Orphans’ Friend. Price, $1 a year.) OXFORD, N. C., MAY 4, 1883. (VOL. VIII. NO. 49. A QUESTION AND ANSWER. BT JULIA H. MAY. Ah, when they said that yon must die to morrow, How did you feel? Did through your frame a thrill of solemn sorrow Unbidden steal? A prayer, “Oh Father, let this cross be taken,” •Murmured you then? Or did you send to God with faith unshaken A glad amen? All, when they told me I must die to-morrow, I cannot tell Whether it was a thrill of joy or sorrow Upon me fell. The prayer I uttered with white lips of anguish 1 do not know, Whether it were, a while in pain to languish, Or quickly go. But, now that night is past and you are living, How do you feel ? Does through your heart a thought of deep thanksgiving Unbidden stea'? .A prayer, “Oh Father, for this gra cious blessing,” Murmur you now, ‘I thank Thee, and my wickedness confessing. Humbly I bowf” How, that the night has passed and I am living, I cannot tell Whether alone my thought is glad thanksgiving Or fear as well. I only know th'S prayer I’m Heav enward sending, On bended knee, “Oh, teach me how to live, each day depending, Saviour, on Thee.” DiSRAELrrcbURTBSY TO A YOUNa MEMBEE. A little incident which hap-* pened to Mr. Fawcett shortly after he took his s^at in par liament is worth noting. He had ordered his dinner in the dining-'room of the house one evening, when some one came up to him and said: “Profes- BOr Fawcett, as you appear to be alone, have you any objec tion to my dining at the same table with youT’ Mr- Faw cett replied, “Certainly not,” but with a rather puzzled ex pression. He could not im agine who be was, for be failed altogether to recognize bis voice. His unknown com panion, noting his perplexity, said quietly: “I see you do not know who I am. I am Disraeli.” Mr. Fawcett could hardly believe his ears, and for once in his life was fairly taken aback. This little act of friendly good-nature on the part of the great Tory leader toward a young member whose views were so utterly and irreconcilably at variance with his own touched Mr. Fawcett very much,. and in spite of their political differs ences and their passages of arms in after years, the recol lection of Mr. Disraeli’s grace ful courtesy on that occasion always remained vividly in his mind.—London TtuxJi. AN EN&LISH OEPHANAGE- Man doubles all the evils of his • fate by meditation upon them. A scratch becomes a wound, a slight becomes injury, a jest an insult, a small piil a great danger, and a slight aioknesB often ends in death by looodmg ^>pFeheDUOQa. It has been my pleasure since I last wrote you, to be able to visit the “Royal Fe male Orphan Asylum.” The Honorable Secretary (who has been a daily visitor for more than forty years), kindly showed us over the institution. This Asylum was established.in 1839, and from the first the Queen has been a .constant supporter. It is in tended expressly for the or phans of Sailors, Soldiers and Royal Marines from all parts of the Empire; it is therefore essentially a National Institu tion. A distinctive feature of the charity is, that on the oc casion of all niilitary and na val events involving loss of life, tne committee admit at once a ,'cortesponding number of orphans; thus more than one-half of the children elec^ ted since the foundation, lost their fathers in actual service. The building is situated on high ground, and commands a fine view of Plymouth Sound and the Cornish H!ills. There are ‘at present 166 children (all girls) in the Asylum and’ they are trained for house ser vants. More thaUbne thou sand girls have passed through the Asylum, and are fillihg respectable positions iu life. The house has the usual num ber of dormitories, a large school room where part of the day lessons are learned,, and then the girls are taught sewing. All the work is done by 3’’Oung girls, many of them scarcely more than fourteen years old. They make for themselves every article of clothing except hats and shoes and some of the sewing is most beautifully donb. We were shown through the wash house, it being Monday, and there chatting and laughing were about twent^^ girls, eR bow deep in soap-suds, “pre tending to work very haid” as the genial Secretary laugh ingly observed to some of them. There was only one woman directing the work. The laundry, which bad just been completed, is a roomy, airy building fitted with all the modern contrivahces for hanging and diyfing clothes, and a record is kept every week in the laundry book of the pieces washed. The kitchen displayed half a dozen girls under the direc tion of a cook. One girl was the “chief” for the day, and had the direction of the cook ing of that day s dinner. In the lavatory is a wash basin for every child. The basin is stationary; a towel, with a bag containing brushes and combs, hanging from a peg on a narrow shelf above it, on which stood the unbreaka ble, but excellent substitute for a water bottle and glass; this contained the tooth-brush and the necessaries for the toilet. Monday afternoon be ing a half-holidpy the friends of the children are allowed to see them, and are permitted to bring with them any little luxury, such as cake, fruit &c., and as there are a number of little ones without any friends, these goodies are equally di vided. Around the winter play-rooms are ranged a lot of “lockers’’ or little keyless cupboards, each bearing the name of the girl who uses It. These keyless lock ers tell a worthy' tale; they prove that every girl may be trusted not to pilfer from her neighbor. They are miniature cupboards, come-at-able at all times, yet in all the experience of the Asylum only two cases of theft have been recorded and those many years ago. The culprits in both cases were visited with the only punish ment provided, instant dis missal. The girls are thus placed on their honor, and the principle works without trouble. I was very much pleased with this institution, and the children all looked well and happy. Yesterday I went through another Asylum of only fifty inmates, but was not very fa vorably impressed; it did not look tidy and nice.—Cor. of Orphans' Friend, Albany, N. Y. LOUIS JOHN EUDOLPH A&ASSI2 region and the Atlantic coast, and, in’1852 accepted the pro fessorship of anatomy in the medical college of Charles ton, S. 0. Afterwards he went on an expedition to Biazil, which was rich in sci entific results, traversed the Rocky Mountain8,and iu 1875 made an ocean voyage around Cape Horn, in a coast survey steamer, for deep sea dredging, the result of which proved , important in the study of ocean animals. His next great work was the es tablishment of a science school at a point on the North Atlantic coast; in which he continued to teach till his death, in 1873.—School Jour nal. WALKIN& IN SHADOW OE SUN LIGHT. BY HOPE LBDYARD. No man has ever lived who has studied nature with as much care and thought, and who has contributed more to ;he solution ol natural prob lems than did Louis Agassiz. At an early age he began the study of science and his work was laborious, but he labored in love to solve the intricacies of sience and therefore en dured an amount of work that would have wrecked the health of an ordinary man. He was a man of great men tal and physical power, in tense tenacity of purpose and keen observation. Louis Agassiz was born in the parish of Metiers, Switzerland May 28th 1807, his father being a Protestant minis ter in charge of the^ par ish. Up to the age of ten years his education was in charge of his mother who is said to have been an estiroa ble and intelligent woman. He attended the schools of Bienne, and Lausanne .and the universities of Heidelburg and Munich. At the latter place he formed the acquain tance of some of the most in telligent and prominent men of Europe, and pursued the study of mineraology and philosophy under competent teachers. Subsequently, he prepared for publication the ichthyological department of Martin’s great work on Brazil, in such a manner that placed him in the front ranks of nat uralists. His next important work ‘was the “Natural History of the Fresh-Water Fishes of Europe,” then came his “Fos sil Fishes,’’ which filled five volumes and a folio atlas These publications were con sidered of great value to the scientific world and Agassiz found himself justly appreci ated by the learned men of Europe. From 1836 to 1845 he studied the glaciers of the Alps, and the geological phe- nomona which they produce. These researches were pub lished in 1847, and establish ed the fact that the immense bowlders seen in the manj' parts of the world were con veyed to the places where they are now found, by bod ies of floating ice. In 1846 I was ^ alking along the street the other day when I saw a young girl, whom I knew, and a little tot of three years, crawling along disconsolately on the shady side of the way. It was a side street, and no one was passing, so I call ed out, “Come over in the sun, Mollie.” The girl looked up,cros8ed over, and we walked on together, the child dancing along in the hap piest manner. “Why, how pleasant it is on this side!” exclaimed Mollie. “I had no idea it was so warm and cheerful. We were half frozen, and I was going to turn back-” How like that is to many a Christian life. How many find the “narrow way,, cold and dreary, and are inclined to turn back and give it up entirely. And, yet, there is the Snn, and they might walk in His light; there is the bright, sunny path of entire and full consecration, of unwavering faith, of perfect submission to Him who “know- eth the way that I take.” Let if we can find the way out of the shadow into this sun- light. The very darkest coldest shad ow comes from want of faith. You are wrapping yourself, up in your feeling, your attainments, your understanding of God’s Word. No wonder you shine dismally, and that the way seems cold and dark. Look across; see such as Frances Ridley Haver- gal, or Hannah Smith, and, I trust, some among your own personal friends, walking in bright sunlight, .never thinking whether they feel aright or have yet attained to anything, never questioning God’s Word. It is enough that Christ has been perfect for them, that He leads them. “Ah' but,” saye one, “some lives are full of shadows—full of trouble.” Thank God, lives are not like jjQUses—they can be brought into the sunlight; and we know that even this created *8un has power to break away all shadow—how mueh more the Uncreated Sun who longs i;o shine full upon us! I do think we look upon trouble in a very unscriptural way now adays. I am quite sure that in the apostles’ time there were many in the church who were enduring great sorrow and afflic- may be that great persecution brings with it an exalted state of mind, so we will not consid er that at all. But I am sure that many a mother, in the apos tles’ time, was mourning the loss of her darling, many a wife was dragging through years of devo tion to one who was blind to all her self-sacrifice, many a man was beset by terrible business dif ficulties. Yet, did not the apos tles pity them, and wish it in their power to take the load of sorrow, or sacrifice, or anxiety oflF? “Behold,” says St. James, “We count them h&ppy which endure.’ Ah! there is the shadow, and beyond, looking at the unseen things, shines the clear light of that Sun which is risen with healing—healing for wounded, tired, discouraged hearts—in His wings. Is it not foolish,—no, is it not wicked,—to walk shiver ing in the shadow, when by one step, into full faith and accep tance of God’s will, you may be in the warmth of his preeence? ■S. S. Tinm, HELP POE THE POOE. Georgia certainly never saw a more imposing funeral than that of her most distin - guished citizen, the late Gov ernor Stephens. The interest of the occasion centred in the address of Gen. Toombs, who for some minutes was unable to begin for emotion at the loss of his friend. That was the most eloquent address; but the highest eulogy of the eminent man was spoken by Chief Justice Crawford, who said that out of his lirpited means Mr. Stephens had edu cated 122 poor young men, and that a green country boy went to. Crawfordville to so licit aid of Mr. Stephens, and forgetting his narne, asked: “Whar does the man live that oddicates poor boys?” and ev ery hand in the crowd poin ted the boy to Liberty Hall, sitting on an adjacent hill. We wish to commend this illustrious example to all who have meads as not only one of beneficence, but of wisdom. There can surely be no strong- appeal than that of the youthful mind which, with just enough light to yearn for more, cries out to the gener ous for help as it struggles out of the darkness. To bestow one’s benefactions upon mind culture is wise ; for with due care in the selection of the subject,' no investment is so secure and none yields a rich er harvest. One of the things whicii op press those who travel in North Carolina in the interest of education is the large num ber of worthy and poor young men who long for an “eddi* cation/’ but know no Alexan der H. Stephens from whom to get aid.—Wake Forest Stu-> dent. built after the divine patter n, was the most splendid edifice of earth, and cost moro than all the Oliurches in America; with its ark of the covenant; in it tlie two tables of stone, quarried in heaven, and in scribed by the fingers ol God with the moral code to gov ern the world, the wand of Moses, the rod of Aaron that budded, and the pot of manna gathered in the wilderness, the golden mercy-seat on the ark of the covenant, and the resplendent cherubim at each end of the mercy-seat, and the Sheki:iah hovering over the cherubim, and the celes tial fire flaaiing on the altar, and the oracular responses of the Urim ar:d Thummim; yet abandoned by the Spirit, the celestial fire expired, the Soekinah returned to heaven, the Temple sunk to ruins, and the Jews were scattered to the four winds, where they are in exilo unrepealed. The Apos tolic Church was framed by immediate inspiration, in ut- m St simplicity, without a symbol, and ^flled with the Spirit,'^ and, because filled with the Spirit, expanding throughout the world in a sinn gle generation; yet, when abandoned by the Spirit, it degenerated into the colossal papal Church, a warning to the Church to the end of times And, last, take heaven itself, built by Gi.>d himself, with its walls of precious stone, and gates of solid pearls, and streets of gold, and mansions of glory, and thrones of light, and crowns and harps of gold, and robes of white, and rivers and trees of life, and sea of glass, and golden altar before the throne, and great white throne itself, that city or God, let it be abandoned by God, and it is nothing I—Mosaer. he came to this country and 1 tion, apart from the fierce perse- explored the Lake Superior I cution which raged, for it The true glory of the Church is its spirituality. The Garden of Eden was planned and planted by God himself, with its bowers, and flowers, and fruit, and birds, and breezes,^ and golden rivers, and tree of life, in utmost perfection, and man placed in it, the glory of creation; but man lost his spirituality, and Eden wither ed. The Temple of Solomon, Judge X ,of Arkansass, had brought before him a convic ted folon to be sentenced. The opportunity to “improve” the occasion was not to be lost; and, so, after the usual de mand for reason why sentence should not be pronounced, his Honor slowly, and with genuine feeling, addressed the prisoner: “My poor fellow, you are about to go the pen itentiary. You are required to give up, for a long time, every thing which the great world values—your family, and, instead, to take for your associates only felons like yourself; your home, and to take instead what can never have the semblance of a home; your will, and so to be subject to the order of men who have no sympathy with you. Even your ordinary clothing 3'ou exchange for”—here his Hon or, raising his left arm, point ed to it with the index finger of his right hand—“striped clothes, the stripes not run ning lengthwise, like those, but so—round and round, like a coon’s tail.^’ Dr. Johnson, when making* his tour of the Hebrides, was asked to take a little wine. “I cannot,’"’ was hi8reply:“for with me moderation is excess.” “But certainly you can carry off one glass,” urged the tempter. “No madam,” said the Doctor, “it would carry me off.”