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Philip Dru: Administrator; A Story of Tomorrow, 1920-1935

Chapter 4 No.4

Word Count: 814    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

remacy

th her in order to consult one of the leading oculists, and arrangements were made immediately. On the last day but one, as they sat under their favorite fig tree, they talked much

y seen at that time, but more clearly now, will finally come into full vision. The materialists under the leadership of Darwin, Huxley and Wallace, went far in the

hed Gloria. "You belong to the pulpit of rea

itself. Now, man is at last about to enter into that splendid kingdom, the promise of which Christ gave us when he said, 'My Father and I are one,' and again, 'Whe

future children are trained from infancy that they can measurably conqu

Philip had rarely heard in her, "is perhaps t

, "But you were preaching t

o hear what you w

er, and to what extent our lives are spiritual rather than material," she answered, "but it's hard to

day may, and only wholesome thoughts will have a place in human minds, mental ills will take flight along

s, but to use our minds and bodies in an earnest, honest endeavor to avert threatened disaster. We should not brood ov

know,

e resolution, to do the best we could under all conditions, and never fear the result. Then, too, we should be trained not to have such an unreasonable fear of death. The Eastern peoples are far wiser in this respect than we. They have learned to look upon death as a happy transition to something better. And they are right, for

ning of a more splendid day, and we should be taught that every emotion, every effort here that i

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