entrovilMltgE. LETTER FROM MOBILE, MOBILE, ALA., December 4, 1865. Having occasion to spend a few weeks in visiting various points of our Southern country, an opportunity has been af forded Of obtaining a more correct yew of the social, civil, and religious ascts of the people of the South than could be had in any other way. Much has been said at the North about the social condition of, the. Freed men, and the apprehension has been ex pressed that much suffering must ensue in consequence of a sudden transition from a state of servitude to that of free dom. •It is greatly to be apprehended that these fears will be more than realized, and it behooves " The Freedman's Aid Societies," and other agencies that are now laboring in the North to meet the emergency, to put forth the most vigor ous efforts to mitigate the threatened evils, before the social fabric, now in process of reconstruction, shall be put upon a firm and enduring basis. Greater efficiency must be given to these agencies, and more enlarged liberality evinced to make these efforts effective. It was stated to me a few days since, by a northern gentleman traveling in the South, that. during the last six months, not less than seiii, thousand of the colored people irt the" Vicinity of Baton Rouge had qied eiticet of disease or starvation. In Savannah, also, and its neighborhood, the mortality among the Freedmen has been very great. The highest estimate has been nearly twenty thousand. Disease and starvation must necessarily make greater' havoc among them ,as the season advances, and the weather becomes more severe. I say again, let the North be up and doing, and extend a helping hand to our suffer ing fellow-men, although of another race and color. . Our charities were not want ing when the cry canie across the ocean that the sons of " Erin's Isle" were dying of starvation. " Bread enough and to spare" was sent to their relief. Let usi not be backward in extending the necessaries of life to our suffering colored people on our own soil. This state of things cannot be of long duration, although a vast amount of suf fering may ensue before the new regime is fully inaugurated wherein labor shall find a just equivalent. The question might here be asked, why should freedom to the slaves be followed with so much suffering ? Vari ous causes may be adduced, among others : First. That the blacks are ignorant, and for this, their late masters only are to blame, whose policy, as thefsupposed, was to keep them so. Consequently they are improvident, and have no just ideas of economy, thrift, or manage ment. Second. They do not know what con stitutes freedom. Very many suppose they are at liberty to do as they please, and live a migratory life of idleness, theft and plunder. Hence, in the pre sent disorganized state of society, and with the present scarcity and high prices of provisions, planters and others are being robbed of cotton, corn, and live stock. Third. The opinion very extensively prevails among them, that after the first of January next, confiscated lands will be'• parceled out to them.by the Government authorities to cultivite for their support. Hence, they are not disposed to labor, or enter into any contracts with their former masters. Planters, on the other hand, are not 'prepared for the new order of things in the cultivation of their cotton fields. Very many are so impoverished in con ,sequence of the war, that they are un able to employ hands, and dread the ex periment. Others, again, will find it difficult to procure hands, although they may be able to remunerate them. Be sides, there is a growing feeling of antag onism between the white and colored population, consequent upon the war. A. distinguished minister of the Presby terian Church, said to me, a few days since, "that the conflict now going on between the white and colored popula tion, will terminate in the extinction of the race; and the mistaken policy of our Northern philanthropists will then be apparent." Some time must elapse before these questions of conflicting,,interest shall be put to rest, and the South only then, with these questions entirely settled and out of the way, will start on a career of prosperity unknown in her former _ his tory. Till then, it is generally believed that the cotton crop will be light. Hence speculators are now buying up the stock on hand, at present rates, with a view to realize at much higher prices. It is painful to witness the demoral izing influence of the war upon the in terests of religion. Scattered flocks, dis organized Sabbath-schools, benevolent agencies suspended, pastors dishearten ed, and defection in church members, are causes of sorrow in almost every portion of the South, and a long time must elapse before an aggressive move ment can be made by the churches, with any large hope of success. In this city, with a population of fifty thousand, neither the Bible, Tract or Sabbath-school Societies, have any de pository. Nor are there any religious pe riodicals circulated,—not even the Chris tian Observer, published at Richmond, has a foothold here. Sabbath-schools barely exist. With a population from eight to ten thousand offsuitable age to THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN THURSDAY. DECEMBER 21, 1865. attend, it is doubtful whether four hun dred were in attendance last Sabbath in all the schools. The same is true, to a very great extent, in the metropolis of the South, New Orleans. These two commercial cities of the South, in a moral and religious aspect, fairly repre sent the entire Southern territory. What a wide field is here presented to the friends of Christ in the North, for judicious Christian effort( J. S. C. NATIVE RELIGIONS OF CHINA, Fun Cl:Liu, Sept. 20, 1865 In previous letters I have spoken of foreign religions in China:Mohammed. anism, Judaisni, Nestorianism, Roman ism, and ChristianitY. I will now speak of the native religions, by which is meant those that have sprung from the Chinese mind, or that have been so long domes ticated as to be claimed by the people as peculiarly their own. To do full justice to so broad a theme, would require a long series of articles ; but this is very far froth the writer's design, and would scarcely comport, perhaps, with the f so ciable and popular tone of a family nezys paper. Let us rather give within..the brief limits of a single article, some use ful hints, which may convey to the minds of our readers a tolerably clear concep tion of the vast extent of Chinese wor ship. And then let future communica tions incidentally fill the picture by ex hibiting its phases, its spirit, its woeful results in blunted consciences, dwarfed minds, and polluted morals, as brought to view in ordinary missionary experi ence and labors. If you 'ask a Chinese how many sects or religions there are, he very glibly an swers, Ju tau, shift san kiau, which means literally, and in the order of the words, the learned, rationalist, and Bud hist ; three doctrines. This will make a good text, especially as it so naturally divides into three heads. We will place the names of the three founders or pat rons at the head of as many paragraphs, of which one shall be long and the other two short. Confucius was born B. C. 549, and is, in the estimation of his countrymen, par excellence the prince of letters and philosophy. At the early age of twenty two he became a public teacher, and during his long life of seventy-one years his migratory home was resorted to by multitudes of the young. The common saying is, that his disciples numbered three thousand, of whOm seventy-two were chief. He taught politics, music, sacrificial rites, virtue, morals, good breeding, and ideal perfection, by shad owy and impracticable means. His mind, and of course ,its .expression, re volve heavily and'4.olohotonously about the duties pertain - 14%i. the five social relations of sovereign and minister, father and son, husband and wife, elder and younger brothers, friend and friend. The chapter in his history about his politics is a curious one. In his time the empire was broken into numerous principalities or dukedoms, yielding only a partial allegiance to a king or emperor. The sage traveled many years from one dukedom to another, sometimes accept ing office, but always coveting the more honorable post of princely - advisor or censor, which virtually made him the prince's superior. His grand idea of perfect success in governing assumed that official virtue and propriety would inevitably secure the same in the gov erned. His faith in' human nature and in good models was implicit. He de clared that the people would respond to the virtue of the ruler as the grass bends to the wind, and that the whole empire might be brought to a state of happy tranquility " as easy as one can look on the palm of his hand." In a few isolated cases he was indeed quite successful in bringing order out of anarchic chaos. But for the most part his failures were signal, and humilitating. Despondency consumed his spirits in his old age. He says, gloomily, no intelligent monarch arises ; no one in the empire will make me his master." He complained most bitterly that no prince would adopt and carry out' his principles. And such was the dream of human perfection in the China of B. C. 500. Confucius, was a philosopher, and in this position wise for his time, though a politician. His chief honor, as a sage, is due to his moral and ritualistic teach ings, and to the fact that he rescued from oblivion and revised the classics of ancient sages, the poems, the book of rites, of history and of diagrams. His only original work was a historical one called " Spring and Autumn." He is the patron saint or divinity of the learned sect, which embraces the literati of the empire. It is for this reason that they are often called Confu cianists. Yet it is not, strictly speaking, a religious sect, any more than the disci ples of Greek philosophers were such. It is rather a grand literary fraternity : its creed, the civil, ritual, and moral apoth egms of the books. It has temples and pays divine honors to sages, but employs no priests. Its stated services over, the sacred building is left in the care of a simple acolyth. And then its adherents, officers and people, are as much addicted to other idolatries as is the veriest Tauist or Budhist. The arrangement of a Confucian tem ple is marked by extreme simplicity. A large open court, steps in the ,rear to a raised altar place, where are placed five gilded tablets; other tablets, seventy two in number, in porches by the sides of the court, thirty-six on each side ; these with a few altar tables and vases, are about all. On two set occa sions, called the Spring and Autumn sacrifices, the high mandarins visit these temples in great state, and under the direction of a laseng (master of rites) perform their devotions before the tablet, while• prayers are pronounced invoking the presence of the sage's spirit. Offer ings are made. Here they consist of a whole ox, pig, and goat, dressed, but not cooked ; tea, rice, beans, wheat, and millet, in various vessels of bamboo, brass, and iron, with burning. incense and candles, and the accompaniment of a powerful orchestra of bells, gongs, drums, pipes, lutes. The waving of pheasants' tails also graces the perform ance. Only the official and literary circles worship on such occasions, and those of them who have contributed the offerings share them afterwards in their own homes: It has been estimated that there are 1560 Confucian temples in the empire, and that the yearly offerings amount to some 62,000 animals of vari ous sorts, (including, besides those above mentioned, rabbits and deers), and 27,- 0.00 piece's of silk. It is a noted fact that in Fuh Chau, rolls of paper are used to represent the silk ! But the sage is not to be put off with this amount of worship. Throughout the empire he is worshipped in colleges anrschoolrooms, as well as in provincial and district tem ples. Here is a simple strip of paper with four words, meaning " Teacher and exemplio of ten thousand ageS." - This is pasted on the wall. On the opening of school, after the new-year festivities, a formal worship is held before these words, and daily every lad, tin entering or leaving school, gives them an infor mal salaam. This cheap bit of prayer, or rather the words on it, answer the purpose of lodging the sage's spirit, just as the central tablet does in the temples, while the other tablets perform a like office for his disciples and other sages otthe medium and inferior grades. •Yet, after all, the sage is not properly a religious teacher. A disciple once asked him about death. He replied, "We cannot understand life, and how can we know about death." He also once said, " You cannot serve men, how then can you serve their spirits ?" and his advice was to attend to human duties, and keepAetrOthat aloof from spiritual thingo4: l Ws',hedeclared, was true wisdom. admissions seem fatal to the claim that' his teachhigs suffice human wants. He studiously avoided subjects which the soul of man regards of supreme importance. And yet his disciples regard him as the per fect man. His grandson, Tsze-sze, by a stretch of audacity, likens him to heaven and earth in their supporting all things. " His fame overspreads the empire and extends to barbarous tribes. He is the equal of heaven. Who can know him but hp who is of all embracing know ledge, possessing all heavenly virtue." How does this fulsome praise compare with Confucius's humble opinion of him self as a " transmitter," not a "maker," of doctrine, or with the startling evi dences gleaned from the books them selves, that while he - taught the virtue of sanctity,. he praised falsehood in others, was himself guilty of the sin, and even deliberately broke his oath on the ground that the end justified the means? The instances alluded to are sufficient to show WI - gposition Confucius must occupy in history. And the praise uttered by his grandson, though very extravagant, indicates what place he occupies in the hearts of the Chinese. Yet not exactly in their hearts, for no one now obeys his precepts any more than those of his own time did. Still he must be prayed and bowed to. The path of leariaing and road to official dignity are strewed with such honors from youth to old age. The school boy must bow' to the sage in the slip of paper on the wall, so that he may learn and recite his lesson well. Students and collegians must secure his benignant favor in their 'struggles for literary degree and civil office. All would as soon think of get ting along without money and rice, as without the smiles of the " Great, com plete, extreme Sage." C. C. B. HAVE WE A BIBLE RITUAL ? MY DEAR YOUNG FRIEND :—ln my last, I promised to illustrate the refusal of the Bible as a rubrical directory, by reference to the practice of all the churches. Our own Church declares her view of the matter by the publication of the Directory - for Worship ; a gross impertinence if the Bible contained one already. Her view ,of the` non-funda mental character of these regulations, however, is very decidedly exhibited by her refusal to place the Directory for Worship on the same level as the Con fession of Faith, by making it a term of communion. The distinction is found ed in the nature of things : truth is uni form, worship is multiform ; witness the different liturgies of the Hindoo, Negro, and Scottish Covenanters, equally ap proved by Synod, and accepted of God. On examining the Bible with the view of compiling a rubrip and liturgy there from, one is surprised at the want of ma terials: The Bible is silent about the forms of worship just where we would suppese it would be most necessary to speak, if it is to be our standing direct ory of worship. It is eloquent on the spirit of worship, but strangely inatten tive to records of forms. Of the three great universal ordinances, it furnishes neither rubric nor liturgy - . No man pre tends to find the order of congregational, matrimonial, or funeral services in the Bible. Such fragmentary notices of a historical kind as we can extract from its pages, we feel ourselves at full liberty to criticise, adopt, or reject. Yet, nine tenths of the worship of mankind has ever been, and must always be, present ed in the public worship, marriage and funeral services. Offering is the primary and fundamen tal act of public worship. When we seek the origin of public worship, we find no record of a " Thus saith the Lord" for its institution, and are obliged to argue its Divine origin by a chain of inferential reasoning. Is it at all likely that the Author of the Bible could have been thus reticent, had He designed the book as the rubric and liturgy of His church ? 'The very first historical notice of its existence is fatal to the notion of uniformity, with which so many good people are afflicted. For, if we admit that sacrifices were offered in consequence of an unrecorded Divine revelation, as all theologians, save the German Neolo gians, are agreed, we are presented with two widely different ceremonials, adapted, respectively, to agricultural and pastoral notions, and both of Divine appointment. For,'it is wholly incredible that if God hal prescribed the exclusive use of bloody sacrifices, Cain would have dared to offer first fruits. Nor does God charge him with any transgression the mode of his worship, but expressly rejects his offering on the ground of his moral char acter, as also does the Apostle in his reference to this first recorded worship. But of the ceremonies of offering, and the accompanying confessions, thanks givings and prayers, or whether any such were offered, the Bible gives us no account. More minute rubrical direc tions are given to the Hebrew priest hood after the lapse of centuries, but all save a few ultra-millenarians admit, that these were never obligatory on other na tions, and are not now binding on Chris tians. We come then to the notices of offer ings in the New Testament, and find the record of Christian converts selling their estates, and donating the proceeds to the Church for the poor, and of the necessity of appointing an order of ministers exclu sively for this part of public worship. If either you or your Baptist brother should ever hear of any Church feeling bound to imitate this Scriptural example, I will esteem it a favor to be informed of it. The New Testament, however, con tains at least one very positive command to the Greek churches for the regulation of this most ancient ordinance of wor ship ; commanding every member of these churches to deposit, every Lord's day, a sum proportioned to his income, for the relief of their Asiatic brethren from famine. I suppoSe, no one will allege that the ten-penny collections of those churches which have any weekly collections, applied to pay gas bills and sexton's salary, or the occasional collec tions of other churches for all manner of purposes, are seriously intended by anybody as a fulfilment of Paul's corn mend. I know of no other Scripture so plain and pertinent on this subject, nor does either your Baptist friend, or any Church of my acquaintance appeal to, any other so plain, for their practice. The fact is, then, that in regard to the, most ancient of all ordinances of wor ship, the most universal, the most ever lasting, the ordinance whose influence on mankind outweighs the combined power of all the liturgies and sacraments, -which is more insisted on by prophets, Apostles and by our Lord himself, than all ceremonies, and which He makes the test of salvation at the great day of trial —offering to God and the poor,—the churches have, with one consent, decided that we are not bound to obey the Scrip ture commands to the Apostolic churches, nor to imitate their example. Rejecting the notion of any Biblical rubric in the matter, we appoint the time, place, mat ter, collectors, distributors„ mode of collection, and objects of distribution of these offerings of the Lord, according to } our own views of propriety. Having I done so, how dare we turn round and revile some brother who modifies some other ordinance of far less moment for his own, or his brethren's edification ? What! shall we be told that sacraments are more sacred than charity ? Oh how zealous we become in defence of a cheap orthodoxy ! Thousands of ' pon derous volumes on the theological and liturgical controversies have had eager readers; but there is not a systematic treatise on Christian charity in the Eng lish tongue, to be found in the book stored-:of New York, Boston, Philadel phia, aitp Chicago.* The nation offered more,N•iiiie clay for the support of the army, than the whole Church did in a yeatfovits salvation. The theme indis poses me' for treating the discussions on the liturgies and ceremonies of public worship with proper respect at present ; and I defer these subjects therefore, till my next letter. R. P. * The American Tiact Society has published some excellent little essays on one branch of this subject, Essays on Systematic Beneficence. OFFEND NOT THE LITTLE ONES, Do we realize that for every idle word we shall have to give an account ? Nay, that for every word, and thought, and action, each one of which lies open to the sight of God, as clear as if illu mined to human vision by the brightness of the clear shining of the noonday sun, —we must give account? Day and date, and amount, and reason for each item, however trifling; and this, in the face of the assembled Universe, and of the great God himself, Abefore whose all searching eye, no subterfuge, no excuse, no shuffling or evasion, can avail. How awful I How overwhelming ! How crushing the thought! But Jesus is our Advocate—yes, more than our Ad vocate, our Counsellor and Intercessor. He is our Friend, our Sacrifice, who has offered up Himself,—whose infinite merits and atonement avail for us. We shall be washed white in his precious blood, which cleanseth from all sin. What love ought we to have for Him ! What faith and trust! What confi dence! What watchfulness in respect to our own conduct ! Row prone is the evil disposition of our weak and sinful human hearts to doubt, to feel conscious, even if we shudder at the thought of its expression, of ridicule even, when we read the accounts of the faith, the trust, the confidence in the religious experienc e of those of tender years. We believe in—we accept without question—the shadow of a doubt never presents itself in respect to the uttermost and unques tioning faith and confidence of the ten derest infancy and childhood in human love and affection. Is the same child like faith and confidence expressed in Jesus, of whose love they hear from human lips,—even our own, possibly,— how unbelief, and mistrust, and doubt rise in our hearts ! We know a "little one" less than three years old, whose 'grandfather was telling him of the love of Jesus, and how Jesus might come and take him to Him self; just then the door-bell rang. "Per haps that's Jesus come for me now," said the little one. What a realization of a . present Jesus ; what " child-like faith." What strength and fervency and intensity should mark our prayers as we offer the petition, " Lord, I believe, Help thou mine unbelief!" Y. OUR LENIENT POLICY. The policy of our Government toward the murderous destructives in the South, proceeds on the false assumption that its inhabitants are on the same level of civilization with the people of the North. This is a fallacy the most egregious, as time, if it has not shown already, will inevitably show. Happy will it be for us, if the present Congress discovers this, and promptly reverses those agen cies which seem now to be plunging us anew upon the rocks. It was a fallacy that urged leniency toward the mad traitors when they first rose against the Government, which as serted, that it was wrong to act against them with decision and energy, since it might exasperate rebels in arms breath ing out threatenings and slaughter. This cost us oceans of blood and millions of money. The present fallacy is, that determination and vigor will discourage them in their penitent disposition to amend and return to their allegiance, and this threatens to cost us all that has thus far been gained by Our arms. Penitence forsooth ! Where has there appeared the faintest glimmering of such a virtue ? To be serious, leniency with mur derers in full career, is always inter preted by them as an evidence of cow ardice, and is sure to encourage and incite them to their bloody work as was most frilly proved in the early part of our struggle. What shall bp said of men in any part of our country, who cannot see this illustrated by the sentiments, and acts, prevalent at this very hour all over the South ? Touching the civilization of this peo ple, look at it as exhibited in their late rising in a time cf proforma peace, to strike at a government, which several of their very ablest men declared had given them not so much as the shadow of cause for complaint; nay, against a government whose beneficent charac teristics and salutary control these wor thies eulogised to the skies, even - at the outbreak; though they themselves joined the insurgents in turn, and to the shame of all decency added their own powers to destroy what they had so ardently lauded aiiay before. Look another evidence at the venomous' outpouringsof -the press at Richmond and other points during the late contest, its advocacy of the most intense sectional and even personal hate, its vulgar grovelling epithets and vitu peration, heaped upon men of unim peachable characer and sterling worth, whose only fault was loyalty to their country and its flag. Look at its incen tives to butchery on the field, and assas sination wherever convenient. Then, as another exhibit of this civil ization, turn to Libby Prison, the abode , of so many of our sons and brothers, its pestilential atmosphere from reeking filth, its privation of necessaries of life, and at length mined and avowedly ready, on a certain contingency, to blow its wretched inmates into eternity at a moment's notice ! And then, as the climax, look at that vast, that monstrous lazzaretto and slaughter-pen, Anderson ville of infernal memory, where oar brothers and sons were murdered, not, as in most of their other receptacles of prisoners of war, in detail, but in masses. These proclaim in more than mere words, the civilization of the people with whpm we have to deal. This is the civilization, this the people, in whom, at the instance of one of our erratic di vines, we ought to " have faith !" Have not their late treachery and present vin dictive malignity, emphatically taught us the duty of being, as to them, keenly on our guard rather ? In entirely another view, it may, with propriety, we think, be asked, leaving out of sight our own interest, our own safety in the matter, and the fate even of the colored man, now as much as ever in their power, Is it proper ? would it be philanthropic to leave this miserable people in their insanity, even to themselves ? Nay, mild persuasive ness and tender treatment for those who are yet " among the tombs cutting them selves" with weapons much sharper than " stones," are out of place, and cannot with safety be resorted to, until the " demons" which possess them be utterly cast out. M. PERSPICUITY THE FIRoT EXCEL LENCE. I have just looked out perspicuity in the big dictionary, to see if it is exactly the word I want to convey my idea, I find that it is. • The dictionary says, " Perspicuity :—That quality of writings or language, which readily presents to the mind of another the precise ideas of the author. Perspicuity is the first ex cellence of writing or speaking." Now it is a happy coincidence for me, to find Mr Webster asserting as authority, just what I was tremblingly suggesting, viz : That perspicuity is the first excellence. I don't know why I suggested so self-evide n t a fact " tremb lingly," unless it was because I had seen it apparently ignored by so many authors and publishers. I bar e one literary periodical particularly in mind, which seems, (or did seem at one time,) to de light to enfold itself in a shroud of shadowy mystifications ; and those who ought to know better mistake obscurity for "sublimity," and "elevation of thought!" Last winter, I was interested in listening to th. following dialogue, respecting one of its articles. Mrs. A. " Have you read the article on -- in the last —." Mrs. B. " Yes, and found it very charming." Mrs. A. "I am free to confess that I did not. It lacked perspicuity. Indeed it was unintelligible to me, and, hence could not be instructive or' charming.' " Mrs. B. " Oh, I never pretend to understand half the articles in the —. I take it for granted they are above me." Mrs. A. " I am not so "umble,' (as Dickens . has it.) When I was a school-girl I was never in a mist over my geometry, or my Butler's Analogy ; and now that I am older and wiser, I don't think I ought to lose myself over the articles in our monthlies. When I have given my very best attention to a paragraph, and cannot understand its meaning or purpose, I think the fault is in the author." Mrs. B. (laughingly.) "How con ceited you are, dear Mrs. A. Why, when we comb to the place, in our read ing, when we cannot see the meaning any longer, we should struggle on, as we did up Mount Washington last sum mer, when the fog came rolling down upon us, saying, as we progress, Beautiful?' Charming!' Oh, how ly it is, only we can't see it!' You our patience was rewarded by - a `prospect from the top, after all." Mrs. A. "Very true ; but, with your pardon, I must turn your fine comparison quite against you. The fog is the ob scure style ; the beautiful view which we seek is the truth. We got our clear view, lit spite of the fog ; because we struggled up above it. So, by our own mental energy, we may get a clear view of a truth, in spite of our author's obscure style of presenting it. That does not prove, however, that it was wise, or right for him to mystify us. An author's office is, like the sun, to dispel all mists, and clear, and brighten our path, step by step, as he cheers and guides us on to cperfeet view." rs. B. "No doubt you are right, but there are few who have the inde pendence to say. such things, especially of popular authors." I believe Mrs. B. was right in her last remark. There is a vast deal of crying, "Beautiful !" " Charming !" " Oh, how lovely !" over misty prose and poetry, when the simple truth is, that there is a sad lack of perspicuity in the language and style of the author. Permit me to close, as I began, with the ipse dixit, (that means, "he, himself said it,") of Mr. Webster. " Perspi cuity is the first excellence of writing or speaking." HERBERT NEWBURY. THE JEWISH SURGEON. . In one of the large London hospitals a poor woman lay dying. One of the young surgeons, who was a Jew, went up to her bed, and said, "My poor woman, you seem very ill; I am afraid you will not recover. Can I do anything for you ?" "Thank you, sir," said the woman, "-there is a New Testament behind my pil low, and I should be much obliged to you if you would read a chapter to me." The young man seemed surprised, but he took the Testament, and did as she desired. H e continued to come and read to her for several days, and was greatly struck by the comfort and peace which the Word of Life seemed to give to the poor invalid. With almost her dying breath, the door woman gave the Testament to the Jewish surgeon, and urged him to read it. . He took the book home with him, and determined to keep his promise. He read it diligently, and soon found Him of whom Moses and the prophets wrote—Jesus, the Messiah—and was enabled to believe in 'Him as the "Lamb of God, who taketh away the sins of the world." ADVICE TO BOYS.--" You are made to be kind, generous, and magnanimous," says Horace Mann. "If there is a boy in school who has a club foot, don't let him know you ever saw it. If there is a boy with ragged clothes, don't talk about rags in his bearing. If there is a lame boy, assign him some part in the play which does not require much run ning. If there is a dull one, help him to get his lessons."