ty.frodA Silver LiningTo A Dark Goud.,8a:)V-ill,isets, :he led ;he or-C.m-hisTragedy brought a sudden end i ve to a journey of twin brothers.' coi One ly dead, pierced with a bul-' int let by accident. The other, wild | all with grief, was helpless in an un-* known land. A thousand miles away mourned a widowed mother. Unable to supply money for the return, she wrote in tears that temporarily the burial would have to take place there. Dark was the cloud of sorrow.Lo, out of the blackened sky burst a silver lining! Hearts of strangers were moved to love. Christ-like people cared for the brother and comforted him. Dear women wrote letters of sympathy to the mother, far away. Hundreds of dollars were raised to pay expenses, and these good people made all arrangements for the return to Georgia of the twin brothers, one living and one dead. May this faintly express the earnest thanks of the widowed mother, and of every inhabitantof Clayton; Ga., Glenn Henson’s home, extend to the Christian people of Vermillion, S. D.