Church at Home and Abroad, The (Jan - June 1895) . ngs in Japan, by Alfred Par-sons. Harpers Magazine, May, 1895. The Imperial Family of Japan, by LauraB. Starr. Pall Mall Magazine, May, 1895. The Shrines of the Shiahs, by Rev. Frank Leslies Popular Monthly, May,1895. Elijah Coleman Bridgman, by C. C Cree-gan, D. D. The Congregationalist, April 25,1895 The American College. Atlantic Monthly,May, 1895 The Future of Japan, by S. Kurino, theJapanese Minister. The North American Review,May, 1895. The Heart of Dr. Livingstone, by TheEditor. The Century, May, 1895. The Pottery of the AMER


Church at Home and Abroad, The (Jan - June 1895) . ngs in Japan, by Alfred Par-sons. Harpers Magazine, May, 1895. The Imperial Family of Japan, by LauraB. Starr. Pall Mall Magazine, May, 1895. The Shrines of the Shiahs, by Rev. Frank Leslies Popular Monthly, May,1895. Elijah Coleman Bridgman, by C. C Cree-gan, D. D. The Congregationalist, April 25,1895 The American College. Atlantic Monthly,May, 1895 The Future of Japan, by S. Kurino, theJapanese Minister. The North American Review,May, 1895. The Heart of Dr. Livingstone, by TheEditor. The Century, May, 1895. The Pottery of the AMERrcAN Indians, byW. W. Hoffman, The Monthly Illustrator,May, 1895. The Criminal Crowding of Public Schools,by James H. Penniman. The Forum, May, Work in Alaska, by SheldonJackson, D D. The Treasury, May, 1895. Mr. Rudyard Kipling is about to revisitIndia, and will furnish regular contributions toThe Cosmopolitan during the coming year. Whathe writes will no doubt attract wide attention. 524 childrens christian endeavor. [June,. A HOME IN THE CUMBERLAND MOUNTAINS. ChildrensChristian Endeavor. In our last number our young readers found apicture of a boy on the back of a big ox drawinga sled in the Cumberland mountains. Here isone of the homes in that mountain region. Whoknows but it may be the home of the same familyto which the boy on that ox belongs? Thatmay be his younger brother who stands therein the door looking out. Sturdy little fellow!The ox would not easily throw him if he was onhis back. Likely that ox would not try. Helooked tame and gentle. He and the boy areprobably good friends. The boy has fed himand given him water to drink, and strewedstraw for his bed, and comforted his sides andback with the curry-comb. The boy may haveknown the whole life of the ox, for a calfbecomes a full grown ox in three or four years,and that boy may be ten or twelve years calf has outgrown the boy in size. Buthow much more the boy knows already than theox! An


Size: 1886px × 1325px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublisherphila, bookyear1895