I ' t "THY KINGDOM COME" A Brilliant Sunday Sermon By Rev. Dr. Barbour. Make An Eloquent Plea for Fellowship Cum ol the Dearth of Candidatea For th Ministry. BnooKT.Ylf. N. Y. In the Emmnnncl Tlnptist Church, St. .lames' place nnd La fayette avenue, Sunday morning, tlie Rev. Dr. Clarence Augustus Harbour, pnstor of the Lake Avenue Baptist Church, Roches ter, N. Y., preached on the subject, "Thy Kingdom Come; a l'lca for Fellowship.' the text wns trom Matthew vi:Wi my kingdom come. Dr. Harbour said Matthew's srosnel is distinctively the gospel of the kingdom, but in a very true sense the Ilible throughout is the book of the kingdom. If, as one haa suggested, the conception of a suffering Redeemer runs as a blood-red cord through tho Scripture, it is no less true that the con ception of the all-embracing kingdom and the nil-conquering King runs through all the Scripture as a cord of royal purple. My fundamental proposition is that the kingdom of supreme and transcendent importance. The kingdom of God, tr-nt divine polity over which Jesus Christ is King of Kings and Lord of Lords that claims pre-eminent fealty. The kingdom is of greater importance than the local church, of greater import ance than any communion in any com munity, of greater importance than any single denomination With any different conviction the denominations easily be come "sects." something cut off in svm- rathy, as well as in organization nnd be lief, from the rest of the Christian world. There is real danger that the local church or the denomination bo exalted above the kingdom of God. You know that our Roman Catholic friends say that Protestantism is split up into innumerable little sects, quarreling among themselves. "In the Protestant missionary work of Japan," they say, "the Japanese, seeing the headquarters of fifteen different nnd non-co-operating sects in the square of Tokio, wrote to America. 'Do not send us any more kinds of religion.' We of the Catholic Chuch are everywhere the same in America, in Africa, in Asia, in Kurope, in almost every city and village of every land: the same form of worship, the same articulate nnd compact organization. We are the church, one and united." We might answer that this is not necessarily a ground for self-congratulation; that wherever there is freedom of inouiry, free-, dom of opinion, freedom of will, there is, bound to be diversity. But we are not row discussing the truth or falsehood, the good or evil, in Roman Catholicism;' ire sav that this argument the Roman. Catholic uses with powerful effect. True it is that narrow denominational ism is belittling nnd deadening. That waa a significant remark mndc by one of our' college presidents. "The men who least comprehend what I am tryinc to do in this, college are some professors of the college.! Thev are noble, self-sacrificing men. but' each one considers his own department the' only really important one, and the idea! of building tin a university is something which none of them can grasp." So there nre self-sacrificing denominationnlists, who have no adequate concention of the dig nity nnd importance of tho church univer sal the vast embracing kingdom of Ood. "The field is the world," says our Mas ter, nothing less; any smaller conception is a caricature of Christianity, a belittling of our faith; nny ideal short of united effort for tne conquest of the world-field is an ideal unworthy of the Christian name. "The good seed, these nre the son ot the kingdom; the words immediately follow the reference to the world-fie'd. '"Ihe good seed, these ae the aona of the kingdom," not the membership of any lo cal church, nor of any single denomina tional body. I bdieve that we nre cominr to recog nize th essential unity of the kingdom of, God. Many mountains, one globe; many ravines, one mighty earth mass, vastly' greater than the wrinkles on her face; many regiments, one army; many denomi nations, one church; manv creeds, one faith; many way no the hill, one city at the top, where sits the King on His throne. Denominnt.ionalism, wisely man aged, may be used for mutual provocn-' tion to love nnd good works. Perhaps it, is hotter to be broken up externally, that each denomination may do its own work.. But there must be recognition, nnd that recognition more than a normal one, of the practical fellowship, the co-operative fellowship of believers. ' I am a Bapti.it bv birth, by training, by conviction. I yield to no one in mv loy alty to essential Bnntist principles. There are Cnngreirntionalists and Presbyterians and Methodists with equal loyalty. But. the Christian should b no bigot, and no snecies of bigotry is more offensive than, that of the denominational bigot. Let no one misunderstand. We are not of those sentimentalists who decry eccle-: s'jstical and denominational organization.' We are not of those who idealize the man who ncrchea on the denominational fence.' The fence-litter is nauseating as lukewarm .water. , We counsel no sacrifice of conviction, but a mirroring forth of the snirit of our, divine Lord, who prayed for Ilia disciiia and for those who shoti'.d believe on Him through their word, "that thev all may b one, even as Thou. Father, art in Me, and I in them, that they also may be in us,' that the world may believe that Thn-i didst send Me," that as of old the world nay recognize us as His, in that these Christiana "love one another." finch a spirit is a Ion way beyond the spirit of "toleration." Yet even toleration is in advance of what we have known, fjen in this "land of the free." In the Yarvard baccalaureate of this year Dr.; Dvke eloquently said of the Puritan; Something too little of sunlight may. nave come in through the narrow windows, jf his house. But that house had founda-, tions. nnd the virtues lived in it." With, all deference due to our national forefath-' trs and to them deference is due there1 cre tensnts in the house other than those readily recognizable as virtues. In tolerance, intense nnd bitter, was charac teristic of Puritanism. The Puritan failed to annrchend the first princinles of relig ious liberty. That it was his independence of conviction nnd his demand for freedom f worship wltich banished him from his native land, but renders his failure in this repeet the more consoicuous. He had no jWitv for those who read the truth through other eyes than his. The freedom nich he demanded for himself he would Jot accord to those of different faitb. To in view nf truth the whole community must yield aasent; to his standards of orship all must conform. And this pur (nse to secure uniformity of worship did ot content itaelf with seeking to correct Tor by the gentler arta of persuasion; "or muat be rooted out. at whatever . The arm of the State is invoked to Jcure uniformity. Upon the shorts of tne New World are re-enacted scenes of nich these exiles should long since have Ifown weary. The Puritan rivals in cru J'ty the persecutors from whom he has. Jed. We see Holmes, and Clark, and Irandall dragged before the Governor and enteiiced to heavy punisnmcnt. We hear Jas ahrill cry of their clerical accuser as "mites Holmes before the judgment !Tt, "The curse of God go with thee." r see the three frail Quaker women rourged through the aettlement, until re Wveved it last at the point of death. W Ann Hutchinson, her reason well nigh, driven through the deep anows to jrih at the hands of savages. No ele &t of horror is wanting to the scene. ". imprisonment, whipping, mutila uohs, banishment, death, await those who) "ler stress of present convictions seek1 be faithful to the lesson of fidelity to tonsciance learned from their Puritan i '"? and associates in the land from "aicb they have come. Such intolerance "as hideous enough, though it waa baaed , J4r,' niwn strength of conviction, 'stk r tba Pendulum haa swung to the J '"'. extreme. We are in a day when jjhwvous moral malaria steals subtly ."J the fiber of sv-ong endeavor.' The age .Orunk with materialist.!, the south wind b 7. 'tlV- and multitude are enervated tnf fthing touch. Home would stem iofi that n hi dy tm towers of a Christian life and character and of iaii, aplendid structure of the king ' aJI.of, ."od are going to leap up in the 4 ''onah's gourd; that w are noi T1 me morning to Xia . ""Idinf miraculously finished, endeavor to, tba-'siet-atouo. T'nrtcritandT meTthe heart of the""cfiureh still beats strong nnd true, but great masses of nominal Christians are in a lotus-eating atmosphere, listless, idle, unac complishing. Toleration is A long advance from Intol erance, but toleration easily becomes in difference, and both nre utterly inade quate to express the ideal relationship be tween bodies of Christ's followers. Toler ate? Endure? Be indifferent? Shame on those who would thus crucify the Christ nfrcsh! "Like n mighty nnny moves tho cburch of God," shoulder to shoulder, heart beat answering to heart beat, steps swinging in time to the martial music of the church militant and the church trium phant, "Like n mighty nnny moves the church of God." No regimental sacrifice of conviction, but above the flag of the regiment, the flag of the nrmy above the standard of the denomination, the white banner of the Captain of the host, tho Commander of the nrmies of the faithful, the King, omnipotent and eternal! Not intolerance, not toleration, not indiffer ence, but fellowship, is the rallying cry, nnd we may believe that it finds a sympa thetic chord in every henrt of this great company. A good beginning has been made. Fed eration is fellowship put into practice. Federation of churches and of Christian workers has ceased to be a dream. It is far from uncommon to-day. in single com munities, in counties, in States. Let mo indicate a very few of the lines which have been suggested nnd actually followed in this federated work. A religious census of given community, resulting in n religioim directory, showing church nnd Sunday school membership and attendance; Chris tian citizenship efforts, including those against the legalized saloon, nnd against the desecration nnd annihilation of the day of rest, a bulwark of our national life now thrown down nnd trampled in the dust our brethren under other national flogs are not free from the bitterness of this assault; n common rallying for the preservation or the securing of nn ideal public school system; where it can be done a wise direction of denominational enter prises in the way of the founding of new churches, thus tending to economy of ef fort nnd wise stewardship of resource, but chiefly, chiefly, co-operation in the vital, invaluable work of the church universal in evangelization, this above everything else the joining hands of those who believo that the world is lost without Jesus Christ in harmonious nnd loving fellowship of action for tho world's salvation. In nil of these endeavors we may work together, Mir henrts beating ns one in our common love nnd loyalty to our common Lord. Let me suggest two thoughts which may strengthen us in our fellowship. First The enemies of Christ nnd Ilia followers nre neither dead nor sleeping. Luther said,. as a renrrsentation of the church in his day: "Who would rnmt a picture of the present condition of the church let him paint a young woman in a wilderness, or in some desert place, nnd round about her let him figure lions, whoso eyes are glaring upon her nnd whose mouths nre open to devour her substnnco ind her beauty." That is the natural con dition of the clrirch. When the church In that orre, in this age. in anv nge, is truly alive, nnd is fulfilling her destiny, she will find about her, ns of old. men more cruel than ravenous beasts. The gospel means battle. It is rightly on the offensive, not Ihe defensive. The gonel divides, when it is manifested in a disciple whose em bodying of the gospel is strong enough to livide anything. The block will bear nl mot unmarked the edge of an axe han dled by the feehlo finder" of nn infant, but the axe goes (leaving through th wood when the cd'xc comes down under the "weeping nower of n strong man's arm. True, multitudes of nominnl Christians live on most amiable terms with the world, nnd know next to nothing of anv tribulation or opposition occasioned by their profession of Christianity. But that Is not because there is anv real alteration in the consequences of close union with Jesus. It is because their unio.i is so very slight and superficial. The world loves its 3wn. and what can it find to bate in the hoalg of people whose religion is confined to their tongues mnstlv and has nothing to do with their lives? It i,ns not censed to be n hard thing to be a real and thorough Christian. To be sure, onposition finds different foes to-dnv than in some other davs. You know to what lengths u has go"e. The Inquisition, the massacre ot M. Hnrtliolo mew. the veien of Philip II. of Snain. the Duke of Alva with his setanic deeds in tho Nethcrlanus. the fires of Smithfie,d. these are not so far in the nast that nista of oblivion have shrouded them. But let us understand, mv fellow Christians, that the world n-id the flch and the r'vi are igninat (uristinn building nnd Christian livine still, just a they always were. I an not peneve in people looking tor trouble, searching for some one who will onsent to persecute them, but I have an Idea that the sting of Smithtield fires and Ihe wrenching of Torouemada'a rack, if those experience could be reneated, might correct some vagaries ot modern theology. The tliundertni summons of tim enemy at the door might be a wholesome nnti- dnte tor aomo conditions in our churches f to-dav. There is something in the call to battle, battle for a cause which is tighteous and supremely worthy, which Itir the deepest and the best in us. Is It true that there is to-day litUe of the heroic m religion Jto appeal to men? Alas 'or us if that be ao. The statement come from some of our theological seminaries that there is aomo ilearth of candidates for the ministry. Why? Why is it that the ministry doe aot appeal to every atalwart. able, earnest, inselfish Christian man in his co-llcge days? It doe to some. A part of the product it our seminaries to-day waa never sur passed. But. why does not the claim of this great vocation press upon every aucii tn one until it is soberly settled one way or the other? It is not because young men arc afraid. There was no difficulty in filling un the ranks of the Rough Rider regiment, though every man knew that ho was taking his life in his hands when he rolunteered. There was no lack of volun teers for servico when the Merrimac was to be sunk at the mouth of Santiago har bor, though it meant a voyage into the jaw of death. Eight men were needed; you know the response to the call for voir unteers. I will not believe th.'t thero is among our young men a lack of courage, a lack of willingness to suffer. Can it be that young men have made up their minds that with the present spirit in the church there is little demand for the heroic in her minis try? Thev say that a minister makes hie church. He does leave hi stamp upon the church, but it is no less true that tho church makes the ministers. And tliu Minister will not go far beyond what tho ;hurch rcnuires, or at least he will not go far bevond the point to which the church will follow him. If the church of the liv ing God is to any considerable degree hon eycombed with indifference, permeated with the dry rot of lethargy, if the heroin element in the church ia dying, then tho ehurch may hold itself responsible for any diminution in number, and for any lessen ing of stalwart efficiency in its leadership. No man of strength and self respect i going to submit to being regarded merely a a convenient adjunct to weddings and funerals, as a kind of family pet to hw coddled and fed with sweetmeats. If the church wanta much that is heroic in her leaders, she must have much that is heroic in herself. There must be a recognition of the fact that the foea of Christ nnd of His followers are neither dead nor aleep ing; that eternal vigilance, eternal self sacrifice, everlasting and strenuous strug- fie, are the price of progress and of vie orv now sa always. Second The insistent call for service haa not ceased. Dean Frederick W. Far rar, who haa but recently - passed from among us, has said: '"la not tins fatally true, that the lives of very manv are friv olous, useless, egotistical; that the lives of very many are wasted and self-ruined by their own vilest passions; that the live of soma sra like a mero poison snd pesti lence to all around them; that it is the lives of few only which are noble and gen erous, brave and unselfish, merciful and just, pure and true? And the main curse of most lives i that thev think only of self snd live only for self." I hop that the words contain an exaggeration. I can but believe that each of us knows in his own circle lives which, though they be hidden from public view and knowledge, are "brave and unselfish," "pure and true." -But the words of the great church man are a challenge and an anpeal. The insistent call for service ha not ceased. Thank God. history shows that th call Its uoLtsts. ia. am. In 1'ie joaiil ittxaia I orthc lire or this world It is good to think of men and women who have not plcnsed themselves, but have gone about doing pood, great snnls who in their stubborn devotion to the truth, in detestation of fnlsehood nnd lies, have fared n lying world nnd the hatred of the bae and the storm of weak and cowardly criticism, not holding their lives dear unto themselves. ' I hear some one say, "We have nn such call ns they," but we have. The only call they hail we have the call of the need. We might, the humblest of us, be useful. Perhnns very few eyes will be wet fur us, 'and they not for long, while others, with .less of opportunity than ourselves, have gone down to the grave amid the benedic tions of the poor. Ah, the insistent call for service has not ceased. Can we not strive to rise, to rie unitedly, to rise in ever strengthening fellowship,' into such A lifo ns is described bv the words apoken of our blessed Lord, "Ho went nbout doing good." The great Methodist tender, John Wes ley, the bieentennary of whose birth has jnst been celebrated throughout the Chris tian world, nnblv said: "I desire A league, offensive and defensive, with every soldier of Christ." So say we. Let it be repeated in ever increasing volume until the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord ns the waters cover the sea. "Wo desire a league, offensive nnd defensive, with every soldier of Christ." Two Kinds nF ftympnthy. Sympathy is a word set over from the Greek, nnd means "suffering with." Hence one who sympathizes with another suffers with Him. In our careless use of tho word we do not nut so much menning into it. As generally employed, it means that one has n gentle touch of pity for nn other who is in trouble. In order to have it signify anything worth while we should put its full meaning into it when we use it. There are two kinds of sympathy, savs Wcllsnring. There is n so-called sympathy that is simplv depressing. If one is in trouble it makes his trouble seem greater nnd harder to pear. It weeps with one, but not in n comforting wnv. On the con trary, it ninlics one feel that he indeed has ocasion to weep, nnd that there is no real solace for him. If one is cast down be cause of his health, it makes him almost m've up nil hope of recovery. In his friends Job hnd sympathizers, but he was justified in saying to them: "Miserable comforters are ye all." The other is a sympathy that puts heart, nope, manhood into one. If one is cast down it leaves him cheered. Afterwards tho obstacles do not look so formidable or the clouds so b'nek. In our despondent words we matrnify our troubles; helnful sympathy enables us to sec them in their true proportions. This kind of sympathy not only weeps with those who are sor rowful, but speaks n comforting word. It docs not merely pity the unfortunate, it puts out a hand to lift him up. If one really sympathizes suffers with another, he will do something besides condole, if something besides condolence is needed. Sympathize with others, as you would Jiko to have others sympathize with you. Subjects of Thought, Behavior is a mirror in which every one disnli-.ys his own image. Originality blazes n new track while ec centricity runs on one wheel in an old rut. It is better to suffer wrong than do it, and happier to be sometimes cheated than not to trust. Some men stand on principle and some others probably would if they had it to stand on. When you step nn on one promise yon will always find n higher and a better one before you. A laugh to be joyous must flow from A joyous heart, for without kindness there can be no true joy. The art of saying appropriate words in a kindly way is one that never goes out of fashion, never ceases to please, and is within the reach of the bumblest. The domestic man who loves no music ao well as bis kitchen clock and the airs which the Inira sing to him ns they burn on the hearth, has solaces which others never dream 01V God is in our aouls, as our souls arc in our bodies. He never ceases to speak to us, but the voice of the world without and the tumult of our passions within bewilder us. and prevent us from listening to Him. My heart is fixed firm and stable in th belief that ultimately the sunshine nnd summer, the flowers nnd the nzure sky, shall become, us it were, interwoven into mnn's existence. He shall take from all their beauty and enjoy their glory. Do You Travel on Good Hoads? Good roads nre a matter of religious ns well as of national life. We must lenrn that the amount we enn carry depends not ao much on the weight of our buruena as on the road over which we try to carry them. A man can haul three tons over a good macadam easier than he can draw a hundred weight through a mudhole. So a mnn enn carry great burdens who is up held on the rock of God's providence, who would stumble and fall as he tried to flounder on through tho mires of the world's discouragement and discontent. As Thomas a Kempis said, "He rideth eas ily ennngh whom the grace of God car neth." John Kuto was a poor boy, deaf and dumb, nuu brought up in a workhouse a lot hard enough to cast down many lives, but be trusted in God, he thought and wrote of God's kingdom, and he wrought great things before he died. It does not matter ao greatly what wo have to b"ar, or what genius or gift' or power we we have to beur it with, as it does over whM roads of doubt -' fear and fretful ness, or of faith nnd courage and ainging. ve try to bear our burdea. Sunday-School Times, Where Love Abounds. Dr. James O. K. MoClure gives the fol lowing beautiful description of the heart where love abounds: What strength and joy and nobleness would characterize men if in every soul that now bus some love, that love should "abound!" Whsn warmth ''abounds" in a heart no room is left for icoldncss. Our world would become un ispenJiably aweet and nelpful if in all Christian hearts lovintr kin.'ness abounded "yet more and more." The moat attract ive lives would becozue even more at tractive. RAM'S HORN BLASTS. HE devll'a piety will not decrutso bis punishment. Heavenly prltc aro for earnest tr.eo. You need God because Ood nua you. Clerical dlgalty Ik the devil's au- IvJfV Jt aesthetic. RftaS. . Faith In God 1 rVaiW tbo secret of hope in man. Borne slna show a soft head rather than a hard heart. Curses come home to roost and blessings come home to rest The fruit that will keep fcr eternity does not ripen in a moment. They who come empty to God't house are likely to go away empty. Every possessor of light la a dubtor to those who sit In the dark. The more extensive our work for Christ the more Intensive It will bo. Souls are saved only by thoje who gtve their whole souls to the servico. God measures the work of His ser vants by faithfulness and not by figures. Christianity Is bound to be a stum bling block to those who creep and crawl Instead of walking upright, You cannot teach the heart with the head alone, . . Chsracter Is the only permauert capital In business. There is no such thing as preparation after the event. True education Is religious and true religion Is educational, A child can put a twist In a tr that au army cannot takt out. THE SABBATH SCHOOL Infcrnalional Le ;son Commcnla For Octo ber 13. Sufijrcl: David's Conlesolon, Pss. SI, M7 Oolden Text, Pa. 51, 10-Memory Verses, M Commentary on the Day's Lesson. I. Pavid'g prayer for forgiveness (vs. 1-4). 1, 2. "Have mercy," etc. Or, be gracious unto me. JIurk the gradation in the three words expressing God's love: 1, Have mercy denotes that kind of affection which is expressed by moaning over an ob ject we love and pity. 2. Loving kindness denotes a large and liberal disposition to goodness and compassion. 3. Tender mer cies denote the most tender pity of which tho nature is suscciitible. "Transgres sions." fin is described, ns in Kx. 31:7, in three different aspects, ns transgression, iniquity, sin; the Hebrew words thus ren dered mean respectively, (1) detection from God or rebellion against Him; (2) the perversion of rieht, depravity of con duct; (3) error, wandering from the right way, missing the mark in life. "Wot out . . . wash . . . cleanse." The removal of guilt is also described by the use of three different expressions. 1. Sin is regarded ns n debt recorded in God's book which needs to be blotted out. 2. Wash is frc nucntly used for ceremonial purifications (Titus 3:5). 3. Cleanse suggests tho com parison of sin with leprosy. This shows that the sin is deep-seated and needs s thorough treatment. 3, 4. "I acknowledge." I know my transgressions nnd freely confess them. The willingness to know sin is the first step towards repentance. Observe also that David uses tho plural form as in verse 1. He hnd (1) broken the seventh com mandment, (2) caused the death of Uriah, (.1) used deceit. (4) covered bis sin, (5) hardened his heart, (6) dishonored hij family (7) injured his friends, (8) weak ened his kingdom. Thus no sin ever stands nlone, but "each single transgression is the mother of many." Against Thee, Thee only." AU sin, even that by which man may be moat grievously injured, is sin ngainst God. God nlone was greater than the king, nnd to God nlone David, ns king, was responsible. "Slightest be justified,'' etc. From the relation of nil souls to God every sin ngainst man lies primarily ngainst God, so that God, who is the supreme judijc of nil human conduct, will be justi fied in His sentence upon the wicked. David thus recognizes God's justice, how ever severe the sentence may be. If. Dnvid's confidence in God (vs. 5-8), C, G. "Was shapen." David means here that he was horn with n sinful nature. See Kph. 2:3. This confession is not made as an excuse for his sins, but in utter self abasement. David bewails the depravity within, nnd thus abandons nil hope of re storing himself. "Thou desircst truth." David ndmits that he is the very opposito of what he should be. God desires truth in the most secret springs of thought and will. Truth here takes the sense of integ rity and uprightness: and wisdom that of the knowledge of God. 7. 8. "With Hyssop." The figure here is borrowed from the ceremonial of the law. Hyssop wa,s a common herb which frequently grew on walls. This was used ns a sprinkler, especially in the rites for cleansing the :cper nnd purifying the un clean. Dr. Clark calls attention to tho fact that in the case of the leper the cere mony of sprinkling was not performed un til the leper had been healed, nnd the ceremony declared to the people that such was the case. "This." savs Clarke, "David seems to have in full view, hence ho re nuests the Lord to show to the people that ho was accepted and cleansed." "Whiter than snow." The Lord is able to take every clement foreign to holiness out of our nature. See Isa. 1:18. "Hones . . . broken." A strong tigure showing how a sense of God's displeasure had, as it were, crushed his bonc3 and shattered bis whole frame. He had renented deeply. III. David's pravcr for a clean heart f vs. 0-12). 8,10. "Hide thy face." Do not longer rn'o upon mv sins, cast them behind Thee. "Create." "Mending will not avail; my heart is altogether corrupted; it must be made new." "The word create is the strongest known in the Hebrew for bring ing into being that which did not before exist, ns Gen. 1:1. Compare Kph. 2:10; 4:24; and 'new creation,' 2 Cor. 5:17; Gal. 0:13." "Clean heart." A sanctified heart one cleansed from all oin nnd made per fect in the love of God. "A right spirit." A steadfast, established spirit, fixed in its allegiance to God. that could stand firm and resist temptation. II. 12. "Cast me not away," etc. God admits the upright to His presence, nnd they behold His face (l'sa. 11:7; 2:12). David knew that God would be justified in removing His Spirit from him, but he prays for mercy and asks that the divine rejection might not follow in his case as it did with Saul. "Uphold me." The idea of uphold here i to confirm, render perma nent. David desires that the restored state be sustained nnd abiding. This is the point of the petition. Hut he has not in himself the elements of this stability. God only can "restore the joys of salva tion," and He nlone can cause him to stand firm in this restored life. "Free spirit." Se R. V. He desires perfect freedom of spirit so he will easily and naturally do such things ns arc right. IV. David's resolve to employ his life in God's service (vs. 13-17). 13, 14. "Will I teach." Thus David would show forth hi gratitude for that renewal and estab lishment in righteousness for which he agonizes." How he fulfilled his promise is pliown in some of his euhseouen': nsalms. See Tea. 32; 40; 103, which should be read in this connection. "From bloodguiltiness." From the punishment of my sin. Here David no doubt h?d in view the death of Uriah. His blood was crying for ven ?cnnce nminst him and only God could deliver liim. "Thy righteousness." GoH's righteousness is sc2n in His pardon to the penitent ns well as His punishment to the impenitent. lj-17. "Open thou." His lips had been closed, for a guilty soul cannot speak the praises of God; but God could open them, for the power to praise nrteht is the gift of God. "Dcsirest. not sacrifice." See K, V. The lnw of Moses made no provision for tho forgiveness or expiation of such sins as David had committed. See Num. 15:30, 31. Forms nnd types would now avail nothing. "Sacrifices of God." Those which God desires and approves are a broken spirit and a contrite heart; that is, a heart truly ponitent and humble. Such n heart will never be cast out. Mercy will always be shown the humble, penitent seeker. Duckling Chum With Kittens. In the kitchen annex at the boms of Louis Hawks, In Flahklll Landing, NT. Y., the unusual spectacle now Is presented of a duckling chumming with three kittens and the mother cat Tho duckling was hatched all by Itsoll tnd was brought In by the kitchen ire. Boon It found its way to where the kittens were housed. The old cat took Kindly to the newcomer and permitted M to squat down right among the kittens and sleep. Now the duckling ind the kittens piny and romp to gether, and the mother cat apparently ias come to look upon the little feath; red creature as one ot her own child ren. An Excellent Reason. "No man shall refuse to drink with me without giving his reason," said the enragod Kentucklan to the mild faced gentleman boslde htm. "But I have two excellent reasons," pleaded the stranger. "Then name them." "In the first place I I promised my motner uion her deathbed that never never" "Enough," said the Kentuclrlan, ex tending his hand. "I respect your motive. I also have had a mother. But you spoke of anothsr reason. May i ask yen what It Is?" "My other reason? Oh, yea! Well, I've just had a drink." CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR TOPICS. Oclobtr 18 "Great V.cn of Ihe Bible: Wnal Moses Teaches IV Ex. 3i: 28-33; Malt 17:1, 4; Hcb. 3: I S. Scripture Verses. The Story In Acts 7:29-36; Hcb. 11:27; Joans' Ycnrs of Prpparatlon Luke 3:23; John tha Eaptlat Luke 1:80; Oppres sors of Moses 2 Tim. 3:8. Le3son Thoughts. God sets great tasks for U3 to do but lie never sends U9 alone. "Cer tainly I will be with thee," ho says to us, just as ho d.ld to uToees. Intimate communion wlfh God make the faco shine. Men will always s-ee It when we have bnen with Jesus and have leaned on Mm, Moses received a long and thorough, course of training for his great work. No great work can ever bo well dono without patient preparation. Selections. Modesty, humility, consciousness of one's Insufficiency alone, are condi tions of success In the kingdom of God. "When I am weak then am I strong." Moses had a fitness to bo the vehlclo of God's powr. Moses was eighty years of age, and all the experiences of his Ut'o were, parts of his training for Ms mission. His Hebrew parentage and training, his Egyptian t-ducation, his forty years in the wilderness, all contrib uted toward his equipment. Everyone of us Is under traJnlng. We are at school. Tn God's good time we shall find our work open before us, It Is not necessary to call mjn t9 case and honor; these they will find of their own accord. When Moses and Elisha, apostles and preachers and reformers, arc called, It Is to post3 of difficulty and danger. When Most?s waved his mystic rod, What wonders followad while ho spoke! Firm as a wall tho waters stood. Or gushed In rivers from the rockr At his command the thunders rolled; Lightning and hall his voice obeyed; And Pharoah trembled to behold Ills land In desolation laid. But what could Mnses' rod have dona Had he not been divinely sent? The power was from the Lord alone, And Moses but the Instrument. Suggested Hymns. Am I a soldier of tin; cross? Empty me of self, dear Savior. Take thou my hand, and lead me. Take my life, and let it be. Trusting In Xhe Lord, thy God. While thou. O my God, art my help and defender. EPW0RTH LEAGUE MEETINQ TOPICS. October 18 The Law of ids Uj .ha 12: 2J-;6. Christ's first invitation Is "Come &nd love." He reveals himself as a new object of the heart's affection. Ho Invites us to his companionship that wo may satisfy completely our capac ity for love. The only people w"io are not Included in the Gospel Invi tation are those who cannot love. Lovo Is the universal passion. It creates the family, establishes the home, and aolds society together. Christ finds, this world passion, and Instead of thwarting it, he shows Its highest, purest form in his love fcr us. Then he calls us to fellowship with him, of fering thus the holiest and most sat isfying experience of love. He bases his claim to our affection on his lovo tor us. "Believe on me, and accept oy gift of life, and love will crown your own life." But that Is not Christ's final lnvlta Ion. He says, "Come and suffer." In. the passage which Is our study this week ho Is looking Into tho future. He Toresces his own death. It Is not a (feasant vision. But he knows that Ura way leads through death to life. And what is the unvarying law of the iarvest. The man who uses all his powers ind poesesslons on himself may work Sard, and satisfy a thousand desJres, Silt he does not really live. It is not In the nature of things that a self rentered man should succeed. The world cannot learn the lesson.' ft contradicts all political economies ina all business codes. Only as we enter Into fellowship with Jesus Christ 1s it possible to comprehend it. L'Hll then it Is but. pious motoric ur l pleasing parabie. But iu his pre tence we know it for the great law of life, the secret of creation and Provl lance, Gcthesniane and Calvary. baennce la- the way of tho divine In us. The upward tendency of love al ways makes for keener sensibilities, weakens the armor of unconcern, spens the way for wounda and sor rows. Every now tie, every new asso- :iatlon, intensifies tho sympathies and Increases the capacity for suffering. And thsy who can feel most suffer most. "Tho 'bravest ara the tender est." So, when tho supreme affection jonres into our lives, and wo get the vision of the cross upraised for our lalvntion. It Is wholly natural that our Saviour should say, "Taka up thy crcas." Slnco Christ came it Is always har vest. Thure are fields white unto harvest everywhere. Sowing and reap ing go forward with equal pace. No oiro need wait for opportunity to reap. There Is ripe grain close at hand. The great need is for laborers. Human counsels vary as to methods of supply ing harvesters. One says, "Import them," and send for an evangelist. Another says. "Train them." and starts a Personal Workers' Class. Josus tays, while not condemning these methods, "Pray for laborers." Tho field belongs to the Lord of the harvest. I'j3 Is Interested In the In gathering. Pray for wooers, and you will feel the urgency of thu need. Then you will be anxious to help an swer your prayer. Then you can go Into the field, strong In the strength of Him who U Lord of ail harvests, and Master of your life. "And ho that reapzlh recelvcth wages, ani gather cth fruit unto life eternal." Ancient Time. Tho early Egyptians divided the day' and night each Into twelve hours, a custom adopted by the Jews or the Greeks probably from the Babyloni ans. The day is said to have first been divided Into hours from B. C. 293, when a sun dial was erected tn the templo of Qutrlnus at Rome. Previous to the Invention of water clocks, B. C. 168, the time was called at Rome by publlo criers. In early England one expedient of measuring time was by wax candles, three Inches burning an hour. The first perfect mechanical clock waa not made until about A. D. 1260. Day began at sunrise among most of the northern nations, at s un let among the Athenians and Jews, at midnight among the Romas, u with THE EEL10I0US LIFE READING FOR THE QUIET HOUR WHEN THE SOUL INVITES ITSELF. t'oem: Lament of the I'rnrilgnl Son Tim Feasting That Mnkes I.rnn MniN JInck of I.lriuor l.urks I'mitrcr, Slavery nnd Mn Drop tlin Accursed Cup, Docs thnt lamp still burn in my Father's houxe, Which lie kindled the nijfiit I went nway? I turned once bcncitli the ced.ir bnuehs. And ninrked it gleam with n (I'liili'u my; Did He think to light me homo suiiic day? .. - IInnsT-v here with crunching swine, JIunary harvest hnve I to reap: In n dream I count My Father's kinc, I hear the tinkling bells of His sheen. I watch His lambs that browse and liap. There is plenty of bread nt home. His servants huve bread enough and to spare While 1 perish hunirry nnd bare. Christian G. Kossctli. Sobriety a Virtue. One of the greatest difficulties the cause of temperance has to contend with tn day is the multitude of people who are allied ngainst it. Notice right here that it was so in the dnys of Moses. "The whole con gregntinn murmured ngainst Mres and Aaron" two fanatics nzuinst a majority. Strong arguments this majority used, too: jnst as they do to-day. They hejrnn by blaming all their personal discomforts on the enforced temperance that Moses, m ting for God, had established for them. They harked bark continually to that old Egypt of theirs, ignoring its' troubles out of which they were come, forgetting Ca naan, which had never seemed to weigh materially with them. The longing of souls rot given up to God for thnt which they desire is un quenchable except by God. The poor chil dren of Israel wished to be continually feasting, for thnt was their idea of happi ness. Of nil that had been told them con cerning Canaan they seem but to have grasped a dim idea of constant pleasure, nnd that it was to begin nt once. Xo more have we to-day true perceptions and estimates of the heavenly Canaan. Prin ciples we may havo when we start out from i our lands of Egypt, but how many of us abide by them when it conies to a mat ter of personal indulgence? .Some, indeed, do, nnd thank God for the Moses nnd Aaron in our midst who fret not for lux ury, but are willing to abide bv the law God has set, feeling that Goil knows best even nbout so small n matter ns diet. There nre several points of striking like ness between the murmuring children of Israel nnd the people win ouzht to be earnest temperance workers and are not. They ignore the evils of Kgypt, the injus tice, tho oppression, the cruel lakniajters, tor the sake of the fleshpots, which, nftcr ail. were but meagre for the starving creatures bowed beneath many burdens. Our land is in slavery to rum. a curse that is crushing out the manhood of its people. Every year the chains grow stronger, nnd yet for the sake of a little personal indulgence, a little so-called free dom, many remain in bondage. And sel fish lawmakers, cruel as Kjvptinn task masters, regulate and make' respectable the sale of the deadly enemy of our fair land. One sells his Canaan for a daily morsel of meat, ami away down thro'ngri tho nges the other barters it for the deadly wine cup. And so God gave that people what they nsed. rained it down upon tliem ns free ly ns He had given plain manna, and thev took it greedily anil never saw what thev were doing nor how they had abused their loving Father's graciousness. Hecausc they saw not His love and vielded not them selves to His plnns for them, their hungrv souls, unfed by the true nourishment God would have given, grew lean and starved. The poor souls who will not believe in the dangers of alcoholic liquors, nnd who will not give them un. grow lean in like manner. They know that ba-k of liquor lurks danger, slavery, sin; still each thinks he can esrape them nnd cries out for that which will satisfy tlie craving nt his heart. And he gets it if he goes after it. God will not keep a man from sin if he is de termined to have it. The liquor clouds his brain and keeps him from a clear vision of his God so that his soul is starved. It may not be that all who touch, taste or handle the accursed cup dron immediately into drunkards' graves, but just as surelv, il more slowly, do t (icy die from wilful starvation because they would rather fat isfy the immediate cravin-s of appetite than go to live with Gnd forever in His fair, new land. Grace Livingston lliil, in the 2scw lork Mail and Express. Happiness In Work. Some people dream of happiness ns snmetlitnir they will come to bv anil by, nt the end of a course of toil and struggle. Hut the true way to find happiness is as we go on in our work. Every dav has its own cun of sweetness, in every duty is n pot of hidden manna. In everv sorrow is a blessing of comfort. In every burden is rolled un a gift of God. In all life ( hnst is with us, if we are true to Him. It we hare learned this secret, even the things thnt seem iinpVa-sant and disagree able yield joy i.i the doing. A traveler in routh Africa saw some bovs plaviug mnr bles, using p-bbles. One of these' rolled to the traveler's feet, nnd. picking it un, it seemed to him only a rough stone, without beauty or worth. But ns ho turned it over a gleam of light flashed from one spot of it. It was a diamond. Duties seem dull and drearv to us, unattractive, hard, but thev infold secrets of happiness which we find when we accept tlum with love nnd do them cheerfully. The Rev. J. li. Mil ler. ficms of Thought. It is God's glory to help at a pinch. If you want to remember truth medi tate, repeat, confer. Act it as s o:i as vou hear it. I'nder sin we nre free to do anvlhing but good; under Christ we aro tree to do any thing but evil. Come, said Latimer, to the public meet ings. though thou comest to sleep; it may be God may take tnee napping. Absence is without hope. God made him after His image, and men (to reipiius Him) will needs make God af ter their image: cast liim anew in their base mold, and make an idol of Him. Aenophanes was wont to say that if beasts were nble to paint they would portray a god like to themselves. Th Ucv. tj. Hart well Pratt, in New York Observer. Is Klow Itoath. Worry is slow death and neither hospi tal nor asylum can bnn relief. Tne phy sician cannot cure it. All the ozone of the mountains and the soft salt breeres of the sea nre powerless in its presence. Flee worry; it is the ban of all pcacs. United Presbyterian. Start With Ood. The early hour is the hour for prayer and the Bible, ritart the day with God! Ve know not what the day may bring ia either trial or temptation. The most dan gerous temptations are the unforseen and unexpected. Theodore L, Cuyler, D. V. Inspiration of All Faithful. r.elmion is the very respiration of sll faithiul and loving toil, and to detach it for minutes specially reserved is like pro posing to take your walk in the morning and do your breathing in the afternoon. James Martineau. Immense Puff Ball. W. O. and Herbert Gee of Vergen r.es, Vt., recently found a puff ball growing la the woods which measur ed 4 feet Inches In circumference. If Inches across, and weighed lGli pounds. Cltlisns' Live Guarded. No married man In Vienna, It It (aid, la allowed to' go up In balloon without the formal consent cf bit wife and children. : THE GREAT DESTROYER SOME STARTLING FACTS ABOUT! THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. rornu CivllltPil Him Oartnnt Improve mcnt of llitmunlty It la Coins; om i-'.vpvy r.yOrnnkrnnes and Othcs Vires Are Knpldly Dying Out. I. ''I ued to roam in ignorance'J The former savage said. , "I did a wildly heathen danco, j, With feathers on my head. I used to tight in heathen style, j ;) I nless my fo? would run v Hut now 1 pot him nt a mile, ; For I possess a gun. ! "Oh. it was terrible to aeo i Me in mv former atate. But destiny looked after me i .And led the hand of fate. I I'ntil where once we sat and sang i uur nravers to tne moon V The white man built a his ahebanr t ilia-, nc calls a saloon. . I , "Enlightenment came here; she bore Krag Jorgensen and Krupp In one week's time I smoothly sworatj And played at seven-un; The kindly men who took my land Came fio:n across the sea, And siiil they'd take mc by the band! 1 And make a man of mc. ".So now I'm not a savage man," He said, nnd wisely smiled. 'With pagan eyes I do not scan , The desert and the wild. I do not ramble any more The wicked paths despised I I blow the foam upon tne Hoor, ' And I've been civilized." Chicago Tribune. J Reforming Young Men Preachers, editors, temperunce societies and charitable organizations nil kinds of personal forces are working to reform thai world. . lint nil cf them together cannot aceom-l pli-h one-tenlh or one-millionth part of the work that is done by the cold hard lnw of supply nnd demand, the regulations forced upon men by necessity, and by the modrrnf struggle to keep up. .Suppose a great many good men and women went to Pennsylvania to prcacia against intemperance among the miner. The might convert temporarily a few. The temjiernte men would listen tn them" kindly. The intemperate men would prob ablv never hear them. But when the mine owners, acting in ao coril with the unions and with the unions. support, refuse to employ an intemperate? miner then temperance work in the minra begins in earnest. You may tell a mnn that his drinking ruins his family nnd himself. He knows it. but still he drinks. When the companies nnd his felloTSt workmen realize that the drunken minor, through his carelessness, endangers nil oth ers then the laws of life step in and re form begins. The intemperate miner mav not listen to the preacher, but he has got to listen t the man thnt takes his name off the psvrnll and tells him he can't get on again until ha stops drinking. And so it is in Chicago, where manv em ployers have agreed not to keep on "their payrolls young men clerks and others that drink excessively, smoke cigarettes or gam b.e on the races. Good men nnd women mav use up their voices in telling the voung clerk that tha gambler is a fool and must lose, that the) cigarette in time is a certain poison, that whisky cheats the brain and ruins life. This talking nnd writing by the good is not without effect. It saves some men strong in character and open to argument. lint it only calls out the self-confident smile or neer of the average young clerk who thinks that he can take caro of him self. When that young clerk ia told that ha will not be needed after next Saturday be cause he bets on the races, because b smokes cigarettes, because he is seen drunk in doubtful company, nnd because the em ployer docs not care for that type of man then the young clcrU's superior smile van ishes. ( When he draws his pay. nnd goes homo without work, ho actually knows that gambling a:id whisky and cigarettes ara bad things. And be finds it out in time to reform, if he lias brains enough to reform. i 'Ihe ordmnry rrfomirr gets very few re suits until the last extreme. The tcrribla example is willing to reform often because he can't get anv more whisky anvhow. i i he laws of human existence fortunateTjr do not wait for the young mnn to become a terrible example. , They a- to the mine worker or this clerk. " n can't work and get money if yoiwlrink." When ti.o individual can't get 1. oney he can't mink. He does not havo to take th pledge; the employer takes the pledge fol ium, s.iying, "I pledge mvself not to payj vou while you gamble, smoke cigarettes, drink or otherwise throw away your chaaca of being a decent mnn." Those laws of nature and of our strasjle here, while they seem cruel, are working; for onr betterment. It is to be honed that more nnd mora employers will tnke on behalf of those who y.ork for teem the pledge of temperate liv ing and enforce it by rubbing names off tho pnvro.l. This may seem hnrsh, but it will be befcs ter for all concerned in the end. hat the average young mnn needs is a, fulure. n peremptory discharge, to maktt him think seriously before it is too late for thinkins to tin him anv r.,.,1 X...- V 1 livening Journal. Why Many Men Drink. Tll Dean nf I!m-Iut. ,.:,;.... I. - 1 ,. . - --- iiiimuk m n Hor ticultural correspondent, recommends veg ctablo growing as conducive to temper ance. Get a man to take pains with hist vegetables, says the Dean, and you will ilo more to keep him sober "than all th !;,ue nhbons and pledges worn and signed." im-rc is here tin ,'. 1 ... . a. a tact which extends far beyond the vege- i.-.c Ku.ui-n, nnu wiuen is too often over looked. Drinking for the most part is n proof of nothing (o much as a lack of jmeresi in inc. A worltinginan who haa no resources outside bis round of dnilr toil trod when it ia ... 4- n' house simply because there is nothing else for him to do to escape being bored Ha n, rrau, even II ne cared muehr about reading, and ho can acarcclv lie ex pected to sit wrapped in meditation. Hence, even if his wife be thriftv and hi home well kept, the temptation is stronz to betake himself to the public houw-. where at least he ran meet and talk wit hi his fellows. Give him a counter attrac tion something that he hkes and can taka a personal interest in and the poblio house at once bcgina to lose its eomuellin power. This has been demonstrated over nnd over again where workingrnen hava ticen supplied, or have supplied themselves. jvith niacin, erv for rational recreation. London Gruphic. How the Cinsau Drink. The statistics of the Imperial TTraltla Ollico show that the total apent on alco holic liquors in 19(12 throughout the Ger man fcmpirc was about IrtiS.UOO.UOO, an av erngo per head for persons over fifteen yeans of age of 35. A mas of material shows the injurious effect of alcohol. Wisconsin's Good Bacons. Tn Wisconsin's Legislature, just closed, some fifteen bills, afrctini the liquor questiou, cre introduced. 8eva. of tbewa created considerable discussion. Two ia ths liquor interests were defeated, while five in the interests of temperance wens adopted. Tempcraase Work by rirtsre ToU Cards Ths former moral pocket handkerchief is now disp.aced by the moral pic t nr. post card. M. ( hapmsrtin, of Ulaye. bas had) half a midion picture postcanla printed Illustrating the evils of Jrunkenneae. Tber have such titles as "The Drankard'a J?- ' Dt the Eoltlo" and "Tke Ih-ink Fiend." and the author suggest that they might be posted to conHrnw drunkards. Two or three slander actions have already been started by people wKe have received the cards, and one recipient is bein-j proceeded against for violrathy assau.tiug a sender .Weelaainaeer liasettev Laughiia McCfore, an ice wagon driver pf Kansas City, llo., was tons to piece by a tram, lie was drank. -