillars. tuir corral, their claw-m. their reticulu- tion. mt: groupinr‘unillu of that. town of then. cities oi thou. on continuit- at them. indeed. you «out naming the main; of my text uulm you know something of iin'ooni. IAbyrlnthhn, stellar, coi- nuur. lot-i. dented like Ihioidl from homo. spotted lilo heparin. embroid- md "to loco, hung like uphold"!- twlllnt and nnrorn and sunburn- oi bounty! hon deco crimson to tolli- whit. on it. colon. You my Ind this work of God through tho noi- lllntlu dilly tumou- doom. or amid the Mulch. when the m tuba the tilde-t. and but. tho Iuhtint. old inflow- tho loudest. 11 examined a specimen on the shelf. I am realized what a holy o! ballet God can build and has built in the temple at one piece of coral. I do not. wonder that Ernst. Heckel. the great scientist, while in Ceylon, W" ’° entranced with the specimens which some Cluniese divers had brought up for his inspection that he himself planted into the sea, and went. clear under the Vans at the risk of his Illa. Main. and again, and again. that he might know more of the coral. the fie-my at which he indium cannot HY do you any that. inspired dra‘ whilst? When you wanted to set forth the superior value oi! our religion, you tossed aside the onyx, which is used for making exquisite mmeoa. and the sapphire. sky-blue. and to- m or rhomliic prism, and the ruby of frozen blood. and here you say that the coral. which Is a miracle or shape and a. tumour: or color to those who have studied it, in not worthy of men- tion in comparison with our holy re- ligion. "No mention shall be made of coral." At Saint Johnnbun. Vt» "I '- ‘ gnu-win bum by the chief citizen, u‘ no. sh- ran-J‘s. tom-u sun I. I“. I! nearâ€"int lit-p- XXVI“. Van 18â€"1.." or (lad for no In“. ficmnunz or 7H: nearâ€"con Auoua 'rm: comma. TMAGEé’ mm; “III. I aim your hand epln. and walk a llttle further on In thle garden at the sea, and l notlce the durahlllty at the work of the coral. Montgomery specks of II. He an: "Prnll were their tom, ephemeral their llvna, thelr masonry lmyertnhahle." Rhizo- pode are Insects no small that they are lhvlltble. and ye. they hunt the An- penlnee and they planted tor their town monument the Cordllleraa! It takes 187,000,000 of them to make one path. Corals are changing the unl- ‘ ptlon of the sea. saying to the com- ‘ merce ot the world, "Take this chanâ€" nel;” "take this channel;" "avald the other channel." Anlmnlculee heat- tng back the Athntlc and the Pacific me! If the Insect- ot the ocecn have built a reef a thousand tulle- longmho how: but that they m M hulld a M 8.0“ nip- ”3 a! mu. that I» on gum mu... m stun he Near my «fly home there was a piece called the "Two Bridm" Thmc hfldgn leaped the two screens. Well. my friends. the religion of Jesus Christ In two bridges. It bridges n" the past. I: arches and over-Dans all the future. It metre lhe dying Ml- low the landing pure of angels fresh from glory. It tame the sepulr-hre Into 3 wartime orchard. n catches up the dylng lilo full orchestra. Corâ€" nllum! And yet that does not express the beauty: "No mention shall he made of con I." la the honellnt par-an i ever saw.‘ when. after you who to nadontuml M- and Illa nobility of aonl shining through his countenance. you said; "He ia the loveliest ”not: I "n saw." No on. "or had a homely Christian mother. Whatever the world my than thought of her. then- were "re 1who though} ntl~yonr father. who ‘htd nil-ind her for fifty mm, and you. over whom an heat at": no nuny tender nialstratlons. When you think of tho angels of God. and your mother among them. she outshines them all. Oh. that our 1mm; people rotfld un- dmtand that no lunch bunnies the human reunion-nu as the religion r-f Jesus Christ! . it makes everythingi beautiful. Tumble beautiful. Sit-lt- neu beautiful. Disappointment bean. ttfnl. Everything beautiful. [land hue their cormpondonchs in nu. Men at (he no. Conllum: It In I synonym tot bounty. And yet In". I: no bum: In the can! com- puted VIII our rellglou. It ("a phi-monk: beauty. It don no! CMI‘. me (“Inn-I: M don um um; Mmm mm truth the when In on origin-"y «adored. but It nu thnd the (calm-m n! [M bong-Hm! ”mo I henna that shines clear through. Ho "In often, cm first an anal-hare. you mid of a man: "No Ono umlmm of (on! In culled the dondrophtttn. because It In Ilka I tree; {Another I: «lied the utmn. because ‘It link. a Iur; Another tn mtlod the butt: cont. tee-nu It. It mm the conâ€" volution at tho human bnln; another I: called the tan cont. because It In like the Inntrnnut with which you cool your-ell on I hot Any; “other looctmn I: «IN "to organ ptoe cont. hoe-nu It mumble- the It“ at our lk‘ll Instrument. All the flowom unl III the shrub- tn the urin- of the Again, I take your hand. Ind we walk on thrmub this garden or the sea and look more particularly than we did at the beauty 0! the coal. The poet- have all has hum-ted with It One of men wrote: “Then, with n broad and my motto". The (In coral ”veep: through the char deep not. And thc yellow and serum mm of tho You tell me we do not amount to much now, but try n- nfler a thou- sand mllllon ages of hallelujah. Let. u: hear the angels chant (or a mll~ Ilon centuries. lee up an eternity will: and, and then see it we do not amount to eomelhlng. More slowly and marvelously accumulative I: the grnco In ml soul than anything I can thlnk of. "No mention shall be made or coral." Again, I take your hand. and we wall on through um garden or the will be small luyor on top or small loy- er, and toasiiiud grief on the top of fossilized grief. Grace does not to up rapidly in your soul, but. bled-ed be God. it goes up. Ten thousand million use: will not iinish you. You will never be ilnilhed. 0n iorever! Up lorever! Out '01 the sea of earthly dis- quietude will gradually rise the rents. the islands, the continents, the hemâ€" iapheres of grandeur and glory. Men talk as though in this lite we only had time to build; but what we build in this life, as compared with what we shall build in the next file. is a: a ‘ striped shell to Australia. You so into ‘ an architect's study and there you see the sketch of a temple, the corner~ stone or which has not yet been laid. 0. that I could have an architectural sketch of what you will be after eter‘ any has wrought upon you! What pillars a! strength! What altar: of an- pernal worship! What pinnacles thrusting their glittering spikes into the sun that never sets! You do not scold tho corailines because they can‘ not build an island in a day. Why should you avoid yourself because you ftnnot complete a temple of holiness Are but "In- corn on the avian! mullin- vnn banal-3 new and my kind: Ind an liar-Ml] and Gilbert mu. put new daily um mum-tally ”Imam!" n m In the heart. You sometimes- set encourued Man;- the nob-ald- lng by the non! doe- not an on man nyldly. Why. you have all “m!!! to build In! The little annoy-noon of life are 1005;]:er builds", and than .' the than The h It It. In... I... “About the manna: m .1 new," sud m no“, “"1," know over 1- In!“ Xi H Litiie thing: decide great things. Ali that tremendous career at the last Napoleon hanging on the hand of a braheman who. on one of our Ameflcgn railways, caught him as he was fail- ing between the can of a flying train. The battle of Dunbar tag decided against the Scotch because their matches had given out. Aggy-99mm. of little things that pull down or build up. When an army or a rut-mu come to a bridge they Ire aivan cou- manded to break null. for their aim. uitaneoua tread will tie-troy ma strongest bridge. A bridge at Anglers, France. and I bridge it Brougham England, vent down bet-anal). "I!" ment kept Itep rune crooning, A‘s negation: of temptation Wind of normal. asmauon- of a.“ aggregation of Chrlltlan aloft, galiaoa of neitaacrificeai M the lrreaistibie power to ' to uplift, to destroy or to an. canoes and mat mum. c; It, won introduced into Japa baa falling overboard o! a poé from a chip to the harbor of M 4’24. Ima." Do you moo-o tho hunger! said: ”Then in no no“ at I, work- ing; I can not build the Sandwich Io- lands." Each one attaodod to Ila ow. Maine-o; and thou an the which Irlamla. and then an the Minor". Ah. ray friendo. tho ruler-puc- oI thh world In a [rut «Morton. I dld not no It start; I will not II Illa world m In close. . I an only In Inset an mun-rd ruth the amt wort to be done. but yet I nut do my part. Help build tlm rtrml totalin- I I'm. My oarâ€"nu mild! on thin no! long hr tore I was born. I may God that II] rhildnn rlay toil on thia red loo. altrr I an tic-alto Intact. all at In. hot honor-o by God to help leave up on not of Ilght acre-a which ah." Moor tho ocnu'a Immortal gladne-a. Better he luatsniflrant and metal than mat and Idle. The mastodono and run- thertnma o! the earth. what did they do but wait their great cart-auc- across thr laid and leave their stab tom through the atnta, while the cor- alllnos went on heart" no the ”land. all covered till Intltage and verdm Itettrr he a coralllne than a Ila-to- don. Ito now I am trying to make on. little mralllne. Tho polyp pick. out o! the wave that unites it carbonate 0! Iimr. and with thlt hullds up In own lnaeotlle masonry. So out of tho ware at your tears I take the salt: out of the brain I take the blue. and out of your hteevllng heart I uh the red: and out of them altogether I take this coral which I pray may not he «Iti- owned in the day when God makes up his jewela l cannon you do. a: the num- at the work and at bot link In no do- In; And yet. do you "no“ (he rhllopod um. "Then-II no and at I! rotting! I can not build Ila cmn- om Into the world. Tho ml with whlch you no; hill to sloop [In am! will go rm: him while he "van. a co.- ulou- or nucomcloul rennin! and u- wtnuon here. and In: help open on him the mu 0! a monon- and (than phnnt hereafter. Tho lulhuu or th' century will nln; through I“ the (aria. The humble-t good ocean pushed In time vlll In! through our nm. l sometime. cu dlxoonud. n ’ workinnotatalltohe - .. 7 ' fires of the inn day, but our- But the durability of the durability of our VOI- The coral is going-to crnln God will endure forever. No w eonrnged man ever lived thnn : en. the great musical comm _ mercifully criticized by brother M' and his music nomeiitnee "Wm Deal for twenty-five years. uni (creed. on his way to Vienna, to be: food M lodxlns at a plain home by the reed- alde. in the evening the family opened a musical instrument and played “Id sang with great enthusiasm: nml 0'“ oi’ the numbers they rendered was In emotional that tears ran down their cheeks while they sang and played. Beethoven. sitting in the room. ('30 deaf to hear the singing. was curious to know what was the music that so overpowered them, and when the! ”L through he reached up and took the folio in his hand and lound it we: his own musicâ€"Beethoven’ 3 Symphony Ill A-and he cried out, “1 wrote that!” The household sat and stood “I'M to find that their poor-looking guest was the great composer. But he no"! lett that house alive. A fever seized him that night. and no relief could be anon-tied. and in a iew days he died- But just before expiring he took “I. hand of bio nephew, who had been so!!! {or and arrived. saying. "After all. Hummel i must have had some tal- ‘.ent " Poor Beethoven! His work still lives, and in the twentieth cen‘ "If? will be better appreciated then i? was In the nineteenth; end a lone 3| there is on earth an orchestrn to play or on orniorio to ulna. Beethoven'l nine symphonies will he the enchant- ment of nation. But you are not I composer. and you any there in nothing remarkable about you-«only 1 mother trying to rear your family (or methi- neu Ind heaven. Yet'ihe long with which you sing your child to niece will never can it: mil-ion You will grow old and die. Tut Ion will pen I!!! to all, 3 33' a}; gunman "Then an]! be no no" “0.1.me

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