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"Now see what you've done, Leslie!" said her brother sharply "Cloudy hasn't looked that way once before Next thing you know she'll be washing her hands of us and running off back to Sterling again"
"O Cloudy!" said the penitent Leslie, flinging herself into her aunt's arly "You wouldn't do that, would you, Cloudy, dear? No ot? Because you would knoouldn't mean it ever Even if I was real bad"
"No, dear," said Julia Cloud, kissing her fair forehead "But this is just one of those things that I meant when I was afraid to undertake it You see there s you ant to do on Sunday that I would not feel it right for me to do, and I may be a hindrance to you in lots of ways I shouldn't like to get to be a sort of burden to you, and it isn't as if they were things that I could give up, you know This is a ht, Cloudy," put in Allison "You have your say in things like that We aren't so selfish as all that And besides, if it's wrong for you, who knows but it's wrong for us, too? We'll look into it"
Julia Cloud went s, but underneath was a tugging of strange dread and fear at her heart It was all so new, this having responsibility with souls She had always so quietly trusted her Bible and tried to follow her Lord She had never had to guide others There had not been time for her even to take a class in Sunday school, and she knew her religion only as it applied to her one little narrow life, she thought, not realizing that, when one has applied a great faith to the circuhly through a lifetiet in years of a theological seminary Theories, after all, are worth little unless they have been worked out in experience; and when one has patiently, even happily, given upto serve, has learned to keep self under and love even the unlovable, has put to the test the promises of the Bible and found them hold true in time of need, and has found the Sabbath day an oasis in the desert of an otherwise dreary life, even an old theologian wouldn't havea discussion on Sabbath-keeping