. The uplift [serial] . t than am I. 2. To keep silent about my opinions anddeal with facts and rea-sons rather than what I think. 3. To hold steady under strain. Nothing is as bad as it looks. 4. To hear both sides before I decide major matters. Every man hassomething to teach me. 5. To leave important decisions until the following morning. Godmay take a hand if I hold off a little. 6. To treat every man as my equal. Those who feel inferior will re-spond with new values and my betters are also timid. 7. To believe that every man means to play fair. Better to be im-posed upon occasionally than
. The uplift [serial] . t than am I. 2. To keep silent about my opinions anddeal with facts and rea-sons rather than what I think. 3. To hold steady under strain. Nothing is as bad as it looks. 4. To hear both sides before I decide major matters. Every man hassomething to teach me. 5. To leave important decisions until the following morning. Godmay take a hand if I hold off a little. 6. To treat every man as my equal. Those who feel inferior will re-spond with new values and my betters are also timid. 7. To believe that every man means to play fair. Better to be im-posed upon occasionally than suspicious all the time. 8. To give my associates, not orders, but responsibilities with creditfor results attained. 9. That no case is hopeless. Every failure deserves three trialsunder varying conditions. It may be a matter of finding his place. 10. Having done all things to decide, and having decided not tochange without reason.—Bishop A. Miller. From: The Illinois State Training School THE UPLIFT iMefrttaiunts rD. A JEWEL FOR YOUR MEMORY GOLLEGTIOJM (LETS MEMORIZE IT) Bless tthe Lord, O my soul: and all that is within me, bless his holy the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits. (Psalm 103: 1-2) At the age of 53 a miracle happened to Borghild Dahl. All her life shenad been almost blind and could see only faintly at a very close an operation at the Mayo Clinic her vision was improved forty tells in her book how washing dishes became a new thrill, she couldnot only run her hands through the suds, but sihe could hold the bubblesup to the light and see tiny rainbows. She could stand at her window andwatch the sparrows as they flew through the snow. Her whole world be-came a new and exciting place. She closed her book with a prayer ofthanks for the simple things of life. Imagine thanking God for the privilege of washing dishes and watch-ing sparrows play in the yard. Heavenly Father, we offer our thanks for the multitude of blessing
Size: 1491px × 1677px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookauthorstonewalljacksonmanua, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900