BY THE WAYSIDE. 'M Bttle way, my dearie, la the world' ( loom or g Ieain; few fleet jun of smiles and tears, And thes the last, sweet dream. A little way, my dearie God knows f rom shore to shore, XnA the ships sight each other Oa the dim sea uo more! A little way, my dearie A way of lore and trust; Then trust and love to height above, But, ou this earth, to oust. A little way, my dearie, With flower and held and tit ream Will the heart he ho weary Twill ssk an endless dream? Atlanta Constitution. SUSPENDED ANIMATION. I1KV hail ix-en the fondest of lovers once before her sudden fancy for a "life work" and a "career" li:;d postponed the wedding day iu- 1 e ti u itcly and the uroum of the I experience still lingered, with a vague, Illusory sweenies, in his in e in o r y. He found himself viv idly recalling tli! circuinstam.es and results of their last meeting, an he ac knowledged his second lutrodiiclion to her. She hud exhausted bin alienee by persistently refusing to even s-o 'inu'-lt as consider the possibility of deserting her classes at the end ... the term ami becoming his wife im liately, and bad bidden her with i.,i.stiikon stem ne, as he afterward realized choose between her stinbes and hiniself. She had comiilled Instantly, belli? a girl of much spirit and ludepeudem e v hen these qualities wen; once aroused in her gentle soul and the choice bad not fallen tiimn him. Tbey had parted then, vltti ostenta tious and studied ominous so far its out ward appearances went, but with sur reptitious and Intense bitterness upon bla part, and keen, if suppressed, re-Tot upon hers. I'.itt they had gone their several ways wit limit more ado. .She had become, after a due period of study, a suecefui physician and sur geon, of whom great things were pre dicted, and be had aiu.iised more money than lie had ever dreamed of acquiring In those days; but the ner vous frown which habitually disfigured his forehead hinted at many au hour of loneliness and remorse, and (he wistful look which soft. -lied the professional sternness of b'-r line eyes in moment of relaxation was eloquent of a similar Btory. And tiny bjd never met again until to-night. "Yotl will take In Miss Winston, please," their Iiomcss remarked, a tiille hurriedly, as ihe young man eiuered the drawing room just in time to hear the announcement that dinner wan erred. "Miss W inston, Mr. Harper or stay, " w ith a breathless recollection of some vague story connecting the two names, "perhnTou already know each other." "Yes, we have met before," was his bold reply, given with embarrassed hesitation ns .Mrs. Dudley looked ques t3onluly from one to the other. The woman's quicker wits prompted a liws balling response. "Yen, Indeed; we were quite inllmate once," she said, sweetening the com monplace words with the brilliant Im personal smile she hud adopted as part of her professional oiiilit, and which , was so widely and intrinsically differ ent from the frank and unstudied smile of the girl be remembered. She laid her finger lightly on hi arm an their hostess fluttered away, and they walked out to the dining room to gether In due course and onher; but neither simUc again until I lie soup had been disposed of and the Huh was well under way. Then "You fire greatly changed," he blurted out, feeling that courtesy Im peratively demanded an utterance of YES, WK IIAVK MKT III roHS. some kind, and hardly knowing what to nay. She favored him with a new mile again. "Yes, I have changed much, I mip potK1," she returned, fingering her fork with Just a touch of nervousnos. "I bave been working hard for some years, you know, and steady, earnest work almost transforms one, I think. lie aldes, It Is over seven years since we last met, In It not? I was very young then." "You were Just. 20," trembled uion his lips, but he suppressed It. He wan by no mean certain as to the precise amount of personal conversation she would allow. But presently, as he made no audible reply, she spoke again. "In faet"-tlll with that nervous ac tion of the fork ind fingers "I have changed o much since that time that I an IwfMv muu pTsa 4 ail. I'lw t A Ev MID' "lil"V d 7 m (... .. .. ,. girl you knew," with sudden decision, "died a long time ago." "She was a very dear little girl," he exclaimed tenderly, without stopping to think. But, somewhat to his sur prise, she neither reproved hlnj nor looked Indignant Instead, he could have sworn that her voice trembled a little as she uttered her calm and Judi cious reply. "Yes," she responded with unexpect ed gentleness and acquiescence, "I think she whs. She has been dead so long, you see, 1 can speak of her Just as though she had never belonged to nie at all. i'ud I really do think she was a nice little thing. So faithful to the ri diculous liitle ideals that seemed of such vital importance to her. I am sur prised now, when I think of her occa sionally, to remember how really good she was, or tried to be, and really, I am fond of her memory, too. Would yon believe," turning upon him Impulsive ly, with a smile and glance so precisely like those of the girl under discussion that he started involuntarily, "that I, practicing physician and surgeon (he fancied that she laid an unnecessary If slight emphasis iqion the last four words), within two milestones of my thirtieth birthday, would be foolish enough to do as 1 did yesterday? I came accidentally upon the satin slip pers I wore at at that ball, you know, just before well, a long time ago " ".lust seven years," be interrupted, softly; but. she did not recognize the In terruption, and only went ou with heightened color: ".nd jiiit them on to see how my feet would liM.k In them now. Why, I haven't worn satin slippers or danced for au age. And I fancy I almost dropped a tear over the pretty, foolish things. What do you think of that, and I a practicing physician for nearly four yea is?" "You are a physician, then? You took your degree?" he queried gently, refusing to notice either the palpable and defiant challenge of her maimer or the Interrogation with which she ended her unstudied confession, and quite un mindful of tin; fact that he was perfect ly aware of her professional status and could even have named the date and place of her graduation. "Well, well: 1 can hardly grasp It. It seems w as tonishing somehow. I cannot fancy the dear little girl we were talking alxmt taking up a profession of that kind. She was sueh a dear, timid little thing. Not so brilliant as you, of course, but ho tender and loving. She could never have Imrm; to inflict pain physical pain at least upon others, even if it had been for their ultimate j:od. She -" "I took up the work because it was the baldest for me of anything I could Imagine, and I fancied it noblo--then to compel myself to do the thing!) you shrank from, whether other people suf fered witli you or not," she broke in impubiively, with a stoile of mingled pity and regret for the girl who had passed through this state of mind. "It bum me to conduct or witness an oie ration even now," she added. "She was so tender-hearted and affec tionate," be went on quietly, tacitly de clining to recognize or accept any ex planation which she might offer, "and she would have made you don't mind my speaking familiarly of her now that sin; Is dead? No? Then 1 will go on. She would have made such a lovable w ife for some lucky fellow If she had only lived. The man whom she married could not have helped being happy, and a fairly good fellow, even if he had tried. Her love," lowering his head and voice reverently as he ut tered the word, "would have con strained him to right ways even against his will her love and her beauty. Those starry, earnest eyes of hers seemed to look one's wotil through and through and find out only the goodness In It at" .- all. She was too pure and In nocent to see anything but good, dear little saint. It is not often that one sees or knows such a iierfeet woman as she would have made. I bave never met with such another, ' he finished. The girl she was nothing but a girl still, In spite of her 'SI years and her physician's diploma looked down at her bands In silence as the roast was served, and his glance followed hers. They were lieautiful hands, smooth, w hite and well shaped, but the girl of whom they had been speaking pos sessed hands like those of a little child, and he missed the rosy dimples which used to erowu the Juncture of each slender finger with the dainty palm. Perhaps the woman beside him divined anil resented it. At all events she with drew the altered hands Into her lap and faced lilm with all the tender softness of the last few moments banished, and with the newer air allowing forth again. "She must have been delightful In deed. I am glad to have had the privi lege of knowing her." she exclaimed sarcastically, "even if, at the time of our acquaintance, 1 did not realize one tenth of the loveliness and salutllness which nlie possessed. Hut unfortu nately," her voice growing harder and cobb-r ns she went on, and the profes sional sm le appearing brilliantly again, "like all the other paragons and saints, she Is dead. And In her place," she continued wllh a defiant air, "you be hold Ir. Helen Winston." lie bowed ceremoniously a nd as though to a new acquaintance; she col ored Indignantly. "Not that I allow my profession!? title to be used upon social occasions," she hastened to add. She was talking rapidly to cover the emotion which she ciuild not entirely repress: "Jt I sel dom, Indeed, that I am obliged to con sider Hint side of the question at nil. I go Into society very little. I am hero to-night because Mrs. Imdley Is such an old and valued friend that she i lalnis the right of refusing to taka 'no for nil answer to her kindly pressed In , nations once In a while. It la only upon rare oceaalons that I drop my workaday name and attire for a few hours, and become somewhat of a but terfly again. For the girl, you know, who loved social festivities bo dearly" dropping a little of her defiant man ner and ceasing to talk against time as her cheeks grew colder "Is dead." He did not reply, and there was sl lewe between them for some time. The dessert had been nearly disposed of before h' broke It. "Io you believe In the resurrection of the dead?" he then asked, with a suddenness purposely startling; and the girl supposed to be so long buried rose up uumistakably In her eyes as they turned Mv.tly and full of unshed tears upon hliu. "What ?" siie grasped, In bronUiIesa astonishment. "What do you mean?" Then she flu-hod with auger. "Not in this life," she cried, with sharp emphasis; but he saw, or fancied lie saw, the trace of a tear on the bright cheek nearest to IT u. and was In uo wise daunted by her wrathful and chilling manner. "Have you ever," he persisted, watch ing her Willi keen scrutiny as he sjHjke, "in tlie course of your professional and scientific observations, come across such a thing as a case of suspended animation or supposed death?" And tills time lie was certain that the vivid blush which reminded hlru so Irresistibly of the girl whom they had been discussing was accompanied by a roiJM) HIM llltKA.MINU OVI.Ii A CIUAK. tear. He saw It fall from her cheek to the napkin in her lap; and his heart leaped for joy. Itut her reply was long In coming, and the rising signal of the hostess, given Just, ns she struggled for words in which to frame It, saved her from the necessity of making it at all. He beld the door open for her to pass throu;rh hi silence, noticing, as he did so, the long richly colored velvet robe, so exc eedingly unlike the fluffy white ness of that oi her girl's holiday attire and In another moment repealing his unanswered question to himself, as he made his way back to the tabic. Possibly, however, he proiouudod It ; again later in the evening with better success. Anyhow, early the next inorn- ing, the chuiii who shared his eonfi j deuce and his apartments found him dreaming over a cigar with a smile so ; blissfully happy that he yielded, for ' once, to a most, immasculine curioedty. ( "So you took Ir. Winston out. to din j tier?" he remarked. "And what, I ' wonder, did you find to talk about?" The other smiled again; his voice, too, was strangely tender and youth ful as he made reply. "She told me how completely dead her old self the self that 1 used to j know was," he answered, "and I ! agreed with her." The listener gave an exclamation of j Impatience. i "Welli" he ejaculated, "I must say I that you chose an exhilarating subject ! for conversation, after all those years. And I must say. too, that for a man who used to lie too precious fond of that old self of hers you are looking strangely JoyotH after the funeral." "Hon't fret, old loy," said Harper, softly. "Strange tilings sometimes happen, you know. There have been well authenticated eases of suspended animation that merely simulated death. Or. Winston tells me that she ha never met with such a case In all her prac tice; but It may be. rny lioy" accep lng the other's proffered hand and shaking It heartily "it may be that 1 have." I'tlca Olobe. How Do You Walk? Obstinacy Is Indicated by a sloWi heavy and flat foiled style of walk ing, while miserliness may be suspect ed from short, nervous and anxlouf foot s! eps. Turned in toes generally character ize the absont-inlnded and a stoop the studious and deeply retlecMve, whose thoughts are anywhere rather than with themselves. Sly, cunning people walk with a noiseless, even and stealthy tread, re sembling that of a cat. A proud per son generally takes even steps, holds tne figure upright and the head a little back and turns the toes out well. A gay and volatile person trips light ly and easily, In sympathy with his o; her nature. Character Is shown by all sorts of oddities in gait, but for grace and elegance no civilian's walk will bear comparison with that of the men who has received military training. No two i-ople walk exactly alike and the student of character finds ns niucb to Interest him In the way people "walk as In nny peculiarity they may have of feature. Quick steis denote agitation; slow steps, either long or short, niig get a gentle or contemplative turn of mind. Hum an Nut lire. It seem rather queer that the average limn Will let trifles his judgment displace, Yet he thinks less of the tea thnt ho earns Than the dollar be wins ou the race. Speaking of fitness for mariiaga, more attention should ha paid to a ca pacity for forgiveness. IN this sermon of I)r. Tiihmtge the character of a wise, sympathetic and self-denying sister is set forth as an fxample, and the story will set hundreds of meu to thinking over old tines; text, Kxodus ii., 4, "And his sister stood nf.'ir off to wit whnt would be dune to him." I'rineess Tliermiitis, daughter of I'lia raoh, looking out through the lattice of her bathing house, ou the banks of the Kile, kiivv a curious boat on the river. It had neither oar nor helm, and they would bave been useless iinyhow. There was only one passenger and that n baby boy. But the Mayflower, that brought the pil frim fathers to America, carried not so precious a load. 'The boat was made of the broad leaves of papyrus, tightened to fether by bitumen. Bonis were sometimes made of that material, as we learn from I'llny and Herodotus ami Theophrastiis. "Kill all the Hebrew children born," had been Pharaoh's order. To save her boy, Joehehed, the mother oT little Moses, had put him in thnt queer boat and launched him. His sister Miriam stood on the hank watchiiiz that precious craft. She was far enough off not to draw attention to the boat, hut near enough to offer pro tection. There she stands on the bank Miriam the poetess. Miriam the quick wilted, Miriam the faithful, though very human, for in after time she demon strated it. Miriam was a splendid sister, but. had r faults, like all the rest of us. How ciirefullv she watched the boat containing her brother! A strong wind might upset It. The buffaloes often found there might In a sudden plunge of thirst sink it. Some ravenous water fowl might swoop and rick his eyes out with iron beak, Some crocodile or hippopotamus crawling through the rushes might crunch the babe. Miriam watched and watched until Prin cess Thermntis, n maiden on each side of her holding palm leaves over her head to shelter her f rem the sun, came down and entered her bathing house. When from the lattice she saw t lint boat, she ordered It brought, and when the leaves were pull ed back from the face of the child and the boy looked up he cried aloud, for he was hungry and frightened and would not. even let the princess take him. The Infant would rather stay hungry Hinn a-knowledge any one of the court ns moth er. Now Milium, the sister, incognito, no one suspecting her relation to the child, leaps from the bank and rushes down and otters to get n nurse to pacify the child. Consent, is given, and she brings Joehe hed, the baby's mother, incognito, none Of the court knowing that she was the mother, and when Joehehed arrived the chili! slopped crying, for its fright was en lined and its hunger appeased. You may admire Joehehed, the mother, and nil the ages may admire Moses, but I clap my hands in applause at the behavior of Miriam, the faithful, brilliant and strategic sister. A Noiisih h in History. "Go home,'' some one might have Paid to Miriam. "Why risk yourself out there alone on Ihe hunks of the Nile, breathing the miasma and in danger of being at tacked of wild beast or rufllan? Uo home!" No. Miriam, the sister, more lovingly watched and bravely defended Moses, ihe brother. Is he worthy her cure and courage? Oh, yes; the sixty cen turies of the world's history have never had so much involved in the arrival of any ship nt any port ns in the landing of that papyrus bout calked with bitumen! Its one pasM-iiger was to be a nonsuch in history- lawyer, statesman, politician, leg islator, organizer, conqueror, deliverer. He had such remarkable beauty in child hood that, Jonephus says, when he was carried along the road people stopped to gir.e ut him and workmen would leave their work to iidmire him. When the king playfully put his crown upon this boy, he threw it off indignantly mid put his foot on it. The king, fearing that this might be a sign that the child might yet take down his crown, applied another test. Accord ing to the Jewish h gelid, the king ordered two how ls to he put before the child, one containing rubies and the other burning con Is, and if he took the coals he was to live and If he look the rubies he wns to die. For some reason the child took one of ihe coals titid put it in his mouth, so thnt his life was spared, although it burn ed the tongue till he was indistinct of ut terance ever after. Having come to man hood, he spread open the palms of his hands in prayer, and the lied Sea parted to let 2,."V)O,tKl0 people escape. And he put the palms of his hands together in prayer, and the Kcd Sen closed on a strangu lated host. Miriam the Faithful, Oh, was not Miriam, the sister of Moses, doing a good thing, nn Important thing, u glorious thing when she watched the boat woven of river plants and made Water tight with nsphnlluin, carrying its one passenger? Hid she not put all the ages of time and of n coming eternity un der obligation when she defended her help less brother from the perils aquatic, rep tilian and ravenous? She It was that bronili! that wonderful babe and his mother together, so thnt he was reared to be the deliverer of his nation, wdien other wise, if saved at ail from the rushes of the Nile, he would have been only one more nf the (bid defying pharaohs; for Prim-ens Thermntis of the bathing house would hnve Inherited the crown of Egypt, and M she had no child of her own this adopted child would have come to corona tion. Had there been no Miriam there would have been no Moses. What a gar land for faithful sisterhoodl For how many a lawgiver and how many a hero and h"W many a deliverer and how many a saint are the world and the church In debted to a watchful, loving, faithful, god ly sister? Come up out of the farm house, cuum up out of taa Inconspicuous irj . .. homes, come up from the hanks of the Hudson and Penobscot and the Savannah and the Mobile ami the Mississippi and all the other Niles of America, and let us see you, the Miriams who watched and pro tected the leaders in law and medicine and merc handise and art and agriculture and mechanics and religion! If I should all physicians and attorneys and mer chants and ministers of religion and suc cessful men of all professions and trades who are indebted 1o an elder sister for good Influences and perhaps for an educa- ion or a prosperous start to let it tie known, hundreds would testify. (Jod knows how many of our Greek lexicons and how- much of our schoolings were paid for by money that would otherwise have gone for the replenishing of a sis ter's wardrobe. While the brother sailed off for a resounding sphere, the sister watched him from the banks of self-denial. Tlie i;ider Winter's Guiding Hand. Miriam wns the eldest of the family;; Moses and Aaron, her brothers, were younger. Oh, the power of the elder sis ter to help decide the brother's character for usefulness and for heaven! She can keep off from her brother more evils than Miriam could have driven hack water fowl or crocodile from, the ark of bul rushes. The older sister decides the di- 1 reetioii in which the cradle boat shall sail. By gentleness, by good sense, by Chris linn principle she can turn it toward the palace, not. of a wicked Pharaoh, but of a holy (Jod, and a brighter princess than Thermntis should lift him out of peril, even religion, whose ways are ways of pleasantness and all her paths are peace. The older sister, how much 1he world owes her! Born while yet the family was in limited circumstances, she had to hold land take care of her younger brothers. And if there is anything 'thnt excites my sympathy it is a little girl lugging round n. great, fat child and getting her ears box ed because she cannot keep him quiet. By the time she gets to young womanhood she is pale and worn out and her attrac tiveness has been sacrificed on the altar of sisterly fidelity, and she is consigned to celibacy, and society calls her by nn un fair name, but in heaven they call her Miriam. In most families the two most undesirable places in the record of births nre the first and the last the first he cause she is worn out with the cares of a home that cannot afford to hire help, and the last because she is spoiled as a pet. Among the grandest equipages that sweep through the streets of heaven will be those occupied by sisters who sacrificed them selves for brothers. They will have the finest of the Apocalyptic white horses, and many who on earth looked down up on them w ill have to turn out to let them pass, the charioteer crying: "Clear the way! A queen is coming!" KltKsiiiK or Curse. Let sisters not begrudge the time and care bestowed on a brother. It is hard to believe thnt any boy that you know so well as your brother can ever turn out. anything very useful. Well, he may not be a Moses. There is only one of that kind needed for (!,(MJ0 years. But I tell you what your brother will be either a blessing or a curse to society and a can didate for happiness or wretchedness. He will, like Moses, have the choice between rubies and living coals, and your influence will hnve milch to do with his decision. He may not, like Moses, be the deliverer of a nation, but he may, after your father and mother are gone, be the deliverer of la household. What thousands of homes to-day are piloted by brothers! There are properties now well invested and yielding income for tlie support of sisters and younger brother because the older broth- ; er rose to the leadership from tlie day the ' falher lay down to die. Whatever you j do for your brothers will come back to you I again. If you set him nn ill-mitured, cen sorious, unaccommodating example, it will ' recoil upon you from his own irritated and , despoiled nature. If you, by patience with j his infirmities and by nobility of charac ter, dwell with him In the few years of your companionship, you will have your counsels reflected back upon you some day by his splendor of behavior in some crisis w here he would have failed hut. for you. Hon't snub him. Don't depreciate his ability. Don't talk dlsconragiiigly about his future. Don't let Miriam get down off the hank of the Nile and w ade out and upset the ark of bulrushes. Don't tense him. IVrothers and sisters do not consider j It any harm to tease. That spirit abroad i in 'the family is one of the meanest and most devilish. There is a teasing that is ! pleasurable and is only another form of innocent raillery, but. that which provokes .and irritates and makes the eye Hash with i anger is to be reprehended. It would he less blameworthy to take a bunch of thorns and draw them across your sisler's cheek or to take a knife and draw its sharp edge across your brother's hand till the blood spurts, for thnt would damage ; only the body, but teasing is the thorn and the knife scratching and lacerating the disposition and the soul. It is the curse of innume'rnble households that the broth ! era tease the sisters and the sisters the brothers. Sometimes It, is the color of the hair, or the shnpe of the features or an nffnir of the heart. Sometimes it. is by revealing a secret or by a suggestive look or a guffaw or nn "Ahem!" Tease! Tease! Tense! Tense! For mercy's sake, quit it. Christ says, "He that hateth his brother is a murderer." Now, when you, by teas ing, make your brother or sister hate, you turn him or her into a murderer or mur deress. Itcware of Jealousy, Don't let jealousy ever touch a sister's soul, as It so often does, because her broth er gets more honor or more mentis. liven .Miriam, the heroine of the text, was struck by that evil passion of jeal ousy. She had possessed unlimited influ ence over Moses, and now he marries, and not only so, but. marries a black woman from Kthiopia, and Miriam is so disgusted and outraged nt Moses, first because he had married at nil, and next because he had practiced miscegenation, that she is drawn Into a frenzy, and then begins to turn white and gets white ns a corpse and then whiter lluin n corpse. Her com plexion is like chalk the fact is, she has the ligyplinn leprosy. And now the brother whom she had defended on the Nile comes to her rescue In a prayer that brings her restoration. Let there be no room in all your house for jealousy either to sit or stand. It Is a leprous abomina tion. Your brother's success, O sisters, Is your success! Mis victories will be your victories. For while Moses tha brother led the vocal music after the cross ing of the Bed Sea, Miriam the sister with two sheets of shining brass upllffedj and glittering in the sun, led the instnuj mental music, clapping the cymbals till the last frightened neigh of pursuing cav alry horse was smothered in the wave and the last Egyptian helmet went under. Do l our Part. If you only knew it, your interests are Identical. Of all the families of the earth that ever stood together perhaps the most conspicuous is the family of the Roths childs. As Mayer Anselm Rothschild was about to die, in 1812, be gathered his chil dren about him Anselm, Solomon, Na than, Charles and James and made them promise that they would always be united on "Change. Obeying that injunction, they have been the mightiest commercial pow er on earth, and at the raising or lowering of their scepter nations have risen or fall en. That illustrates how much,' on a large scale and for selfish purposes, a united family may achieve. But suppose that instead of a magnitude of dollars as the object it, lie doing good and making salu tary impression and raising this sunken world, how much more ennobling! Sister, you do your part and brother will do his part. If Miriam will lovingly watch the boat on the Nile. Moses will help her when leprous disasters strike. When father and mother are gone and they soon will be, if they have not al ready made exit the sisterly and frater nal bond will be the only ligament that will hold the family together. How many, reasons for your deep and unfaltering af fection for each other! Rocked In the same cradle; bent over by the same moth erly tenderness; toiled for by the same father's weary arm and aching browf with common inheritance of all the family, secrets and with names given you by par ents who started you with the highest hopes for your happiness and prosperity, I charge you be loving and kind and for giving. If ihe sister see that the brother never wants a sympathizer, the brother will see that the sister never wants an es cort. Ob, if the sisters of a household knew through what terrific and damning temptations their brother goes in city life, they would hardly sleep nights in anxiety for his salvation! And if you would make a holy conspiracy of kind words and gen tle attentions and earnest prayers, that would save his soul from death and hide a multitude of sins. But let the sister dash off iu one direction in discipleship of the world, and the brother flee off in an other direction and dissipation, and it will not be long before they will meet again at the iron gate of despair, their blistered feet iu the hot ashes of a consumed life time. Alas, that brothers and sisters though living together for years very often do not know each other, and that they see only the imperfections and none of the virtues! Know Thy Brother. General Bauer of the Russian cavalry had in early life wandered off with the ar my, and the family supposed he was dead. After he gained a fortune he encamped one day in Husain, his native place, and made a banquet, and among the great military men who were to dine he invited a plain miller and his wife who lived near by and wdio, affrighted, came, fearing some harm would be done them. Tha miller and his wife were placed one oa each side of the general at. the table. Tha general asked the miller all about his fam ily, and the miller said that he had two brothers and a sister. "No other broth ers?" "My younger brother went off with the army many years ago and no doubt was long ago killed." Then the general said, "Soldiers, I am this man's younger brother, whom he thought was dead." And how loud was the cheer and how warm was the embrace! Brother and sister, you need as much of an introduction to each other as they did. You do not know each other. You think your brother is grouty and cross and queer, and he thinks you nre selfish and proud and unlovely. Both wrong. That brother will be a prince in some woman's eyes, and that sister a queen in the esti mation of some man. 'That brother is a magnificent fellow, and that sister is a morning in June. Come, let me introduce yon: "Moses, this is Miriam. Miriam, this is Moses." Add 75 per cent to your present appreciation of each other and when you kiss good morning do not stick tip your cold cheek, wet, from the recent washing, as though you hated to touch, each other's lips hi affectionate caress. Let it. have all the fondness and cordiality of a loving sister's kiss. To Part No More. Make yourself as agreeable and helpful to each other as possible, remembering that soon you part. The few years of boyhood and girlhood will soon slip by, and you will go out to homes of your own' and into the battle with the world and amid ever changing vicissitudes and on paths crossed with graves and up steeps hard to climb and through shadowy ra vines. But, O my (Jod and Saviour, may the terminus of the journey be the same as the start namely, at the father's and mother's knee, if they have inherited the kingdom. Then, as In boyhood and girlhood days, we rushed in after the day's absence wllh much to tell of excit ing adventure, and father and mother en joyed the recital as much as we who made it, so we shall on the hillside of heaven re hearse to them all the scenes of our earth ly expedition, and they shall welcome us home, as we say, "Father and mother, we have come and brought our children with us." The old revival hymn describ ed it with glorious repetition: Brothers and sisters there will meet, Brothers and sisters there will meet, Urol hers and sisters there will meet, Will meet to part no more, , OopyrlgliblSf)8. Short Sermons. Take Away the Pain. Iet us tako away the pain from the heart of God by removing It from the soula and bod ies of men. I-et us remember that "to lift the burden of humanity Is to lift the burden of God." Iter. 0. W. Will iams, Baptist, Denver, Colo, The Truth of Christ. Christ Is the living truth, not, a string of formulas Intellectually perfect, however venera ble. He Is embodied truth, the knowl edge of whom Is better than the dis cipline of sacred inebajphyslcs. llev. Dr. Barrowe, Presbyterian, Chicago, ill. A Vast Problem. Every generation of the world's hlstosy Is confronted by some Important problem to the solution of which the bet minds and the truest hearts must lend their every energy. Our time has a vast problem. Kr. Father Ducey, RoBaaa OsthaJlfl. New York City.