The
last Sentinel and Journal have just been read and thoughts from the many beautiful articles remain as sweet, hallowed, and helpful memories attuning consciousness to things divine.
The
Electrical Review, one of the leading electrical papers, in the issue of March 12, 1904, contained an article entitled, "The Present Condition of Radioactive Science," which deals with the much-talked-of discovery of radium.
The
religious instinct of our Puritan ancestors is preserved in more or less of its original form on those occasions when by state proclamation we abstain from labor and give ourselves over to fasting or feasting and prayer.
But to what avail have I a spirit separate from the men and women around me, if I must take my temper from theirs, be happy only when they are gay and serene only when they are kindly?
Many
reports have reached us of "overflowing" Thanksgiving services, and it would be a pleasure, were it possible, in our limited space, to refer more specifically to them all.
The following account of collection taken in the Baptist Temple in Philadelphia is interesting because of the spontaneity which seems to have marked the occasion, and the unselfish thought which was expressed by this "self-denial" day.