THE C1IEMAWA AMERICAN' pcrvice. It is not the office of slaves only to serve; it is the office of kings; it is the office of every man and woman, to serve and be helpful and to lend a hand. To be a true minister, that is, a. true helper of the world, a man must be hap py. Sometimes, I am asked how we m av be happy unless we are happy. It has never oecured to those who ask this question, that they must use their wills; they must actually make an effort. I do not mean frivolity or foolish jov; but there must be real cheer. There must be the major key, not the minor key. It is hard for one to make others happy if he wears a doleful face himself. He cannot be helpful to others if they do not like him, and they cannot like him if he has an unhappy face. It has been said that "Jesus often wept, but no man ever saw him smile." This is a perverted view of his life. He could never have taken children into his arms; he could not have drawn people to him, had he never smiled. Of ,co.irse. there are times when our spirits are bruised, and even Jesus asked that the cup might pass from him if it was the will of his Father in Heaven. Tiie bur den and sadness of the world was felt bv Christ; but the sense of the goodness of Cod kept him through all of his suf fering. I do not wish to sta i t up thoughts of sad ness within you, but I wish to say, some time as you glow older, sad conditions mnv come to von. sometimes too great for you to bear you will think. It is not always for gross minds to feel these things. Stran jely enough, the better people, the more refined, feel more keen ly the burdens of the world in wnicii they live. A Japaness baron, a man of sensitive and refined mind, and burdened with the misery about him which he thought he could not help, fell it to be courageous to commit suicide. He t hrew himself in to a crater of a volcano, lie was not natu rally cowardly. He was a philosopher and did not do it through ignorance, lie did not do it because he lacked sympa thy. It was his sympathies which drove him to t his act. Yet he lacked some thing. What did he lacked? lie lack ed the faculty of putting his will into his happiness. He had not cut the (Jordian knot of his selfisfiness. He had not found happiness; Iih hail not stood bravely by the great task of making the world happier. We see the misery in the world and we can help a little here and there. Whatever our position in life is, we can give ourselves to this ministry. Thi sensitiveness to the misery in the worid. should create a longing in our hearts to bring more happiness into the world. Everyone of you should know of (Jen. Armstrong, the originator and founder of Hampton Institute. I wish that his biography might be in the hands of every pupil of this school. e was a. "Knight of the Holy Crail." His heart was longing for the bettering of the world. lie had a happy heart. He would help those who were unhappy. He would help those who were in dark ness and ignorance. He gave his whole life for the work. Hooker T. Washing ton owes more to (Jen. Armstrong than to anv other man. (Jen. Armstrong made him what he i. He used to l II a story illustrating faith. lb' told it a great manv times. It is the story of the woodchuck. Now the woodchuck cannot climb a tree. Hut once upon a time, a woodchuck was chased by a (tog. He ran as fast as he could. There was a ree near. Now the woodchuck canno, climb a tree. Hut this woodchuck had to climb the tr-e and he did. This was he story that Jen. Armstrong told The impossible may become possible, just as the woodchuck found he could climb a tree.