Te Karere . r our new revelation provides uswith evidences that will provide uswith a strong, true faith if we care touse our intelligence. MY HAPPINESS (Continued from Page 335) intelligence. An experience like thisis not mans great hardship but ratherhis great opportunity to grow towardperfection with understanding. Thisalso allows cause for self-satisfactionand to rejoice and appreciate EternalLife should it be obtained. To offer man this opportunity thereare two powers in the universe. Be- sides the already mentioned influencefor good, there is an influence for influence has the w


Te Karere . r our new revelation provides uswith evidences that will provide uswith a strong, true faith if we care touse our intelligence. MY HAPPINESS (Continued from Page 335) intelligence. An experience like thisis not mans great hardship but ratherhis great opportunity to grow towardperfection with understanding. Thisalso allows cause for self-satisfactionand to rejoice and appreciate EternalLife should it be obtained. To offer man this opportunity thereare two powers in the universe. Be- sides the already mentioned influencefor good, there is an influence for influence has the will and workto halt the progress of happiness andbring about confusion, darkness, cor-ruption, disease, and ignorance. It isalso this influence which is the authorof all the many false ideas of happinesswhich blind and deceive and prompt usto reject the true way.(To be continued next month.) The voice that smiles wins.—Theodore N. Vail. 338 TE K A RE RE (CONTINUED FROM LAST MONTH) New Zealand Sets the Pace. SN March of 1949 the work com-menced to secure a suitable locationfor our school. Several visits weremade to land agents in Hamilton, butno lasting success was ever enjoyedfrom this. There were offered, how-ever, two prospective farms by oneagent. One of these was about thirtymiles from Hamilton, and the otherone was about six miles from Hamil-ton. The one thirty miles out was afarm of one hundred and sixty-sixacres and was for sale at sixteen thou-sand pounds. The farm that was sixmiles out was two hundred and thirty-six acres and it was selling for twenty-six thousand six hundred pounds. Wecould see from the high prices thatthese two farms would be very expen-sive to buy. They were considered, butbecause of the high prices and the badlocations neither of them were went on and still no successcame until one day while this agentwas being visited a man happened tobe in his office doing some overheard the conversation betweenPresident Young and Mr. Gra


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