IR, TALMAGES. SERMON, | The Brooklyn Divine's Sunday Sermon. a ———- Subject ;: “Duties and Responsibilities of Business Men," bio — Teer: “It ds naught, it is naught, saith the buyer, but when he is gone his way, then Ae boasteth.®—Proverbs xx. 14 Palaces are not such prisons as the world imagines. If you think that the cnly time kings and queens come forth from the royal gates is in procession and gorgeously at tended, yon are mistaken. Incognito, by day or by night, and clothed in citizens’ apparel or the dress of a working woman, they come out andl see the world as it is Tn no other way could King Solomon, the author of my text, have known everything that was going on. From my text I am sure he must, in Hsguise, some day have walked into a store of ready made ay nr. in Jerusalem, and stood near the counter and overheard a con- versation between a buyer and a seller. The merchant put a price on the coat, and the castomer began to dicker and said: “Ab surd! that coat is not worth what you ask for it. Why, justlook at the coarseness of eho fabric! See that spot on the collar! Be- sides that, it does not fit. Twenty dollars for that! Why, it isn’t worth more than ten. They haven better article chan that. and for cheaper price, down at Cloathem, Fitem & Brothers. Beside that, I don't want it at say price. Good morning ” “Hold,” says the merchant; ‘don't go off in that way. 1 want to sell vou that coat. I have some pay- ments to make and [ want the money Come now, how much will you give for that coat? “Well,” says the customer, ‘IL will split the difference. You asked twenty dollars, and I said ten. Now, I will give you fifteen’ “Well,” says the merchant, *'it's a great sac rifles; but take it at that price.” yen Solo mon saw the customer with a roll under his arn start and go out and enter his own place { business; and Solomon, in disguise, fol lowed him. He heard the customer as he unrolkad the coat say. ‘Boys, I have made a great bargain. How much do you guess I guve for that coat? “Well” says one, wish- ng to compliment his enterprise, "you gave ty dollars for it." Another says wy id think you got it cheap if you gave twanty-five dollars.” “No,” says the buyer in triumph; “I got it for fiftean dollars. 1 beat him down and pointed out the imperfec tions until I really made him believe it was not worth hardly anything. It takes ma to make a bargain. Ha! Ha!™ Oh, man, you got the goods for less than they wers worth by positive falsehood, and no wonder, when Rolomon went back to his place and had put #f his disguise, that he sat down at his writ- ing ded and mads for all ages a crayon sketch of you: “Itis naught it is naught, saith the buyer; but when he is gone his way, then he boasteth.” There are no higher styles of men in all the world than those now at the head of merabandise in Brooklyn and New York and in the other great citiss of this continent. Their casual promise is as good as a bond with piles of collaterals. Their reputation for integrity is as well estab hed as th of Petrarch residing ia the family Cardinal Colonna, and when there was great disturbance in the family the cardinal called all his people together and put them under ath to tell the truth, except Petrarch, for when he came to swear ardinal put away his book and said “As te you, Petrarch, your word is sufficient.” Yiever since the world stood have thers beenso many merchants whose transactions san stand the test of the Ten Command- ments. Such bargain makers are all the mors to be honored because thay have with. stood year after year temptations which have Sung many so fiat and flung them so hard they can never recover themselves. While il t the all positions in life have powerful besetments to evil there are specific Borns of alluremens which are peculiar to each occupation and profession, and it will be useful to speak of the peculiar temptations of business men rst, as in the scenes of the text busines men ars often tempted to sacrifice plain | truth, the sellsr by exaggerating the value of jooda, and the buyer by depreciating them. e cannot but admire an expert salmsman. See how he first induces the customer into a mood favorable to the proper consideration of the valus of the goods. He shows himself to be an honest and frank salesman How arefully the lights are arranged till they fail just right upon the fabric! Heginning with goods of medinm quality, te zradually advances toward thoss of more thorough make and of more attractive pal- tern. How he watches the moods and whims of his customer! With what perfect calm. sess he takes the order and bows the pur- ‘haser from his presence, who goes away saving made up his mind that he bought the goods at a price which will allow him a ving margin when he again sells them. The goods were worth what the salesman said t ware, aud were sold at a price which will not make it necessary for the house to tail ten years in er to fix up things. But with what burning indignation we think of the iniquitous stratagems by which goods are som es dispossd of. A glance at the morning pa ows the arrival at ame of our hotels of a young merchant from one of the inland cities. He is a comparative “range ln the great city. and, of course, he must be shown around, and it will bs ths duty of some of our enterprising houses to esocors him. He is a large purchaser and has plenty 3! time and money, and it wil pay lo be very attentive. The is spent at a placeol doubtful amusement. en they go to the hotel Raving jous comme to town, they raust, of course, . A friend from the same mercantile establishment d in, and asare and generosity suggest that arink. Business prdspects are and the stranger is warned api cortain dilapidated mercantile establishmen are about to fail, and for such kindness magnanimity of caution against the dishon- esty of other business houses, of course, it is axpected they will, and so they do, take a drink. Other merchants lodging in adjoining rooms find it hard to sleep for the clatter o decanters, and the coarse carousal of thess “nail follows well met” waxes louder. But they sit not all night at the wins cup. The must see the sights. They or forth with chealts finshed and eyes b The vuter gates of hell to let in the victims. The wings of los} souls flit among the Highs, and toe i the carousers sound with the rumbling of the damned. Farewell to nil he sanctities of home! Could mother, in the inland some virtuous soul that once stood aghast at the splendor and power of thess business men will say, “Alas! this is all that is left of that great firm that ooou- pied a block with their merchandise and overshadowed the city with their influence, and made righteousness and truth and purity fall under the galling fire of avarice and arime.™ While we admire and approve of all acute- ness mad tact in the sale of goods, we must condemn any process by which a fabric or roduvt is Repruten as sing a value Which it really does not have. Nothing but shear falsehood can represent as rfection boots that rip, silks that speedily lose their justre. calicoes that immediately wash out, stoves that crack under the first hot fire, books insufficiently bound, carpets that un ravel, old furniture rejuvenated with putty and glus and sold as having bean recently manufactured, gold watches made out of brass, barrels of fruit the biggest apples on the top, wine adulterated wit strychnine, hosiery poorly woven, cloths of domestic manufacture shining with foreign labels, ime ported goods represented as rare and bard to get, because foreign SachATe is so high, rolled out on the counter with matchless dis- play. Imported, indeed! but from the fac- tory in the next street. A pattern already unfashionable and unsalable palumd off asa new print upon some country merchant who has come to town to moke his first purcliase of dry goods and going home with a large stock of goods warranted to keep. A gain business men are often tempted to make the habits and customs of other trad- ers their law of rectitude, There are com- mercial usages which will not stand the test of the last day. Yet mon in business are apt to do as their neighbors do. If the ma jority of the traders in any locality are lax in prin- ciple, the commercial code in that commu- nity will be spurious and dishonest, [tis a hard thing to stand close by the law of right when your next door neighbor by his loose- ness of dealing is enabled to sell goods at a cheaper rate and decoy your customers, Of course you who promptly meet all your business engagements, paying when you promise to pay, will find it hard to compete with that merchant who is hopelessly in abt to the importer for the goods purchased, and to the landlord whose store he occupies, and to the clerks who serve him Thers are a hundred practices prevalent in the world of traffic which ought never to be- come the rule for honest men. Their wrong does not make your right. Bin never be- comes virtues by being muitiphed end admits ted at brokers board, or merchants ex. change Because others smuggle a few things in passenger trunks, becauss others take usury when men are in tight places, be- cause others deal in fancy stocks, becauss others palm off worthless indorsements, be cause others do nothing but blow bubbles, do not therefore, be overcome of tsmptation. Hollow pretension and fictitious credit and commercial gambling may awhile prosper, but the day of reckoning cometh, and in ad- dition to the horror and condemnation of outraged communities the rurse of God will coms, blow after blow, God's will forever and forever is the only standard of right and wrong, and not commercial ethics. Young business man, avoid the first busi- isnonor, and you will avoid all the rest. nefarious desds, and ne + river wish toe tide was low, and { ths great links of which his fool slipped, and it began to swall and hs esuld not with iraw it. The tide bagan to rises, The chain wsrild pot ba losssnsd nor filed off in time, and a surgeon was called to amputsia the limb, but befors the work could be done the tide rolled over the victim and his life was gous, snd I have to tall you, young man, that just ons wrong into which you slip may be a link of a long chain of circumstances from which you cannot be extricatad by any in- genuity of your own or any halp from others, over many. When Pompey, the warrior, wanted to take possession of a city, and they would not open the gates, he persuaded them to admit a sick soldier. But the sick soldier after a while got well and strong, and be he devastai- One wroflg admitted in strength until m. into the soul may gain fmmoral nature, and the surrender is complete Again, business men are sometimes tempted to throw off personal responsibility gpon the moneyed institution to which they belong. Directors in banks and railroad and insurance ;ompanies sometimes shirk pes sonal responsibility underneath the action of the corporation. And how oftan, whan some basking house or financial institution ex. jodes through frand, respectable men in the board of directors say: “Why, I thought all was going on in an honest way, and | am ut- terly confounded with this misdemeanor ™ The banks, and the firasnd life and marine insurances companies, and the railroad com- pmaies, will not stand up for judgment in the inst day, but those who in them acted right. soualy will receive, esch for himmeif, a re. ward, and thoss who acted the pars of ne imaell, ro- giect or trickery will, each for cwive & on odampation, Unlawful dividends mre not clean Galore (God because there are those amocciated with you who grab just as big a pile as you do He who countenances the dishonesty of the firm, or of the corporation, or of the associa. tion, takes u himself all of the moral Habilities. if the financial institution steals, bo esis If into wild speculations, be himself is a gambler. If they needlessly smbarrass a creditor, he himsalf is guilty of erusity, If they swindle the uninitis he himself is a defaniter. No financial instito- tion ever bad a money vault onugH.or oredit stanch emough, or dividends snough, or policy acute enough to hide , individual sin of its members. The old that corporations bave no souls, is . Every corporation has as many has members, Again, many business men have bean tempted to postpone their enjoyments and duties to a future season of entire leisure. What a sedative the Christian religion would be to all our business men if, instead of post- poning its uses torold or death, they w take it into the store or factory or worldly engagements now! It isfolly to go uncertainties of business life with no God 0 help. A merchant in a New England vil was standing by a horse, and horse li his foot to stamp it in a pool of water; and the merchant, to escape the splash, into the door of an insurance agent,and agent have coms (0 renew m souls as it dential. And what a m nest man to feel that th are and sidera or a sess men could realize it! ———— Hill or Plessant Rotress or Sagle Eyrie. May the future have for every business man here all that and mors besides! Dut are Jou pout pont our happiness to t me’ you oYiourning your joys to that consummn tion? Suppose that you achieve all you expect and the vision { mention is not up to the reality, because the fountains will be brighter, the house grander and the scenery more plo turesque—the mistake is none the less fatal. What charm will there be in rural quiet for a man who has thirty or forty years heen conforming his entire nature to the excit- ments of business’ Will flocks and herds with their bleat and moan be able to silence the insatiable spirit of acquisitiveness which has for years had full swing in the soul? Will the hum of the breeze soothe the man who now can find his only enjoyment in the stock market? Will leat and cloud and fountain charm the eye that has for three tourths of a lifetime found its chief beauty in bogsheads and bills of sale? Will parents be competent to rear their children for high and holy pur- poe if their fndancy and boyhood and girl- ood were neglected, when they are almost ready to enter upon the world and have all their habits fixed and their principles stereo typed? No, no; now is the time to be happy. Now is the time to serve your Creator, Sow is the time to be a Christian, Are you too busy? Ihave known mien as busy as you are whe had a place in the store loft where they went to pray. Some one asked a Christian sailor where his found any place to pray in. He said. “I can always find a quist place at mastheed ? And in the Faslest day of the season, if your heart is right, you oan find a place to pray. Broadway and Fulton street are good places to pray in as you go to mest your VArious eng ements, Uo home a little earlier and get intro- duced to your children. Be not a alley slave by day and night, lashed fast to the oar of business. Let every day have its hour for warship and intellectual culture and recrea- tion. Bhow yourself greater than your busi. ness: Act not as though after death you would enter upon an eternity of railroad stocks and coffees and bonbons. Roast not your manhoods before the perpetual fires of anxiety. With every yard of cloth you well throw not in your soul to boot, Use firkin and counting room desk and hardware crate as the step to glorious usefulness and highest Christian character. Declis opos and for- sver who shall be master in your store, you or Fou business. Again, business man are often tempted to let their calling interfere with the interests of the soul. God sends men into the business world to get educated, just as boys ars sent to school and college. Purchase and sale, lows and gain, disappointment and rasping, pros parity, the dishonesty of others, panic and bank suspension are but different lessons in the school The more business, the more means of grace. Many have gone through wildest panic unhurt, “Are you not afraid you will break? said someone tos merchant in time of great commercial excitement. He replied: “Aye, I shall break when the fiftieth Psalm breaks, in the fifteenth verse: ‘Call upon me in the day of trouble and I will de- iver thee." ” Perhaps originally they had but little but two business thumps woke them up from Christ's But busines bas besn -netusl depistion to many a man. It first rat of him all benevolenos, next all amiability, next all religious aspiration, next | conscience, and though he entered his Yo- sation with large heart and noble character Men appreciate the importance of having right w the right block. Now, God's angels hover ovar sustain and build ap To spiritual caltaure ment you will listen for it, you may hear a i i ! Yet soms of those sharpest at the bargain are cheated out of their immortal blessed news game” of the street. They make invest. ments in things everiastingly below par, They put their valuables in a safe not fire roof. They give full credit to influences that will not be able to pay one csal on a follar. They plunges into a labyrinth from which no bankrupt law or “two-thirds enact ment” will ever extricate them They takes into their partnership the world, the flash and the devil, and the enemy of all righteousness will boast through sternal ages t the man who in sil his business life could not be oul wittad or overreached at last tumbled into spiritual defaloation and was swindled out of heaven. Perhaps soms of you saw the fire in New York in 1535. Aged men tell us that it heg- gared all description. Some stood on the YI of Brookivn, and looked at the “ad ruin that swept down the streets and threat ensd to obliterates the metropolis. But the commercial world will yet bs startied by a greater con tion, even the last. Bills of policies of insurance, mor » of and government securities will be consumed in one lick of the flame Bourse and the United States mint will turn to ashes. Gold will run molten into the dust of the street. Exchanges and granite blocks will make the earth tremble. The flashing up of the great light will show the righteous the way to their thrones Their Dost up and take possession of them. The toils of business life, which racked their brain and their nerves for so many years, will cease from troubling, and the weary are a8 rest.” -—- The First of Social Duties, 1t 1s umversally conceded that the first of social duties is the giving of the greatest amount of innocent pleasure to the greatest number of people; but how this shall be accomplished is a subject tor much consideration. To follow strictly the golden rule, doing unto others as we would be done by, wonld alone enable us to accom- fish our end—providing all human Reine thought and felt so nearly alike that what we might wish to be done to ourselves, would be wished by others; or providing that we have an unerrin judgment, an unfailing tact in r to what may or may not be desired by Is were ina circle of our Two little about twenty and girls of from ten ng the old to sixteen years of age, pin fashioned game of *'k n the ring." One of the girls being violently kissed by one of the boys, in accordance of the rile of the game which nired this penalty under certain condi eried ont to the other little Ly “Help me! Mary! help me!” And, with the spirit she would be dome by, M i that the a“ BO Mary Pas slunk g i id He gat ta tend to like what they detest or to dis- like what they actually prefer. Taking the world as it is, a compound of sincerity and falsehood, generosity and selfishness, magnanimity and mean- ness, we would not act upon a too literal construction of the golden rule, If we wished to be ES eo in Booiety, we would rather consider it the first of social duties to adapt ourselves to cir- cumstances, and to endeavor to have everything move smoothly; rendering the golden rule somewhat in this fash- ion. SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON, SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 18%, The Parable of the Sower. LESSON TEXT. (Luke 5 : 4-15, Memory verses, 12-15) LESSON PLAN. Toric or THE QUARTER: Jesus the Saviour of Men, Forget yourself, and make every thing as agreeable as possible, to every one else, After having forgotten one's own mental needs and desires, influential minority of a social gather- ing of any sort, are agreed in their do- casion for every one else, it becomes almost unfailingly a “‘delightful time." The thing to remember first, last, and all the time, come to enjoy ourselves, to be enter- a spoon. We have come to help to give to other people a good time, to do our little best to make the evening, the dinner, the lawn party, the pic-nie, the boating trip, or whatever it may be, pass off agreeably, to make it an occas ed sunshine, we feel without knowing. Of course, much of the pleasure of a social gathering of any sort depends upon the tact and talents of the hosts, but all should not be left to them. If the guests do not second their efforts, the ablest and best disposed. invitation, we are virtually committed to do our best to make every one hap- py during the time of our stay. guests? We must sink them out sight and memory. If our worst en- {0 be even A mmvitation be with an There must not And 1s simple our greetings are forced. hypocrisy, it courtesy pleasure of others, by ex- which be willing to hont and, singing or playing expect much atten hurt or disap roe sort ih we are proficient, shonld do so without urgin delay, when our little part is over, even while we ar or reciting, not to tion, { to retire wit int. as and not to feel we ive 8 mly of the perfunctory at is paid to all alike On the other hand { those of who belong to the of the entertmined, rather than to select fow of entertainers, must not fall into the error of supposing that have nothing to do! It 1s our part to atten to whatever is going on, to listen wit all our ears in any event, and with all our hearts, if we can; to smile or laugh, to sigh or ery at the proper places; to show our full appreciation of the at- tempt that has been made to please us At » gathering, where conversation forms a prominent part of the enter- tainment. it should be the aim of each guest, 10 have a few moments of lively pleasant chat with each person present, who is known to him. Tosit in acorner with a few friends, ignoring the others, is an unpardonable rudeness; yei it 1s one that half a dozen or more persons hnss the we d H ing of as many as twenty-five people, un- capable sort, who breaks up the little circles, which are so por. separating their members, and pairing them off with others The question of whether mooted, but never decided. In our very often impossible, and in that case it becomes the duty of those who are standing or sitting near others, who are not engaged in conversation, to each other. No lady or gentleman accustomed to the ways of good society thus addressed. Even by his boot-black in the house of a friend, s gentleman would show neither ANNOYANCE DOr surprise. her wash-woman bere extend a friendly hand. The next day all relations may return to their old level, but while we are guests in the house of another, we must be surprised and annoyed at noth- ing; for it is a part of the first of social duties to allow the display of no feel- ing, whose expression would ruffle the harmony of the hour. Besides—and this men and women of the world well know--to repress hard thoughts and ungenerous emotions, tends to extirpate them. To ex- press kind thoughts and generous ecelings tends to inerease then, and to cause us to remeber thet we are in this world not for ourselves, but for others, and that the boot-black and the wash-woman have just as much right to the best in it as we have. Spmaxiva of ‘Jeffersonian mmplio- ity,” » genuine instance is to be found in one of the arguments by which Mr. Jefferson himse t to enforce the ratification of his Louisiana putehuss, Gorpex Texr This is indeed the of the world, (JUARTER © the Saviour YOR THE Christ, John 4 : 42 Lessox Toric : Words on Sowing. { { « 1. The Parable, vs. 4 9, i i The 114 LK 11 Lesson OUTLINE heed there fore 8:18, Goroex Text: Take how ye hear, Luke Dairy Home READINGS: M. Luke 8 : 4-15. ing. Matt, 13 1-28. parallel narrative, W.-——Mark 4 : 1-20. lel narrative. T.—Ita. 5 : 1-7 vineyard. F.- Luke fig-tree. 8, Mark 11 leaves, 8. John 15 : 1- fruitfulness. T Mark's paral The unfruitful 13 : 1.8, The Blessed ness of ati A pn LESSON ANALYSIS, 1. THE PARABLE, | I. The Lord's Employment of Para~ bles: He spake by a parable (4), He spake to them many thing bles (Matt, 13 : 3). Without a parable spake he no to them (Matt. 13 : 84). He spake also a parable und {Luke 5 : 36 These things have n proverbs (John ii. The bles: Unto mysteries i I will open my month in a parable (Psa. thir i spoken unto Len Ths Gr 16 : 25). Disclosing Power of Para- vou it is given to know i » ig i “ {Ezek. 17 : 2). Explain unto us th 'e ¢ par while (Matt 111. The Concealing Power of Para- bles; That seeing they may not see ( They say of me, Is he not a spea parables? (Ezek. 20: 49). In parables: because seeing they see pot (Matt 13: 13). Ye shall hear, and shall in no wise un- derstand (Matt. 13: 14 Unto them, . .. .all things parables Mark 4 11). 1. “He spake by aparable.” (1) The audience; (2) The speaker; (3) The form of address; (4) The imparted 2. “Unto you it is given to mysteries of the kingdom." he mysteries of the kingdom; I'he perception of the disciples; (3 The gift of the Lord I. “That seeing they may not see. (1: What the world does see; What the world does not see. 10. ker of . . are Qone in {1 i {9 -} {5 - IL I. The Sower: The sower went forth to sow (5). Hear then ye the parable of the sower Matt. 13: 18 | He that soweth the good seed is the | Son of man (Matt. 13: 37). | The sower soweth the word (Mark 4: i 14) | One soweth, and another reapeth (John 4:37). i 11, Sowing | As he sowed, some fell by the way side (5). THE SOWING, (Pan. 126: 5). {| gure reward (Pros. 11: 18). | He thatsoweth iniquity shall reap ca- lamity (Prov. 22: 8). In the morning sow thy seed (Ecel. 11: 6). iii. The Seed: The seed. is the word of God (11). The good seed, are the sons of the kingdom ( Matt. 13: 38), To sow his seed (Lake 8: 5). Not of corruptible seed, but of incor- ruptible (1 Pet. 1: 23). His seed abideth in him (1 John 3: 9). 1. “The sower went forth to sew his seed.” (1) The waiting fields; (2) The precious seed; (3) The lordly Sower.—{1) The Sower’s purpose; (2) The Sowers toil; (3) The Sow- er's sucoess, . “As he sowed, some fell Other fell.” (1) Patient sowing; (2) Var- jod falling: (3) Differing results. _ “Phe seed is the word of God.” (1) Capable of the sowing; (2) Re- quiring favorable soil; (3) Possess. ing germinal powers. Il. THE RESULTS. » Satan Arcuses: Then cometh the devil (12). The tempter came and said unto him (Matt. 4: 3). Then cometh 9. Straightway cometh Satan (Mark 4: 15). The prince of the world cometh (John 14: 80). 1. Faith Falls: For » while bellewe, and in time of temptation fall away (13). Straghtway he stumbleth (Matt. 13: 21). They have no root, ...but endure for a while (Mark 4:17). ....went back, and walked no . more with him (John 6: 66). went out from us, bat they were not of us (1 John 2: 19). 1: Fruit Abowd: ....bping forth frnit with pa- the evil one (Matt. 13: a HAE PIS LAP in weeel The i he sad 1. “Then cometh the Jovi nd ta away the Wot qd. 1: The vip seed: (2; The alert base appropriation; (4; resnits, 9 «'I'hese have no root.” (13 Te Se- cure stability; (2) To sppropriste ponrishment: (3) To ensure life, 3, “Bring forth fruit with patience.” (1) Producing; (2) Continning * e > foe; 19} ————————— — LESSON BIBLE READING KYMBOLISM OF FRUIT. Effects of repentance iMatt. 3 : B) Characteristic conduct (Matt. 7 20). 16 Products of the Spirit (Gal b © 2 Eph. bh: Praiseful utterances (Heb, 1 Godly example (Prov, 11 : 1 Rewards of the righteous Rewards of the wicked 10). 72 : 16 ; Joh LESSON SURROUNDINGS, VERTH, HH ter the fesson, , Innde BA INTERVENING Fi i 8 in the diseip) Luke with his cirenit through Galilee ond {| Shortly aiterwards, 8 | returned to not psn Gas, the Capernauin, named, | the para © which L Mark, i place iB | very busy | was uttered, i in order how busy they Ww the nee however, were, 100 and bh friends | Jesus said he was “bes | (Mark 3 : 20, 21). The | Lists also narrate here ! of a demoniae called | hemous hostility of the Pharisees | 12 : 22-37; Mark 3 : 22-30). Then ! Jowed a request for a sgn (Matt | 48-45), after which the mother | brethren of Jesus sougnt hum - 46-50: Mark 3 : 31-85; Lake Later in his narrstive, Lao a similar miracle 1 1BOTIRS hold, these are th m insert at this point that is, between the last le n and the | present one—all the narrative io 11:14 to 13 : 9, since that entire | sage is connected by the evangelist any case, the discourse in parable curred on the day our Lord was soug! | for by his mother and his brethren, ane the on } occurred evening (Matt. 13 : 1; Mark 4 | Mark tells that the jarsble was spoket a boat. Prace,—On lake, probably | parently at shore €@ nid a y BE {| events, many we must Luke pas- in slorin the lake from the west shore of th near Cspernaum, ap convenient bend in The explanation may have the boat, farther out ake, Later on, he went into the Matt 36). in "Kl: that is, Prensoxs h Bone i Lhe Moga in ia 15 Lhe A.D. Lar hm autumn of A. U. C, Ix Lord, the disciples, others wit Mark 4:4; a grest multitude I%¢ The multitude gathers; | the parable is spoken; the disciples ask an explanation; our Lord tells why he speaks in parables, and then explsins the four ways of receiving the word of God. Pamarrer Passaces 11-23; Mark 4 : 1-23. JTDENTS, Matthew 13 —-—-—— Desponding Mothers. «] have done nothing to-day but | say wearily at the close of it. Do you | oail ‘that nothing that your children | are healthy and happy, and secured | from evil influence? Nothing that neat- ness, and thrift, and wholesome food follow the touch of your finger-tips? Nothing that beauty in place of ugli- pess meets the eye of the cheerful little ones, in the plants at your window, in the picture on the wall? Nothing that home to them means home, and will al- | ways do so to the end of life, what vie- jssitudes soever that may involve? Or, eareworn mother, ie all this nothing? | Is it nothing that over agsiost your | sometime mistakes and sometime dis- | couragements shall be written, **She hath dope what she could?” LITTLE COMPORTS. Little things often jar amd annoy, and so little things involve comfort, not alone for ourselves but for others. A happy home is not necessa rily one | possessing rich decoration and magnifi- | cent furnishing, for even amid such | appointments 1f the motto, “A place | for everything and everything in its place,” be not observed, phe house mis- tress will ind friction in ber domains, | There is often nothing so much needed | as is a piece of brown wrapping paper, | but to obtain this the entire household must be pat into confusion, drawers | and closets be hopelessly ransacked, | and finally the package will be wrap- | ped in the morning's Sun or Tribune, | or a loaf of Harper's Weekly, though | before night these very papers shall be | asked for by the chagrin and disap- | pointed head of the house. Yet guanti- | ties of Wrapping paper are t into every home, only to be tiossly burned or hopelessly crumpled. All the annoyance and vexation caused by the want of this, could be saved by en forcing » rigid rule to properly care for this paper. When a package is left, smooth out the wrinkles necessar- ily made in the wrapper, and then fold and placé it in the closet and on the shelf previously selected. Tissue paper should be treated in the same manner, and put carefully aside for future use, and nesspapers, which are frequently needed for reference, have a place of their own. If only regarded as val able for kindling purposes it saves time to be able to go directly to pot where they are kept. Paper bags should aiso be preserved. No one knows until she hears the demands of daily wants just what will be needed, and it is 8 great economy of both time and strength to find st onoe the requir. od article. Also have 5 place for card. board and paper boxes. Tue training school for female ol nurses connected the Post-Gradnate Medical Sehool and Hospital in tins wae four years ith A ran It now hon By pup all the: it can sccommodate, it bas ily in the favorof the modi- wn b ET | Ox of the best gifts of Providencs is futnrity. wor | the veil that conceals 0 rv