SIRE METHOD WITH DOUBT A BrHllaat Sunday towi By Rev. Dr. C. T. Qoodell. 0e Not Be Isssatlewt Wltk II. Oily Coallant ( Jnav Tewatd Ik Llhl Ysa It U. HiooKt.Y!. N. Y. Sunday Bitrniiifr. in ihe Hns Place M. K. I'buica. the f!ev Pr. Chnrle T.. Oondell preached n "A Sure) Method Willi Donlit." The text wm taken from Peniel v: 16, "Aid I have heard of thee that I Hon canst make iater pretattnn and dissolve doshts." )r Uoodell mid; IP Daniel were alive ts-dnv. with hit ability to dissolve doubt iiniinraired nd unimpmched, he mould he the busies! man of hi time. And vet ms is nt mora aa e of doubt time any nthei which nreeeded it. There waa infidelity hundred Tram ato ia ur auiversttiet and a flippant skepticism iiuom eililr-ut ed people which ia now quite outgrows, hut it will alwava remain true that every generation muni untie i tn awe doubts. The feneration ia mnde nw of the inrli viilual and Ihe area' iincali'ina of the soul arc personal 'Miex'ietia. The? mat h wroiiiht nut lor tin- iuol. part hv indi vidual stres and striiKilc. There are l'iase f do'ibt th-u rereive stealer em pliasis tlian nlhern at a ;v-a tiiae In an aeneration n dc-slic nluln-unliy eni ti triumph in another utncMluitia ia at tin fore. The reiteration now passing has foiwlii out the (treat battle nf evoluHoa and we mar fairly say that it theory ia in no 'f a menace to the Christian faith. There have been hoi hattlee on the field of bdiliral eriticistn. Position oace He'd by the two (treat forre have beta tirovea untennble and the orthodox tmrtv by jiv ing up what eould not he defended' hna mnde ill position slrontar thaa ever be fore. The doubt to which I wih ( refer and which T would be (lad to scatter na apse tex of the nieht are not n-urh ef the theoretical aa of the practical sort. They are the kind which make Atmit, wen weak, which paralyse (treal upward movement it society, and cut the nerve of personal de-otion. It ia rat alranre or nnrblr ihst we ahould hire douhla. We berin life knowin; nothing. We journey ia tlc land ef the nnknowi nt every !e. We investigate and eTnerimrnt nnd o'icion. Little hv little with material brought from the unknown we litnld the structure which we call Vnpivlete. and in doing rhi we form a habit which muster u. It will not let ua rrat. Life ha become a great interrogation point. acH our jour ney a virage of discovery. V"e axil in? eTcry beckoning bay. One i a fair har bor and notliine bevnnd: another a stretch of sandbar and ahoal and we are fortu nate if we are able to mit a"in ac ; while another proree he (he mouth of a -reat river tin whose tide we ro to r'r ioua diaeoveriea in a delectah'e countrv. The maa who thinka wmnat aton hi thinkin. Often he ia mockefl hr it and pitileaolv pii"iahed, like eoce ad'-enturona mountain cllmbe'-. but cliruk he muat thongh lie fad in hia queat. "That low man ek n little thing ' do, Ccea it and doea it; Thia Mrh man with a great thing l puraiie Diea era he knewa it." It ia no wander, thea, thai we are drir en to doubt, (or life ia too abort to know all. It a not to be wondered at t':at one doubta concern themelvee rhieflv with relijioua truth. In the very nature of thinira relieiona troth ia aiipernatural. It W not 10 much contrary to, aa berond. our eensee. Ita nrincinlra are not like the ax iom of mathematica. The wlin'e- (le!d of religion ia bevnnd the realm of the eenera and of acientific rulra; therefore, it ia to be wondered at leant of all when we find that in thia field apeculation and doubt run riot. Tbere ia another fact to be rnnaidered which Horace Iluahncll etatra admirahlv: ' Our frult i itaelf in diaordei. A brok en or bent teleecone will not aee anything rightly. So a mind wrenched from ifa true linea of action, diaeolored and amirched bv evil, will not aee truly, but will mit a bhirred, mieahapen look on everytumy. Truth will only be na aood aa error and doubt aa natural aa they." In yiew of all thia, let u hay dni with abueing thoae who doubt. Dnidit nroDer'.y puraned ia only knowledge in the row, and Tr. Parka woa rieht when he aid: "Infidelity ia the ultimate reeult of checking the desire for exnanded knowl edge." Let ua frankly tell our young pon tile that doubt ia not a final condition m t to 'a diahoneat mind. Throixh the dnoht si to-iiny they will come to the knowledge of to-trorrow, and let ua o'o remind them that what they bold aa the truth to-morrow ahould hare great exnanaiv power, ao that coming day will give more light and add to the nronortiona of the truth "I hae heard of thee that thou eanet nake interpretation and diaeolre doubta." waa the King'a greeting to th Hebrew. Thi aame Daniel bad atood before th King'a father when be, too, waa aore bur dened with aiyttery. He did not claim for hia own unaided wiedom the power to aettle doubta, but atout! and honratly owned th aource of hi power, aaying: "There ia a God in heaven that revealetb aecreta." It may he aaid truthfully that the only aure method for the volution f life' problem and the dissolving of it doubta ia by entering into right relation! with Him. If it ia objected that one nl the great doubta of lifer relate t Kit very existence the anawer ia. Every man ia conacioua of tl e great ethical impera tive, I ought. Thi relate him to aomi great law, and hence to aome great law giver. It would not aeem t be a very exalted prayer, "Oh God, if there be God, enlighten my oul, if I hav a aoul," and yet even a prayer like that, with ai hone-t purpoee to follew each fainteat ray of light, would not lie unavailing. In the matter of dissolving religiout doubta, the ultimate purpose i everything. Ko man ever come to the truth by brina imply curiou. Speculation for apecu lation' sake leada nowhere. Th miud it filled with conflicting argument, it ia a poor cause which has not something plana ib'e about it. and ao the mind chase it le'.l from sophistry to sophistry, from con troveri-y to controversy, darkening coun sel and rcniing out nowhere. The first thing for aa honest seeker af ter truth to do is to plede; himself t abide bv the truth aa he linda it. To play faat and lo.i .e with one'a convictions is thi first and second death. To fail to tins the light w hav to refuse to live up t - bat we know ia light, i to put one's e',f into the darkness of sterna! doubt PUto waa right when he aaid: "Atlic I is a diseaae of the aoul before it becnnie an error of the understanding." frencl atheism waa a foregone conclusion tvlin one conaidera the condition ol French "".' ala. Why ahould a man beiieve in when bi lit was on long rebeUiui against Him? Why should n not ei) "after us th deluge when conscious th nothing but an unfathomable an coula cover the putrefaction of his lift! Whet a man has made up hia mind tu give him elf to tba sensual and the material, it il lollow mockerv for hira to protri de aire to know the truth. The truth a'mdet with no man who will not use it. and, on the other hand, if he be, like Romance, pur of heart and purpose, be will think bii way out of th darkness into th full tight of revealed religion and pillow hit dying head upon a certain fait. Know ing the life of Shelly we would expect him to be proud to write himself down "an atheist;" knowing th life of Words werth w would expec the epitaph ia Crass iuara Church to read a it doea, "To the iiieiuoi-r ol William Wwdaworlb, a trwa i..' ,..i... .ni nnet who. bv a special ill anj eajung iiuiauj J : ,-rt ... ,n.n nr nature, failed ROt to lift up the heart to holy thing, tired not of maintaining th eaus of .the poor and aimpl and ao in penloue timea waa ra.aed up to the chief minister, not only if nnhleat poesy, bat of high and sacred truth." ...' , .... ISelore you aeek aw further for the dia so ing of your doubU. ask yourself him twtly th question: "Am I unalterab.y men over to right doii.g? Am 1 ready to ohev the voice within me a iteadfastly et fiocnitc obeyed bi daemon,' even though it nhou'd cross my purpose and b- n x hitter lo.incai" It will be easy to believe in immortality whea wi try to live a life that ia good enoili to lal forever. We shall not doubt lh 'utiitliuJuji ol lioi uroao a grve oiiraeivea to tna practice ot tne Dreili erbood of man. Our doubts trouble 'j (ind thereby preva that donbt ia not a state of equilihrinni; w must more on toward the lialit. Actloa ia the nncea for doubt. If any man will da (2od will he aliall kn"W Hi dootriie. I)i you douht the tiowe- of prnverT To vhom do yeu think th reality' of that matter is revealed? Oi-tainl" not the mru who rerer' nraya. I'uf yourself n best you csn in Ihe ntti uie of t,r.iyer nn.l lis ter. You will then b able to know wheth er (!od talk buck. You liaro ant in the pew tor years and you have heard sermon without number on the great fi ndanientale of the Christian faith. To some of them von have given intellectual nssent. and yet von ttnd youraelf in doubt and uncertain ly. Why ia it thus with vou? "here con be but one answer. Ton have thrown yourself in holy surrender at the feet of ' a truth von have known. It cost aome thine to do that. I tiily the man who had ne Bethel in hia life; no place wn-e he has faced find and duty and said: "I will" to the divire "yon onht." t'mil had hi Dnmascus, Luther his Krfurt. Wee lev hi Aldersyate, nnd Vl"ahnell, lectur ing to the students of Yale, aaid: "There ia a story lorlced in the little hedreom nf e-ie of these dormitoriea which I nr tlod Tlia recciding ane.el may note, allowing i ever to be lost." He not b impAtient with yoar doubt, nly be itre that you are moving tnwnrd the lirh. yoa d are. Xol whnt we ne. but what we are becom'ng: not where we tlend. but whence we cor.e and whi'her we go these are the great '.hing about whieh we should be concerned. The fruit ef the tree nf faith mtv be ulucked too soon and it is then vn'ueles. It tekea a full season to ripen the best of nature'e products and there are some things in fnith which only veers nnd frost tnd storm will brini? t maturity. ft hat ben said that one of the trestet talents i religion discovery is the find ing how to hang up O'Jestions without be ing anftious about them. Look at I hem ow and then a thev hang and by and by. when vou turn son's envner of thoueht, ou will he delichfed and aslonihcd to s-c kow quietly and ensi'v they onen tlinir se sret and let yon in. I know a great teach r of mathematica who al'vsyn kent some bard prohlems by him. le would work in one a'ln and put it osrk in his ani.ket st.ill incnmolete. After weeks or eiontha the problem would he solved and tiother take its place i' his thoueht. There sre tranv who sty with easy ajur tnoe: "Lord. I believe," but thev have never thought enough to have any iloahts. They have no sympathy with those -rho tie fr a man or a cause. Thev could be lieve anything that seemed to be rei-eesuiy " r food position iu society and n com 'ortable income. The man who ia honest must adjourn ome of hia question and int be imoatient. I expect to carry some f my question with me into that larger life toward which all mes .rove, but Ilia act dor not trouble me. Peme thinira 1 lave settled and other can wait natil the lav when all mystery shall be made clear. One of my parishioner some years see Mught we a great lesson. -She waa a Indv culture and refinement, flhe had beea it the head of a great ee.hnnl for many rear. Her eyesight at la.-t failed her nnd the became totally blind. I saw her at the ilose of a aervire feeling her way up the lisle frem pew to pew. that she miirht ihake handa with nie. The thought of her preat suffering and loss finally over whelmed me and I mid with deep emotion ut I claapsd her hand: "It will be light u fonder and you will know why (tod has sermitted thi great uffliclion to enter four life." She lifted a face transfigured y ineffable peace and aaid: "If I am so kuppy aa to get t- heaven, I ahull let by jonee be bygone and shall not 'rouble the Lord for anv explanations." If one hue a tpirit like that, whatever doubt he hat an wait. -' Iiemeniber Bmlly that there are but a few thing that are absolutely necessary to Phriatian faith. He ure that you have Ihem. whatver the price demanded mv be. Do not try to make a bargain for a mfe and pleasant course. That is an aw ful mocking of the truth. But having set lied the great problem be assured that rou need not be greatly troubled about the lesecr ones. Men have set up ataudard which Ood never ordained. We have multiplied dogma and doc trine to the confusion of the mind and I fir to lite loa of the oul. Worse than ill men have forgotten that right living it mor important than right views. 1 hey have burned heretic to tit rid ot their heresy, and have banished good men be. enuae thev disagreed wi'H them. Have pa tience with other men tt a: they may have patience with you. Lot your life recern mend your creed. Kijht opinion wil avail u no mora than they vail ihe devil and hi angel unlea we hold them in tht golden chalie of a pure aud honest lite. The great truth of bf ar not simply in tellectual truth aud the method by whick they are revealed ara not chiefly intelieot ua). With tba boart man believeth uiit righteouane. Doubt which ia in moral earnest M a aervant of God to bring the truih. , It baa preceded all great reforrae in the individ ual and in the eeenmunity. A taitli which haa keen forged out through the awful heat of doubt ia the only kind that be come an aachor to the eoul. It ia worth going through th fiery furnace to find "the form of the Fourth." The conviction which honest douht lead to i th eonviction which has shaken the world. Do not acorn any man, nd lea6 of all th truth ha hold. Keep the mteg ntv of your mind. Think houeatly, think eriouly, for Hf'a question ara aolemn questions. ... Do not be obetinate and refuse to own a new truth which contradict some position you once held. Above all things realmj that th truth i( the only thing that will free rou from an evil life. Ihe verdict ol the age and tba verdict of the fact ia that the truth ia to be aought in a person ality and nat in a theory, and no one has arisen to dispute Hia word who ai(l, I am the truth." It ia to Him that Ink you to com. Well may you aav to Him: r'I have heard of Thee that Ihou canaj make interpretation and dissolve doubta. What BetsaaT Tt is not. of course, the highest argument for Christianity, but it i always wall to ask one wuo is refusing Christ what sub stitute be has for Him. Upon what is he relying to escape from hia sins? What ture comfort ha he for hi aorrowa? What evidence hae he of immortality? Whence ha h rained rertaiuty aa to th charac ter of God? What upholds him in hia work in the world? Where t.oe ha fiad power to conquer temptation? Often, if . man can be made to see his poverty, k will aeek the true riche. Th Bndder of the Day. The lrat hour of th morning i (he rudder "f th day. It ia a blessed baptiaia r-hich give the firat waking thought inte I lie bosom of God. Henry Ward Leecbar. Got Hia Trouaera In Duty Free. AmoDg tba pasaengera of m steam ship Just In from England waa a cler gyman, whose Intention it waa to take ap hia permanent residence here. Dur ing the examination of his baggage, which Included surplices, stole, and other non-dutiable church veatmenta. the question arose whether the rev erend gentleman waa not called upon to pay duty for the numerous pairs of trousers which be was Importing. Bald the customs officer : "I am sorry to say, air, that you muet pay duty on these trouaera; only the apparel you make use of during divine aery lee can be admitted free of duty," Whereupon the quick-witted clergy man exclaimed: "Coma, come, my dear man! You surely don't expect me to officiate in church without my trouaera!" So the apparel In question w passed free of charges. Haa Mewepaper ef 1800. H. J. McNally of Burlington, Vt, ha an Interesting souvenir In th way of a newspaper printed Saturday, Jan. 4, 1800. The periodical, besides giving ihe congressional news of that time, publlsbea an account of the biuUtl ut Oeorae Washington. THE SABBATH SCHOOL International Lesson Comments January 10. For Subject The Preachlag of Jebn fha Baptist, Malt. III., M2-0ldea Text, Matt. Ill , 2 Memory Verses, 4 Coataien tary as Ihe Daj'a Leasen. 1. A caH to re,i4iBre (vs. 1M. "In tliose dys." The Mavi i defined in I.ulc 3: 1. It waa a time of isorul dr.urtta. All Israel had bceotae a barren wildtiaess. The Roman ctnncror was despotic and cruel. Herod and I'ilnte were little lat ter. The priesthood was fllfcd with cor rupt men. and even Caiaphas. the hit!t priest, waa coarse and brntal. I'ader etich leader the people hod sunk inte a very low and degraded moral condition. It had beeti four hundred years since tliev had henrd prophetic warninis, when sud denly -lohti appeared upon the scene. "John the Piptist." So mimed by Mark and Luke and by .fosephut, who mentions hi great influence and speaks of the. crowds that flocked to hear him prench. "1'reaching." Heralding, a word euracMt in? the proclamation of a king. Johu w,is a great reformer. "In the wilderness." "John preached in the wild, thinly in habited region lying we-t, of the Jnnlnn and the Dead 8ea a lar nor'h as Knon, two-thirds of the way to the Sea of !n,i lee. and on both aides of the lower Jor dan." 2. "Repent ye." Repentance include. I. Conviction. '1. Contrition. 3. Con fession. 4. Reformation, nnd leads to conversion. John, Jesus, Refer anil Paul all preached repentance. "Kingdom of Heaven." As Jesus is the Messiah, tlmt is. the Anointed, the Kincr. so Hia nospel is law and His dispensation a kinudom. The kinedom of Heaven nnd UitiHom of Hod in the New Trtainent mean one and the same thing and (tenerally have refer ence to the spiritual kinTdoin which Cli: it sets nn in the hearts of His follower". "At hand." The Jews expected a irrcat national deliverer. The meaning here is that, the coming of the Messiah to heizin His domin ion on earth, under the Christian economy, ia nt hand. 3. "Ksaias." The ttrcek fnm for 1-uinli. The reference here is to Isinh 4: .1-3: n'o see Luke 3: 4 0. "The Voice." The r rotih ecy draws attention to the work rather than to the worker. The voice of the pronhet was loud and distinct. "I'rcn.ve ye." The idea is taken from the practice of Eastern mnnarchs, who. whenever they took a journev, sent harbintera before them to prepare the way. The Jewish church na the desert country. "Paths straight." lln i figurative language. The words illustrate the atraightening force of the gospel. There must be a thorough prep aration before C-erl, our Kinii, will coma to aa. The self-line must hi "brought low." The orooked. dishonest life must be "straightened." Let us remove the truations of uubelief and earnal desires. 4. "Had his raiment." etc. The ap pearance of John was like that of th great pronhet Elijas in the popular in!nd. He was clothed in the coarse, rough cloth called sackcloth in the Scriptures. It wns cheap, but admirable for keeping out the heat, cold and rain. This mantle was girded around hint with a leather girdle of undressed hide. Hia fond consisted of locusts, closely resembling our grasshop pers, end of wild honey. All tliis was a natural as well as aimnle mode of livine in those day in the wilderness. "Moat." Food. "LorusU." The law of Moses pave pormiision to eat locusts Qj?v. 11: :M). John here represent Ihe symbols of the repentance he presehes, according to an sient custom. The hair nr sackcloih. the fasting and the solitude, were the ordinary outward signs of deepest humilia tior , li. Many confessions made (vs. 5, 81. 5. "Went out." Left their home and went to the desert, where John whs preaching. He was very aucrcsst'ul and the heart of the whole nation was atirrcd. Kven Herod, the King, leard him g'.adlv nd "did many thinns" fMark 0: 'JO). "Ail the region." The crowds mnat have been enormous. John was very popular, but t opiilarity bad no effect upon such as he. J. "Confessing." Confession of sin is one tf the marks of true repentance, bee 1 John 1: U. III. A thorough reformation demanded (vs. 7-10). 7. 7Vhen he aw." Meu honor a lofty and fcarlesa aoul. seeking oo selfish object, but braving all opposi tion for the noblest end. John had noth ing to lose bnt hi life, and cared for noth ing but the faithful discharge of his duty. ''Pharisees." Th name signifies Sep tratists. They held tenaciously to a lit eral obedience of the written law and an cwritten tradition. ".Saddueees." They dhered to the written law of Moses, bat refused to give much weight to tradition. They did not beliv in a future life, an gel or spirits. "Said unto them." Th (lire j leading religious sects at that time were the Pharisee, t-d(incees and Ks lenea, and be handled them with ternh'o seventy. He earn into the forest of "bad law, absolute customs, social iuequalities, religious bigotries," licentiousness and in temperance, swinging hi gospel ax and trying. "JRjform! Repent" je brood of ripars." Ine reformer was thorough. Tbere waa no compromising with th worldly influence around him. "Uanern tion of vrpera." "Brood" of vipers. This denote persons decaitfu and malicious. B. "Think not to say," etc. The uaturtil impulse of the unrgenrate heart is to saee; out excuses and subterfuges when the eonsdenee is touched. Johu slut tiers two common errors: Th first, that bap tiara, would be auilicient to turn the virath of God away, and rnud, that became they are children at Abraham, thereforo they are aafe. "The stout." Undoubt edly a reierense to the calling of the tien tile. Out of these hard, unregenerate heart Uod ie able to make hearts of flesh and children of Ahrehaui. 10. "The ax la laid." "There ia an allusion here to a woodman, who, having marked a tree for exeiaion, lays his ax at its loots, wriila he lays off bi outer garment, in order that he may wield more powerful blows. The Jewiah nation ia the tree, and the Romans the ax, which, by the just judgment of Cad. waa ependily to cut it down." IV. Jolts points te Christ (vs. 11, 12). II. "Unto repentance." John waa a re pentance preacher. This was "a baptism requiriug and representing an inward spir itual change." "He that comrth." Th nreaching uf John was preparing th mind of th people for the coming of the Mes siah, and they beimn t ask themes ves whether he were th Christ. Cut John woa not alow to undeceive them regarding himself. "I mightier." John clearly oal lined th work of tin coming Messiah, lii raptisrn will e-Tect what mine is pw erlcts to do. "Not worthy." John shows his greatness by hi self-abaartnent. 12. "Whose fan." The fan, or the initninatnt for the purging, it the gospel. "Floor. His church. fiWheat." True believere. 'LJarner." The kingdom of grac her and of Heaven hereafter. "Unquenchable fire." Nothing wile be able to extinguish th awful fire that will kindle around tu feet of th finally impenitent. Thrifty Woman. In order to aave 28 centa an Itallai woman of Ashland Helgbta, West Man tyunk. Pa., carried a 100-pound bait if bay, a bag containing two basheJi jf oats and a 24-pound sack of flow In two trips from a Manayuok flout and feed store to her borne, more that a mile away, chiefly up a ateep bill. On the first trip she placed the bait ot bay on ber head and walked off. Os the second trip she placed the bag ol oats on her head and carried tba sack ol flour under ber left arm. Her bua band owns a horse and cart, bnt waa too busy doing hauling to go to th store, and bla wife chose to carry th feed borne rather than pay II eentt to have It delivered. Cape Cod Oysters Popular. Cape Cod oysters are gradually find Ing their way Into the Connecticut market, where, for years, the home product bas bad little or no competi tion. A New London Arm baa plant cm: 1,000 acres of oyster ground on Cape Ood. CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR TOPICS. January 10-"Whit Are Same Teals el Re pentiace?"-Lnke J:S-H; Pa. Sl:l 17. ' Scripture Verses Job. 11:18, 14; Isaiah l:l-18; Prm. 19:7; John :44; Psa. 78:84-48; MaJt. 3:1, 2; 4:17; Acts 2:38; Janves 4:8-10; Ps. 8:7. Lesson Thoughts. Aa living faith bears fruit In good works, ao true repentance will manl tnt ltsedf In conrstnron, or a turn ing; away from the odd thlnjM of un rlKlrtCTiiamoH) toward tlw new things of riRhteoiisri) awl truth. It In not for the vJue of deeds law ful and right tluit man may save hie soul alive, so much as it is for the spirit they spring from a penitent hatred of nnt wrongdoing and an earnest desire to foltow the all-righteous One. Selections. If s put off ropentanco another day, we have a day more to repent of, and a day less to repent In. A bruised rted Is an cxpreeslvo em blem of tha boiiI, broken and contrite on account of sin, weoplng and morrrn Ing for transRrptskn. Christ will not bronk It. that. Is. will not tie haughty, unforgiving and cruel; ho will heal It, and Bive !t strength. Conversion In no repairing of tli old building, but It takes b!1 down, ami erexts a new structure. It is not tie putting In a patch, or sewing on a list of holiness; but with th tnte convert, bolinxm Is woven Into all Ms powers, principles and practice. Tbo timbre Christian Is qulto a nerv fnbrlc from the foundation to the top atone all new. Ha Is a new man, a new croat u re. Itepentanre and conversion must bo ecniplotw. If a ship have three leaks, and two be stopped, tho third will sink the ship. If a man have two sovero wounds, and euros one, the neg lected one will kill him. Prayer In d?p sorrow for our many sins we approach thee, O gra. (Jons Father. Wo confess tnat wo have erred and strayed from thy ways like lost sbe?p. We have followed too much the desires of our own hearts, and have inflected our duties and transgressed thy holf laws. Continue to b? mofrtful to us. for the sake of Jesus Christ our Ftavlour; ami by tho Inflitcno of the Holy Spirit onnblt? ua svj to hp'e sin thot we may turn from It aid offend thee no more. New, par don our sins, and Bavo as fur Jwms' sake. Amen. RAM'S HORN BLASTS- HERB is no great ness with His grace. Faith makes the infinite definite. Ton cannot car ry religion aa a side-line. The secular soul must be like a wingless bird. The aermonthat iv"CCj is preached down 1 never lifts up. No man can keep a joy he keeps It lo himself. Power without prudonce is the cause of many a wreck. Some preaching Is as effoctive as blowing through a sieve. It is hard not bo drift when you have nothing to tie to. Religion Is not a scheme for getting on the blind side of Ood. God never honors the check of faith that Is not endorsed by works. God has given voice to His love In our Lord. Character Is the only basis of classi fication. God cannot use a conditional conse cration. A aummer resort Is seldom a refirge for the soul. Faith Is always correct, but it can never be formal. Oppressors of the poor are depres sors of the people. Faith finds new friends whenever it listens to the Father. The world has found no gospel out side ot the Gospels. When man Is measured by money Ood Is gauged by gain. The best labor union Is wbea men work together with God. A catalogue ot the hypocrisies of others Is not a key to Heaven. Reason makes a good guide tut a poor god. Our faith may fail, but His faith fulness will not. The world will never be won by warmed up piety. Potatoes Grew Above Ground. It is stated that sclcnUats have produced tomatoes and potatoes on the same stalk potatoes In the ground and the tomatoes on the vine on top. In the garden of Mrs. F. J. Ault, above Nlsbet, Penn., where she bad planted some "stray Deauties," one of the vines, without any manipulation from the bands of scientists, was found banging full of potatoes from the ground to the top, there being about a dozen of them, and they were as red as a tomato could be. Tut same stalk had also Us full quota of potatoes In the ground. Now York journal. Railroad Ties of Leather. The Invention of a leather crosstle, designed to take the place of sleepers made of wood. Is attracting attention In railroad circles. F. W. Dunnell of West Warren Mass., Is the Inventor. In the manu facture of bis crosstle, which weigh 126 pounds, the scrap leather from shoe shops is taken Into a dialntogra tor, ground fine, subjected to a re fining process and molded. The tension of the molding machine can be so regulated that ties bard enough to take a spike or ties through which a spike cannot be driven ean be turned out. Carving 1,000 Years Old Found. ' A remarkable piece of antique In dkan carving, which must be nearly thousand years old, was dug up In making an eioavatlon In the center ol Vancouver, B. C. The carving is ot brown sandstone, and tha work must nave been done with a sharp piece ol Olnt or slate. It Is iu two suctions on) being a bowl and the other s bear's bead. It waa found under thi decayed stump of an lmmenae ccdai tree, and may have been placed then before the tree began to crow and loa? before Colurabua had any thought ol iUcovorlng America. 'TCkeJrl am rre&JKl&tSl Transformation. I find no fiulcr'a skill ran show How Heaven doth wash ao white the anowj Whnt miracle of pure new birth Hath glorilied these drops ot earth. I only know the upper air Hath wrought thia lining? that moves a prayer; A holier accrct angel know. How souls are made more white than now. . Though once in clouds of thunder born, Though sunken deep in landw forlorn, Yet may the skiea their gift reclaim. And write thereon this white new name. All movelcaa, clinngcleas, lies the clod, Hut spirit comes, and goes, of (lod; Though we have lain so dark, so low, The heavens tan make us white ns atiow. , Carl Spencer. When lleil Time Come. On a Santa Kc train going out of Kan eas City one night recently was a mother and her brood of five, four girls and nn boy. They had left Illinois the day be fore, and were on their way to "the new country" whrre her husband and father has a claim which is the new home. The oldest girl appear to be about fifteen, and from that age down to the only bov, a chubby little fellow nbont four. Their dress and manner showed that thev had not been reared in the midst of luxury nnd npuline, '.mt with all they were model children nnd scrupulously clean. The mother was thin nnd bony", her lace slick and shone from much washing and hag gard from the long trip and the caia of her precious little flock-, for there were twenty-four hums ycl beyond the jour ney s end. It was after bed lime when the train left Kansas tily. and the younger omo were soon yawning and nearcclv able to keep awnl:e In fact, the pet of the family had ciosed his even and was fast approach ing "shut eye town." while the next eld est tugged nt him while she looked appeal inc at her mother with nn expression that was pitiful Ho mustn't go to sleep vet! 1 he others began whispering among tliem selves and then to the mother, aa if some thing exciting had happened or would hap fen soon, all of which attracted the at tention of other passengers, who sat in wonderment as they tried lo divine tho cause ot to much whispering and such strenuoua efforts to keep the least ono awake. Presently the cause of this excitement was made plain; it was bed time nnd they had not said their pravers. Quietly, mod estly, without ostentation, ves, even tim idly, the mother nnd her children knelt together at the long scat at the end of the car. the baby bowing his head with the rest and rubbing with chubby hands lm eves that would hardly stnv open, while the evening prayers were said. dust for a moment, nnd then thev arose, the children were made ns comfortable as possible tor the night, and soon all but the mother were asleep, while the mois-t-.iied even and quivering lips of the othet passenger, the traveling men with their grips, the politician with his schemes, the business man with hia worries, paid n si lent but mighty tribute to the greatest cml12,g agent of all ages, the Chris tian religion. Here. oh. you teacher of theology, ia tt sermon greater than you ever preached' Here, oh, yc choir, i an anthem sweet er than you ever sang! Here, ye host nf Israel, quarreling over creed and doctrines and torn with strife you eCve7taught '"" V0M thm r,riu.lMVVh? m'!t,ier nnJ ,1Cr k"!. J ? 1,btn? to "' " in safety, and to their lat home iu peace. Seeds That Will firow. coT!1 iis.no!lli8 that will makc a man contract ike tne conscioasnesa of a mean act-I'm ted Prcubyterian. , jiuiuiKeiice iu any vn-e is but a J?l.KtOUt,of the h.al,d manacles hold .Sin V,'. '. ""'; atierwards it tVellenrinn-. compels. "fir "t'uu"v' .n'ls? I""" '' aid. is for use. or it ia nothing." It means the deepening life of goodness in thi heart. Alexander Gordon. it my dreams of doing something anlen did and rising to something great are 8ead whl'iT' 1 "I11 take holif witl, a will at what I know I can do atill to a good pur pose nnJ then let the eternal love'whVh U Sberi-i-Xr"" C" f the com-" atob;ro,i,mshe,78e, te: ness lau f (;od thatS centred, nesa enda in selt-consciousness. There is KTrwe11 fullow" fl ou need not break the glasses of a tel escone or coat them over with paint in order to prevent you from seeing through Jnti""1 V""!? uP?a themf antf.e star. sT ,refltl" ehut out all the Jtars. bo it does not require great crime little fault' """if f God' un e"nie! k-echcr J " wcl -JI- w- It is nat bv i...iii.. -.I... - v. .i. I "n""""s wuai is rrepar ab.e that true work ia to be done, but by making the beat of what we are It ia not by complumfng that we have not the rijh What wt.by ng wen the tool, we have ment JfVH-e j (i0d 1 f"viriei.tial arrange mcnt God a doing, though it mav be EEl' r'. Life is a series o7m . whTVJ"1 not thc bMt Christian who makes the fewest false steps. He is rie.M' W.'n" "!e ?,0,t "''"xli-l "ie Ro&rt.on f Bkes.-K. W. lr. Arnold's Dally Trayer. O T.nril T k-v. - U.. i j rv uiiy woria around me. 'J V1d houFnt W'll he needed for all my work to be done in this busy world. Now, ere I enter on it, I would commit eye and ear and th We.- . IX I" .. 'JO WlOU inlinl.. 1-1 .... ' mm aen ineir work Th ne that na through Thv natural law. mv anv thonV"1 mr 1)100,1 fl" mav 1 of-.m'ne- m7 eniritual life hen my mind cannot conspicuously turn to 1 hee to commit each particular thought to ihy aervice. Hear mv prayer, for my dear Uedeeiner'a sake! A men. Tha Rmlder of tha Day, I-et the day have a blessed baptism by Jiving your first wakintr thoughts into the bosom of Ood. The first hour of the morning is the rudder of the day.-IIeury Ward Beccher. Kcho In tha Heart. A word of sin of haughtiness and un godly joy, of pride, of fullness of temporal things, of cruelty, of uneleanlincas of heart, of strife and of warring against all f.ui' " ood! nl a divine voice aaying: llleased are the poor, the and, the meek, the faithful who atill long for righteous "": the merciful, the peacemakers, and all who are persecuted for Mv ake. Re- ioice and be glad, for your reward is in leaven." And all who hear the Voice, and find ita echo in their hearts, take up lift) with renewed hop and strength and courage. The bleaaings always stand good. Ia the responsive echo in our hrart which make them atand good for ua? Cora B. Day. Forced Into Happlneaa. Seymour, Conn., bas a bachelors club, the members of which draw lots once a year to see who will get mar rled, and the one getting tho rod ticket must marr) within a year or pay thc wedding exi enaea of lio next victim KccfnUy W. F. Kcrstlu was cboson an the unwilling sacrifice, and all th m tuber a ot the club thought he would refine to pay the penalty, but a few days ago be disappeared and now an tiouncuroents of bis wedding at Madt sou, N. Y., hare beea received by bis frleuds. THE GREAT DESTROYER SOME STARTLING FACTS ASCUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. Poem i Who 'Till Hlgn ? An In-lnce Khowlna; That Two Drlnkj lny May Mend a Man Having t n Dt-tinhard'e GraveA Terrible Warning. Sign the pledge! Who wi no more delay: Wait not till to -morrow to-duv. II s--n? Mik ; better sign Sign the pledge right early! Offer no excuse. Stopping short of dntv never is of ne. I'or a million pledges we have set our plow, You can lend a good band; lend it here and now! For the sake of others, for your own sake sign. For the wide world us combine. welfare, come, with See the drink curse raging! doin to stm ita course 11 Jour wise example, by love'u gentle force ! Tarcnts. answer quickly to voiir country's call. Christians, for this service Christ requires vou all! And thi sacred crusade; hca - the voice Divine. Let each sav with fenor, "I will make it mine." Then in year to follow we shall thankful be ""hat we helped tl.e people to be pledged " and free! Dawson llurns. A Sure Way to I srspc. A man whose widow testifies that he was never drunk in his life dud in a New oil; hospital the other dav of delirium tremens, the doctors declare. His habit was to take two drink of whisky daily, one in the morning and the other ai night, lie Wiis not robust plivsi-nlly. and these two drinks, steadily repeated evciv twentv four hours for .i-ne tinny year, final;? alcoholized hi. tissues, uiiili-i mined Ins nervous strength and killed him. l-avinen have sculled at Ihe d.ieiors for ho. ding that two drinks a day ean do one any harm, niiu li less semi him raving to a drunkard's grave, but the doctors stand their ground, and come li.uk at the moder ate drinkers in a way to alarm these com fortably S"lf.jn,nj,,.nt and casyniindcd person. Men so eminent in tln ir profes sion as Die. Miradv. Ilanforth. Somerset and liailcy assert that those who e.innot drink in moderation, but Ins-; control ol themselves whenever thev touch alcohol niv really in less danger those who seldom or never drink to excess, but im bibe steadily the strong-willed tipplers, who "rariy their liipior like tentlcnien'' anil pride themselves on hcin able to "take it or have it alone." Dr. Shradv put it thus: As between the habitual drinker and the dipsomaniac, the latter has the hettci chance of a good old a-e. It is just the difference between Ihe tl.inie which burns itself out ipiickly and is done with, ami the smoldering fire which slowiv but sure ly eat into the vital organs, produce de generation of the arteries and brings on a premature oM age. It is not so much t he quantity of alcohol a man drinks ns flic regularity and freouencv with which he dunks that work the havoc with hi system. Of course, there are unnumbered men, and women, too, who on social occasions take wine without injury to themselves. And it is also true that there are multi tudes so organized nervously thai they are in no danger of bicouiin.j drunkards, though they like a bottle of claret with their dinner nnd a glass oi something stronger on occasion. Hut the safe course for the young man who has his way to make in' the world I to eschew drinking altogether, lie mav be among thc fortunate upon whom alco hol can take no hold, but then again ha may have the physical and nervous sns ceptibi bty which makes it unsnfe to trillo with the tempter. If he resolves to be a total nbstainer he will be completely in sured agninst the peril which strews the hores ot life with wrecks. Il you don't drink vou can't possiblv l,c come a drunkard.--Editorial in thc New orlc American. Test Your Appetite. A young man carelessly formed the hain't of taking a glass of liquor every morning before breakfast. An older friend ad vised him to quit before the habit should grow too strong. "Oh, there's no danger: it's a mere no tion. I can quit uny time," replied tho drinker. "Suppose vou try it to morrow morning " ug"csled the friend. "Verv well: to oleiu- 1 -ll .l W I -..I.... it. J - u" , , Muu juu lllt'IC no cause for alarm A week later the voitm. t.:. - - , J fs -.it-i. met ing friend again. "Vou are not looking well," observed the latter. "Have vou been ill?" "Hardly," replied the other one. "Hut 1 rim trying to escape a prcat danger; and fear that I shall before I shall have con quered. Mv eves were opened to an mi minent peril when I gave you that promiso a week ago. I thank you for your timclv suggestion. friend' J'J youJ" Jn1uirea' the "The first trial utterly deprived me of appetite for food. I could eat no break fast, and waa nervous and trembling all flay. 1 was alarmed when I realized how irsidiously that habit had fastened on me and resolved to turn square about and "a t ""-" nooim-r urop. j ne swearing off bas pulled me down ren-i-clv h..t T am gaining, and mean to keep the upper catch me in his net agaii - -"-' ."it. noiiiiK lirillK will never -'hurcu Life. Greatly lleduces Drunkenness. A certain Justice of the 1'iace of East 1 oughkeepsie, N Y., requires all drunks brought before him to sign the following total abstinence pledge: "I, , (iav. ing been convicted before , j'ustico of the 1'eaee, of public intoxication, in or der to obtain a auspension of sentence do hereby pledge myself to abstain from in tn&icating liquor for a period of one year from the date hereof; and in case I ahould be arrested and convicted of intoxication within that period. 1 renticst .,.:.. in order to aave me from utter rum, to impose upon me the full penalty of the la, to wit, six months in the Albany K'nitciitiarv.' It is Btaled that this umqiic method has greatly reduced drunk enness in the town. Made a Demon of Hlin. "Ixx-k me up, please; put me where 1 can t get any more whisky; it makes a de mon of mc," said John Jackson, as h hurried into the central station, in Cleve land, Ohio. "Anything to get me away from the liquor demon. I've had enough. Ked lights twinkle all around me. lhiu- dreils of voice call to uie. of thiii'm." 1 vo all sorts A Teinperanra Itevlral. The Illinois Citizenship League lias put t- test n new method of anti liconse work in aa.oon towns, and found :t very suc cess, ill in creating sentiment. It ia ca..ed a "Temperance Itcvival," and con i3t of a ers of meetings, at least four, and a children's meeting. At these meet ings the people are asked to rome forward V js"" ," pdf to the effect that they wid do all in their power lo prevent th a.e of intoxicating and malt liquor in their own town, except for medicinal and mechanical purpose. On each signer a bit of red ribbon ia pinned; also, on the 11 ...-.. fjuiucu; a. so, on inc 1 cm.ilien at their meeting, when they prom- is to help. Th Yolly of TrHns The question of aaava and of justice ta the laboring man absorb wide attention; but who will dispute that if all the money that ia spent by the woikioir classes in "treating'' each other o alcoholic bever ages n-ers aved there would be thousand 01 better furnished homes, better riad wives and Utter fed children? Wars Than Fusel oil. The fart that all whisky handled bv th retail trade lonlaiiw fukel oil wou.d be mora alarming it it were uot for the other f.u-t that ful oil ia not the worst thinit that whisky contains. The alcohol is what doe the business, if the consumer to tl lu"H enuunli. MiuaeapjjM Tim. ' COMMERCIAL REVIEW. General Trad Coadltlosi R. G. Dun & Co.'a weekly rertew ! tfade ays: Holiday condition- p) vade the markets. Manufacturing plants are stopping for inventori-s and repairs, in many cases the extent ol idleness being considerably greater than for the corresponding season ln recent preceding years. Tliere has beerai a liberal volume of business in holida4 goods, but reports are somewhat conV Ricting in comparison with 190a. AnV encouraging s-gn is the improvement inr" collections. Railway traffic was not seriously imJ peded by rec'nt storms, owing to bet-' ter nieth;iQi of operation, and earnings?' ' thus far reported lor December e- oeed last year's by six per cent. Agree-' ments are teirg made with little irtcV tior, aa to wae reductions, except W the cue of coal-mining, and several Idle pir.ts have fixed the date for re suming work. . Few lib?r disputes are in prcRrwsj and steel producers look for much ner business e-.riy next month. Egaif'.menti ;,f poll were checked? by a sharp recovery in fnrrim . ehangi;, alrhoujfh receipts have raised? treasury gold holdings far atove all pr vnus rcci-rds, and money is unusually; easy for th season. Cwing to the decrease in speculation, bank exchanges for the week were 16. per eer.t. smaller than a year ago at V.'ew York, wbile at other leading cities' there was a pain of .5 per cent. Leading intcrtsts in the iron and Keel industry l,roui;ht more stability lo the situation by decidit.fr apainst any farther reductions in quotations, and there are numerous indications that prospective purchasers don't intend ta Jclay placing contracts beyond the sea ion of invciitori-ja and repairs. LATEST MARKET QUOTATIONS. Four Spring clear, $3.854.05; best Patent $5.5; chore Family JM-35- Wheat Xew Vork No. 2. 8q7,c; Philadelphia No. 2, 86(i87c; Balti more No. 2. B2V1. Corn New Vork, No. 2, sojc; Phil jdclphia No. 2, 4S'Aii4$X; Baltimora No. 1, 48c. Oats New York No. 2, 40?ic; FTiit Idelphia No. 2, 4i(li4.c; Baltimore No. . 4'c. Hay No. 1 timothy, large bales. (15.00; No. I timothy, small Jalcs, $ (VTij.oo; No. 2 timothy, 14.00; No. 3 timothy, $12.00 (300- Green Fruits and Vegetables. Ap ples Western Maryland and Pennsyl vania, packed, per brl $1.50(012.35. BeetsNative, per bunch iJ4(n!2c. Broccoli Native, per box 2025C Cab age New York, per ton, domestic, McxJTjj; do, New York State, per ton, Danish $3001 i'35. Cranberries Cape Cod, K-r brl $t).ooV,7.5o; do, per box $i.75C4 125- Celery New , York State, per Jozen 3o('i 5o: do, native, per bunch 3frt!4V Carrots Native, per bunch l(a;lJ4c. Urapcs Concords, per 5-lb basket 13 14c; do, Catawba, per 5-lb basket IJ fll AC Horseradish Native, per bushel box $i.25fi 1.50. Kale Native, per bush el box 200:1.25c. Onions Maryland and Pennsylvania, yellow, per u 55(n)65& Pumpkins Native, each 3a4C. Spin achNative, per bushel box 75(o)goc. String beans Florida, per box $.2.75(9) 300. Turnips Native, per bushel bo 351 40c. Potatoes. Maryland and Pennsyl vania, good to choice, per bu 78(a:8oc) New York, per bu 78iT8o. Sweet pota toes North Carolina, yellow, per brl r2.oo(i 2.40; Potomac, $2.ooca2 4o; East ern Shore, yellow, "5c(rj.$i.5o; yams, $ 1. 25(0. t. 6a Provisions and Hog Products. Bull dear rib sides, bulk shoulders, 8 bellies, 8)4 ; bulk ham butts, 7J4 ; sugar rttred shoulders, blade cut, 9; sugar-cur-td California hams, 8J4 ; canvased and nncanvased hams, 10 lbs and over, 13; refined lard, second-hand tubs, 8J4 ; re fined lard, half-barrels and new tubs, i'A ; tierces, lard, S'4. Poultry Turkeys Young. 7 lbs and aver, ai$T-c; do, old, do (iiitA'A ; do, small and poor. isfSi.t. Chickens- Hens, medium to heavy, ioioMc; dow hens, small and poor, 9L19! j ; do, olor roosters, each 253o; do, young, good to choice, per lb 1 0(12; do, staggy, pef lb gio; do, do rough and poor, 9 Ducks White Pckings, 4 lbs and over, -i:i2c; do, mongrels, jyi to 4 lb, per lb H(fti2. Geese Western and South trn, each Goffisc. Dressed Poultry. Turkeys Choice, per lb, (fil6; do, medium to good. Ij iiiS. Ducks Good to choice, per lb 11 614. Chickens Young, good to choicer a.l2cj do, mixed, old and young, Jf 11; do, poor to medium, (ei ij. Gees Good to choice, per lb lortjiijc. Fggs. Western Maryland and Pennv tylvania, sale. We quote: Western Maryland and Pennsylvania, loss off, pef dozen 30 c; Eastern Shore, Mary lan I and Virginia, loss off, per dozen 3o; Southern, do. 2728; storage, fancy, al mark, do, 25. Llv Stock. Chicago. Cattle good to prima Steers $5.005.75; Blockers and feeders 7S3-9t; cows $i.5oft!3.Qo; hcifen i-75'f'4 5o; canners $1.50(240; bulla tl50''4 35: calves $200575; Texas led steers $65'ri4 oo. Hogs Mixed and butchers' $4.35iii4 5 1 good to choirs bcavy $4-55&4-o2j4 ; rough heavy $43004 450; liKht $4l5i4-5o; bulk of sales f4 45rtf 4 55. Sheep I-anibs steady ; good) lo choice wethcra, $375l4 3o; fair to choice mixed $3 00(0)3.75 ; native lambs 4iiS 75! U70. led estcrn yearlings Pittsburg. Pa. Cattle slow: choice. rS otaS 'o; prime. 4700X4.85; fajr. $3001 'K3.60. Hogs higher, prime heavy, $4.70 M75; mediums, $4.6o(r4 65 ; heavy Vorkers, $4-5S4 CO; light Yorkers. $4.4$ g4 5: pigs, $4 35C?4 40; roughs. $3.coJ4 1 15- Sheep firm; prime wethers, $185(11) too; culls and common, $125 2.00; :hoice lambs, $5 35fiS5c-; veal calves, r7Xa7-SO. PERSONAL MlNTlOlt Rev. John K. Booton, the author ol several works on the Scriptures, and an eloquent preacher, died on Sunday last at Luray. Va. J. Charles Arter, formerly ol Cleve land and at present a noted artist liv Ing abroad, has just received a commis sion Irom the Vatican to paint the por trait ol Pope Pius X. Pro!. Diaries Eliot Norton, ol Har vard, has, as usual, extended a general :, - ss.i, ckiciiucu a (cnrra Invitation to Harvard students to com to hia home. Shady Hill, on Chria'.maa Eve. Rev. Dr. Marshall V. MrDuffe. ol East Orange, N. J., pactor of the Pros pect Street Baptist Church, has re signed and accepted a call tr the Eev enih Baptist Church, ol Baltimore., General Young began bis military ca reer as a private in the Twelfth Venn tylvania Infantry in 1861. When be retire in J imiary he will be succeeded by anoth r loriuer private s il i a Gen eral Chaffee. A Hold chalice studded with iowe't, tins week presented lo Ar.-Mn-r F"arl.-i' i-vl K'eeu Yorl. hv the Vn.-'j Order of llitrnunv m husm fini unnn -'sary ol hi acre' s ' archietuscooare.