MUTUAL PRAYER. (To THE EDITOR or Tim " Seecreroa.") Sza,—I
have for some time felt that it might be of real spiritual help to our men at the front if their women at home would
arrange with them a fixed hour each clay for the interchange of mutual prayer and thought, and for this purpose a special card of prayer has been drawn up, and is obtainable from Messrs. Walker, Myrtle Street, Liverpool. The great underlying hope is that the habit of prayer, thus formed through a man's natural love of home and family, may be continued in after life, and prove the source of untold spiritual help and blessing. Will you allow me, through the medium of your paper, to lay this thought before the wives, mothers, and sisters of our soldiers, and also may I suggest to the workers for the National Mission the possibility of utilizing the idea in the course of their work?—I am, Sir, dc.,