Christmas with Grandma Elsie by Martha Finley
page 34 of 286 (11%)
page 34 of 286 (11%)
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and have brought them with me to read to you," the mother said, taking
the missives from her pocket. "Thank you, mamma; I am always glad to hear what they write; their letters are never dull or uninteresting," Violet replied, her sister Elsie adding, "They are always worth hearing, Lester and I think. What dear boys they are!" "And quite as highly appreciated by my husband as by yours, Elsie," Violet said with a bright, happy look. "They are a great blessing and comfort to their mother," Grandma Elsie remarked, "as indeed all my children are--their letters always a source of pleasure, but these even more so than most; for they show that my college boys are greatly stirred up on the subject of missions at home and abroad; full of renewed zeal for the advancement of the Master's cause and kingdom." She then read the letters which gave abundant evidence of the correctness of her estimate of the state of her sons' minds. They were working as teachers in a mission Sunday school, as Bible readers and tract distributors among the poor and degraded of the city where they were sojourning; doing good to bodies as well as souls--their mother supplying them with means for that purpose in addition to what she allowed them for pocket-money;--also exerting an influence for good among their fellow students. They told of interesting meetings held for prayer and conference upon the things concerning the kingdom; of renewed and higher consecration on |
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