Juvenile Instructor . have a les-son for all who will carefully study andprofit by their lives. The spirit bywhich he was inspired and which ledhim on to greatness affords a valuablelesson to every man however humble in 444 THE JUVENILE INSTRUCTOR. life his station may be. He did not sitdown and wait for chances; he did his best at whatever he had to do. Povertywas no hindrance. SOME OF OUR SUNDAY SCHOOLS. THE GLENDAUE SUNDAY SHOOL. ODAY we present a picture of asomewhat unfortunate SundaySchool, one that at the close of the last year had an enrollment of morethan one hundred, but at present h


Juvenile Instructor . have a les-son for all who will carefully study andprofit by their lives. The spirit bywhich he was inspired and which ledhim on to greatness affords a valuablelesson to every man however humble in 444 THE JUVENILE INSTRUCTOR. life his station may be. He did not sitdown and wait for chances; he did his best at whatever he had to do. Povertywas no hindrance. SOME OF OUR SUNDAY SCHOOLS. THE GLENDAUE SUNDAY SHOOL. ODAY we present a picture of asomewhat unfortunate SundaySchool, one that at the close of the last year had an enrollment of morethan one hundred, but at present hasonly about sixty. The cause of thislarge decrease is that three epidemicshave followed each other in quick suc- ern Utah, a pleasant little settlement afew miles north of Orderville. Of coursethe interruptions resulting from thesesicknesses and changes, have workedagainst the best interests of the school has had six departments—kindergarten, primary, first and secondintermediate, preparatory theological. THE GLENDALE SUNDAY SCHOOL. cession—smallpox, scarlet fever andmumps. In addition to this misfortunea number of the citizens are moving toother parts, among them the first assist-ant superintendent has gone to WestJordan and the second assistant has leftfor the Big Horn. This school is situ-ated at Glendale in Long Valley, south- and theological. Its superintendant isElder James W. Watson. Good sing-ing is one of its pleasant features, asthe superintendant is a lover of trust that before the end of theyear a change will have come in the tideof events and thereby the Glendale schoolwill have resumed its old prosperity.


Size: 1988px × 1257px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthorgeorgequ, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookyear1903