By THOMAS R. SLICERPastor of the Church of All Souls, New York, Author of “The Power and Promise of the Liberal Faith,” etc.The Way to HappinessCloth12mo$0.00Dr. Slicerhas written a practical, readable book based on the belief that a great many unhappy folk are so not because there has been any increase in the world’s misery, but because the consolations upon which people have depended in the past seem to them inadequate. The author therefore first restates certain old, old principles, which seem to have lost force from detachment, in the forms of conception, and in the speech, of modern life. The making of a character which is for itself a sufficient consolation seems to him the only permanent relief from unhappiness, and he sets forth the positive principles on which such a character is based.
By THOMAS R. SLICERPastor of the Church of All Souls, New York, Author of “The Power and Promise of the Liberal Faith,” etc.The Way to HappinessCloth12mo$0.00Dr. Slicerhas written a practical, readable book based on the belief that a great many unhappy folk are so not because there has been any increase in the world’s misery, but because the consolations upon which people have depended in the past seem to them inadequate. The author therefore first restates certain old, old principles, which seem to have lost force from detachment, in the forms of conception, and in the speech, of modern life. The making of a character which is for itself a sufficient consolation seems to him the only permanent relief from unhappiness, and he sets forth the positive principles on which such a character is based.
By THOMAS R. SLICER
Pastor of the Church of All Souls, New York, Author of “The Power and Promise of the Liberal Faith,” etc.
The Way to Happiness
Cloth12mo$0.00
Dr. Slicerhas written a practical, readable book based on the belief that a great many unhappy folk are so not because there has been any increase in the world’s misery, but because the consolations upon which people have depended in the past seem to them inadequate. The author therefore first restates certain old, old principles, which seem to have lost force from detachment, in the forms of conception, and in the speech, of modern life. The making of a character which is for itself a sufficient consolation seems to him the only permanent relief from unhappiness, and he sets forth the positive principles on which such a character is based.