"TflE DIY1NE CARPENTERS 1 Brilliant Sunday Sermon B the Ber. Dr. H. C Sweatee!. Christ Belonged to (he Onad Army ol Self Respecting Worklngmea. Bkooklyx, N. Y. An interesting and forceful sermon vu preached (Sunday morning by Rev. Dr. Henry C. Swentzel, rertor of St. Luko's Church, Clinton ave nue, near Fulton street. The subject w.n "The Divine Carpenter," and the text St. Mark vi:3: ,-Is not this the carpenter?" Dr. Swentzel snid: The glorious Hon of Man was a mechanic. It is well worth while to consider those eighteen years which He spent at Nazar eth, concerning which we would dearly love to know so much, but of which it i possible to learn so little. Whether He were rich or poor, whether Ho devoted Himself exclusively to the exercises of re ligion or was orcupied with other concerns as well; whether He were, so to say. a man among men, or lived a strange weird life as a recluse in the wilderness these lire queries upon which we .may reflect with, prolit. During the period which began when the Christ Child went down from among the doctors in the temple to the Galilean home to prepare for His nublie life there is only one bit of definite information concerning Him, and that is furnished almost acci dentally in the text. The people who had known Him all along were astonished when they heard His sayings and saw His mighty works. The record which He made among them in bygone years was worthy of Him and ought to have prepared them to expect large things of Him sooner or later, but they could not forget that He had lived among them as a common artisan. JVhen He returns to them with all the fame He had won and was about to spend a briel season with them in order that His former friends and neighbors might not he neg lected in His ministry, they recall His an tecedents, and they ask with mingled won der and scorn, "Is not this the carpenter?" The question establishes the fact that Jesus had been known as a village carpen ter. From the days of youth until He set out to do the stupendous work for which He was sent, He accepted the trade of His reputed father and was occupied largely with its ordinary employment. He be longed to the "working classes." A de scendant of the royal David He most sure ly was, and yet He thought not of the throne of His renowned ancestor. He was indeed a king, but not after the world's fashion, for He came to be King of men, to rule the heart and conscience of man kind. He seems to have had no ambition to attain unto a lofty station, and the par aphernalia of earthly greatness had no charms for Him. His masterful purpose was to save the world, both the classes anil the masses, and He would, therefore, iden tify Himself personally and actively with the multitudes and not only with a privil eged few. He could teach princely virtues without being a prince, and He would ben efit the hosts of mankind by allying Him self with the conditions and experiences of the many. He understood full well that no political contrivances cou'.d bring the kingdom of God to this earth, and He con sidered that the needs of the millions could be served in no other way thun by the moral and spiritual democracy which it was His mission to establish. Our Lord was a workingrnan. Tt must not, therefore, be supposed that Ho held a brief or thundered a bull of excommunica tion against riches. He had something to say against mammon worship, and He warned against the temptations of opu lence, but He never branded wealth as es eentialiy evil. He taught emphatically that the responsibility of people is in exact pro portion to what they have, and that, inas much as money entails numerous obliga tions, they who have it can be saved only through the most devoted regard for their duties. Some of His disciples were well-to-do, and both the midnight inquirer and the good man of Arimathea were dear to Him. The common people heard Him gladly," but others were not excluded from His blessing simply because they had posses sions. The gifts of the Magi at the begin ning of His career and the rich man's tomb svherein His mangled corpse reposed at the last, indicate that His mission included both the many and the few. He advocated none of the insane social or political here ties which some believe in now, but, tak ing full account of human inequalities, He taught the world to do its best, to live manfully amid the strains and stress of life, to use the present situation with all its ills for the glory of God and the well being of the human family. No Croesus could have been the Son of Man. The real Son of Man must be typical and represen tative in every noble way. He must be the brother of the toiling millions who earn their bread in the sweat of their face, and who deal every day with the urgent prob lem of livelihood. ' And yet Jesus did not accept the. state of squalid poverty. He was no pauper. The purpose of infinite love which brought Him hither could not prompt Him to ac cept the state of such a forlorn character. It would be impossible for any individual who was poor through his own guilt to bi other than on incongruous ana repulsive figure, or to stand as the model of perfect manhood. Pauperism is an evil in every ense; and while society is bound to help it, it is too degrading and polluting to merit encouragement, and an enlightened state will wisely make luwa by which, if possible, to crush it. Guilty poverty should be rebuked and shamed. The Son of Man could choose it not, for then He would tiave disgraced Himself and presented an Inferior ideal for His followers. Never by allowing Himself to be a burden to others or by becoming an object of public charity, could He have spoken to men and elevated their standards and raised the tone of their . thought. Neither a high social degree not ' discreditable beggary would have been in harmony with Himself or the interests which He had in view; for in either case He would uot have been in a position from which He could touch the minds and hearts and lives of the nations. The Son of Man must be where He can speak to all with equal advantage, where He can reach their affections ana wield His blessed power over the sphere of their practical questions and activities. He could not have been one -who was arrayed in purple and fine linen and fared sumptuously every day, neither could He have adopted the portion of a squalid and self-inflicted poverty. He would not be either r; -h or sunnily poor, but an honest, industrious, royal working man. "Ia not this the carpenter?" In this en vious and half reproachful question of His acquaintances is a happy revelation of tin ideal of the Son of Man for all the world. It was in Joseph's shop that He spent all aave three years of His manhood, it was at the bench and with the tools of a me chanic that He chose to live ia order th.it Hi example might speak lessons of truth and inspiration to all human souls. The Scriptures lay atress upon His humble cir cumstances, but they do not place Him on a par with the thriftless sluggard who de nerves to feel the pinch of want. No ef- . fort of ours can fathom the depths of His bumiliation who, being the Son of God, be came the Son of Mary and a -carpenter; who, though He was rich yet for our sttkes He became poor, that we through His pov erty wight be rich, but He knew no indi gence. We see this divine Being in Naxa reth on a self-supporting basis, making a living by mending plows and yokes, re pairing houses and doing all the jobs which fall to a village carpenter; we see Him working with His hands for bread and learning by day that way of labor which must be trodden by all bread-winners. He belonged to the grand army of self-respecting workingmen. Not from a palace nor yet from a hovel, but from the workshop of an artisan does Jesus of Nazareth make common cause with all the people of the passing generations. . How surely our Lord condemns the sin fulness of indolence, and how sublimely . does His example urge the employment of our energies. He might have maintained Himself without work, but to have done so would have been to set the seal of His sanction upon the very spirit that prompts the average individual to get through this world with as little effort ss possible the spirit that ia plainly the spirit of the devil, and thst ia the prolific cause of crime and woe. lie who fed the crowds from few loaves and fishes might have wrought a daily miracls for Himself, but nevar once was His omnipotence exerted in His ovn beha'f. He accepted the very situation which confronts us. Engaged with the oc cupations of His trade during so many years, He exalts industry into a divine virtue and brands sloth as n deadly sin. He has no favor for an ambition that longs for absolute ease. It may nut be uecessaiy for any one to be occupied with the bur dens of business, but we are all bound to keep in personal touch with the life of hu manity.. There are other spheres of use fulness than the Hold and the shop, the office or the counting room. The church asks for thousands who are willing to fol low the example of splendid heroes who have withdrawn from the haunts of trade and from the hope of gain in order to de vote themselves exclusively to the ministry of Christian laymen. Everywhere are char ities calling loudly for encouragement and service. Politics presents a wide range for the activities of patriotism and of the very highest religion. There is something for everybody to do, and no one is justilied in living for himself in a sequestered and at tractive nook away from the demands that sound from every quarter. Kach individ ual should have some occupation, a place in the world's vast factories, a work of some sort which shall tell for the happiness of others. The Lord has a strong word for labor. He is the fellow and the champion of all toilers. He has a meaning for all those who work with their brain or with their hands, for all such are workingmen. He has forever consecrated the everydayness of life. He adopts the workaday world. "The Light of Asia," which states beauti fully certain features of the Buddh'st reli gion, represents the incarnate lluddha as a wandering beggar, asking food. Jesus Christ was no beggar. The mendicant, any more than the pauper, rereites not the ap proval of His own practice, by which fie sanctified labor until the end of the world. The Gallilean Carpenter was no less the incarnate Son of (rod during the years which He spent at Nazareth than He was on the mountain of the transfiguration or on the first Easter Day. There are many reasons why work is honorable, but it re ceives its crowning glory from the exper ience of the divine Christ, during the long ?eriod of which we know nothing save that fe was a mechanic. He has endured all occupations with dignity that nothing short of our own disloyalty ran possibly take away. It matters not what one's daily toils are, I hey are worthy of fidelity and, energy, and they are. as much a part of God's service as the saying of prayer and the receiving of religious rites. The em peror and his humblest subject, the prime minister and the street sweeper, the mil lionaire and his valet, all are included in the spirit of industry and devotion wnich Jesus manifested at the bench which stood in a shop or, jierhnps, at. times under a huge tree at Nazareth. He has hallowed all vocations by the consecration of His personal industry, and they should be in terpreted and accepted as a sacred part of the life which now is. The Nazareth Carpenter teaches that worldly place of itself is nothing worth. A man may be a man wherever he is, and labor ia honorable whatever it may be. Station or the lack of it does noi; make the man or his life. The people of lowly degree may likewise learn precious lessons of the Galilean artisan. They become dis couraged because they fancy themselves to be of no account, and they' too often cher ish an unhappy contempt for their daily toils. They despise the factory tr the office as necessary evils. Jesus has a lesson for them which He pronounces from the Nazareth shop. Long years He spent in obscurity. No murmurs escape Him, no signs of impatience, no evidences of a restless longing to be otherwise, no vulgar and godless disposition to try to i nprove upon the plans of divine providence. Quiet ly day after day He was concerned with the unimpressive and uninteresting mat ters of His business, and His only aim was to be true to the state where He was des tined to live until the time came for be- finning the public ministry. Wherever the leaVenly lather has placed us we, the aons of men, can be the sons of God. The real things of lite are not earthly and tem poral, and the true estimate of ourselves is not the place be it lofty or lowly which we hold among men. 'J he divine Carpen ter ia a comfort and an inspiration to all. Amid the employment of His trade did Jesus prepare Himself for His public life. There He was made ready, at least in part, to exercise all those transcendentlv great qualities of mind and heart which marked His ministry. For three years He gave Himself up to His work as the world's Re deemer, but for fifteen years and more, as was probably the case, He was only a car penter. Surely He did not spend all His time and energy upon His daily toils. Of ten did He devote Himself to godly exer cises of prayer and contemplation, without which no one can develop the traits of highest character. But He was no recluse. He settled the truth once for all that the place for strong-minded, stout-hearted folic to serve God is in the world; the arena for doing the Father's will is right here, where we nave abundant opportunitiea for the culture of holy graces and the practice of boly living. We need the benefits of occa sional solitude, but we are bound to think so seriously of life and of God's cause as to give no place to the mawkish sentimen tal ism which adores perpetual seclusion and calls it the noblest type of religion. The divine Carpenter hesitated not to spend the years upon which His future work was founded amid the activities inci dent to the daily interests of mankind. He was a bread-winner, a wage-earner. Work is God's ordinance. Ii it was a curse in the beginning, it is a blessing now. It is one of the best tonics. It is scarcely less than a sacrament. It may be debased, even as may the sacrament of the altar in which one may eat and drink damnation to his soul, but It is something of a sacra ment which is intended, if used aright, to strengthen and uplift, nnd to further the divine plans. It is a sacred duty. It is the privilege and the prerogative of taking part in the vast activities of humanity. It is an invitation to the market place to dis pense comforts, to have a share in the world's progress and the making of his tory. It proclaims independence, it disci plines character, it schools the affections. We are only holy ground and are doing holy things when we go with Christ's spirit to the daily round and the common task. The founder of Christianity, the incarnate Son of God, the universal Man, was a vil lage carpenter. Holiness and Humility. The highest lesson a believer has ta learn is humility. O, that every Christian who seeks to advance in holiness may re member this well! There may be intense consecration, and fervent zeal, and heav enly experience, and yet, if it is not pre vented by dealings of the Lord, there may be an unconsciousself-exjltation with it all. Let us learn the lesson thx highest holi ness is the deepest humility, and let us re member that it comes not e itself, but on.y is it is made a matter of special deal ing u i the part of our faithful Lord and His fanhful servant, Andrew Murray. A Heap of Pennies. During the past.ftve years the mint In Philadelphia has ground out 3,000, 000.393 pennies. Between July 1. 1902. and June 1, 1903, 86.G00.000 pennies were coined. If all those pennies were collected In a heap it would make quite a mountain. It would take a Rood many Eiffel towers to reach as high, for It would not be less than 2,400 miles from the bottom to the top penny. From bis present stock of pennies L'ncle Sam would be able to give each child la the world 10 copper keep saltes and bave enough left over to fill a cood sized savings bank besides. Needls Book, j Take a piece of brown leather am) .cut out a maple leaf from it Then take a piece of pink leather and do the Jsame. Then stitch these leaves so as to show the reins. After that cut three leaves from flannel cloth. Buttonhole stitch them with either pink, white or brown. Tie all together with a piece of ribbon, and you will have a pretty, but simple needle book. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENT3 FOR MARCH 6. Subject! .Testis Calms tlie Storm, Mark It., M-H tinlilen Text, Psalm 107, 3U Memoi r Verses, a .TO Commentary on the Day's Lesson, ' I. Crossing Galilee (vs. 3.V ). "The other side." .lesus had probably be come very weary through the long days work and needed retirement. He knew that quiet and rest could be best obtained in the solitude of the eastern shore. Ac-cordiiigl,,- He proposed to the disciples that they cross over the lake. :W. "Sent away the multitude." The country r.rouml Capernaum, and in all Gal ilee, was denselv populated and great crowds ot people followed Christ wherever He went. His teaching was original, His personality very striking, and His miracles proved His power and authority. Some wished to hear the truth, others had a curiosity to see the man, and many desired to be healed of their diseases. "As He a." Christ had been engaged up to the last moment, and now leaves without mak ing any preparation for the voyage, .lust he lore the boat put oft three of the listen ers In His words desired to attach them selves to Him as His disciples: 1. A scribe. 2. An already partial disciple. 3. Another who wished to bill farewell to his friends at home. "In the ship." Life has often been appropriately described us a voyage. Christ will come on board the barque in which our destiny is being carried forward, if ive want Him to. "Little ships." None of the so-called ships on this lake were of any great size; they were what we would call tisiiing boats. II. A great tempest (vs. 37, 38). "A great storm." It was one of those sudden and violent squalls to which the Lake of Gennesaret was notoriously exposed, lying as it docs 601) feet lower than the sea anil sourr Minded by mountain gorges, which act like gigantic funnels to draw down the colli winils from the mountains. These winds are not only violent, but they come down suddenly, and often when the sky is perfectly clear. Life's storms come sud denly. Temptations come when we are not looking for them. "It was now full." The boat was now filing. This storm was prob ahly excited by Satan, the prince of the power of the air. who having the Author and all the preachers of the gospel together in a small vessel, thought, by sinking it, to defeat the purposes of God. But the plans of Satan often miscarry. Christ isable to bring good out ol the threatened ill, and thus cause even the devil to assist Him in perfecting the courage and taith ot His followers. .'IK. "He was in," etc. Vntil Christ was hi the ship there was no storm. While men are resting quietly in carnal security all is peace, but as soon as Christ rebukes the world of sin the wicked ale like the raging sea, that cannot rest, whose waters cast up dirt and mire. "Asleep." Here we see that Christ was a human being a man like other men. He became very weary, and His nature called for rest and sleep. A moment later when He stilled the raging waves we see just as cleaiiv that He was God. "They awake Him." In the hour of their distress they turned to Christ; so should we. At times lie may appear to be unmindful ot our need, and it will be necessary for us" to "awake H:m" bv- earnest, perseverinu prayer. "Master." The double "Master. Master," of St. Luke eives vividness to their haste and terror "We perish." We are in danger of perish ing. They did not know that no whip could sink with Christ on hoard. Those in dan ger of perishing should always go to Christ for help, for there is none who can save from the storms of divine wrath but tic Son of God. This was a model prayer. It was short, appropriate, fervent. III. The tempest stilled v. 33). 3D. "He arose." Christ is always ready to as sist those in trouble. If we can net the sympathies of Christ enlisted in our case all will be well. He (1) arose, (J) rebuked, and (3) there was a great calm. "Rebuked the wind." The wind was the cause of the foaming sea. "Peace, be still." Literally, "be muzzled." The word means (11 to close the mouth with a muzzle; (2) to re duce to silence. He rebuked the winds as a master rebukes a raging animal. Mark alone preserves these words which were doubtless addressed to ' the prince of the power of the air," by whose agency the storm had arisen. "A great calm." As a rule, after a storm the waves continue to heave and swell for hours, but here at the word of the Iord of nature there was u great culm. The culm was great from the completeness of the stillness. IV. A gentle reproof (v. 40). 40. "So fearful." You should have remembered that the Son of God was on board. There is no cause for fear. Note some signs of a weak faith: 1. Feur in danger. 2. Doubt of the Lord's power in danger. 3. Anx ious solicitude about earthly things. 4. Impatience under trouble. '"No faith." Matthew records Christ's words as being. "O ye of little faith." 1. They had "no faith in themselves or their own ability to hush the elements or to quiet their own fesrs. 2. They had a "little faith" in their divine Master. This is seen from the fact that they (1) came to Christ. (2) awoke Him, and (3) appealed to Him to save them. 3. But. their own tearfulness and Christ's renroof shows that they had only a little faith. 4. Christ's questions go to show that they were responsible for the defectiveness of their faith. 5. Christ's love for them did not leud Him to shield His disciples from the reproof thev de served. 0. Christ honored a little faith. He (1) arose, (2) rebuked the wind, and (3) caused a great calm. Is there a tempest in your heart if There is One w ho is able to drive out all the elements that cause dis cord and unrest and give you perfect peace. And it is the duty of the tempest-tossed soul to make a personal application to Christ for the peace which He so much de sires to give. V. Great astonishment (v. 41). 41. "Feared exceedingly." Matthew says, "The men marvelled." They were greatly aston ished; tilled with amazement. Thev were overwhelmed with the majestv and ease with which He issued His orders to the elements, and at the submission with which they, like living intelligcncies. are bushed by His word. "What manner of man." What a vast display of power; how far exalted above mortals must He be! Christ is the great problem of historv, of theology, of life. What is He? He is "man, out what "manner" of man? He is the God-man, who stands equal with God on the high level of Deity, and equal with man on the low level of humanity. "Obey Him." The One who created wind and sea could control them. Strength in Human Limbs. Physiologists and scientists bav been making some curious expert merits with a view to determine thi relative length and strength of rlghi and left limbs. Fifty and nine-tenthi per cent ot the men examined had thi right arm stronger than the left; 16. ( per cent had the two arms oPequa length and strength and 32.7 per cen had the left arm stronger than tht right. Of women 46.9 per cent bad tht ri-;ht arm stronger than the left; 24.1 per cent had the left stronger than thi right. In order to arrive at the avet age length ot limbs fifty skeleton! were measured twenty-five of eacl sex. Of these twenty-three had thi right arm and left leg longer, six thi left arm and right leg, while In seven teen cases all the members were ' " or less equal In length. Cat Likes Flowers. Mrs. C. M. Brocksleper of New Lon don. Conn., has a big tiger cat, "Jack,' that has a mania for eating cut flow era. "Jack" likes all varieties, and if particularly fond of palm leaf ends but his choicest, floral menu consist! ol violets. On Thanksgiving day hi turned up his nose at turkey and de mured a large bouquet of violets thai bad been left In a vase on the dlnlnj able. He did not even leave tbi sterna. SUNDAY, MARCH SIXTH. How Christ Stills the Storms of Life." Ps. 107:23-31. Scripture Verses. .Job 3:17. IS; laa. 33: 10; Matt. 11:28-30; John 9. 1-3; 1 Cor. 15:5j-5i; 2 Cor. 4:lt18; 2 Tim 4:fi-8; Hob. 12:11; Rev. 7:1317; 21: 1. 3, 4. Lesson Thoughts. There Is no distress, no trouble, no suffering, out of which God Is not able and as wJlting as he is able, to dellvei his people. He will never refuse his grace, which Is sufficient for every need. Life's storms would overwhelm us If we had not divine protection. It la the part of wisdom to take our troubles to God. It is good to cry unto the Lord In trouble; but how shamefully men for get to "praise the Lotd for hij good ness." Selections. Thy burden God's gift. And It will make the bearer calm and strong. Yet, lest It press too heavily and long. He says, "Cast It on me. And It shall easy be." And those who heed the voice. And seek to give It back in trustful prayer, Have quiet hearts that never can de spair; And hope lights up the way Upon the darkest day. ' Burdens are not unmixed evils. Saints are otten the moat heavily laden. Whr-n God tries, he is not look lng for guilt, but for gold. It Is then sometimes to be Interpreted as a mark of divine favor when a soul struggles forward under the. heavy weight of affliction or disaster. Whatever Is God-given need cause no dismay. It Is not the burden, but the purpose of It, which we are to study. O, shadowed heart, cease thy repining, A loving Father knows thy care; This cloud must be of his designing. Because faith sees the silver lining That proves his constant presence there. Prayer Oh that, men would praise the Lord for Ills goodness, and for His wonderful works to the children ot men! Ws do thank Thee, our merciful heavenly Father, that Thou dost con stantly watch over us, protecting us from dangers seen and unseen, and giving us blessings ' far beyond what we are worthy to receive. When storms of trouble and temptation meet us, and we cry unto Thee, bring us, wb beseech Thee out of our distress es, and give us perfect peace In the assurance of Thy loving protection. Now, accept our praises which wb offer In Jesus' name. Amen. EPSiVORTH LEAGUE LESSONS MARCH SIXTH. Christ Stilling the Storms of Life. P3a. 107. 23-31. The noblest souls of Israel had a vision of God in everything. Second causes for them disappeared. The divine hand wrought all. The history, poetry, biography, prophecy, of Israel Is lull of God. The lesson of thU psalm, written probably to celebrate some national deliverance, is that the judgments and mrtls of life come not by chance, but from. God; are not arbitrary, but follow a divine plan. This flan Pro' reeds from his eternal holiness. Sin Jehovah will punish, righteousness he will reward, that he may draw men from iniquity, and that they may un derstand the loving kindness of the Uird. Bunyan likens the Chiistlan life to an overland pilgrimage. With equal fltne.,3 and fascination he might have pictured It as a voyage. So self-evident is this comparison that preachers, moialUts. poofs hiive worn It thread bare. T-ie embarka.ion. the desired haven, the calm and storm, perils, toTupnnfonahlps, hopes, movement, un cettalnty, need of chart and compass, necessity of a pilot, safe arrival, glad imh at. clasping friends on the home land shore, these and other like nesses are so obvious that a voyage will always btf a favorable picture of lite. Jt is a perilous voyage. For some reason the ship seems to have an evil tendenry to wreck Itself. It is in- lined to refuse obedience to the helmsman, to run uoon roclrs and quicksands, to get lealty. It is ill fitted to cop) with wind an! wave. To i T ,ak without figure, man is by na ture dlspobed to sin. Therv are outward perils. Pirates flying the black flag of ruin swarm on this sea. Then there are the. storms. How suddenly they sometimes arise! How Bercely they rage! How they toss the Lest built, most skillfully man aged crafts. Many a fine-looking ship, which in calm weather sailed as mon arch of the seas, has easily foundered when the tempest came. But not cue need be wrecked. Each may take on board the Master of wind and wave. Once there, he can change the most leaky, water-logged, rotten ship, with machinery biokeu and rud der helpless. Into a very queen of the deep. He can and will either Bttll the storms or give the vessel power in se curity to outride them and even make them help sweep her home. Christ on board will calm the storm of guilt. ' How many, tem pest tossed by conviction, have heard that sweat, magisterial voice, "Peace, he still," and there was a great calm. Looking up Into the clear blue, we could say, "Therefore beiug justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Chrl.-t. Cat' Thrilling Rido. The office cat at the shoe factory In Derry, N. H., bad a rapid ride in the big drive wheel one day last week The cat was asleep In a warm place In the rim of the wheel before the power was started and the big wheel was revolving swiftly before the cat was seen. The machinery was stop ped and pussy was taken out un harmed. Killed Wolf With BrToomallek. ,t David Dike of Btarksmoro, Vt., Is ihjbltin the skin of a gray wolf which ho killed near bis barn. Mr. Dlk was attracted by a noise near the barn, and. taking a broom, went to Investigate. Ho found a wolf there and killed it with, the broomstick. Toe animal weighed about thirty-five pounds and waa a fine specimen. 5? The l.ove of C;nil. At first f prayed lor liht; '.juld I but see the way. How gladlv would I walk to cvcrlaalinf day! I asked the world's deep law before my eves to ope, And let me see my prayer fulfilled, and realize my hope. But God wa kinder than inv prayer, And darkness veiled me everywhere. And next I asked for strength, thai I might tread the road With firm, unfaltering pace to heaven's serene abode ; That 1 might never know a faltering, (.til ing heart. But manfully go on nnd reach the highest part. But God was kinder than my prayer, And weakness chocked me everywhere. And the.i I asked for faith: could 1 but trust my God. I'd live in heavenly peace, though foes were all abroad. His light thus sliming round, no filicrinj should I know; And faith in l,eaen above would mike a heaven below. But God was kinder thin my prayer, And doubts beset me everywhere' And now I pray for love, deep love to God and man A love that will not fail, however dark His plan; That sees all life in Him. rejoicing ia Hi power. And faithful, though the darkest clouds ol gloom nnd doubt may lower. And God is kinder than my prayer, Love tills and bleme evervwliere. Kdnah D. Cheney, in Christian Work. Crltlrtstn and Work. It is both natural and cave to criticise, but as George Kliot used to say. "It is easier to criticise than to be correct." The tendency to criticise is always strong with in us, but never is it stronger than in the years when our eyes are keen and fresh, says Wellspring. As time goes on we be come accustomed to tains ami blotches, to blemishes and blunders, ami they do not jar upon us as they do when yet iin-noiled or calloused; we measure all tilings by the high ideals which God plants in hearts which arc young. It i not wise for young people to suppress entirely their critical faculties or to smother the hot indignation which they feel in the presence of suffering or wrong. The world is never so tine as young folks expect it to be, and the church never turns out to be so good as young people first dream that it i. The disap pointments of the disillusioning years, the imperfections,of men, the defects of insti tutions, and the out-of-jointness of thingf in general sometimes drive the critic from one mood to another until he becomes both, sour and skeptical, aud takes his place in the seat of the scornful. A man who sits down in h h scorn is known as a cynic about the most useless and most pitiable of all the descendants of Ad tin. Do not allow- yourselves to become blind to defects, or to be satiiiied with thing-i as they are. Alas tor the man or woman who submits so completely to the world that he loses the desire to make it better! In the words of a wise .Scotchman: "The first open look of young eyes on t lie condi tion of the world is one of the principal regenerative forces of humanity. Keep your keen eyes and your exacting con science, but be careful to work as well as talk. A critic who degenerates into a chroni? fault finder is a nuisance and a curse. Criticism is never sane unless accompan ied by honest work. The old Latin poet Lucretius spoke truly when he said: "It U a pleasant thing to stand upon the shore and see ships tossed upon the sen, to stand in the window of a eatle and watch a bat tle on the plain below." It may be pleas ant, but it is base to hold one's self alool from the Christian church, criticising its blunders, but doing nothing to settle it problems or lighten its burdens. -.4.1... Our Religion. A reader of the Old Testament must be impressed, if he be a tlioiighttul student of what lie reads, with the fascination which novelty in religion always possesses, says the Chicago Interior. It is ditlieult for us to conceive w hat charm '.he cults of Kgypt nnd Assyria possessed, but the Wilful in Israel had continually to lift up their voices against the priests of Apis, the prophets of llaal, and even the votaries of the still grosser forma ot idolatry practiced by the Cunuanites. The same spiritual phenomenon exhibited itself at Itome, where the worship of the Kgyplian Isi at one time threatened to replace that of .love, and later, the mysteries of Mithra,' from Persia, drew after them practically the whole patrician class. It makes all the difference in the world whether our reh- f iim is a home or a habit, a roof tree that ia sheltered us or a costume that has merely pleased our fancy. We resent change in what is dear to us as much as we hate sameness in what is Dimply a cou vention. A leligion which is merely for mal, external, becomes as tiresome as an out-of-date garment, but for a religion which goes dow n by its roots into the heart of life, men will go to the stake, A new faith, or an old faith, revamped, will uft times spread like wildfire, just as a new cut of u gown will, and for the same rea son: became we possessed the former, but it never possessed us. But u religion which enters into all our ways, controlling our aims, sanctifying our atTcrtioiis and dominating imagination itself, is ours till death. No strange god can be set up in the temple w hich the Shekinah of His presence completely "tills" with its glory. The C'rlms of Couiplarsnry, No man has a right to be satislied with what he has done. A famous artist wui once found by a friend gloomily contem plating his last painting. "I see nothing wrong with it," said the friend. "Neither do I. replied the artist. I'm satisfied, and I shall never paint another great pic ture." The same truth was in the mind of a grand old veteran in Christ's cause, who said, when congratulated on the man ifold achievement of his life: "It is not what I've done that 1 think of, but what I've left undone." As Kobert Browning wrote: "Life has no place for satisfaction in well doing. On the earth the broken arcs; only iu heaven a perfect round." Finding 111 4loll. How Toud we are of thinking abjut what we have not, Instead of about what we have! Ji bus been well said that "some eople's cast -or? happiness, like their cal-otl clothes, would make some other eop)e very he.ppy." The cheeriest lives are not those that have the inqsi, but tlio.u that appreciate the most. Kvery one of us has a gold mine of un worked joy close at baud. But gold needs searcliing for are you Uncl ing yours J .Sunday-Sc hool Times. Poverty. . To many a tel ot character U lodged in poverty. Key. i'r. Adm-a, Me, lnvlisi, Brooklyn, N. Y. A Useless Hurdso. It has been well said that no man ever sank under the burden of the day. It is when to-morrow's burden is added to the burden of to-day that the weight is more than a man can bear. Never load your selves so, my friends. If you find your selves so loaded, at least reiiicmlwr this: it is your doings, not God's. He begs you to leave the future to Him aud mind the present. What more or what else could lie do to take ih burdeu off you? George MacDonstd. rorffstfalHss of God. - Forgetfulnesa of God is ths path t'.iat leads te taanitold tvils. United Presbyterian. ME GREAT DESTROYER 10ME STARTLING FACTS ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. There la No flrentsr in a re tn the Toting Man .Inst Hpglmtlag; Life Than the Cninpanlnnslilpnf the Moderate tlrlnk erThey Are Horlefy's Resl Hane. "Oh. I onlv tike a glass now and then villi a friend or when I don't feel quite sell. I defy any man to say he ever saw ne drunk" And so w- tnv in you. nilsjuiile.l man, :liat for this very reason, because you Innk but are npver drunk, tint you are ;he bane of society. You. and not the Imnkard. There is no greater snare to the young nan iust beginning life than the compsn onhip of the moilcrnle drinker. He had better a thousand t-mes have 'nr his friend the man who lies hall of the ,ime ipad drunk in the gutier. For your moderate drinker is very of :en a man of good morals, ss the world roes, and he talk lol'iil'- of schemes for -Aising mankind and purifying society. He ilways nuts something in tiie missionary tux. nnd he rtnes to chnrcli, and helps to jay the minister, and lie makes speeches it Fourth of July celebrations and Sab-Alh-sehool picnics, nnd. a'tonctiicr. is con ndered a very good r-it'Ten; while ins leighbnr. who begun with "jnt one glass." Vit had not the will power lo slop there, md went on to the depths of drunkenness Hid desnair. is despised by all nnd hooted ind scoff ed as he staggers along trie streets. But Mr. .Smith, the moderate drinker, knows where to stop, and so retains the espect of his acquaintances. And when .he young man at the beginning of his ca reer of ruin i remonstrated with by Ins 'riends. he looks surprised and refers them lo Mr. Smith. "Why, look al Mr. Smith. TTc lias nl, ravs taken a glass when he fell like it, md I am sure there is no man stands any turner than Mr. Smith." Young friends, such of you ns are I akin t pattern by Mr. Smith, pause a moment ind consider. How do you know that, like him, you can stop before you leave the jround of safely? How do vou know- tha', rour will is strong enoueh to keep you back from the brink of the precipice to ward which you are advancing? Kvery one has not an appetite which, when once nroused. can be controlled by the will. Nine-tenths of I lip men who be in by taking ' just one glass" cud bv be coming drunkards. How do you know that you are the lui kv tenth man .' Again, we repent, un, derate drinkers are the bane of societv, because their example is one full of insidious fascination, and the danger is never seen or realized until it is too late. No man was ever inlbienced to drink by the sight of one of his fellows lying beastlv drunk by the roadside. Urastlv, did we sav? We beg to (.inert ourselves. Beastly is not the word, for beasts never denrade themselves to liio level of men in this respeci. A brute beast is a creature to be hon ored beside t lie poor wretch who prosti tutes his manhood, sinks his moral vespon lihility and falls to the degradation of a sot. Think you that any young man who seej the bloated, disgusting wreck of humanity, which we call the drunkard, passing along to the lockup in the hands of the police, desires to become like him? Is it any temptation to him lo go and do likewise? Does the sight make him anxious to be come a drunkard? Never! He shudders with disgust and hurries by. No, the drunkard never tempts any man to becoma like him; be never entices the young man of so-called good habits to drink. It is your gentlemanly, perfumed, refined, respectable moderate drinker, who wears glossy linen and broadcloth and passes for a worthy member of society. Society forsooth! Out upon such societv! Men and women of to day, ye who would in good to your fellow-men, who would Itrengthen the wenk and 1 1 ft up the fallen, east out from your friendship and yout homes this moderate drinker. Place him ander ban. Let the light of truth shine apon him, and show him in his true colors, which, beautiful though thev mav be, are beautiful onlv with the baleful glitter of a lerpent'it skin. And when you pass the miserable drunk trd as he lies helpless beneath tiie fiend of rum when yon draw your virtuous robes around you with a shiver of disaust. and pass by on the other side, remember that, loathsome and repulsive though he may be, hut example is a thousand tunes less bane ful than that of the respectable, moderate drinker whom you receive into your houses ind feast at your tables and a.-eepl as a vmipamon and friend of your families Kate Thorn, in the New York Weekly. Temperance lor ltllro! Men. Some time since, the Boston and Maine Railroad bought a hotel at Rotterdam, N. Y.. where liquor had previously been sold ind turned it into a plant for moral and religious work among the railroad em Moves, who congregated in large numbers In that town. It was determined to sup plant the saloon by affording employes a place of resort, which was conducted upon moral principles and where religion might have access. The reports of the company innounce that the investment ha been a decidedly paying one. The employes are more sober and reliable. The danger from accidents and injuries to lite and limb has been decreased, and the religious hotel is regarded as a success. What the Saloon Does. The other day we saw an HJ man pushed ut and ataigc'nng from the door ut a a 'own. He stumbled off the sidewalk, and, 'allmg headlong, struck his head on the pavement, slid lay stunned and bleeding jntil some passers by picked him up and tarried him across the street. Of course, be was drunk, and probably disagreeable, ind presumably had spent all his money, tnd ao he was put out as an undesirable nest. The saloon keeper had his money tnd was through with the man until In obered up and had some more money. As he came, pitched out from that den ot iniquity, he was a tit sample of the work done within. He illustrated what the sa loon does, iu th.- long run. for those wug make it their headquarters. fttrong Prohibitory Ordinance. The strongest prohibitory ordinance yel adopted within the State of California is that which was recently enacted by tin trustees of Lompoc, which provides for tin following pcnslties: First violstion, HW 9ne and thirtv day' imprisonment; second Eolation, $200 line, aixty days imprison ment; third violation, WOO fine and ninety days. According to this ordinance all pre it r in t ions for liquor must be signed by a iuly sccredited physician, and mast stats lay, hour and minute when given, and must be filed within three hours of dais ind placed on a separate tile by the diug juts for inspection. What lln Had to Hay. A number of young men were one day lilting around the tire in the waiting room it an English railway talking about total ibstiueuc societies. Just then a police man came iu with a prisoner in handcuffs. Ha Iwtened to the young nien'e conversa tion, but did not give any opinion. There was also in the room Mr. McDonald, a minister ot trie gospel, who, nearina wni the young men were saying, stepped up te the policeman and said: "Tray, sir, what hava you to say about temperance? "Well, replied the policeman, "all 1 havi to aay ia that I never took a teetotaller tc York Castle prison in my life, nor to Wakefield house of correction, either." Demoralises the Natives. . Bishop II art sell says that aeventy-fivf per cent, of the demoralisation of nsuvei of Africa in their home life and charactei cornea from the use of strong drink, and Itev. Charles tsstchell Morris declares thl po (ewer than a.OUO.OW savages die cveij year aa the result of the traffic. Whisky Breeds reuds, ' Dr. Wiiiiam G.sjdell Kroet. 1'rtjiucnl ol Berea College, Meres, Ky., in speaking re cently upon ( Feuds in our 8outbin high lands," said that it is the common belivl of judges thst bave tried criminals foi murder that ninety-five pr rent, of ali these killings are performed uuder the lb flueuc ol the whisky boltU. THE KEYSTONE STATE ' Latest News of Pennsylvania Teld hi Short Order. . f'hnrlcs L. Huston, of ContesvIIIeu '' Htiite president of the Y. M. C. A., and a prominent Iron and steel manufacturer. Is widely known for his) philanthropy..! ' In ten years he has given more than oO.si ' (0 to f hiirity. For several yean h maintained tlie Huston Memorial Hc Pital at an iiniuinl expense of 0(XK). Mr. Huston bus triven $10,iH) to the Coated ville Y. M. V. A. He bus also give $o00u towards the new public hospital. Mrs, Huston, his wile, pays for the sar vires of a graduate nurse to attend thsT tinfortiiunte free. Madison A. Curnahan, of Harrisbura one of the oldest engineers In thu Phila delplihi and Krie sc rvlre, wm killed In s collision between the HufTuloexpresiand a drnft of freight enrs at Korkville. C'ar n:ih:m was in ehaigo of the loeomotivaj attached to the express train, and was running an hour nnd thirty minutes labs. When the collision occurred he wass rnuglit between the locomotive and tbfl tank and squeezed to death. None oC the passengers or the rrew was injured. Thomas Iieesehagan was committed tei the count v juil nt llovlestown to awaJtt trial for larceny ami burglary. Sumsv months aio he is said to have robbodC John Yost, of Buckingham, of fM, auoA cecding in getting away. Elsie and Robert Shennfelt, aged 6 and! 4 years respectively, were burned tsf death In their home in Johnstown. Thelsi mother, who is a widow, had gone acros the street to visit a neighbor, and the first she knew of the fire was when the flames burst from the door. By that time it was? toj late to save the little one. While unloading scrap Iron from icy' at the I'enn Iron VVorks workmen fouatt two boaeonstrletors, each more than ten feet long. After conquering their fright the men found that the snakes weredead It 19 believed that the reptiles escapes from some traveling organization arnt crawled to the car where they froze to death. Andrew Llclitcr, the 11 year-old eon of Chillies Lichter. of Willow Orove, ha been missing since February 4. The Bonrd of Revision of Taxes lis raised the nssesstnrnt ou property 1 Chester, 4"UHM). The present a-sseasj-nicnt is 14.9:m,10l. The increase bM been particularly heavy on water fron property. Itev. Dr. S. L. Messinger. ria-storof St. Luke's Reformed Church. Trappe, ha,? . ..,.....!..... I n P.... StUilO f ....... .. fwlanA - . I n ri , vu u l III l i ( 'f- i v. i . . u 14 of the congregation, to pay one-half thd cost of a pipe organ. Andrew Csrnegia? bus promised to pay the other half. Delaware conntv seems to have mars 1 1 Kin its share of mad dogs so far this" year. A dog created hnvor among tb ilogs at Lima and a number were shot. Two mad dogs made their appourauce itf; I'pper Darby, but were despatched, bet fore doing any harm. The State Bonrd of Public Bulldingf nnd (i rounds Iihs not yet approved th$ font met for building the bridge over thd Lehigh River nt Alleutnwu, as the Lehigh Yiillcy Kuilroud Company has tbtr f? fiiilcd' to sign an nurec-inent to pay $'2-1, 000 for a right of w ay over the structure Jacob Bin-kwalter, of New Hnllsnd, was driving down the. Welsh Mountains, with a wugon loaded with heavy logi( nnd near the base endeavored to releassf the brake. I In whs catiirbt astride btf one of the wheels ami dragged twent feet in that position and so badly laor- i ted that it is feared he will die. . The eleventh annual Sunday Behoof Convention of the Allentown Conference M' the Lutheran Church was held in 9k Luke's Church, thut city. Charles Kagely, of Rending, sn engint fcr on the 1'enusylvauiu Ruilrnad, leaned too far out the window of his cab and; was strucK ou tiie iieuu oy tue Jiouocaoj Bridge and killed. Deputy Fish Warden Criswell report that he has succeeded in breaking up t band of fish law violators who have bee aperatlng all winter by fishing throng the ice ou Lake Krie. Rev. Theodore Ileysham, pastor of the Bridgeport, 5aptist Church, has resigned because M tfl health. .Mr. Ileysham has been pastor thero for five years and If was bis first charge. The Media County Commissioners ap pointed J. Herbert Ogdeu, of Lausdowno, slid J. Lord Rigby, of Media, as mem bers of the Board of Prison Inspector. Judge Johnson w ill appoint the three other members). The annual con vent ion of the school directors of Chester County was held Iu the chapel of the State Normal School, West Chester. An organization was effected under the new law governing school directors' convention. Judge C. B. Staples, the newly. elected Judge of the Monroe-Pike District. In his tirst charge to the Grand Jury suid if jurors ami w itnesses do not answer to their uames wheu called they will be fined their day's pay. The Stroudsbtirg authorities wrote to frovernnr Pennypoi-ker informing hiui of '.lie outbreak of rabies among dogs la hat city. The Governor's secretary re Mi ed Hint steps would be taken to pra rent any spread of the disease. The annual contest in oratory for tha 3eori;e K. Nesbit t prize took place at the tVyomiuir Seminary The girls' pH viu wou by Miss Myram Stevens, while ;he boys' prize wns divided betweee tugene lircruiau and David C. Bpencer. F.x-Cotintv Treasurer O. A. Doertlia rcr, win, it'is alleged. Is 'JmihJ short in ii,s uccouuts for interest on public monsyf placed ou deposit during his term, whlcM uided in 1 !";!, hud a hearing before .Vlderman Fister, at Pottsville. He waives ln-ariug aud entered bail for court. Prof. AUxrrt . Dunn, of Philailelphia, las tendered his resignation as organist f the Firsi Prcsbyteriiiu Church of Chester. Prof. Dunn U the third organs st of large churches in Chester Ut resign n the course of the luni month, the other iwo iM-ing Plof. Rrc J. Fresi oln, ol tt. piiul's Prowlan Kpiscopal Church, and prof. J. Evans Krcles, of the Emmanuel (baptist Church. A week's eiou of farmers' Institute ,'or Schuylkill Couuty opeued at Andreas inder the supervision of William 1L ?tout, lecturer and director for the State Sonrd of Agriculture. L. W. Llghty aud Dr. I. A. Thayer delivered add r ease. The Leaders' Conference of IheLeblgb County Cbristlau Eudoavor Unloa wse ichl iu Trinity Reformed Church, AUea wu. . John W. Orawal, who claims be la as Austrian count, had a hearing in Majrot Price's court, Wilkes Barre. ' charged with larceny and obtaining Money under false pretenses. As no was led out he turned to Charles A. Blumea ihsl. one of bis accuser aud cried ouU "You're u ilur." At the same time hit itruck st Bluiuenthal. who bit back aad itruck Orawal several tiroes before the. police separated them. Orawal SUKM to jail ia clefiult uf baiL , .