Cama # i i ¥ fs STE AE Sr PATIENCE, Bs patient! Easy words to speak While plent While health brings roses to the cheek, And far romoved are care and strife. tho cup of life, Falling so glibly from the tongue Of those —I often think of th Whom suffering has no 3 r wrung, Wko scarcely know what patienes is. n the suff'rer lies Ba patient! w! Prost: ate beneath some fell diseasa, And longs, through torturing agonies, Only for one short hour & ease. Be patient! when the weary brain Is racked with thought ani anxious care And troubles in an endless train Seem almost more than it ean bear. To feel the torture of The ago To labor st The prize unwon, the prayer unheard. of hopo def li irom day to And still to hope, and strive, an wait The due reward of fortune’s kiss; This is to almost conquer fate, This is to learn what patience is. Despair not! though the clouds are dark, And storm and danger veil thes sky; Let fate and couraze guides thy bark. The storm will pass, the port is nigh. De patient ! and thetide will turn, Shadows will fade before the sun ; These are the hopes that live and burn To light us till our work is done. so —AIl! the Year Round. AUNT SUSAN'S QUILT. Mrs. Dake, who was a widow and | childless, lived in a small, remote | country town in which her nephew, | James Larkin, had been born, and | from which he had gone to become a | successful young lawyer in the city. | He had not been back to the home of | his childhood for five years. As his Aunt Susan sad, he ‘‘wa’n’t no hand to write letters,” but he often sent brief notes and little gifts to his to assure her gratitude. He had not announced his engage- ment to her, and the invitation to his wedding was one of the greatest sur-| prises of Mrs. Dake’s uneveniful life. ‘““He jest wanted to give his old aunty a big s’prise,” she said to Elvira Hodge, the village seamstress, when she came to ‘‘lix over” Aunt Susan’s black silk. “I couldn’t believe my own eyes at first. It don’t seem no longer than yesterday that Jimmy was runnin’ ‘round here in pinafores; and | to think of him bein’ married—I de- | clare I can’t git over it! cep i 3ut I'll give him a &'prise, too. 1] | aunt | of his affection and | I'm comin’ to his weddin’, and if he! won't be took back when he sees me marchin’ in on him, my name ain't Susan Elizabeth Dake! Don’t you! reckon his wife'll be tickled with that quilt, Elviry?”’ ‘“They’d ought to be, that's sure,” said Elvira. ‘I think it's a kind ofspecial Provi- dence that I put in the frames when I did. TF Jimmy and his bride ain’ pleased with that, 1 don’t know what would , said Dake ms akim- head one twisted to side, as Z ne epped back and gazed with admiration at the object spread out on the bed. It was a care fully-pieced quilt, of =o tricate pattern. ‘“‘dimmy’s bride can’t help tickled with that,” said Mrs. Dake, as she smoothed out a fold; ‘and if she knows anything about nice quiting, ghe’ll see that wa’'n't quilted in a day. Well, T guess not! I quilted ev'ry last ot j= stitch of it myself, and there’sa good | half-day’s work in someof them blocks with the feather and herrin’ bone pat- ternsand the shell border all round the aidge. I had that quilt in the frames five weeks and three days, and I put all thetime I conld geton it, and there ain’t no slack work, tired as I did get of seeing it round.” She smoothed out another crease. “Lemmesee,” she went on. “There's £147 pieces in the quilt, and a good many of ’em are pieces of Jimmy's lit- tle baby dresses. That'll please his wife, TI jest know. Here’s a block made of calico like a little pink dress he had when his ma first put him into short dresses. I remember it was made with a low neck and short sleeves, like they made baby dresses in them days, and his little shoulders and arms was almost as pink as the dress. “And here’s pieceslike alittle double gown he had ’fore he went into short dresses. And this piece of blue cham- bery 1s like a little sunbonnet he had, all lined with fine white jaconet. And here is a piece of fine muslin with a little pink sprig in it like the first short dress Jimmy ever had. He did look so cunnin’in it, with the sleeveslooped back, and a tumble-curl on the top of his head! “I’1l1 show his wife-to-be all these pieces, and if she ain't tickled with the quilt, she'll be a queer one.” Then Mis. Dake went over to an old-fashioned mahogany bureau with brass knobs, shd took from the upper drawer a large, square cream-tinted envelope, out of which she carefully drew the ‘“‘invite” to Jimmy's wed- ding. “Mr. and Mrs. William P. Holbrook invite you to be present at the mar- riage of their daughter Belen and James Barclay Larkin, Wednesday evening, September 14.” Then followed the address of the bride's parents, in a city 400 miles from Mrs. Dake’s home. “But I'm goin’ !” she said gleefully, as she slipped the invitation back into its envelope. “I'd go if it was twice us far. 1 ain't seenJimmy for near on to five years, and he always seemed like my own boy to me ‘cause I never had none o’ my own, and I helped to bring him up after his own ma died, when he wa'n’t but just in his first little trousies.” “I aint been so far from home in many a long year, and I reckoned my travelin’ days was done, but I’ve got to go and see Jimmy married. I must see Elviry Hodge right away about turning and making over my black silk, and I must see Samantha Rose about a new cap. have something kind o’ smart for a city weddin’, where they’il all be fini- fied up so. I don’t want Jimmy to be ashamed of his old aunty; but lawsy me! Jimmy wouldn't be ashamed of me if I went in my plain calico house dress. He wa’'n’t raised to set clothes above his relations, and he ain't got | nothing to be ’shamed of in any of his folks.” Then Jimmy's aunt, her face aglow | with loving thoughts of seeing Jimmy | again, folded up the quilt carefully in | laid it away in a | an old sheet, and ; lower drawer of the bureau, saying : “I g’pose they’ll have lots of nice presents, won’t have one thatrepresentsasmuch lovin’ labor as that quilt. I had to cry a little when T quilted them blocks with the pieces of his baby dresses iu | ought to think the | I hope to | em. His wife world and all of the quilt. I h the land she won’t go to using it com- mon.” she | somewhat in- | being | I guess I'll have to | but I'll warrant you they | until next winter, butI had a kind of | feelin’ that I'd better do it when 1 did, | and now it’s turned out that there was | a good reason why I should quilt it { then.” | Susan’s friends at the little station to | see her off on the morning she started. | There was unusual color in her cheeks | and undwonted sparkle in her eyes. | She bade each of ber friends good-bye two or three times, and promised to | take good care of herself. + Some of ( Se “An’ if you cor the bride’s weddin’ dress an’ of any of her other dresses for my silk quilt, { Susan, 1d be so pleased with em!” | said old Mrs. Gray. {- “I will if I can, Nancy,” Susan. ‘‘There’s the train comin’! Tmso glad I could get my irunk checked elean through! I'd bein a | nice fix if that trunk should get lost said Aunt | with Jimmy's quilt and my black silk | {in it! Where's my lunch basket? Oh, | yol're goin’ to carry it away on the train for me, you, Hiram Dre I'm ’bleezed to you, but mind you git off the © fore it starts. Good-bye, Nancy; good-bye all!” In » moment the train was on its way, Aunt Susan’s handkerchief ilut- tered from one of ear windows as long as the train was within sight of the lit- tle station. All the people in the car noticed the happy old lady in her queer, old fash- are ioned garb. Some had not seen for many years a shawl like the one she wore, with its fringe a foot long and | silk embroidery in the corners; but | nothing was coarse or amiss in her dress, and there was a quaintness and charm about her that attracted the sympathy of all the passengers. wd not gone twenty-five miles before she was telling some of them nearest her all about Jimmy and Jim- my’s quilt, and the wedding to take place on the coming Wednesdey. She was delighted to find that a mid- dle aged, kindly looking woman who was one of the passengers lived in the city in which young Mr. Larkin lived, and conld easily show her his board- ing house. “I'm so much obleeged to youn!” said Aunt Susan. ““I've been dreadful nerv- | ous “bout trying to find the house my- i self. I hated to write to him to meet { me, cause it'd take off the best part of | the s'prise. I jest want to walk right in on him.’ That was just what she had the pleasure of doing the next afternoon. James Larkin was taking his wed- ding suit from the box in which it had been sent home, when there came a knock at the door of his room. Aunt Susan was trembling with ex- citement when her nephew opened the door. ’ “Why, Aunt Susan!” he cried, and then he took her into his arms and kissed her on both cheeks. There wes no lack of tenderness in her nephew’s greeting, yet the change in him was painful to her. He was a | beardless, boyish-looking young man { when she had seen him last. Now he | was a tall, broad-shouldered, full- | bearded man with a way that made it ia little hard for her to call him | “Jimmy.” He did not say so, but she felt that he would rather have her | call him ““James;” and that sounded | so cold and formal to her. | He now had the graces of a ecity- i bred young man. She found it hard to accoramodate herself to them, and to the usages of the fashionable board- ing-house in which her prosperous young nephew lived. He might, perhaps, have wished that | Elvira Hodge had made his aunts | garments more stylish when he took | her down to dinner, but he was in no | sense ashamed of her. When they were going down stairs with her hand timidly resting on his arm, he made her very happy by looking down into her face and saying tenderly and heart- ily, “I am so glad you came Aunt Susan.” | “I thought you would be,” she said, patting his arm affectionately. ‘You know youre the only boy I ever had.” | | “And you were always the best of | mothers “ me.” | But when she was alone in her room | she wondered if it had been wise for her to come after all. She did not doubt now that James was genuinely happy to see her, but she had discov- ered that his betrothed was the daugh- | Susan | dressed I didn’t callate on quiltin’ it | \ There was quite a company of Aunt | a full account of | ud git me a scrap of | | x rE TE py ter of a rich man, and that: the wed- * ding was to be an elegant affair. Aunt feared she wonld be cence do or say something James and his bride ashamed of her. to give cause to be or her family until then. new and strange to her! She had expected to All wes so “take right hold” and help Mrs. Holbrook with the | wedding dinner, even if she did ‘keep There was a big, new kitchen | apron in her trunk, brought with Aunt : Susan to be worn while she was ““mak- : a girl.” ing herself useful in Mrs. Holbrook’s kitchen.” It disappointed her to be told by her nephew that her services would not be required, and that a caterer would provide the supper. She did not know what a caterer was, and felt confused and uneasy, and ; went to sleep half wishing herself { home. 1 : : When, the next evening, she found | don’t intend to give him a hint that | 1 Mr. surrounded by finely- ladies and gentlemen who looked curiously at the odd-looking little old woman in the queerly-made and old-fashioned black silk, she heart- ily wished that she had not come. Mr. and Mrs. Holbrook were as at- tentive tb her as they could be with a house full of guests; but Aunt Susan soon found it convenient to slip off into a corner, where she hid like the little country mouse she was. | But she was glad, after all, that she | had come when James, looking so tall | and happy and handsome, came into the great parlors with his bride on his arm in her trailing, white satin dress and Jong veil. Aunt Susan was so com- pletely overawed by this magnificence that, instead of going forward with the others to offer her congratulations, she slipped off up-stairs to the room in which she had tzken off her bonnet and shawl. In it was her wedding gift to Jimmy—the quilt that had but yester- day seemed to her as beautiful and ap- propriate a gift as she could bestow upon him. Across the hall was the open door of a room almost filled with shining silver and glittering glass, with pictures, and rare ornaments, and beautiful books, gifts to James and his bride. Aunt Susan felt that her own offer- ing, although it was the gift of her own labor and love, would be out of place. It might offend her nephew and his ride to see it there. Some one might | laugh and jeer at it, and she could not bear to think of that. It seemed so poor and trifling, now; she could not bear to think of allowing Jimmy and his wife to know that she had brought them such a gift. She turned back a corner of the quilt, and looked at a piece of the pink and white muslin of which one of Jimmy's first garments have been made. A flood of tender mémories filled her heart, and she buried her face in her gift and cried as she had not cried for years. . There she sat for a long time, pay- ing no heed to the noise and nferri- ment downstairs, Presently she heard a rustle of silk and satin in the hall, and a low murmur of voices. In a moment a pair of soft arms were {around her neck, and a girlish voice was saying : “I am so glad that we have found you at last! We have been looking everywhere for you!” When Aunt Susan looked up she found the bride kneeling by her side, while James was bending low over her. ‘You haven’t been up here all this time, have you?” he said. “We have wondered where you were. Helen was so anxious to see you.” “Of course I was,” said the bride. “There is no one here I am so glad to see. James has told me all about you, ana it was so good of you to come so far to see us married. You must kiss us both and wish us joy, won’t you?” “If you'll let me,” said Aunt Susan, with the tears still in her eyes. ‘Let you!” said James. ‘We should think it very strange if you didn’t. | What have you here? It looks like one | of the quilts you used to make. It is | a guilt, isn’t it?” Aunt Susan tried to conceal the quilt, but James took it from her and un- folded it. Suddenly he said: “Why, Aunt Susan, didn’t youbring this for a wedding present?” “Well, I—I—did think I'd give it to your wife, James,” said Aunt Susan, soberly. ‘‘Ithought that—well-—well, you see, I made it ev'ry stitch myself end——and——there’s lots of pieces in it from the first clothes you ever had, { and—-T thought maybe she’d tike it be- cause I did it ev'ry stitch myself, and—" “Like it?” cried Helen. ‘I shall value it above any gift I have had! It | is beautiful-—I never saw such exquis- | ite needlework! What weeks of labor | it must have cost you. I am so proud lof it!” | “She said them very words,” said herself in the beautiful house of Holbrook fur J | | | | | | { lighted friends who came to see her the day she reached home. ‘‘She was so tickled over the quilt. She fairly cried when I showed her the blocks made out of pieces of Jimmy’s things. *“~he said she’d think the world and all of it. She and Jimmy had to go off their weddin’ tower in about an that night; but Mr. and Mrs. Hol- brook wouldn’t hear to it. week, and they treated me as if I was one of the greatest ladies in the land. They took me to ride ev'ry day, and they never seemed to mind a bit about my old-fashioned ways and clothes. “I had a beautiful time; and the best part of it is that Jimmy and his wife are coming to make me a visit on their way home from their tower next week. You never see such a splendid young woman as she is!” out of | place—that she might in her inno- | A SERMON FOR WOMEN. BY REV. DR. TALMAGE. Sai The Prophet’s Visit to the Woman of | Shunem the Subject of His The wedding was to take place the ! next evening, and there would be no ! opportunity for her to meet the bride : : Discourse, TeXT - “And it fell on a day that Elisha passed to Shunem, where was a great wo- i man.”—II Kings iv.. 8. The hotel of our time had no counterpart in any entertainment of olden time. The vast majority of travelers must then be en- tertained at private abode. Here comes Elisha, a servant of the Lord, on a divine mission, and he must find shelter. A bal- cony overlooking the valley Esdraelon is of- fered him in a private house, and it is es- pecially furnished for his occupaney—a chair tosit on, a table from which to eat, a candle- stick by which to read and a bed on which to slumber—the whole establishment belonging to a great and good woman. | Her husband, 1t seems, was a godly man, Aunt Susan to half a dozen of her de- ! hour, and I expected to come on homes ! ‘They made me stay there a whole ° i but he was entirely overshadowed by his wife's excellencies, just as now you some- times find in a household the wife the centre of dignity and influence and power, not by any arrogance or presumption, but by superior intellect and force of moral nature wielding domestic affairs and at the same time supervising all financial and business affairs, the wife's hand on the shuttle, on the banking house, on the worldly business. You see hundreds of nten who are successful only because there is a reason at home why they are successful. If a man marry a good, honosst soul, he makes his fortune, If he marry a fool, the Lord help him! The wife may be the silent tner in the firm, thers may be only culine voices down on exchange, but .m there oitentime comes from the home circle a potential and elevitting influence. This woman of my text was the superior of her husband. He, as tar as I can under- stand, was what we often see in our day—a man of large fortune and only a modicum of brain, intensely quiet, sitting a long while in the sume place without moving hand or foot —if you say “yes,” responding fives if you say ‘‘no,” responding ‘‘no”—inane, eyes half shut, mouth wide open, maintaining his position in society only because he has a large patrimony, But his wife, my text says, was a great woman. Her name has not come down to us. She belonged to that collection of people who need no name. to distinguish them. What would title of duchess or princess or queen— what would escutcheon or gleaming diadem —be to this woman of my text, who, by her intelligence and her behavior, challenges the admiration of all ages? Long after the bril- liant women of the court of Louis XV have been forgotten, and the brilliant women of the court of Spain have been forgotten, and the brilliant women who sat on mighty thrones have been forgotten, some grandfather will put on his spectacles, and holding the book the other side the light read to his grandchil- dren the story of this great woman of Shu- nem who was so kind and courteous and Christian to the good prophet Elisha. Yes. she was a great woman. In the first place, she was great in her hospitalities. Uncivilized and barbarious nations honor this virtue. Jupiter had the surname of the hospitable, and he was said especially to avenge the wrongs of strang- ers, Homer exaited it in his * verse. The Arabs are punectilious upon this subject, and among some of their tribes it is not until the ninth day of tarrying that the occupant has a right to ask his guest, “Who and Yhence art thou?” If this virtue is so hon- ered even among barbarians, how ought it to be honored among those of us who believe in the Bible, which commands us to use hos- pitality one toward another without grudg- ing? Of course I do not mean under this cover to give any idea that I approve of that va- grant class who go around from place to place ranging their whole lifetime perhaps under the auspices of some Lenevolent or philanthropic society, quartering themssalves on Christian families, with a great pile of trunks in the halland carpetbag portentous of tarrying. There is many a country parson- age that looks out week by week upon the ominous arrival of wagon with creaking wheel and lank horse and dilapidated driver, come under the auspices of some charitable institution to spend a few weeks and canvass the neighborhood Let no such religious tramps take advantage of this beautiful vir- tue otf Christian hospitality. Not so much the sumptuousnes of your diet and the regality of your abode will im- press the friend or the stranger that steps across your threshold as the warmth of your greeting, the informality of your reception, the reiteration by grasp and by look and by a thousand attentions, insignificant attentions, of your earnestness of welcome. There will be high appreciation of your welcome, although you have nothing but the brazen candlestick and the plain chair to offer Elisha when he comes to Shunem. Most beautiful is this grace of hospitality when shown in the house of God. I am thankful that I am pastor of a church where strangers are always welcome, and there is not a State in the Union in which I have not heard the affability of the ushers of our church complimented. But I have entered churches were ther» was no hospitality. A stranger would stand in the vestibule for awhile and then make pilgrimage up the long aisle. No door opened to him until, flushed and excited and embarrassed, he started back again, and coming to some half- filled pew with apologetic air entered it, while the occupants glared on him with a i look which seemed to say, “Well, if I must, 1 I must.” Away with such accursed in- ; decency from the house of God! Let every church that would maintain large Christian i influence in community culture Sabbath by i Sabbath this beautiful grace of Christian hos- | pitality. A good man traveling in the far west, in the wilderness, was overtaken by night and | storm, and he put in at a cabin. He saw fire- arms along the beams of the cabin; and he felt alarmed. He did not know but that he had fallen intoa den of thieves. He sat there greatly perturbed. After awhile the man of the house came home with a gun on his shoulder and set it down in a corner. The stranger was still more alarmed. After awhile the man of the house whispered with his wife, and the stranger thought his de- struction was being planned. i Then the man of the house came forward and said to the stranger: ‘Stranger, weare a rough and rude people out here, and we work hard for a living. We make our living by hunting, and when we come to the night- fall we are tired, and we are apt to go to bed early, and before retiring we are always in the habit of reading a chapter from the word of God and making a prayer. If you don't like such things, if you will just step outside the door until we get through I'll be greatly obliged to you.” Of course the stranger tar- | ried in the room, and the old hunter took hold of the horns ot the altar and brought i down the blessing of God upon his house- hold and upon the stranger within their gates. Rude but glorious Christian hospi- tality ! : Again, this woman in my text was great in her kindness toward God’s messenger. Elisha may have been a stranger in that houshold, but as she found out he had come on a divine mission he was cordially welcome. We have i a great many books in our day about the | hardships of ministers and the trials of Christian ministers. I wish somebody would write a book about the joys of the Christian minister—about the sympathies all around him, about the kindnesses, about the genial considerations of him. Does sorrow come to our home and is there a shadow on the cradle, there are hundreds of hands to help, and many who weary not «through the long night watching, and bun- dreds of prayers going up that God would restore the sick. Is there a burning, brim- ming cup of calamity placed on the pastor's table, are there not many to help him to drink of that cup and who will not be com- forted because he is stricken? Oh, for some- body to write a book about the rewards of the Christian minister—about his surroand- mgs of Christian sympathy. temp stim ov ———————— | This woman of The text was only a Type of | thousands of men and women who come down from the mansion and from the cot to do kindness to the Lord's servants. I sup- pose the men of Shunem had to pay the bills, but it wasthe large searted Christian sympa- thies of the women of Shunem that looked after the Lord’s messenger. Again, this woman in the text was great in her behavior under trouble. Her only son had died on her lap. Avery bright light went out in that household. The sacred writer puts it very tersely when he says, “He sat on her knees until noon, and then he died.” Yetthe writer goes on to say that she exclaimed, “It is well!” Great in prosperity, this woman was great in trouble. Where are the feet that have not been blis- tered on the hot sands of this great Sahara? Where are the shoulders that have not been bent under the burden of grief? Whereis the ship sailing over glassy sea that has not after awhile been caught in a cyclone? Where is the garden of earthly comfort but trouble hath hitched-up its flery and panting team and gone through it with burning plowshare of disaster? Under the pelting of ages of suffering the great heart of the world has burst with woe. Navigators tell ns about the rivers, and the | Amazon and the Danube and the Mississippi | have been explored, but who can tell the depth or length of the great river of sorrow made up of tears and blood rolling through all lands and all ages, bearing the wreek of families and of communities and of empires —foaming, writhing, boiling with the agon- ies of 6000 years? Etna and Cotopaxi and Vesuvius have been described, but who has ever sketched the voleano of suffering reach- ing up from its depths the lava and the scoria and pouring them down the sides to whelm the nations? Oh, if I could gather all the heartstrings, the broken heartstrings, into a harp I would play on it a dirge such as was never sounded. Mythologists tell us of Gorgon and Cen- taur and Titan, and geologists tell us of ex- tinct species of monsters, but greater than Gordon or megatherium; and not belonging to the realm of fable, and not of an extinet species, is a monster with iron jaw and iron hoofs walking across the nations, and his- tory and poetry and sculpture, in their at- tempt to sketch it and describe it. have seemed to sweat great drops of blood. But, thank God, there are those who can conquer as this woman of the text conquered and say: ‘‘Itis well! Though my property be gone, though my children he gone, though my home be broken up, though my health be sacrificed, it is well, it is well!” There is no storm on the-sea but Christ is ready to rise in the hinder part of the ship and hush | it. There is no darkness but the constella- | tions of God’s eternal love can illumine it, | and though the winter comes out of the northern sky you have sometimes seen the all ablaze with auroras that seem t6 say: ‘‘Come up this way. Up this way are thrones of light, and seas of sap- phire, and the splendor of an eternal heaven. Come up this way.” We may, like the ships, by tempest be tossed Ou perilous depths, but cannot be lost. Though satan enrage the wind and the t'de, Tae promise assures us the Lord will provide, I heard an echo of my text in a very dark | hour, when my father Jay dying, and the old country minister said to him, “Mr. Talmage, how do you feel now as you areabout to pass the Jordan of death?’ He replied—and it was the last thing he ever said—*I feel well : I feel very well ; all is well,” lifting his hand in a benediction, a speechless benediction, which I pray God may go down through all the generations. It is well! Of course it | was well. Again, this woman of my text was great in her application to domestic duties. Every picture is a home picture, whether she is entertaining an Elisha, or whether she is giv- ing careful attention to her sick boy, or | whether she is appealing for the restoration of her property—every picture in her case is a home picture. Those who are not disci- ples of this Shunemite woman who, going out to attend to outside charities, neglect the duty of home—the duty of wife, of mother, of daughter. No faithfulness in public ben- efaction can ever atono for domestic negli- gence, There has been many a mother who by in- defatigable toil has reared a large family of children, equipping them for the duties of life with good manners and large intelli- gence and Christian principle, starting them out, who has done more for the world than many another woman whose name has sounded through all the lands and ali the centuries. I remember when Xossuth was in this country there were some ladies who got reputations by presenting him very grace- fully with bouquets of flowers on public oc- casions, but what was all that compared with the work of the plain Hungarian mother who gave to truth and civilization and the cause of universal liberty a Kossuth? Yes, this woman of my text was great in her simplicity. When the prophet wanted to reward her for her hospitality by asking some prefer- ment from the king, what did she say? She declined it. She said: “I dwell among my own people,” as much as to say: “Iam satisfied with my lot. All I want is my family and my friends around me. I dwell among my own people.” Oh, what arebuke to the strife for precedence in all ages! How many there are who want to get great architecture and homes furnished with all art, all painting, all statuary, who have not enough taste to distinguish between gothic and byzantine, and who could not tell a figure in plaster of Paris from Palmer's “White Captive,” and would not know a boy’s penciling from Bierstadt’s *‘Yosemite’ —men who buy large libraries by the square foot, buying theselibraries when they have hardly enough education to pick out the day of the almanac! Oh, how many there are striving to have things as well as their neighbors, or better than their neighbors, and in the strug- le vast fortunes are exhausted and business firms thrown into bankruptcy, and men of reputed honesty rush into astounding for- zeries, "Of course I say nothing against refinement or culture. Splendor of abode, sumptuous- ness of diet, lavishness in art, neatnessin ap- parel—there is nothing against them in the Bible or out of the Bible. God does not want us to prefer mud hovel to English cot- tage, or untanned sheepskin to French broadeloth, or husks to pineappie, or the clumsiness of a boor to the manners of a gentleman. God, who strung the beach with tinted shell and the grass of the field with the dews of the night and hath exquisitely tinged morning cloud and robin red breast, wants us to keep our eye open to all beauti- tul sights, and our ear open to all beautiful cadences, and our heart open to all elevating sentiment. But what I want to impress upon you is that you ought not to inventory the luxuries of life as among the indispensables, and you ought not to depreciate this woman of the text, who, when offered kingly prefer- ment, responded, “I dwell among my own people.” Yes, this woman of the text was great in her piety, faith in God, and she was not ashamed to talk about it before idolaters. Ah, woman will never appreciate what she owes to Christianity until she knows and sees the degradation of her sex under paganism and Mahommedanism. Her very birth considered a misfortune. Sold like cattle in the sham- bles. Slave of all work, and at last her body fuel for the funeral pyre of her husband. Above the shriek of the fire worshipers in India and above the rumbling of the jugger- nauts I hear the million voiced groan of wronged, insulted, broken hearted, down- trodden woman. Her tears have fallen in the Nile and Tigris and the La Plata and on the steppes of Tartary. She has been dishon- ored in Turkish garden and Persian palace and Spanish Alhamora. Her little ones have been sacrificod in the Ganges. There is not a groan, or a dungeon, or an island, or a mountain, or a river, or a sea but could tell a story of the outrages heaped upon her. But, thanks to God, this glorious Chris- tianity comes forth, and all the chains of this vassalage are snapped, and she risesup from ignominy to exalted sphere and be- comes the affectionate daughter, the gentle wife, the honored mother, the useful Chris- tian. Oh, if Christianity has dons so much for woman, surely woman will become its most ardent advocate and its sublimest | exemplification ! | parliaments, When [ come to sp2ak of womanly influ. ence, my mind always wanders off to one model—the aged one who, 27 years ago, we put away for the resurrection. About 87 years ago. and just before their marriage day, my father and mother stood up in the old meeting house at Somerville. N. J., and took upon them the vows of the Christian. Through a long life of vicissitude she lived harmlessly and usefully and came to her end in peace. No child of want ever came to her door and was turned empty away. No one in sorrow came to her but was comforted. No one asked her the way to be saved but she pointed him to the cross. When the angei of life came to 1 a neighbor's dwelling, she was there to rejoice at the starting of an- other immortal spirit. When the angel of death came to a neighbor’s dwelling, she was there to robe the departed for the burial, We had often heard her, when leading family prayers in the absence of my father, say, ““O Lord, I ask not for my children wealth or honor, but I do ask that they all may bethe subjects of Thy comforting grace I" Her 11 children brought into the kingdom of God. she had but one more wish, and that was that she might see her long absent mis- sionary son, and when the ship from China anchored in New Yori: harbor and the long absent one passed cver the threshold of his paternal home she said, ‘Now, Lord, lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace, for mine eyes have seen the salvation.” The prayer was soon answered. It was an autumnal day when we gathered from afar and found only the house from which the sou] had fled forever. She looked very natural, the hands very much as when they were employed in kindness for her children. Whatever else we forget, we never forget the look of mother’s hands. As we stood there by the casket we could not help but say, ‘Don’t shelook beautiful?’ It was a cloudless day when, with heavy hearts, we carried her out to the last resting place. The withered leaves crumbled under hoof and wheel as we passed, and the sun shone on the Raritan River until it looked like fire ; but more calm and beautiful and radiant was the setting sun of that aged pil- grim’s life. No more toil, no more tears, no more sickness, no more death. Dear mother! Beautiful mother! Sweet is the slumber beneath the sod, While the pur: spirit rests v Goi. I need not go back and show you Zenobia or Semiramis or Isabella or even the woman of the text as wonders of womanly excellence or greatness when I in this moment point to your own picture gdilery of memory, and show you the one face that you remember so weil, and arouse all your hoiy reminiscences, and start you in new conseeration to God by the pronounciation ot that tender, beautiful, glorious word, ‘“Mother, mother !” = pe edicine in the Middle Ages. entertaining article in the Nineteenth Century on medizeval med- icine, some curious prescriptions are given. A person whose right eye was inflamed or bleared was recommended | to “take the right eye of a Frogg, lap it in a piece of russet cloth, and hang it about the neck.” The skin of a raven’s heel was prescribed for gout. Diffident young men will be interested in this: “If you wonld have a man be- come bold or impudent, let him carry about him the skin or eyes of a lion or cock, and he will be fearless of his enemies; nay, he will be very terrible unto them.” The tendency to reti- cence, which 1s so common a fault of municipal councils, ete., might be cured by this treatment: “If you would have him talkative, give him tongues, and seek out those of water frogs and ducks, and such crea- tures notorious for their continual noise making.” If a man had a “sounding or a pip- ing in his ears,’ he was recommended to put oil of hempseed, warm, into them, ‘‘and after that let him leape upon his one legge upon that side where the disease is; then let him bowe doune hys eare of that syde, if haply any moysture would issue out.” The remedy for nose bleeding was to ‘‘beat egge shales to pouder, and sift them through a linnen cloth, and blow them into hys nose; if the shales were of egges whereout young chickens are hatched, it were so much the better.” Powdered earth worms mixed with wine were recommended for jaundice. Toothache might be relieved by an ap- plication of the fat of ‘little greene frogges,” or of the ‘‘graye worms breathing under wood or stones, hav- ing many fete.” Frogs and toads were favorite remedies, especially when | treated in some grotesquely barbarous manner. Popular prejudice against medical science to-day is declining, and will probably disappear alto- gether; but in the Middle Ages it seems to have had avery rational basis. —Toronto Globe. ———— Sere eae Saved by a Bloffer. A commercial traveler writes to the St. Louis Globe-Demoerat: ‘“The blotter in a hotel writing room once saved me from very considerable loss. As a general rule the blotter in a writ- ing room is so dirty and covered up with ink marks that the whole presents the appearance of an Egyptian hieroglyphics. But on this occasion, as luck would have it, the blotter was absolutely new and clean and could be examined very closely. The last man who had been using it was also the first, and as he used rather a liberal supply of ink and wrote rapidly he re- produced almost the entire letter upon the blotter before folding it up. I knew him to be the representative of a large Eastern housein asimilar though not rival capacity to our own® and without intending to do so, I found myself glancing at the reproduction of his letter on the blotter. I was struck at once with the name of the house from which I had the previous day taken an exceptionally large order, and reading on'I found that he had notified his firm that, acting under advice from a very reliable source, he had decided not tc carry out his in- structions and sell this firm a bill of goods. I went out at once and made a few inquiries which convinced me that not only was the house in ques- tion in difficulties, but that it was also contemplating a fraudulent transfer to defeat its creditors. I promptly wired the house I represented téignore my letter by mail containing this order, giving the reasons briefly, and following up the telegram by an ex- planatory letter. Some rather indig- nant correspondence followed, but this was abruptly terminated by the suspension of the latter and the ab- sconding of ome of the partners. I have always held a clean blotter in a hotel writing room with a feeling of veneration ever since.” tedi entl Told the tlen thes — Gr orat dela era denc Ezel this enin ever gists