. Letters from Europe to the children; Uncle John upon his travels. w nothing about Sunday-schoolsor about Jesus. Faithful men and women aretrying hard to provide for them and bring themwhere they may learn how to be saved. Butit is a vast work. Think, dear children, of asingle city with more people in it than thewhole State of Illinois! O, how many poorand suffering ones there are here! My heartaches for them., as I meet them every time Igo out upon the street. If Uncle John had hispockets full of money when he takes his hatand cane and goes for a walk, he might come 46 UNCLE yo/m UPON HIS TR


. Letters from Europe to the children; Uncle John upon his travels. w nothing about Sunday-schoolsor about Jesus. Faithful men and women aretrying hard to provide for them and bring themwhere they may learn how to be saved. Butit is a vast work. Think, dear children, of asingle city with more people in it than thewhole State of Illinois! O, how many poorand suffering ones there are here! My heartaches for them., as I meet them every time Igo out upon the street. If Uncle John had hispockets full of money when he takes his hatand cane and goes for a walk, he might come 46 UNCLE yo/m UPON HIS TRA VELS. back without a sixpence, if he was to give toall who ask, and to whom he would be gladto give. But he has to remember that there isboth a Number One and a Number Twofor him to think of, and it would not answerfor him to have no money left for the landladywho keeps the lodging-house, or to buy rail-road tickets when he starts next Monday orTuesday morning for Paris. So you see hemust try to harden his head, if not his heart,and not be too soft. Uncle


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookidlettersfrome, bookyear1870