'General, it seems singular that you have gone through all the trouble of army service and frontier life and have never been provoked into swearing. I have never heard you utter an oath or use an imprecation.'
"'Well, somehow or other, I never learned to swear,' he replied. 'When a boy I seemed to have an aversion to it, and when I became a man I saw the folly of it. I have always noticed, too, that swearing helps to arouse a man's anger; and when a man flies into a passion, his adversary, who keeps cool, always gets the better of him. In fact, I never could see the use of swearing. I think it is the case with many people who swear excessively that it is a mere habit, and that they do not mean to be profane; but, to say the least, it is a great waste of time.'"—J. M. Farrar.
(3140)
SWIFTNESS OF BIRDS
The inexperienced gunner will declare emphatically
that any old bird can fly at least
a mile a second, but science is of the opinion
that the swift, the most speedy bird of all,
can make but 250 miles an hour. The swallow
can cover ninety-two miles in an hour
and the eider-duck ninety miles. All birds
of prey are necessarily rapid in their flight;
the eagle can attain a speed of 140 miles per
hour and the hawk 150 miles. The flight of
most migratory birds does not exceed fifty
miles an hour, and the crow can accomplish
but twenty-five.
A falcon belonging to Henry IV of France escaped from Fontainebleau and was found at Malta twenty-four hours later, having covered a distance of at least 1,530 miles. Sir John Ross, on October 6, 1850, dispatched from Assistance Bay two young carrier-pigeons, one of which reached its dove-*cote in Ayrshire, Scotland, on the 13th. This was comparatively slow time for the distance, two thousand miles. It is probable that flights which have occasioned astonishment by greatly exceeding the average have been materially assisted by aerial currents moving in the same direction.—Harper's Weekly.
(3141)
SWINDLING
An instance of "high finance," under the guise of religion, is set forth by the daily press in the case of one, Carl Helmstadt, of whom this is said:
The detectives report an instructive conversation
with this man, who tells clergymen
he is a brand from the burning and needs
their prayers for deliverance.
"How many ministers have you swindled?" the detective asked Helmstadt.
"Oh, I don't know how many."
"More than one hundred?"
"Sure," answered Helmstadt. "Why not? We kneel down and pray together, and we both weep. Then I tell them I feel greatly relieved, spiritually. Then I sting them for a few dollars."
(3142)
SYMBOL OF LIFE
Men talk sometimes as if the passage of a
ship through the sea or a bird through the
air is a fit symbol of man's passage through
this world. I do not think so. A better
symbol would be the passage of a plow
through the soil leaving a furrow behind.
What does the furrow include? All the
memory of every beautiful picture and landscape
you have ever seen. It includes the
memory of every experience, every sweet association,
every tie of love, whether of father,
mother, wife or children. All these, whether
living or dead, speak to you. They have a
voice, a language that you will understand.—George
L. Perin.
(3143)
Symbol of Life, The Tree a—See Tree a Spiritual Symbol.
Symbol of Sacrifice—See Memorial of
Lincoln.
SYMBOL, POWER OF A
The waving folds of an American flag are
credited with saving a house in the midst of
the fire following the earthquake in San
Francisco in April, 1906. The house stands
at 1654 Taylor Street. As the fire crept up
to it its owner determined it should go
gloriously and ran up a flag on the roof pole.
The eaves had caught fire, but a company
of the Twentieth United States Infantry, under
a lieutenant, passing a block away, saw
the banner waving proudly amid the smoke.
"A house that flies a flag like that is worth
saving," is the expression the narrator puts
on the lips of the young officer. The men
ran to the place, beat off the flames and saved
the house.
(3144)
SYMBOLIC PREACHING
A good example of symbolic preaching is afforded in the following descriptions of a sermon by a Chinese evangelist named Li, of Changsha, China, on the value of the soul:
Mr. Li began by describing a clock, with-