* DR. TALMAGEY SERMON. The Drooklyn Divine's Sunday Sermon. Subject : “The Birthplace of Sewing societies.” Preached at Joppa. TRXY: “And all the widows stood by him weeping, and showing the coals and gar ments which Dorcas wee wails she wae with them." Acts ix, 40 Christians of Joppa' lmpressed as [am with your mosque, the first 1 ever saw, and stirred as [ am with the fact that your har. bor once floated the great rafts of Lebanon cedar from which the temples at Jerusalem wera builded, Solomon's oxen drawing the logs through this very town on the way to Jerusslom, nothing can make Jue forget that this Joppa was the drthplace of the sewing society that has b scl the poor of all succedding ages in all lands The disasters to your town when Judas Macealions set it on fire,and Napoleon ] five huidred prisoners massacred in your neighborhood, cannot make me forget that one of the most magnificent charities of the centuries was started in this seaport by Dorcas, a woman with har needle smbroider- ing her name ineffaceably in the beneflesnce of the world, | see her sitting in yonder home. In the doorway, and around about the building, and in the room fhe sits are the pale faces of poor. She listens to their plant, she ties their woe, sh makes garaents or them, she adjusts manufatured arti- cles to suit the bent form of this invalid woman, aud to thacripple that comes crawl ing on his hands a kuees. She gives a coat to this one she gives sandals to that one, With the gifts she mingles prayers and tears and Christian encouragement. Then she out to be greeted on the street corners y those whom she blessed, and all through the Jrdes the £1 is hoary: “Dorcas is edt ing™ @ gic tefally in her face as she puts ner Pond on the burn ing brow, and the lost and the abandoned start up with hope asx they hear her gentls voice, as though an angel had addressed them; and as she goes out the lane, eyes half put out with sin think they ses a halo of light about her brow, and a trail of glory in her pathway. That night a half. pal shipwright climbs the hill and reaches and sees his little boy well clad, and says: ‘Where did these clothes come from™ And they tell him, “Dorcas has been here.” In another place a oman is trimming a lamp; Dorcas brought the oil. In another Jlace, a family that had not been at table or many a week are gathersd now, for Dor- cas has brought bread Bat thers is a sudden pause in that woman's ministry. They say: “Wheres ix Dares) Why, we haven't seen Roe [or many a day. Where is Dorcas” And one of thess poor goes up and knocks at the door and ® the mystery solved. All through the haunts of wretchedness, the news comes, “Dorcas is sick™ No bulletin flashing from the palase gate, telling the stagesofa King's disease, is more anxiously awaited for than the news from this sick benefactres Alas! for Jo ! there is wailing, wailing That voice which has uttered so many cheerful words is bushed: that band whicl had made so many garments the poor is cold and still; that star which had poured light into the mudpight of wretchedness is dimmed by the blinding mists that go up from the river of death. In every God forsaken place in this town, wherever there is a sick child and no balm; wherever there is hunger and no bread wherever there is guilt and no commiseration; wherever there is a broken heart and no comfort, there are despairing looks and streaming oves, and frantic gesticulations as they ery: “Dorcas is dead They send for the apostle Peter, who happens to be in the suburbs of this place, stopping with a tanner hy the name of Simon. Peler urges his way through the crowd around the door, and stands in the presence of the dead. What sxpostalation and grief all about him! Here stand some of the poor people, who show the for hie a into ths asylums of the suru and des. tute bearing that (iospel whic is sight for the blind, and hearing for the desl, and which makes the lame man leap like a hart, and brings the dead to le, immorial health bounding in their pulses. What a contrast between the practical benevolence of this woman and a great deal of the char. ity of this day! This woman did not spend her time y ning how the poor of your city of Jo were 10 be re lieved; she took her needle and relieved them, Bhe was not like those persons who sym- pntitine with y sorrows, and go out the street and bh at the boy who has upet his basket of cold victuals, or like that charity which makes a rousing speech on tha benevolent platform, and goesout to kick the beggar from the step, crying: “Hush your miserable howling es sufferers of the world want not so much theory as practice; not so much tears as dollars; not so much kind wishes as loaves of bread; not so much smiles as shoes: not so much “God bless yous!” as jackets and frocks, 1 will put one earnest Christian man, hard working, inst five thousand mere theorists pn the subject of charity. There area t many who have fine ideas about church archi. tecture who never im their life helped to build a church. Thers are men who can ve you the history of Buddhism and Mo- ammedanism, who never sent a farthing for their evangelization. There are women who talk beautifully about the suffering of the world, who never had the courage like Dorcas to take the needle and assault it, I am | male benevolence, God says to all lands and | people, Come now and hear the widow's mite rattis down into the poor box. of Conti sold all her jewels that she might help the famine stricken. Queen Blanche, the wife of Louisa VIII, of France hearing that thers were some persons unjustly in. carcerated in the prisons, went out amidst the rabble and took a stick and struck the door as a signal that they might all strike it, and down went the prison door and out came the prisoners. Queen Maud, the wife of Henry 1, went down amidst the poor and washed their sores and ad- ministered to them cordials. Mrs Retson at Matagorda, appearsd on the battlefield while the missiles of death were flyin around, and cared for the wounded. Is thers a man or woman who has ever heard of the Civil War in America who has not heard of the women of the Sanitary and Christian commissioners, or the fact that, be. fare the smoke had gone up from Gettysburg North met the women of the South on the battieflsid, forgetti all their animosities while they bound up the wounded, and closed the eyes of the slain? Dorcas the benelac. tress. I come now to speak of Dorcas the lamented, When death struck down that good woman, oh, how much sorrow there was in this town of Joppa! I supposs thers | Ware women | women, perhaps, with bandsomer faces; but | there was no grief at their departure like this | at the death of Dorcas. There was not more | turmoil and upturning in the Mediterran- | ean Sea, dashing against the wharves of this { seaport, than there were surgings to and fro {unmissed,. There may be a very large | funeral; there may be a great many carriages jand a plumed hearse: there may be hgh { sounding eulogiums; the bell may toll at ¢ { cemetery gate; there may be a very fine | marble shaft rearsd over the resting place: | but the whole thing may be a falsehood and | asham. The church of God has lost nothing, i the world has lost nothing. It is only a | nuisance abated; it is only a grumbler ceas- Parliament and the royal family to sit in. There was s gi audience to witness the distribution of the medals. A Colonel who had lost both fest in the battles of Inkerman was pulled in on a wheel chair; others came in Hmping on their crutches, Then the arose before them in the name overnment, and uttered words of commen- tion to the officers and men, and distrib uted these medals, inscribed with the four great battleflelds, Alma, Balaklava, Inker- man sand Sebastopol. As the Queen gave these to the wounded men and the wounded officers, the bands of music struck up the na- tional sir, and the people with «res rics oes fpined in the song: God save our gracious Queen! Lomg Hve our noble Queen | God save the Queen! And then they shouted ‘Huzza' huzza! Oh, it was a proud day for thoss returned warriors! But a brighter, better and glad- der day will come when Christ shall gather those who have toiled in His service, good soldiers of Jesus Christ. He shall rise be- fore them, and in the presence of all the glorified of heaven He will say: “Well done, : and faithful servant ™ and then He will bute the medals of eternal victory, not inscribed with works of righteousness which we have dons, but with those four great bat- tiefileds, dear to sarth and dear to heaven, Bethlehem! Nazareth! Gethsemane! Cal. vary! Comfort and Cost, BY HELEN EVERTSON SMITH. A skete koshowng tivo ways of living. How one jamily is miserable, where another is happy. “Cheap and good.” This is what most of us are wishing for. We desire the best of everything at the lowest prices. We would like to buy the best silks of Antwerp for the cost of a cotton sateen; to procure the best of Delmon- ico’s dinners for such a rate as a clerk could afford to pay. On the other hand there are those who fancy that no dress can fit the wearer unless the dressmaker received from $50.00 upwards for her skill; that no picture ean be good unless its pain- ter is one whose name alone would com- | mand thousands of dollars if affixed to Such persons if sud- denly reduced in circumstances find themselves in a hard position. They know that they ‘must economize,” but i the veriest daub. they are quite ignorant. Examples will { beat show what is meant. ! A gentleman who had enjoyed a very large income lost his fortune in specu- lations and then died leaving his wife, with four young children, and one was left an income of $8500.00; a sum which to many would be affluence, but The That she ‘must economize’ was the i 3 forts ‘to eponomize” mnst assuredly have ended in a rapid melting away of capital, followed by absolute poverty. With a good income and notwithstand- ing the help received, her family were constantly enduring real privationsand did not know how they could be avoided. Another lady—Mrs. Carter—was left with & mumilar family, $1000.00 per year less of income, and no rich relatives, Mrs. C r, also felt that she “‘must economize,” so she spent some time, and much thought in separating neces- sary things from the luxuries, or non- essentials of a comfortable existence. In Mrs. Carter's opinion the demands of fashion were not of the slightest real consequence, She would have prefer- red to move into some country town, but knew that her children would have superior educational advantages by re- maining in the city, and availing them- selves of the facilities of our excellent public schools, free lectures, museums, ete., and that when the time came they would have better opportunities for advancement in whatever pursuits they might wish to follow, for she intended them all to become producers as well as consumers, So she decided to remain in New York City, but chose her abode in the unfashionable precincts of the East Seventies, for there she found a fourth.story flat in a corner building facing south and west, containing par- lor, dining-room, three bed-rooms, servant's room, kitchen, bath and store-room for $500.00 per year. It is true that the rooms were small, but they were all sunny, and as large as and much more conveniently arranged than those iv Mrs. Barlow's house; the ceilings were low, but the ventilation was good; there were three flights of stairs to climb before reaching the domicile, but there were no stairs inside it and one servant could easily do all the work including washing and ironing, excepting the daily eare of the rooms, x care would only give a proper amount of exercise to the daughters. As the halls were heated by the land- lord, Mrs, Carter found that £50.00 worth of fuel supplied her range and kept her rooms st & comfortable tem- perature, gin her housekeeping with more real comforts than Mrs Barlow, and cost (including servants wages) of less than 8750.00 a vear, instead of §2000.00 which Mra Barlow expended to reach the same point In the matter of dress, Mrs. Carter her. Mrs. Carter was an wWolnan Y By sie m,"” soon in condition to eut and make all the SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON. Buspar Decesnen 15, 138), Solomon's Fall, LEBSON TEXT. (Kings 11 ; 4-13. Memory verses, 9, 1D LEBSON PLAN, Toric oF THE QUARTER : and Adversity. Gonpex Text vor ae Quarter: As long as he sought the Lord, God made him to prosper.—2 Chron. 26: b, Prosperity Lessox Toric ; ing Folly. Lesson Qurtine: Gorpex Text: Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall. —1 Cor, 10 : 12, The Peril of indulg- 1. Folly Indulged, vs. 4, 8. 2. Bin Committed, vs. 5-7. 8 Penalty Incurred, vs. #13. Dany Home Brapixas : M.—1 Kings] : 4-18. of indulging folly. T.—1 Kings 10 ;: 14-29, marvelous prosperity. W.—Deut. 17 : 14-20, Israel's kings warned. Neh. 13 : 23.81. bad company. F.—2 Kings 23 : 8-14. idolatry, Jas. 1:1-15. and death, 8--—RBom. 6 sin. The peril Solomon's T. evils of The Extirpating 8. : 12-23. Freed from - LESSON ANALYSIS, 1. FOLLY INDULGED, I. Tempters Obeyeoad ; His wives turned away Lis heart after other gods (4). Neither shall he multiply that his heart turn not 17 . 17). Him did strange women «(Neh 13 : 268.. wives, , cause 10 sin sent thou not { Prov. 1 10, works 11). darkness {Eph bh His heart was not perfect with the only evil (Gen. 6 ;: 5). with the Lord (1 Kings 8 : 61), He did right, fort heart (2 Chron. 25 : 2). (Matt. 6 : 24), iL Inlguity Extended: So did he for all his strange wives | yawning: it is only a dissipated fashionable i partad from his wine cellar; while, | the other hand, no useful Christian leaves | this world without being missed. Thechurch | of God cries out like the pr . “Howl, | fir tree, for the cedar bas fallen” | hood comes and shows the garments which | the de d had made. Orphans are lifted up to look into the calm face of the sleeping | benefactress. Reclaimed vagrancy comes | and kisses the cold brow of her who charmed { it away from sin, and all through the streets fof Jo thers is mourning-—mourning be- | cause Jorcas isdead she might still enjoy the comfort of were willing to take a house ina su- burb or in an old-fashioned ‘‘down- of small moment; for while she § good, sens exoellent taste, We now eft for food and sundries about §1500.00 (Pan. 41: 6}. the wharlwin i (Lios. 8B: 7). They will proceed further in ungodli- ness (2 Tim, 2: 16). Evil men {1 Tim. 3: 19). 1. “His wives turned away his heart.” (1) Wicked wives; (2) Wandering hearts. —{1) Tempters; (2) Tempta- tion; (8) Bin. HH ROI, WIPES YOU. Visiting the iu quity of the fathers upon thie cuiideen (Exod. 20: 5). Bo Israel rebelled aga vw the Louse of David (1 Kmngs 12: 19, In his son's days will 1 bring the evil upon his house (1 Kings 21: 29). He rout Israel from the house of David (2 Kings 17: 21). 1. “The Lord was angry with Solo- mon.” (1) Bolomon's iniquity; (2) Jehovah's anger.-(1) The erring king; (2) The angry Lord. 2. “He kept not that widch the Lord commanded.” (1) The Lord's com- mands; (2) The man’s transgres- sions. —(1) The Lord's will; (2) The man's way. +» “I will surely rend the kingdom from thee,” (1) Jehovah's decis- ion; (2) Solomon's doom. —(1) Pen- alty decreed; (2) Penalty inflicted. LESSON BIBLE READING, A RIGHT STATE OF HEART, Prepared for God (1 Bam. 7 : 8: 2 Chron. 30 : 18, 19), Devoted to wisdom (Psa. 90 : 12; Prov, 23 : 26). Perfect before God (1 Kings 8:61 ;2 Kings 20 : 3). Guided aright (Prov. 23 : 19). Purified (Jas. 4 : 8 ; 1 Pet. 1 : 22). :5:C0l. 3:22 “Jo « FR + Add { Diligently kept (Prov. 4 LESSON SURROUNDINGS, Intenvexine kvests.—The visit of | narrative by a deseription of the wealth | of Solomon, his renown, and the intro- | duction of horses and chariots into | Palestine (1 Kings 10 14-20). The | general prosperity of the kingdom has | already Per described in 1 Kings 4 : { 20.25. Itis indicated that the iminedi- | ate cause of the fall of Solomon was his | love for idolatrous women (1 Kings 11 : { 1-8); bat the luxury of wealth and the i pride of worldly wisdom must have | contributed to prepare the WAY for | Bolomon's decline PLACE, ~Jerusalem and vicinity, | Tixe.—The latter part of Bolomon’s reign, from B. C. 992 (or 994 to 975 (or | 977). But the prophecy in the Jesson | probably oceurred a few years before | the latter date. Pensoss, —Salomon and his heathen | wives: the Lord himself, {| Isciomsrs.—The lapse of Solomon into idolatry account of his wives, the displeasure of the Lord, and the prediction that the larger part of the kingdom should be rent away from Or -—- The Dead Fireman's Baby. “What is the matter with my papa?’ Bteave Neall's five year-old daughter | had eaught sight of her dead father in his coffin last Friday evening and ask- ed the question of those who had gath ered around the bier, “Papa is asleep,” they told her. “Why is papa in thet ugly bex?” she “He can sleep better there” “Good-night, paps.” She passed intoanadjoining room and was soon asleep. The mourners sat abont the coffin of the dead fireman all night, Shortly before 2 o'clock in the morn- To "a yor or nt ho had mada i When Josephine of France was carried or them, Their ef © 20 3 " er ; i i } ! The anotle Pata. Briel £ i Fout to her grave, there were a great many | Die and convenie nt flatin another un- | So bitter plans than the latter. cle, He will not do it amidst the excited | men and women of pomp and pride and posi- fashionable quarter for from $400.00 to | in the matter of providing for her | crowd. so he kindly orders that the whale | tion that went out after her: but [ am most | 8800, (6, she chose, not far from Faab- | bie N . Ca o ’ a ntl . { room be clewced. The door is shut against a tiny building about | 1a He, - mi artes a Son antiy n the populace The apostle stands now with fourteen feet wide and only thirty foot ' mind the advice given her DY an Od i the dead. Oh, it Is a serious moment, you : . ) { lady who had kept a popular boarding | know, when you are alone with a Htelons wailing until the air rang again, because, | GCFP, where—the kitche n being in the | house for many years, and finally re | body! The apostle gets down on his knees | When they lost Josephine, they los basement, the dining-room on . the | tired upon a com petance made in that | and prays, and then he comes to the lifeless [their last earthly friend. Oh, who | first floor, parlor on the second and five | =. nprofitable business. Sead | form of this one all ready for the sepuicher, [anid Wo Pathe have Sich obws- | genall bed rooms in the fourthetory and | Mr often unprofitable business. Sa snd in the strength of Him who is the resur- | ules n a the tears i were —OnE bili : “me's | * rection he ints: “Tabitha arise” | ever pourad in the lachrymals that have | atti ” ng was obliged io pate wand There is a stir in the fountains of life; the | been exhumed from ancient cities. There | waking hours in traversing the stairs | may be no mass for the dead: there may be | or to keep several servants to do so for | ing the gong on the wall that kad so often summoned him om his duty ! clanged an alarm for the Polk street fire. It was sounded once and was re- peating the alarm when the little girl came flying into the room in her long, white night dresa | She looked st the silent walchers, | and then ran to the side of the dead | man. Climbing on a chair, she reached nto the coffin and shook her father by he shoulder. 2. "His heart was not perfect with the Lord.” (1) Perfect hearts; (2) 1m- perfect hearts. (1) A perfect heart in man; (2) A perfect link to God 3 “So did he for all his strange wives.” (1) Wrong perpetrated; (2) Wrong multiplied. —The tempt- 1g wives; (1) The yielding king. | II, BIN COMMITTED. WG | re | 1. 1doils Followed: “ 3 ry rg gs AR 4 g i . B 1 at an, Jo Xedp BIC Lm.0na OF | Bolomon went after Ashtoreth,.... | . s Jos ‘ ! : a. ote nu . | and after Miloom (5). to $1400.00 per annum, or a comforta- { expect, the former continues to | { affected by the story of history that on that | j.'s haunts, { day there were ton thousand of the poor of France who followed her coffin, weeping and | flushes; the aye opens; she sits up We see in this subject Dorvas the disciple; Dorcas the benefactress; Dorcas the lamented | Dorcas the resurrected, It I had not seen that word disciple in my text, I would have known this woman was a Christian, Sach music as that never came froma heart which is not chorded and strung by divine grace. Before 1 show you the needlework of this woman, I want to £34 eh Rin : i ; ? ; £ i E “ fi : if ie iF He £3 ie =R ! ; i: Ba [9% no costly sarcophagus; elaborate msusoleum; but in the damp cel lars of the city, and through the lonely huts ing, mourning, mourning, because Dorcas is dead. ‘““Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord, they rest from their labors, and their works do follow them.’ I speak to youof Doreoms the resurrected. The apostle came to where shes was and said: “Arise; and she sat up™ In what a short compass the writer put that—""She sat up™ Oh, whats time thers must have been around this town, when the apostle brought ber out among old friends! How the tears of joy must have started! What clap- ng of hands there must have been! What What Bound it all E i 2 2 f i E Ek i : ¥ | » § ‘ ; { ! i ] { f ai: Ferdi : § i ERE Fens i in the wide and conveniently ar- sufficed: in the flat one servant would three were essential, Four servants were really necessary to make life in the narrow house as easy as it would have been in the other places with one or two. Mrs. Barlow’sgowns had always been made by Madame Val an Vent whose “ereations” could not be purchased for less than 500,00 each, though for ally impecunions p le she econdescended to furnish Oe os ala Mode” for $200.00 or even $100.00 each. Mra Barlow had found it necessary to re- pounce all thought of soquiring any more of Madame's ‘‘creatioms,” but considered that she avd each of her daughters “must have” at least one own a year from the “cheap” grade of adame’s wares, and for the rest the must do their own sewing. As a result the gowns from Madame Val au Vent's were all alike, and like those of all of her customers who did not buy “‘crea- tions,” for which all original ideas must be sacredly kept; while their other gowns were of material and abom- inably made; but then, as poor Mrs, Barlow explained, she “had to econ- om ” a ize. Before their misfortunes the Barlows had always kept a liberal, even a lavish table, but having now arranged to spend $1400.00 for their tiny and incon- venient house, $100.00 for coal (a scant allowance) about $500.00 {or wages and to eo Val aa Vent, the al- Jowance left. for the table, necessary wholesale rates ble quantity. Even sugar ooh package. I buy only the best of everything, especially of butter, milk and eggs. You can never have whole- some or relishy food if any of these things, are ever so little “ofl.” “A prime rib roast, weighing ten or twelve pounds at 16 cents per pound, and a fore-quarter of lamb, weighing six or seven pcaunds at ten or twelve cents, purchased each week will furn- ish you with one dinner of hot roast beef and one of cold; one dinner of juicy chops and one of stuffed-roast, or stew, or pot-pie; and two breakfast or lunch dishes of some of the many forms of utilizing the remnants. From the bones of the week, two or three pounds of soup-mest, and all the odds and ends of vegetables, a little rice, or a can of tomatoes, you should be able to have always a supply of ex. cellent soup. The roast beef and lamb above mentioned, and a good sirloin: steak weighing about three pounds at eighteen cents a pound, asmall piece of corned-beef at eighty cents a pound, and a fish once a week, costing from ten to twenty cents per Bn should give you an abundant meat sap- ply for the week. If there are any of these things that you don’ like, sub- stitute others of similar cost. There are many thi $oichules romy if uly youn don't go h the markets wi your eyes shut, ere are no of food that 1t pays better to buy than good milk, and eggs, for they seem costly at first, there is no necessary waste about any of them; every atom of each is ou “Fowls in their season are not expen- cooked. Roasted and sive il p are not but a boiled fowl is not only 10 but makes a good Canned vegetables of them are really than the so-called fresh ones ex- ue are These be thy gods, O Israel (Exod, 32: mosh, . .. .and for Molech (1 Kings 11: 7) They set them up....Asherim every high hill (2 Kings 17: 10). images (Pea. 97: 7). il. Evil Parpetrated: Solomon did that which was evil (6). Israel did that which was evil... .and served the Baalim (Judg. 2: 11) Judsh. . . . provoked him {0 jealousy with their sins (1 Kings 14: 22). My people have committed two evils (Jer. 2: 13). What agreement hath a temple of God wite dolls (2 Cor. 6: 16). il. Jehovah Abandoned: Solomon. . ..went not fully after the Lord, as did David (6). They forsook the Lord and served Baal (Judg. 2: 18), hey have forsaken me, and have wor- shipped Ashtoreth (1 Kings 11: 33). Which went astray from me after their lols (Ezek. 14: 10), They have forsaken me the fountain of living waters (Jer. 2; 18), 1. “Solomon went after Ashtoreth.” (1) Jehovah's rival; (2) Soloman's apostacy.—(1)Ashto 's vile char- acter; bi Solomon's base conduct. 2. “Solomon did that which was evil in the sight of the Lord.” (1) Solo- mon’s deeds; (2) God's observations, (1) Evil as man does it; (2) Evil as God sees it. 3. “Solomon. ... wert not fully after the Lord.” Solomon's career com- (1) With the law of God; (2) ith the career of David; (3) With his own early choice. 111. PENALTY INCURRED, 1. God Angry: The Lord was angry with Solomon he Lord was with me for RAEI PE i one us rovoked the Lord to wrath (Dent. § made bigh flack, ud veovokte His wrath will soon be kindled (Psa, 2: 12) 11: Power Curtailed: 1 ely rend the kingdom from out of the hand : hi) have we in David? (1 “Papa, paps, wake np!” she said. { “There's a fire! Wake up!” The looks of the people in the room | and the strange stillness of her father | frightened her. “Wake up, please, papa,” she plead- led, her voice beginning to quiver. the fire.” The father still not opening his eyes, she looked around wonderingly and then added what she thought not fail to bring him to his feet. “Wake up, papa, you'll miss the fire and be fined!” When he did not stir she knew that something was wrong, and turned her tearful, puzzled face to the older peo- le. “Never mired the bell, darling,” some one answered, “papa wom't ge fo the fire to-night.” “But,” persisted the baby, “he al- ways got up before when the bell rung —why wouldn't he wake up? What's mamma erving for? What's everybody crying for?” And the troubled little child burst into tears, and, crying pitecusly at what she did not know, was gently carried back to her cot to ery hersell to sleep again. — San Francisco Braminer. Tanne is a very interesting movement on hand to rir extensive and ex- snsive mourning, There are several i ing reform Associations in Eng- land, i
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