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not yet entered the schools, such chapters as this are written. To keep abreast of the questionings of her children, to be thoroughly informed on all the subjects which touch their training and well-being is, next to her religion, the highest prerogative of woman to-day. For any mother to be so prepared that she can teach her children truth, and in such a wholesome way that it shall beautify their whole after lives, and keep them close to her in counsel, is a noble outlook for any woman. And what other right or privilege can be above this?

I am coming to think that a woman is living a great life, and doing a great service for humanity, who trains well one child-if this. be all she should and can have-Godward and manward. True she may do this and do much else; but if she be a mother, all else she may do, neglecting this, can never bring to her or the world much blessing. All else she may do while fulfilling well this duty, will but make her the better mother and worldhelper. No mother can divorce the home and fireside from her work and retain success and happiness.

J. C. Fernauld has said truly, "With every mother the relation of motherhood should be the controlling one, and in all

doubtful cases, mother duty should have the benefit of the doubt." Charles H. Parkhurst says: "Society rises no higher than the mass, and the measure of the home is the mother. In the last analysis the world's downward pressure is sustained by woman, and more than the public generally suspects, the man's talent for achievement is supported by the wife's or mother's genius for quiet, patient, continuous endurance."

"A nation rises no higher than its mothers."

A beginning has been made in our schools toward a wider knowledge along the lines of being, which heralds the day when teachers who are intelligent in these matters shall prepare our young people for the responsibilities of life-then those whose home training has been neglected, shall not come out of our schools unprepared, but fitted to take their places as home-makers, as fathers and mothers who shall be capable of training their children in the wisest way.

CHAPTER XXIV.

MOTHERS' MEETINGS, STUDY CLUBS AND

BOOKS.

The Awakening Along New Lines.-A Better Brand of Mothers.-Books that Will Help Along This Line.-Mothers' Clubs as Factors.-Their Need in Cities, Villages, and Rural Communities. -A Rich Mine.

A BOOK like this cannot enter into close details, or give minute directions; hence we have deemed it advisable to append a list of books and pamphlets which should be in every mother's library. Were every young wife to make a painstaking study of books like these with the fixed intent of preparing herself for motherhood, what a millennial day would dawn for the race.

The following list (to which have been added a few others) I have copied from the library of a club of mothers, who have interested themselves in gathering the best they could find in the line of instruction and helpfulness to a wife and mother. This list may be further increased by many other helpful

books, but serves as a suggestive list for those who are not conversant with such literature:

The Children of The Future,

Nora Archibald Smith.

$1.00

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The Republic of Childhood, (3 vols.) 3.00 Kate Douglass Wiggin.

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Home Making,

1.00

Loving My Neighbor,

.35

The Golden Gate of Prayer,
Rev. J. R. Miller, D. D.

.75

The Ministry of Intercession,
Rev. Andrew Murray.

.75

Stepping Heavenward,

-75

Mrs. E. Prentiss.

With God in The World,

Chas. H. Brent.

1.00

The Kingship of Self Control,
Wm. George Jordan.

.30

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Bringing up Boys,

.50

Kate Upson Clark.

What a Young Boy Ought to Know,

What a Young Man Ought to Know,
What a Young Husband Ought to

Know,

What a Man of Forty-five Ought to

Know,

Sylvanus Stall, D. D.

What a Young Girl Ought to Know,

1.00

1.00

1.00

1.00

1.00

What a Young Woman Ought to Know, 1.00 Mrs. Mary Wood-Allen, M. D.

Children, Their Models and Critics,

Auretta R. Aldrich.

.75

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