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THE DIGNITY OF SERVICE

Word Count: 1608    |    Released on: 19/11/2017

UTHER FOX, A.

r's examination and was granted a certificate and taught a six months' term of country school, closing it seven days after I was sixteen. I boarded at home and received $130 for the six months. Half of this money I gave to my father and with the other half I entered and completed 36 the spring term of the high school. During the winter evenings while I was teaching I studied Latin grammar and Jones' "First Latin Lessons." Hence I was able, with some help from my brother, to join the Latin class on entering the high school, to pass the examination at close of the term, and thus to have a year's Latin to my credit. I returned to school at the opening of the fall term, but left at Thanksgiving, when I returned home to teach the same school I had taught the previous winter. I received this time $

and maple wood. I made inquiry and learned that it belonged to the college president. Then I called upon him and applied for the position of wood sawer to him. He asked me whether I had ever sawed wood. I replied truthfully that I had never sawed much, but that I knew how it was done. He said he would furnish the saw and the "horse" and that I would have to saw only enough each day to keep him supplied. That suited me, for it meant that I could have other contracts running at the same time. It took practically the whole winter to complete the work, sawing usually toward evening enough for the following day. My compensation in money was $20. But I was also facing the question of daily bread. I couldn't go to a boarding club 38 for I had no money. There was a college boarding hall. I noticed that they kept a cow, and I conceived the idea that that cow might help support me. I appli

ugh to purchase the new suit. The college cistern needed cleaning. I took the contract for $3.50. It was a large cistern and supplied the drinking water for the dormitory students. There was about one foot of water in it the day I cleaned it. I hired a fellow for $1.00 to hoist the buckets and I went down into it and scrubbed it clean. We finished about sunset. The authorities concluded to lay a new conducting pipe from the dormitory to the cistern, a distance of about fifteen feet. While we were cleaning they tore the old one out. Just as we finished, the college president came along and peered down at me. "Ah," said he, "how nice and clean. Now pray for rain." "No, no," exclaimed th

dent Rutherford B. Hayes addressed our class. Some things he said seemed intended for me. He spoke of the Dignity of Work. He said many people had hands and didn't know how to use them. It was really an appeal for manual training, a phase of education not then in vogue, but to which advanced educators were turning attention. But I had had it all as an extra. I had read Latin, Greek, and German with my classmates. I had traversed the historical centuries i

Mich.

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Contents

PREFACE PART I A MOTHER'S DESIRE REALIZED "MAGNA CUM LAUDE" TASK WORTH WHILE MAKING ODD HOURS PAY THE COLLEGE STORE BROTHER HELPS BROTHER THE COLLEGE INSPIRATION OVERCOMING HARDSHIPS THE DIGNITY OF SERVICE A HAPPY MISFORTUNE
FINDING ONE'S PLACE
"THE TAR HEEL"
NO WORK TOO HARD
CULTIVATING SIDE LINES
A SMILING SELF-RELIANCE
A MOTHER'S INFLUENCE
RICHES MORE OF A HANDICAP THAN POVERTY
THE WILL AND THE WAY
KEEP GOOD COMPANY
THE DEMOCRACY OF A COLLEGE HON. EDWIN G. MOON, PH.B., B.L
OBEYING THE CALL
DETERMINATION AND STEADFASTNESS WINS
MAKING ONESELF USEFUL
A FAITH "DIVINELY SIMPLE"
ONE WHO KNOWS IT CAN BE DONE
DIFFICULTY AND WILLINGNESS ARE ENEMIES
FAITHFUL IN LITTLE THINGS
FROM JANITOR TO COLLEGE PRESIDENT
STARTING WITH FIVE DOLLARS
FROM GOOD TO BETTER
A TASK WITH A MORAL
FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF DENVER BULLETIN
THE FRATERNITY OF WORKERS
HOW THE PHYSICAL SIDE HELPED
THE WAY ALWAYS OPEN
THE VICTORY THAT OVERCOMETH THE WORLD
OPPORTUNITIES MAKE US KNOWN
MAKING PLAY OUT OF WORK
FINANCIAL STATEMENT
NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS
WORK A STIMULUS TO AMBITION
THE UNIVERSITY AS A GOAL
PART II WORKING TO MAKE HIMSELF A MORE USEFUL MAN
MANY LANES OF USEFULNESS
ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF THE WILLING HEART
DIFFICULTIES PREPARE FOR REAL WORK
PLUCK RATHER THAN LUCK
POVERTY IS NOT HIS MASTER
DEFEAT DOES NOT MEAN FAILURE
"START RIGHT"
THE REAL QUESTION
WILLINGNESS TO WORK A GREAT ASSET
KEEP ON TRYING
OPTIMISM IS AN ASSET
THE DESIRE FOR SOMETHING BETTER
DETERMINATION VERSUS POVERTY
THE REAL NEEDS OF THE WORLD
THE ONE WHO SUCCEEDS IS THE ONE WHO TRIES
THE HELP YOURSELF CLUB
THE HOW AND THE WHY
MAKING USE OF EVERY OPPORTUNITY
EDUCATION WORTH THE PRICE
WORK NO CLASS BARRIER
PART III HOW TO WORK ONE'S WAY THROUGH COLLEGE
DOES A COLLEGE EDUCATION PAY
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