Helen Keller Newspaper Notices . together in a lovefor each other, and the success of ourmovement ana our lives depend onthis love for each other. Every oneof us has a right to make the most ofour lives, of the lives which God hasgiven us. A ray of lifeht has toudhed the dark-ness of my mind. It ihas brought sun-shine into my life. I was blind, nowI see; I was deaf, now I hear; I wasdumb, now I speak. The hands of others have wroughttfliia miracle in me, and it has alsocome through the love of God. Braveand good men have laid their veryhearts in my iands. That Is why Ifind life Inspiring. I am


Helen Keller Newspaper Notices . together in a lovefor each other, and the success of ourmovement ana our lives depend onthis love for each other. Every oneof us has a right to make the most ofour lives, of the lives which God hasgiven us. A ray of lifeht has toudhed the dark-ness of my mind. It ihas brought sun-shine into my life. I was blind, nowI see; I was deaf, now I hear; I wasdumb, now I speak. The hands of others have wroughttfliia miracle in me, and it has alsocome through the love of God. Braveand good men have laid their veryhearts in my iands. That Is why Ifind life Inspiring. I am a ctoild ofthe manual power guided by love andimagination. Life sihould be filled witihmelody. We are blind to all thepretty ways of children. But the^,.senses alone are not enough. It is .only when united with imaginationand thought and feeling that thesenses acquire full Keller said tihat sihe was a real^Socialist. Sihe said tha* the lazy oneswill not get all the cake under Socialism,as they do now. 1^ MllLI-i.;!^,. t >^*^ MISS HEIiEN KEIil/EB. llELEN KELLER SAYSSHE IS SOClALISTi Wonderful Blind and Deaf GirlLectures to 3000 in Tre-mont Temple. A MARVELOUS EXHIBiriONj Dumb from Childhood Until Re-cently, Miss Keller GivesAddress of Optimism. ! A throng that taxed the capacity ofjTremont temple sat enthralled last)!night while Miss Helen Keller, the deafj;and blind marvel, spoke in her firat| public lecture In Boston, with the voiceshe has labored with for 20 years toarticulate her meaning. Her voice, although mechanical andsomber, was an inspiration to thosewho were familiar with the life ofthe girl, who a few months after herbirth, was deprived of the power ofspeech, sight and hearing. Her lectunwas an embodiment of the beautifuphilosophy and optimisna, which hav(made her life full and joyous. Mrs. John Macy, who was Miss Sullivan, of Springfield, who has been heteacher and constant companion for 2years, related the history of Miss Kellers education, and as sh


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Keywords: ., bookauthorunknown, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1913