402 family eirtts. THE HARVEST HOME. "That both he that soweth. and he that reapeth. may rejoice together."—Jons iv. 36. From the far-off fields of earthly toil A goodly host they come, And sounds of music are on the air,— 'Tis the song of the Harvesi-home. The weariness and the weeping— The darkness has all pass'd by, And a glorious sun has risen— The Sun of Eternity l We've seen those faces in days of yore, When the dust was on their brow, And the scalding tear upon their cheek Let us look at the laborers now! We think of the life-long sorrow, And the wilderness daYs of care; We try to trace the tear-drops, But no scars of grief are there. There's a myster, of soul-chasten'd joy Lit up with sun-light hues Like morning flowers most beautiful, When wet with midnight dews. There are depths of earnest meaning In each true and trustful gaze, Telling of wondrous lessons Learnt in their,pilgrim days. And a conscious confidence ofbliss, That shall never again remove,— All the faith and hope of journeying years, Oather'd up in that look of love. The long waiting days are over ; 'They've received their wages now ; For they've gazed upon their Master, And His name is on their brow. They've seen the safely garner' d sheaves, And the song has been passing sweet, Which welcomed the last in-commg one Laid down at their Saviour's feet. Oh ! well does His heart remember, As those notes of .praise sweep by, The yearning, plaitttivelfusic Of earth's sadderikelsy. And well does He kno* each chequer'd tale, As He looks on the joyous band— All the lights and shad ows t hat cross' dtheirpath, In the distant pilgrim land;— The heart's unspoken anguish— The bitter sighs and tears— The long, long hours of watching— The changeful hopes and fears ! One had £limb'd the rugged mountainside; 'Twas a bleak and wintry day; The tempest had scatter'd his precious seed, And he wept as he turn'd away. - But a stranger-hand had water'd That seed on a distant shore, And the laborers now are meeting, Who never had met be . -• And one—he had toil . 7; bailing sands, When the scorching 1 U. was high; c • He had grasp'd the p ough with a fever'd hand, And then laid him down to die ; But another, and yet another, Had fill'd that deserted field, , Nor vainly the seed they scatter'd, Where a brother's care had till'd. Some with eager step went boldly forth, Broad casting o'er the land ; Some water'd the scarcely budding blade, With atender, gentle hand. There's one—her young life was blighted, By the withering touch of woe; Her days were sad and weary, And she never went forth to sow; But there rose from her lonely couch of pain, The fervent, pleadincprayer ; She looks on many a radiant brow, And she reads the Answers there! Yes! sowers and reapers are meeting; A rejoicing host they come I Will you join the echoing'chorus? 'Tis the song of the Harvest-homel THE GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY. A STORY TOLD TO A CHILD ,„4 BY JEAN INGELOW (CONCLUDED.) When he ceased to speak, I said with a sorrowful sigh, " And now, papa, there is only one penny left of all my opportunities ?" "Well, my darling," he replied, "it is possible that you may do acceptable good even with that. Remember what our Saviour said about the cup of cold water." "Yes," I said,"‘but the person who gave the cold water, had nothing better to give ; he bad not a cup of milk, or a cup of wine, which he first wasted and threw away." "My clear, you need not inquire into that; you might have done better; - but as there is still something to be done, 'Do it with might." When I was quite calm again, and almost happy, he sent me into the house to play at ball. As I passed the kitchen door, a poor old woman Nqioni. my mother used sometimes to help, turned from it, and I heard the housemaid say, " Mistress has just walked out, and I cannot say when she will be at home." She was hobbling away, when I be thctught me of my penny; took it out of its bag, and pulling her by the cloak, Offered it to her. At first she did not seem to under stand me, but when she saw my copper opportunity, which was as bright as sand-paper could render it, she gave me just the shadow of a smile, and taking it in her skinny hand, Laid, "I thank you kindly, my pretty." " Poor old creature," said the housemaid, "that will buy her a trifle, mayhap ; she and her husband are going into the workhouse to-morrow." I passed into the house penniless, but in a subdued and humble state of mind. The lessons I had had were not without good effect ; but it cannot be, expected that I can remember mph of the working of my mind. I miry know that time did pass, that I went to bed, got up, said my lessons, and had my play for a long time, per haps a fortnight, At the end of about that time, my little sister, Sophy, and I went one day for a long walk, with 'Matilda, our nurse, and took a little basket with us to put flowers in, and blackberries, if we should be so fortu nate as to find any. We walked a long way, till Sophy was tired, and became clamorous to sit down• i so Matilda led us to the en trance of a little wood, and there we sat, ; and rested on the steps of a stile. There was a cottage year at kiand: THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1865. presently an old woman came out of it with a kettle in her hand, and I recog nized her as the woman to whom I had given my penny. She hobbled to the edge of a little stream which flowed close to our seat, and dipped her kettle in, but did not notice us till Matilda called to her. "How are you, Mrs. Grattan, and how's your old gentleman ?" " Thank you kindly, girl, we be pretty moderate," was the reply. "He" —and sheipointed with a stick to a field opposite, where several men were at work—"He be amo* them, pick ing up stones—Ha! ha 14te be as blithe as a boy I" " We was all very glad up at the Grange, to hear of your good luck," said Matilda, in the loudest tones of her cheerful voice, for the old woman, was rather deaf. "Our mistress was main glad, I'll assure you." " Ah, very kind on you all. How be the old gentleman ?" naQuite hearty." y this time she had reached us, set down her kettle,_ancl taken, her place beside Matilda. I was busily plaiting Ara*, but listened carelessly-to' conversation. " And so you got your rent paid and all," said Matilda, turning her eager black eyes on the old woman., " What a good son Joe is to you." " Ah, that he be, dear," was the reply,; "that he be; wrote he did, so pretty, dear mother,' he says, I don't you'go for to think shall ever forget how good you was to me always —for I shall not,' he says—" Matilda's eyes flashed and glistened: she took a particular interest in this young man, though I did not know that till long afterwards. "Tell us how it all was," she said, quickly. "Why you see , dear , he was not it.y own :- but I did. as well as I could by him; and he be as fond of me like, ay fonder, than he be of his father." " Yes I know," said Matilda., "Well, dear—l went to Mr. T.'s house," (my father's) " and I was very down at. heart—very, I was; for Mr. Ball, he'd been that morning, and says he, It signifies nothing that you've lived here so long,' he says—' if you can't pay the rent' I says, Mr. Ball, will you please to consider these weeks and weeks tli.at my , xbor old man has been laid up wi' rheumatize ?' 'But,' he says, I can put in younger and stronger than him ; and besides that,' he says, know you owe money at the shop, over all you owe to my employer." " He was always a hard man," said Matilda. 1, " Well dear; he ;(-, It ain't no_use my deceiving t o , Mrs. Grattan, but I must sell yob. up, for,' says he, ' the money I must have, and you must go into the workhouse; it's the best place by half for such as you;' and, dear, it seemed hard, for, I'll assure you, we hadn't a half-ounce of tea, nor a lump of coal . in the house, for we was willing, my old man and me, to strive to the last to pay our owings, and we was living very hard." "How much did. you owe ?" asked Matilda. " Over three pounds, dear; and then the rent was four. I hadn't one-half penny in the house; I paid the baker, Thursday was a week ; t'other, four was for the doctor, and we was hungry and cold, we was; but,, the Lord -be praised, we aint now." I Joe's a good son." =lags good as ever breathed, dear; bii;l7.we hadn't heard from him of a loft while, by reason his regiment was up the country, but you'll under stand I didn't know that till I got his letter. And so we was to be sold up, and go into the house. I fretted a deal,, and ?hen I thought I'd go and tellyoUr missis : she be a good friend ; —but' deary me I I owed such a lot o' money ;—only, thinks I, she'll be main sorry to hear we must go; and - a body likes somebody to be sorry." " Ah, to be sure they do," said Ma tilda. "But she was out, and so I got nothing—only this child, bless her ! she runs up and gives me a penny ; but, deary me thinks I, what's a penny to them as owes £7 2s. ? But, thinks I, my old man and me, we won't cry together in the dark this last night. So I walked on to the town with it, to buy a half-penny candle of Mr. Sims, at the post-office. I was half way there from my place, and when I got into the shop, Sit you down, Mrs. Grattan,' says he, for 'he saw I was main tired • I haven't seen you of a long time. " And that's true, Mr. Sims,' says I, 'for it's little enough I have to lay out, and the shop t'other side of the turnpike be nigher.' " Well, I sat' me down ; maybe a quarter of an hour after I'd my candle, and just as I was a going, in comes Mrs. Sims, and, says she,. 'ls that Grattan's wife ?' " Ay,' says he. " Well,' says she, reckon you remembered to give her that letter' " A good thing you spoke, my dear,' says he, should have forgot it—that I should.' "If you'll believe me, I trembled like a leaf, to think I should so near have missed it. 'Be it a letter from the Indies ?' says I. " 'Ay,' says, he, that it is, and nothing to pay on it; and it's - marked "to be left at the post-office till called for."' "Well, dear, I took it home, and waited for my old man to come home, by reason I can't read, and about dusk he comes in, and we lights the candle, and my old man he read it right out, for he's a fine scholar. And there was two five pound notes inside, bless him ; and, says he, ' Mother, I've got made sergeant, and now I shall send to you regular." " Well, I've heard no better news this many a day !" said Matilda. "It was -good, dear. Well, I paid the doctor, and when., Mr. Ball came next day, says I, ' There's the money, sir,' and he stared. 'lndeed,' he says, `I am surprised, but them that pay can stay.' So, you see,, there's money to spend, more money, dear, when we be laid up with the theumatize." Upon this she laughed with a' genuine joy, and, taking up her kettle, wished Ma tilda good afternoon, and hobbled away. , And I knew, though it had i never occurred to the old woman, that all 4 )) this happiness was owina ° my penny ! If she had not had it to spend, she would not have "wal ed, to the post-office • if she had not 1 aikea to the post-office, she would n _have got her son's letter—that ' p ecious letter which had -saved her: fry sere and the workhouse. How happy I wasp as we, valked home ; I seemed to tread on a,r, and .Yet I knew of holv * little value the penny really was, it was only my hay * ing been permit 1 `to give it underli such peculiar c . . msfances t 4, had made it such a worthy and imps, taut coin. The lesson taught me by these little events I did not easily forget; :nd I think their moral is too obvi ~ s to. need elaborately enforcing. It may, ho v •ver, be summed up in . few ~.. , i St, Do not expect tnat n our . - k strength you can make use of • ven best opportunity for doing ,;ood. t Sedond, Do not put off till 'a 'other day any good which it is in the over of your hand to do at once. And thirdly, Do not despo be cause your means of - I:ibing goo ap pear'triflinga4 yl insignificant, for though one A th and another reap eth, yet it is'lGdd - ithat • giveth the in crease ; and whei"can tell whether He will not cause that which is sown to bear fruit an hundredfold ; who can tell whether to have even , a penny to give under certain circumstances may be to havt, not a,Copper, but a Golden Opportunity 1 ' • • VELUM HOWITT'S FOUR DOCTORS. I am temperate because I have seen and-felt the good .policy of It Ap' a literary man ; if I had - falleil - in- 'W•1;1. ordinary literary habits, I should not have been sitting here to write about the advantages of temperance. If. I had lived as . the majority of literary men of this age, as. ",,,a• man about town;" if I had- lived, in fawn, and kept tusual late hotrs, and passed al ki t - yen' after evelaingVn hot,' crowded roomk breathing the ae,adly poison of physical effluvia, gas, and air-deprived of its ozone ; ',if I had sat over the bot tle at late suppers, foolishly called . din ners ; and ; i* short, " jollified"----as my literary ootemporaries call it, I should have been gone thirty years ago: As it is, I have seen numbers of literary men, much younger than my self, dying off like rotten sheep—some of them in their very early youtlajew of them becoming old. • They have acquired great reputations ; for if you take notice, they who collect about the press, and jollity with one another, and cry up one another as prodigies, are the men who become most 'popular; and "verily , they have their reward." They reap much money, and much 'tempc i .rary fame; but at what price do they purchase it_? At the cost of , bodily as well as mental comfort ; at the cost of life itself. For my part, seeing the victims to " fast life' daily falling around me, I have willingly abandoned the temporary advantages of such a life, and preferred less popu larity;less gain); the enjoyment of a, sound mind in a sound : body ; the bles sings of a quiet domestic life, and a more restricted, but not less enjoyable, circle of society. I-am now fast approaching my sev entieth year. I cannot;` indeed, say that I have reached this period, active, and vigorous as I am, without the asOistance of doctors. I have had the co taut attendance of these four fa4us ones: Temperance, gxercise, GOOd Air, and Good Hours. And now a word on work. Those who imagine that I only wag a goose , quill, mistake a' little. lii that depart ment, indeed, I have done as much work as any' man living. Often, in early years, I labored assidiously six teen hours a day. I never omit walk ing three or four miles, or more, in all, weather. I work hard in my garden, and could tire down a tolerable man at that sort of thing. During_rdy two years' travel in Australia, when about sixty, I walked often, under a burfting sun of one hundred and twenty or one hundred and thirty degrees at noon my twenty miles a day for days and weeks together; worked at digging gold, in great heat, and against young, active men, my twelve hours a day, sometimes standing in a brook. I waded through rivers,—for neither man nor nature had made iwy bridges,i ; and let my clothes dry u 'on my back= s washed my own linen, d Made andtbaked my own bread be ore I ate it ; slept occasionally under the forest tree ; and went through it all as hearty as a roach And how did I manage all this, not only with ease, but with enjoyment? Simply because I avoided spirituous liquors as I would avoid the poison of an asp. The horrors which I saw there from the drinking of spirits, were enough to make a man of the least sense sober. The extent to which spirit-drinking was carried, may be judged of by the unexampled fact, that one year during my stay, nine hundred thousand pounds were paid for duty on spirits alone, and that for a popula tion of only two hundred and fifty thousand souls I Well, then, I think I have a claim to recommend to my fellow-workmen ebstinence from beer,` spirits, tobacco. They are all poisoners of the blood ; they are all burnt-offerings unto death ; they are all destroyers of the bottom of our pocket; and what is worse, destroyers of the peace of families, the constitu tions of men, the domestic comfort , and virtue of women, the physical stamina and the very life of children. They slay the morals of society, the intel lects and the souls of men. As I read daily the ! police reports and the pro ceedings of our criminal courts, I trace the wide-spread pestilence of spirits, beer, and tobacco in 'almost every .out rage and misery. All these inflame the passions or beclond the intellect'; they originate robbery of masters, and robbery of all kinds. They strip their practicers of health, clothes, morals, and sanity ; they convert them into madmen and devils. They fire the brain, with frenzy, and arm the hand with bludgeons and knives against their own wives and children. The great bulk of the crimes and calamities of society flow from the tap and the spigot. • m mi- By this indulgence,—surely the most marvelous of infatiations,—and ab surd appetite "set on fire of hell," the people encourage the government to plunder them most cruelly, in the shape of excise duties. To furnish the government with this duty, our working millions abandon every diity of their own. They set up over them selves a most terrible tyranny. They keep open gin-shops at every corner, even , on Sabbath-evenings, when book shops and simple refreshment rooms are,not allowed to be open. BUILDING ON THE SAND. 'Tie well to woo, 'tis good to wed, For so the world hath done Since myrtles grew, and, roses blew, And morning brought the sun., But have a care, ye young and fair; Be sure you ledge with truth ; • Be certain that your love'willovear Beyond the days of youthl _Farif-ve-sive_not heart-tbrAwart,--- As well as hand for hand, . You'll find you've played the unwise part And built upon the sand. 'Tie well to save, 'tie well to have A goodly store of gold, And hold enough of shining stuff, For charity is cold. But plane not all your hope and trust In what the deep mine brings; We cannot live on yellow dust Unmixed with purer things. And he who piles up wealth alone: Will often have to stand Beside his coffer chest, and own 'Tis built upon the sand. 'Tis good A, speak in kindly guise, And soothe where'er we can ; Fair speech should bind the human mind, And love link man to man. Butotay not at the gentle words ; Let deeds with language dwell,; The one who pities starving birds Should scatter crumbs as well. The mercy that is warm and true, Must lend a, helping hand, ' For those who talk, yet fail to do, I But build upon the sand. TIIE ELDER BROTHER. In a family there were two boys. One was named Harry, and the other Fred. Harry was a good boy, and t every one f who knew him expected that he would grow up a holy and useful man. Fred was very wild and wicked, often disobeying his father, and did things that grieved all- his friends. One day he had been very naughty, and had been sent to his room. His father would neither see bim nor, speak to him, and Harry, sorry t o o _see him in, such disgrace, went into his room. Tears of pity were, in his eyes as he said to his brother.-- ''" Oh, Fred, Fred 1 why, will you be so Wry : foolish?" Tiktd;lpoked at him with a sullen, kroki , up.on his, face, and said, d•• 1 ,, ••t care!" • . Marry talked kindly, ever, and'after a little while Fred d, "It is no use; father - will' sieve or give me" Ask him," said Harry. "I dare not," was the reply. "Do, now; go and tell him you are sorry for what you have done, and beg his forgiveness," said Harry. , "No," said Fred, in a sad, hopeless tone. "I amsorry, but I could not 'find words to say so to. father; and besides I do not think he would forgive me now, whatever I might say.", " Well, then let me ask him," said Harry. "Ah! if you would! Father will -listen to you.l" he exclaimed. So the two boys went together to their father's room, Harry stepping in first, boldly and happily. Fred was afraid and. hung back. "I dare not go in," said he, -as- the door opened. " Oh, come along !" said his brother, sin an enconraging.„-tone of voice: and stepped up to his father .and said, " Father, I am come to tell you that Fred is very sorry for what he has done, and ask you to forgive him." Übe father looked up and said, " Could you not come yourself, Fred ?" "Oh no," s a id Harry : "he was so sorry and ashamed that he could not —he dared • not, and I persuaded him to let me ask you to forgive him for my sake." Then the father opened his loving arms, and the guilty boy fell sobbing upon his breast. " Now, for your brother's sake, I have forgiven you. For your brother's sake be a good boy - in- time to come." Dear children,—Jesus is called our " elder brother," you know- ' and if we go to Him in sincerity he-will go with us and intercede for us, as this boy did for his brother. Jesus is called the "Intercessor," which means that when we do, rong he pleads with his Father for us."—"Food for the Lambs." During one of Napoleon's remark able campaigns, a detachment of a corps commanded by Davoust occupied the Isle of Rugen, which they were ordered to evacuate. They embarked with such precipitation that they for got one of their sentinels posted in a retired spot, and who was so deeply absorbed in theperusal of a newspaper containing an account of one of the emperor's splendid victories, as to be totally unconscious of their departure. After pacing to, and fro for many hours upon his post, he lost patience, and returned to the guard-room, which he found empty. On inquiry he learzed with despair what had happened„and " Alas! alas! I shall be looked upon as a deserter—dishonored ; lost, un happy wretch that I am !" His lamentations excited the com passion of a worthy tradesman, who took him to his house, did all in his power to console him, taught him to make bread, for he was a baker, and after some months gave him his only daughter, Justine, in marriage. Five years afterwards, a strange sail was seen to approach the Island. The inhabitants flocked to the beach, and - soon discovered in the advancing ship a number of soldiers wearing the um form of the French army. " I'm done for now!" cried the dis mayed husband of Justine. "My bread is baked." An idea, however, suddenly occurred to him, and revived his courage. He ran to the house, slipped-into his uni form, and, seizing his faithful fire-lock, returned to the beach, and posted him self on sentry at the moment the French were landing. -cf-Who goes there ?" be shouted in a voice thxnattr-- " Who goeS there, yourself ?" replied one in a boat "Who are you?" "A sentinel." "How long have you been on guard?" "Five years. Davoust, for he it was, laughed at the quaint repl and gave a discharge in. dile form tolitifOrdliiiitiEttsgarker fa tip gitilte tato. FAMILIAR TALKS WITH''THE CHIL DREN. (SECOND SP.II,X3F.S. BY REV. EDWARD PAYSON HAMMOND.* "THE IDEA OF MY BEING A 'CHRIS TIAN 1" —Eliza Cook These were the words of a boy, thir teen years old, who lives in Brooklyn. It was a year and a' half ago when said this so scornfully. But, striVie as it may seem; he has been aghns tian ever since. His pastor thinks he is a Christian, and has taken I* into the Church / . I saw him onl3it*, few weeks ago, and he says the more he learns of Jesus, the more he loves What a wicked boy he must have been, for he says, "I laughed at my companions." He means those who were asking their ministers and Sab bath-sChool teachers how they could - find peace in Jesus. Oh, how wonder ful that God' can make such a wicked boy a good boy and a Christian, all ih. a minute! Ye% and He can do this for you now, if you will ask. him. The first time I came to the children's meeting was on Sunday. When it was over," I went outside of the door saying to myself, The idea of me being a aristian Why, I was even ashamed to hear the naule of Jesus spoken to me. OcCasionally I would peep in the. door and"laugh at my compinions who were,in the church. After meeting was over, I went home,and came to the meeting in the evening. After the meeting was over, a good, earnest, working Christian came to me. and asked me,if I loved Jesus. I told him . I was afraid I did not. After talking with me a little while, he asked me if I would kneel down, and he would pray for me, which I did. I thank him 'sincerely for it now, but I did not then. He was pleased to explain to me the love of God giving his Son Jesus Christ to bleed and die for sinners. He told me the way of salvation by faith, the nature of the new birth, and the great necessity of holiness of heart and life: He instructed me greatly ; and, under God, to him I owe all the good I am acquainted with. Soon after; by asking God to help me and my companions, we found peace in God. .Oh, the joy that I now feel through the blood of the Lamb ! How I long to tell all the world what Jesus has done for me ! And now I love to , pray and road my . Bible,more than I ever did before - . I rejoice in the Lord Jesus Christ as a rwasom paid for my soul. Oh, pray for me, that 'may love Him more Copyright secured. A FRENCH SENTINEL. TILE SCORNFUL BOY and more. Pray for me, that I may thank Him for delivring my soul from, bondage and setting me on that heavenly tr ack that ieadb - th to glory; and may many plead for mercy till they find that they have been lifted up from a world of sorrow and placed upon that heavenly track. May we all get hold of the last link of the golden chain, and meet together in that world of bliss. Your young friend, *** Aged thirteen years. " I FOUND JESUS THEN AND' THERE." Thus writes a girl from the Bay State. She was just about the age, of this boy. She too had, as you will see, no thought of being a Christian.. She did not believe that - little. children could -turn to Jesus. She was;:vary earnest, and asked God for a new heart, and prayed so late at night, that she couldn't keep her eyes open any longer. Why didn't she find peace? She will tell you. She had some darling sins she would not give up. Jesus was ready an the time to save her; yes, more anxious -to make her a Christian than sh e was to become one. What a deeene u l heart she must have had! And ycm,lny dear young reader, have just such heart—one which the Bible say ; i s gi deceitful above all things and desi , erately wick ed." You will never get tt "heaven till you get rid of it. When this girl saw the sin th a t he loved * more than her own soul. and said, "I give it all up," she say-. "I was a new creature from that mo. ment." And so you will be, if you will but come in the same way to Jesus. And then, instead of being ashamed of Jesus, you will, before you know it, be pleading, like this girl, with your little friends to love Jesus. *DEAR MR. HamtroND :—The first time I went,to the children's meeting, I went out or curiositg, just to see what you would say and how thb children would act, for I did not be- , lieve in the conversion of children ; but when you asked us to stop at the inquiry-meeting, my heart beat very loud, but 1 succeeded in getting out of the church. But before I got half way home, there was a stilt, small voice said, "Better go back ; it is your last chance!" But 1 did not heed the voice of conscience, and I went home. The next day I went again, and did the same. When I got home, I prayed to God to give me a new heart, but He didn't seem tc. hear my prayer; and then I said, I have been so wicked that God wont hear my prayers. The next day went, and stayed to the inquiry-meeting. When you came and spoke to me, you asked me if I was willing t6give up all to Jesus. I told you I was. Then you knelt and prayed with me, but I did not feel any better. I went home and prayed myself to sleep ; and still I found no relief. I awoke before light the next morning, and began , praying as before; but this time I asked Him if there was anything that I was not willing to• give up, to tell me, and I would give it up. And *He did tell me. Then I said, "Dear Lord, I give it all up; take me just as I am; it is all that I can do. I give paf. self to Thee." A 1 ,,,1 I wr~ Led :nt th HAD." "Annie," who lives in a large Watt ern city more than a thousand •miles from New York, found that she had lived thirteen-" yeails without know 'rig what a "wicked" heart she had. I hope you have not lived so long without feeling your need of Jesus. Her "wicked" heart, you will see, made her get up some excuse to stay away from a meeting where many were seeking the pardon of their sins. But as soon as she found out what a sinner she had been, she says, "I de termined to come the next day." AM yes, then she felt she must find the .Saviour, or be lost forever. You need Jesus just as much as she did. Will you seek "him now, before.,it is too late? "To-day the Saviour calls." I wrote a short letter to you.on Saturday, in which I only told you that I loved Jesus. I did not tell how I found him. A week ago last Sunday, when I came honie from Sun day-school, my mother told me about the meetings to be held at Dr. Patton's church, which she wished me to attend. I did not want to go, because it would interfere with my school, as I thought they commenced at three o'clock, or some time thereabouts; but Ma told me that I ought not to think of that in comparison with my salvation. Still I did not, want to go. But the next day at noon ist received a programme, and I found that they did not commence till a quarter to four o'clock. I then did not have any excuse; so I went. I stayed to the inguury-meeting, and a kind lady came and spoke to me. I t then found what a wicked heart I had. I was determ i ned to g o the next day, and I `took one of my companions with" me. I was ,more, interested than, the timl4ore, and hope that I was enable e d' to give my heart 'to my Saviour. I was happier than I ever was before. I have - been feeling happier 'ever since. from your affectionate friend, ANNIE -*** Thirteen years dd. I was a wandering sheep, :, • I did not love the fold: . did - not love my Shepherinivoice, I would not be controlled; I was a , wayward child, I did not love my home, I did not love my Father's voice, I loved afar to roam. The Shepherd sought His sheep; The Father sought His child ; They followed me o'er vale and hill, O'er deserts r waste and wild: They found me nigh to death, Famish' d, and taint, and lone ; They bound me with the ban& of kive, They saved the wandering. one. Jesus my Shepherd is, 'T was he that loved my -soul'T was he that washed me in his blood, 'T'was he that made me;whole: 'Twas he that sought the Testi That found the wanderings cep; 'T was he that brought Ina to the fold-- "ris he that still doth keep