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would have telephoned that message within the hearing of the seamstress.

The truth of the matter was that her heart—as much as she had left of it—was all wrapt up in her pet dogs, and her interest in human beings had become as a matter of habit, simply a question of the amount of service they could render her. She is probably whining to-day about the seamstress who didn't know her place and who was jealous of people who had means.—, "Searchlights."

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Animals as Pest Destroyers—See.

Animals Before Men—See.

Animals, Inferior to Man—See.

Animals not Original—See.

Animals, Reason in—See.

ANIMISM

The child's religious nature, like that of primitive man, is animistic. Professor Dawson, in "The Child and His Religion," says:

It is hard for children to resist the feeling that a summer shower comes with a sort of personal benevolence to water the dry flowers and grass. A little girl of four years illustrated this feeling on a certain occasion. There was a thunder-shower after a long dry spell. The rain was pattering on the sidewalk outside the house. The child stretched forth her hands toward the raindrops and said: "Come, good rain, and water our plants!" Flowers and trees have individuality for most children, if not for all. Ruth's mama found her sitting among the wild geraniums, some distance from the house. "What are you doing, Ruth?" "I'm sitting by the flowers. They are lonesome and like to have me with them, don't you know?" At another time she said: "Mama, these daisies seem to look up at me and talk to me. Perhaps they want us to kiss them." On one occasion she said to her brother, who was in the act of gathering some flowers she claimed for herself, "I don't think it nice to break off those poor flowers. They like to live just as well as you do." The boy thus chided by his sister for gathering her flowers was generally very fond of plants and trees, and felt a quite human companionship in them. He could not bear to see flowering plants hanging in a broken condition, or lying crusht upon the sidewalk. Even at the age of ten years, he would still work solicitously over flowers like the violets, bluets, and crowfoots, with evident concern for their comfort.

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Announcement, Apt—See.

ANSWER, A SOFT

A drunken carter came into a Greenock (Scotland) train and sat opposite a clergyman, who was reading his paper. Recognizing the profession of his vis-a-vis, the carter leaned forward and in a maudlin way remarked, "I don't believe there's any heaven." The clergyman paid no heed. "Do you hear me?" persisted the carter. "I don't believe there's any heaven." Still the clergyman remained behind his newspaper. The carter, shouting his confession loudly, said, "I tell ye to your face, and you're a minister, that I don't believe there's any heaven." "Very well," said the clergyman; "if you do not believe there is any heaven, go elsewhere, but please go quietly." (Text.)—London Graphic.

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Anthem, Extending a National—See .

ANTHROPOMORPHISM

Spiritual manhood has put away childish thinking. What, for instance, does a child think about God? Professor Street publishes some first-hand illustrations of childish conceptions of God. He says that children "completely anthropomorphize God, making Him subservient to time, space, and passions, just the same as they themselves are." I recall an example or two: When a girl was told that the stars were God's eyes, she at once asked where His legs were. Another saw, for the first time, a cupola on a barn. Gazing at it she asked, "Does God live in that little house?" A boy asked some one if God made the river running back of his house. On receiving an affirmative answer, he promptly replied, "He must have had a big shovel." When another boy refused to say his prayers, he was asked for the reason. He answered, "Why, they are old. God has heard them so many times that they are old to Him, too. Why, He knows them as well as I do myself."—

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