The Alleghany Times H. B. Zabriskie ... . Editor and Publisher Mrs. Sidney Gembill .. Local News Editor Published Every Thursday at Sparta, North Carolina, and entered at the Sparta, N. C., Post Office as Second Class Matter. Subscription Rate: One Dollar a Year, Strictly in Advance Thursday, September 19, 1935. A Prayer Written More Than Thirty Years Ago By Mark Twain Gives One Much To Think About Mark Twain, the world’s greatest humorist, wrote a prayer about 30 years ago which has recently been made public. Regarding it, he said, “I have told the whole truth in that prayer, and only dead men can tell the truth in this world. It can be published after I am dead.” Lovers of peace a!S well as lovers of war will find in this prayer much to think about at this particular time when several of the nations of the world seem almost on the verge of war. “O Lord our God, help us to tear their soldiers to bloody shreds with our slfells; help us to cover their smiling fields ’with the pale forms of their patriot dead; help us to drown ,the thunder of the guns with the wounded, writing in pain; help us to lay waste their humble homes with a hur ricane of fire; help us to wring the hearts of their unoffending widows with unavailing grief; help us to turn them out roofless with their little children to wander unfriended through wastes of their desolated land in rags and hunger and thirst, sport of the sun flames of summer and the icy winds of winter, broken in spirit, worn with travail, im ploring Thee for the refuge of the grave and denied j it—for our sakes, who adore Thee, Lord, blast their hopes, blight their lives, protract their bitter pil grimage, make heavy their steps, water their way with their tears, stain the white snow with the blood of their wounded feet! We ask of One who is the spirit of love and who is the ever-faithful re- ■ fuge and friend of all that are sore beset, and seek His aid with humble and contrite hearts. Grant our prayer, O, Lord, and Thine shall be the praise, and honor and glory, now and ever. Amen.” A newspaper editor, who recently published this prayer of Mark Twain’s, added a paragraph which, he said, might, today, with 30 years of scientific advance since the death of Twain, have been ap propriately included. “. . . help us to rain down bombs of poison gas and high explosives upon their great cities, O Lord our God, toppling buildings and killing men, women and children, everyone; help us to poison their water supplies and their food supplies; help us to strike them from the air and from beneath the sea; help us to loose the germs of deadly diseases in their midst, O Father on High. . .” That Which One Leaves Behind May Bring Immortality. You May Live Forever by John Edwin Price Do you recall when you used to stand dominoes on end, not quite a domino’s length apart, and then push the end one? Your little push followed through the whole group until finally the last domino went ker-flop. You have probably noted the farmers planting, expecting to get their seed back and much more. They thereby make sure that seed will always be the world. Have you learned something by experience— something beautiful, something helpful ? Or, by definite concentration, have you tuned in a worthy thought—worked it out in your life and made it a part of yourself? This part of you that has grown by( experience or been evoked by meditation can be made to live forever. Plant that beautiful truth in the heart of some young person. Sow the happy re sults of that experience in the waiting soil of another nind. Nourish it, cultivate it, watch it grow. will grow as the seed grows. Or, thinking of dominoes, that person to whom you give a help ful push will push another and he another down endless centuries. You can make sure that in this will live forever. handicapped people have thus made sure, middle of the last century, an English clergyman had to give up his regular work due to the ravages of consumption. He left the London slums for a rendezvous with Death in Devonshire. “Every morning,” his biographer says, “the sick man lifted himself laboriously in his bed and watch ed the sun creep up the eastern sky. Would that be his last day? One morning the nurse found him dead in bed, his face turned peacefully toward the eastern window. On a nearby table lay a sheet of paper covered With feeble and almost illegible writ ing. The nurse deciphered a few words—‘Heaven’s morning breaks,’ ‘Earth’s vain shadows flee.’ Then she gave the paper to the minister’s friends, and thanks to their acquaintance with his handwriting, they were able to make out the hymn he had written just before Death came. ‘Abide with me, fast falls the eventide, The darkness deepens—Lord, with me abide! When other helpers fail and comforts flee Help of the helpless, O abide with me!’ ” Henry Lyte’s hymn has furnished the push that hasi helped millions up the steep road. His courage and faith sown in millions of singing hearts will live down the centuries. < Even though handicapped you; too, can make sure that you will! live forever. ‘Many persons think that by hoarding money they are gaining safety for themselves. If money is only hope for independence, you will never it The only real security that a man can have world is a reserve of knowledge, experience ability.”—Anon. this Fast driv is said to be the cause of most but you can hardly get a fast 1 ad wbkfi con trim Poor GmtTnMuc* . . ^«KUawtfA«TOF[ MONUMENTS TO BOOK ALL ABOUT US Professor Huxley did not stand alone in his opinion. James An thony Froude, never accused of prejudice in favor of orthodoxy, said: The Bible, thoroughly known, is a literature in itself—the rarest and richest in all departments of thought and imagination which exists. Said Frederic Harrison, fore most exponent of the religion of Positivism: The English Bible is the true school of English literature. It possesses every quality of our language in its highest form'. The book which begot English prose is still its supreme type. Lord Macaulay wrote: The English Bible—a book which, if everything else in our language should perish, would alone show the whole extent of its power and beauty. And Charles Dickens, writing to his son: I put a New Testament among your books for the very same reason and with the very same hopes that made me write an easy account of it when you were a little child—because, it is the best book that ever w,as or ever will be in the world, and because it teaches you the best lessons by which any human creature who tries to be truthful and faithful can possibly be guided. So we might discuss the Book in its influence on literature and on law; in its contribution to the spread of the English language; in its inspiration of philantropies, for, as Leclty said in his History of European Morals, it has “cov ered the globe with countless in stitutions of mercy, absolutely un known to the pagan world.” Vol umes have been written, and will be, on every phase of this sub ject, but we do not need them. The monuments to the Book are all about us; every department of modern civilized life bears the record of its influence Instead of rehearsing again these, well-worn testimonies, let us close this secies with a single dramatic story, a story so old that surely many readers will find it entirely new. It starts with George III of England, in the year 176.8. In that year the Royal Society of London appealed to the King to send a royal expedition to the South Seas to observe a transit of Venus across the disk of the sun, which event was to occur in 1769. A bark of three hundred and seventy tons was accordingly sent out, and the island chosen was for’ a time called King George's Island, but later it became and at present is known by its native name of Otaheite, or, in its ab breviated form, Tahiti. It is there the modem writers go to get local color for their South Sea stories. IAMBLING 'RpUND NEW YORK *^4IU6M KEMMV At first thought it seems com pletely insane that October 1st should be the one day in all the year that the many thousands in the City of Seven Million should move from one apartment to an other. Ask any real estate man, however, and he’ll tell you that if leases expired at odd times, the apartment you want might not be vacated until two months after you want it. Meantime where do you and your furniture go? Sell ing costs would go sky high— and so would rents. They’ve tried it, and know. * * * Hundreds of brownstone houses in the more fashionable Manhat tan neighborhoods have been con verted or entirely remodeled into small apartments. One woman, born in New York City (you sel dom meet such) inherited seven teen old brownstones, and now rents them. “I’ve lived in them all my life,” she says, "and can’t understand why people like them. They’re just old houses to me, without any elevators!” • • * • The class of people living in remodeled brownstones, according to one well educated rental agent, “at least in the East Fifties,” is much better than those in the more modern apartment buildings in the same rental price class. . . I wonder if that isn’t a reproach to the architects of the box-like cubicles they call “modem apart ments?" Tlie old, high-ceilinged rooms have much more character. * * * But these old remodeled brown stones in the East Fifties and Six ties have their days numbered, probably, for when Rockefeller Center office buildings are all filled up, there’ll be too great a demand for apartment space to make little three and four # floor houses profitable in that area. They’ll pile the apartments higher for Manhattan cliff dwellers. * • * “If I had antyhing to sell," says a friend, “and wanted to establish an office at a favorable address, I’d choose Rockefeller Center. It's the most publicised office space in the whole coun try.’’ And perhaps he’s right, though the Empire State Build ing ran a close second for a time. No Conean tration __ Bobby, who had just started to school, was proudly telling his aunt about his school work. She asked him a few questions which he could not answer correctly. “Well,’’ Bobby’s aunt said, “you’ll simply have to learn to concentrate.” . “Oh! Aunt Mary, we haven’t taken that up yet; we’re only reviewing.”—Montreal Daily Star. Coat and Waistcoat “How many coats of paint do you put on that fence?” Painter: "Two, sonny. Why?” “Well, if you put on a third coat, it would be an overcoat, wouldn’t it?" Painter: "Yes, and a waste coat, too.”—Ireland’s Own. The Woman’s Angje When you accept an invitation, make the understanding clear by naming the hour of the appoint ment in your acceptance. That verifies it, and in the event that your host or hostess finds the in vitation was incorrect, there is an opportunity to correct it and avoid embarrassment on both sides. If you have an eye for color, look at some of the fruit and vegetable stands that are nicely arranged for fancy display. And when you realize how attractive foods can be, plan a meal some time so that color in your cooked foods will come somewhere near their- beauty when they’re raw. Curiosity is early displayed in the infant as he pulls the wheel off his toy wagon. But a child of two can be taught to appreci ate the difference between de stroying his own wagon and that of his brother—laying the foun-. dation for a proper respect of other people’s property. . . By the age of five, reason can be in voked. Before, it is usually a matter of reward and punishment. Three points in which women most frequently show bad taste, are the use of mascara, nail grooming and the use of lip-stick properly. Figures are most fre quently properly watched, but too dark eye shadow and mascara, too red lips and rather bad care of the nails are still points to be criticized. The usual amount of fat in milk, according to authorities, is but 3 1-2 per cent, which has little effect on the weight of the steady consumer. Protein, the largest constituent of milk, forms muscles and lean flesh. The rest consists of valuable minerals. All of which would indicate that milk is not fattening. ~ Frozen desserts made in an automatic refrigerator, though they are good, are not exactly like ice cream. Remember that it is the whipping and churning that makes smooth ice cream. Hence the mousses and parfaits—whip ped cream, sometimes with beaten egg whites, and flavoring, are usually the most satisfactory frozen desserts. The New Champ A stranger was dining in Aber deen. When the meal was over he handed the waiter a penny tip. The waiter looked at the coin in his hand. “Do ye ken, mister,” he said, “that the champion miser in Aberdeen gies me tuppence?” The. stranger held out his hand smilingly. “Here,” he said, “shake hands with the new cham pion.”—Answers Prefers Domestic Fruit “What do you think of the Ethiopian imbroglio?” “Well, I must say that I like our old-fashioned fruits best.” Toe Difficult "Jimmy, what is classical music?” "The kind you cant whistle, ma’am.” Louisa’s Letter WIVES WITHOUT HOLIDAYS SHOULD DEMAND THEM Dear Louisa:— We cannot afford a maid and I do all my work excepting for the laundry which a woman comes in for. I never get any recre ation away from my children and my husband thinks I should be content to stay home with them all of the time. He goes to town several times a week but if I ever go along I have to carry all of the children and really it is such an undertaking that I come home more tired than if I’d never gone. But if I stay home I never see anything—in fact I feel like a moss-back now from being out of touch with everything for such a long time. So what am I to do? MRS. J. A. C. Answer: My advice to you, Mrs. J. A. C., is to stiffen up your backbone and tell your hus band that you are tired of being a slave. If he had to hire a wo man to do his cooking and care for the children, she would not only get some good cash money each week but she, would, also have her evenings and at least one afternoon off to do as she pleased. It is certainly as little as he can do to keep the child ren one afternoon a week while you go to town with a little cash. If he doesp’t want to do that— and some men have a way of getting out of disagreeable jobs —he can hire the laundress, if she is dependable, and she can look after the children. The majority of men are selfish and if their wives demand nothing that is what they usually get* Ten to one if your husband sees that you have some recreation he will be just as delighted with the change, after he has made it, as you Twill be. You will feel better, look better, and be able to do more for your family, if you get away from them each week for a time and enjoy yourself. You will see what other people are wearing and it will help you plan for your children. It will give you a new outlook on life and you won’t feel as if you are caught in a snare from which there is no release. If there were some way of making men like your husband change places with you for jult a short time it would not take long for them to decide that a diet of baby tending indefinitely was not the delightful holiday they apparently think it is for their wives. Yours, LOUISA The Family Doctor by John Joseph Gaines, M. D. SOME TERRIBLE FIGURES By courtesy of the Missouri Social Hygiene Association I am in receipt of some statistics with permission to hand a part to my readers for whatever they may be worth. The cost of venereal diseases to one large city ranges from $2,071,000 to half a million more than that. Annual costs. These diseases, two of them, are a causative factor in many more serious afflictions of mankind and womankind. The cost of first-year treat-, ment of syphilis is much in ex cess of sums available for health expenditures in the budgets of working men’s families. From these diseases come hun dreds, yes thousands of cases of rheumatism, neuritis, heart dis ease. and congenital afflictions in the offspring. It is appalling. All from just two • so-called "major venereal diseases.” What a world of affliction and suffering. It is the penalty for vicious, lustful appetites. I dare not mention certain of the ulti mate loathsome conditions suffered by careless victims of human lust! Tlie picture would be too dis gusting. Isn’t it enough to justify warn ings, shouted from every house top? Your physician knows. Ask him for. information. Millions of dollars are paid annually to drug stores for so called "specifics.” There is no way of finding out the actual sums spent. A volume could be written and yet the greater half would remain untold. One would think a warning such as this would be sufficient. TV. Sign Marie: “Are they in love?” Maoie: “They must be. She listens to him describe a ball game and he listens to her telling how her cousin’s new dress was wgif/ip ”—Pathfinder. International Sunday School Lar •on for September 22, 1»3S. Golden Text; “Blessed is the man that endureth temptation; for when he hath been approved, he shall receive the crown of life, which the Lord promised to them that love him.”—James 1:12. (Leason Tents Ji 1:1-17) We study this week the epistle of James, which some think was probably the earliest epistle writ ten. The author is generally ac cepted to have been James, the brother of Jesus, the Jewish lead er of the early Christian church in Jerusalem. There are four men, apparently, by the name of James refer red to in the New Testament. First, James, the son of Zebedee, who with his brother, John, and Peter were the three chief mem bers of the inner circle of dis ciples who followed Jesus. Another was also an apostle, referred to as the son of Alphaeus. Then, there was James the Little, the adjective probably referring to his physical stature. The fourth, the subject of our lesson, was the brother of Jesus. James was undoubtedly a wor thy man but his relationship to our Lord probably helped him reach the lofty position he occu pied in the early church. From boyhood he had been closely as sociated with Jesus and formed one of the earliest groups of be lievers following the Crucifixion. “No doubt James sat by Jesus at his teacher's feet in the town school,” says H. C. Moule. “He had roved with him on the hills; he had watched with him the plowmen and the sowers; and the oxen of the threshing floor; he had worked beside him, very likely, at the bench, Joseph’s apprentice at first, then, possibly, the helper of his brother Jesus as he succeed ed his reputed father to be the very stay of the widowhood of his mother.” In the stirring events which followed the Crucifixion and Res urrection of Jesus, James was identified. It is recorded in 1 Cor. 1&:7 that Jesus "was seen of James.” Later, according to Gal. 1:19 Paul had an interview with him. Acts 12:17 tells how Peter, after his escape from prison gave instructions that information be carried to James. This James soon became recognized as the head of the Jerusalem church. “Though not one of the twelve,” says Philip SchafT, "he enjoyed, owing to his relationship to our Lord, and his commanding piety, almost apostolic authority, especially in Judea and among the Jewish con verts.” So, we find James in this au thoritative position when the ques tion arose whether the new Gen tile members should submit to the Mosaic law. Paul and Barnabas were sent from Antioch to the Jerusalem church to see if some decision could be reached. “The problem was to save both the lib-' arty of the gospel and the author ity of the Scriptures,” says J. M. Stiller. “Antioch stood for the for mer, the teachers who came down from Jerusalem for the latter. “God’s Spirit harmonised the two.” “If these teachers from Judea had been victorious,” says C, Campbell Morgan, "then through those earliest years, last ing until now, there would have been division between the Hebrew Church of Christ and the Gentile Church of Christ, and the bitter ness caused by such division would be mutually destructive, and the The Hint He had long outstayed his wel come. “Tell me,” said his host, at last, “how long was the fish you caught the other day?” “Oh,” said the guest,/ holding his hands wide apart, "so long.” "Well, so long?” returned the host, “if you really must be go ing.”—Tit-Bits. testimony of Christ to the world would have been lost.” When the conference wag held Peter spoke first, calling atten tion to his own experience with the descent of the Holy Spirit upon Gentiles and that the old yoke had been more than the fathers could bear. Paul and Bar nabas supported Peter’s views. Finally, James quoted Amos 9:11 12, arguing that the liberty of the Church to present the gospel to . the Gentiles was maintained but at the same time the promises of God to the chosen people had not been cancelled. Thereupon, the suggestion of James as to the dis position of the vexatious question was adopted. As said by Philip Schaff, James “was an honest, conscientious, eminently practical, conciliatory Jewish Christian, the right man, at the right time, in the right plaee. The mission of James was evidently to stand in the breach between the synagogue and the Church, and to lead the disciples of Moses gently to Christ. He was the only man who could do it in the time of the approach of the doom of the Holy City. As long as there was any hope of a conversion of the Jews as a na tion, he prayed for it and made the transition as easy as possible. When that hope vanished, his mis sion was fulfilled.” ‘‘The Epistle of James is the most Jewish writing in the New Testament," says Doremus Almy Hayes. “If we eliminate two or three passages concerning refer ence to Christ, the whole Epistle might find its place just as prop erly in the canon of the Old Tes tament as in that of the New Testament, as far as its substance of doctrine and contents is con cerned. That could not be said of any other book in the New Testament. There is no mention of the incarnation of the resur rection of Christ. The word ‘gos pel’ does not occur in the Epistle. Nevertheless, the Spirit of Christ is here. The principles of this Epistle are the principles of the Sermon on the Mount, to which there are more references than can be found anywhere else in the New Testament in the same space (about 16 references). It has to do with the outward life for the most part, and the life it pictures is that of a Jew in formed with the Spirit of Christ." 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