With the children on Sundays, through eye-gate, and ear-gate into the city of child-soul . eye?Which can take pictures quicker, the eye or the camera? What is lacking inpictures taken by the camera? Do our eyes show the colors of the objects?Of what is the camera an imitation? Is it expensive to take many pictures withthe camera? Why do people pay large sums for oil paintings? Was there evera picture painted by an artist or photographed with a camera so beautiful as thesmall pictures taken by the eye? For size, color, variety and convenience,which are the finest pictures in the world? Which pi


With the children on Sundays, through eye-gate, and ear-gate into the city of child-soul . eye?Which can take pictures quicker, the eye or the camera? What is lacking inpictures taken by the camera? Do our eyes show the colors of the objects?Of what is the camera an imitation? Is it expensive to take many pictures withthe camera? Why do people pay large sums for oil paintings? Was there evera picture painted by an artist or photographed with a camera so beautiful as thesmall pictures taken by the eye? For size, color, variety and convenience,which are the finest pictures in the world? Which pictures are most treasuredin old age? FROGS. THE PLAGUES IN EGYPT. Suggestion:—Objects: Some paper frogs, which can be purchased at any-Japanese store for about five cents each. They are often found also in toy stores. MY DEAR YOUNG FRIENDS: I am sure you will allbe able to tell me what this object is which I hold inmy hand (voices: Frogs, bullfrogs). Well, it looksexactly like a bullfrog, and was made to imitate a bull-frog. The bullfrogs I have here are made of paper, and were made. in Japan. I bought them that I might show them to you and preach you an object sermon on the subject of the Ten Plagues in Egypt. You all remember how Joseph was sold by his brethren into 222 FROGS. 223 bondage in Egypt, how he was cast into prison and afterward takenout and made prime minister over all that land; how during theseven years of plenty he laid up corn for the seven years of faminewhich followed, and afterward his father and his brethren—in allthe seventy persons who constituted Jacobs family— came downinto Egypt to be fed. After two hundred and fifty years this fam-ily had increased until it numbered nearly two millions of had made slaves of them, and compelled them to workin the brickyards of Egypt. The task-masters were very beat them with whips, and demanded excessive labor fromthem. These people were the chosen people of God, and theirvoice was lift


Size: 2093px × 1194px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookc, bookdecade1910, bookidwithchildrenonsu00stal, bookyear1911