-CHURCH AND CHILDREN" i Brilliant Sunday Discourse By Rer. Coward IHdish. The PronlM el Zachiriih to Hit Dlicotnged Countrymen. BnonKT.T, V. V. "Wht the Church Owe the Children" wa the subject of a strong sermon preached by the Key. How ard Melish, rector of the Churrh of the Holy Trinity. A number of request for tin publication have been received and it ta tierewith given. The text was from Zeeha riah v 1 1 i : o : "The street of the city ahull be full of boya anil girl playing in the itreet thereof." Mr. Melish mid: Zechariah gave this promise as a word of encouragement to bis discouraged country men when on their return from their exile they were trying in the lace of eneniie and great obstacle o rebuild Jerusalem. The time will surely come, he bade them believe, when the city ahall stand once mure on .Mount Ziou In all ita former atrength and aplendnr, blessed with that greatest of all life'a benediction children at play, "" he treetn of the city shall be nil of boy and girl playing in the atreetf thereof." One of the wonderful stories which our last census told Ha the phenomenal growth of the American oil y. Hriefiy, the story ia thin: While the population of the country in the nineteenth century was multiplying itself litteen times the popu lation (if the cities and towns was tuiiiti jl :ng itself 150 times. Whereas tho popu lation of the farming community has been multiplied by two in titty yearn, Unit ol cities has been multiplied by ten; in ltfW one man in every twenty-live lived in a city. To-day it ia one man in every three The tremendous concentration ot men. women and children in our cities is one of the moot significant and startling facts of J our limes. The city is built! The prophet's p.-omise has been fullilled-'-the sticcls are lull of boys uml girls. Hut what a fuliiliinent! They are p.uying in our streets hc-aiisc. M have built our cities in such a way that there is no other place for them to play. n our tenement districts especially the house stand so cloudy together that, there is seaicely space for light and air to enter rooms, not to mention courts, bad; yards, play grounds and small parks. Within it short walk of where we are to-d.iy are hundreds of families living in one or two funall rooms to a family, rooms often gloomy at mid day. Of course, the chil dren arc in the streets. And what places the streets are for these little ones! Look over the page of ovr paper day b.' day with the children in mind and you read the sad story of this little child crushed by a car, of that one maimed for life by some wagon, (to into the Children's Court and see boys ol twelve and fourteen arrested for crimes which would send men to the penitentiary for a long period of years, lietween the crowded tenements and Lhcse injuries, deaths and rrintes. there is the relation ot cause and effect. The tenements drive the boys into the streets, and there they are forbidden by the police and "prevented bv traitic to play games which kept m? an I my boy friends from going to the devil. Jo! 1 don't mean that insinuation. The ood God won't let the devil have those toys. They may become impertinent criminals, and die like the hardened thief on the cross, but conditions shaped them, and Uod will give '.hem, in my heart ol hearts, 1 believe, a new chance to become Jil; Him in tha: new city, Jerusaleaa, which is not Diiilt by men's hands. Ami yet true it is that in our cities boya who are denied tne healthy amusements of boy life drift into the crap games and form treet gangs which terrify neighborhoods and brutalize ooys and turn the spirit of mischief into the demon of crime, Jacob Kns has told us that between the tenement and the penitentiary l.e has found a beaten mull, traveled by the feet of hundreds of our hoys every year. ' It is about this somewhat new and very serious situation of the children of our streets that I want you to think with me this morning. It is often said, as an argument against tho church assuming this responsibility, that the church's one mission is to preach the gospel, and I want to say at the start that the purpose of the church has never been more correctly defined. The gospel ia the message of the good tidings that Ood cares for r.'.en, that tiod is love. Once let a man accept that niessage and let it ink into bin soul that it becomes the prin ciple of his life, and even .though he lives in a badly ven ilated house in a crowded district, surrounded by evil influences, yet be will be a good citizen, son, father, hus band and friend. Yea, and once let a land lord receive the gospel in his heart and he will transform his tenement into decent biding places if it t. -s him half his in come. For the gospel of the Son of God it the regenerating power in the world which makes all things new. To preach it clear ly, with consecration and power, is the su preme, all important, never-to-be-forgotten mission of the church of Clirist. But how ; the gospel to be preached in our crowded cities to-dny? It is as im- ? octant to know the way at the destina ion when one is trying to reach a definite point in the world. Some men fancy that the city needs nothing more than a coun try village t. preacher and a building to have the gospel preached with power. There was a famous test case of that preaching on the Fast Side in Manhattan. A man of ability determined to preach the gospel every Sunday and do nothing else, relieving that people would come as they did before the city became what it is to day. After several yeara he gave up the work as a proved failure. He was a John the Baptist crying in the city wilderness, but unlike John's experience the people did not come out to listen to the voice. 'And I believe it is because they were wait ing for the Christ. Not the voice in tha Wilderness, but the man to go about doing good, healing, strengthening, encouraging, inspiring. .Sermons, services anil prayer meetings are preaching the gospel and do good. Many of us could not live without jthein. But they do not monopolize preach ing the gospel. Did Jesus do nothing but I treach and teach: The church needs to earn anew the message of the incarnation, the truth thut life is imparted only through life. We are Christ's body. May we prove it by going, as He went, into the tiighway and back alleys, doing good, bringing hope to the discouraged, lifting up the fallen, taking little children into our arms, and so assuring them aa Christ sutured the world that love reignt en throned above this world of pain, sorrow ml hardship. When the church ia a man ifestation ot Christ among men, as Jesus was of God, not merely by speaking and tinging and communion, but by living. Working, helping in the world the gospel Of Christ will bo truly preached. , Let me specify. One man may stand in pulpit by telling of God's love, give hop to some poor mother who is almost in do pair over "i.er boy; Another man, ani mated ty GoU't ove m"y urn"'1' t.lub room where young men may spend their evenings apart from the dangers of the sa loon, and by so doing give hope to the mother wliose uoy goes mci. u;n i"----the gospel of hope, one in words and the other in deeds. A preacher gives a strong armon against the saloon and hia hearers tay he u preaching the gospel. A man tarts a cooking class where women learn to make food so wholesome that their bus bands and sons do not longer have the de ir for drink. Are not both preaching the osnel of the more abundant life? You Jee what tlii mean. The church u preaching the good tidings of love through every agency which give hope to men, aud make thei . feel their brotherhood among men and the Fatherhood in God. You know the way the churche have hirked responsibility for tin kind of reaching, the kind that ia effective in our crowded district. It ia one of the adue ehapter in the history of Chnatianity. Churches among our tenement, with lew plendid exception, have told out and moved up town, with their wealthier mem ber leaving their poorer menilwr he'P without shepherd in tha "city wilder ' ." One will hunt far befor finding more un-Christian spectacle than the exo dus of the I hristian churche from th ten ement district where th harvest I ready. The reason usually given i the removal ol th rich to the suburb and th failure ot iuo-poor ta awaUibU. UbwaJy. bo tin poor are oiamerrtor trie church ) Inrldehfv The church ought to be on the firing lin where th need; in irreatest. Instead it i too often found in the mar, raring for the wounded, no d'l .lit, aud occasionally urg ing hack the frightened or forward the stragglers. The lerowded districts where the streets are full of ho. i and girls are the church's responsibility. To betake it self to the suburbs and leave these children in the street, saloon and tenements is to offend God's little ones. And the Master said about such a one thnt it i- betti that a millstone were hanged nboiit his neck and he was drowned in the deptn of the sea. The second Ihing 1 "rant n think aboul this morning with yon is the church's op portunity to help the children of out afreets. This opportimify is orly limited by the number of men and women who are will ing to take A real interest in thp rundrcn, and by the spine you hnve to use. Give these children a chance to get on. of the streets and away from the bad influences into a wholesome environment of real warm-blooded people anil good hooka and nnnnemcnt and fun giving recreation ond the- will come to the church in stampede. Their hunger for ennobling friendship is one of the most pathetic things I have found in my ministry, and also one of thp most inspiring. Oh! the splendid opportunity for you all to fulfill your responsibility for these bovs and girls of our streets is here. In the bovs' clubs is the chance for vou voung men to rircui h tiie gospel to our lads, not by speaking sermons, but bv manifesting to iem tliinti'h your manly sympathy ni l interest, your rnurnge and your truth fulness, your honor a-id your uprightness the Christ you love mid follow. Christ may be pr-a-lied to thes" hnYs with the boxing gloves, and the fencing foils, the carpenter' tools and the football team with more power tlrin bv sermons from a pulpit. In the sewing school is the chance f ir you voung women to preach Christ, not by words of rei;gion. hut by your beautiful friendship for the lilt o ''.' who come in caner to receive that v.ii.ci their homes are unable to give them. .i the Sunday school is the chance for you vo'ung men and young women, and older ones, too. to gather once a week a little group about you and lead them through the wonderful story of Him who came to earth to be our servant anil yet was King Kternal, and then through the alchemy of the influence of your lire move them to love honesty, purity, goodness, man. Christ, and God. Nor will I admit the o'der people's chance to peach the living Christ. There comes before me the picture of a scene in A men's club in a -crlain parish hmi.su where a professor of political economy met ill a perfectly natural way a brakeman on the Pennsylvania road, and both men came to see that great labor problem more clearly, and had more of tho Christ tolerance than ever before. And I know of women who have found through the Girls' Friendly So ciely the chance to preach the living Christ so effectively that girls have risen up and called them "blessed among women." The few hours given to such work in a single year seem very powerless beside the powers of darkness which walk our streets both day and night, week in and week out, in vacations as in working or school days. Hut. thank God, a man's life ia not an equilibrium of forces, a resultant of houses and environments. In every soul is the thirst for righteousness which con bo aroused by nringing it face to face with a righteous life. There is a contagion in goodness as there is in badness. Arouse those dormant faculties in every soul, and they, with Christ' help, will ' counteract all the influence of douse and afreet. This is the opportunity of the church to day in our crowded cities. Bv meeting it the church will find, what every individual who has so met opportunity finds, that it gets by giving and lias a firmer hold than ever on the realities of truth and life. Call uch service what you will though I personally hate the trite phrase institu tional, for I am pleading tor a work alto aether personal, the touch .of life on life but you must believe that the church which assume this responsibility and meets this opportunity is following the ex ample of the Master. When Christ came to earth to lift men up to God lie took tho form of a common man. He might, wa say, have gathered the Jewish nation intsj some great plain and revealed Hia mission in the sight of all with such glory that all must bow the knee before Him. He might nave come with angels straight from heav en and swept men irresistibly into His truin. What He did resembled neither of these, but fioit ts the way for us to tollow. He was among men as a servant. By His life of service, now with sermons, now with deeds, but always with a life spread ing a contagion of love, courage, hope, manliness, sincerity, He, tho aervant. so profoundly touched the hearts of men that men have risen up and crowned Hun Kiuj of Kings and Lord of Lords. Tile Power of a Uoilly Life. In a recent article, the Key. Dr. Schaufiler incidentally said: I had teacher in our school who used to be a sailor a godly man. He knew little of history, and nothing of science; but he knew Jesus. He so taught hi class that everyone found th Savior, and made public confession. By and by -he came to me and said: 'Take my class away. I am uneducated. I can't lead them any higher; but I hive led them to Christ. Give me,' he said, 'a new class that doe not know Christ, and I will try to lead them to the Shepherd.' I gave him a new class, and before he died everyone had found the Savior. What wax the po tency in that uneducated mm? Was it not his humblu trust in Him who cau sanctity whatever word is spoken!" Our Keaponsiblllty, "Other sin rarainst us and with in and in spite of us, but none can sin for us. Whenever that is done ve have to do it ourselves." It vera well for the weak one of earth, yea, and some who count themselves strong, to ponder on this truth. Men are prone to blame others for their misdeeds. This one .emoted or the other led astray. And so tne conscience i soothed, the still, small voice quieted, i inu consequence is mat tne experience, i in all probability, is repeated in kind when a little wholesome remorse for am, a putting of the real blame where it be- 1 longs, would save much. o one can mi for us. Whenever that is done w have to do it ourselves. I'Uiladelphis Young People. His Father' Watchword. The Kev. John .McNeill, the popular evangelist, says: "l owe more than I can tell to my fath er. He hiid a habit of which lie never jpoke to us, nor we to him. He was a inanyiiiaii. and I often heard him go lownsiana on dark mortiinai. Standing iu the threshold before passing out hcl would say aloud, 'I go to-day in God's name.' 1 can rgever forget the impression thu made upoai me, and thankfully say to day, 'My Uttier't Uod is I ne.' " Flvlna Machine. A toy whli h I slightly built of thin cane. Japanese papr, and elatlc It in the forin of a butterfly, part of which torvet la a propeller. It Is en cloned In a ckrdboard envelope, and the directions) are aa follows: "Hold Flfll" by the bottom part of the body In your Wt baud, and wind the tcrew forty to fifty tlraat to the right Afterward put 'Flffl' in the enrelope, and by opening tame 'Flffl' will es cape." She doot, and flutters prettily across th room like a large, ileapf moth. New Rar Stamp Found. Tha Paris postal authorities, in look Ing oyer a mass of old stamps tha other day, discovered tome curious specimens of Napoleon III., dated 1867. It la well known that the emperoi wore only a mustache and Imperial but by aonie error these stamps rep resented blm with a full beard, whlcb gave blm a worn and aged appear tnce. They were never put Into clrcula tlon, but already eager collectors art trying to net hold of them. Sketch THE SUNDAY SCUOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS , FOR JUNE 12. Subject) Christ frnrlflerf, Mark v., 11-.10 (lulilen Test, 1 tor. ir,, 0 Memory Verses, IIA-'iT Commentary on the lny' l.essnn. I. The journey fo Calvary (v. 22). 22. "They bring Him." Pilate's sentence i supposed to have been given about 8 o'clock in the morning. The Jews must have taken Jesus and started for the cross almost, immediately. 'Golgotha." Gol gotha is the Hebrew and Calvary the Latin word with the same meaning. II. "Scenes around the cross (vs. 23-28). 2-1. "Wine myrrh." it was a merciful custom of the Jews to give those con demned to crucifixion, with a view to pro ducing attipehcHtinu, a strong aromatic wine. This "thev nftered" ( K. V.) to Christ; He tasted (Matt. 27:341, but re fused to drink, as it would obscure the clearness of Ilia faculties. There were seven savings of Christ on the cross, all of which express "some charai " ristic element of His nature or His woiV. i The first was a prayer for His muiderers: "Father, for give them; for they know not what they do" (Luke 2.'l:.'Hl. This was probably spo ken in the height of the agony, when the cross with the victim upon it was dropped with a sudden wrench into its place in the ground. 24. "Parted His garments." The four soldiers divided aniong themselves His outer robe, head-dress, girdle and sandals, but for His "coat," that is, His tunic or under garment, which was without scam and which would have been ruined if di vided, they cast lots (John IU:2u, 24 1. "( listing lots." What a picture! Amid the most solemn scene ol human history the unconscious actors sit Jnwn to gam ble. The legacy in worldly things left by Jesus was very small. 2.i. "Third hour." Nine o'clock in the morning. "They cruci fied Him." His hands and feet were nailed to the cross fl.uke 2I :!), 4u), and then it was lifted and sunk into the ground with a sudden shock, producing great pain. The feet of the sufferer were only a foot or two above the ground. 2d. "Superscription." The white tablet nailed noon the cross above the head of the victim, to declare the crime for which He was crm ilicil. It was a common cus- I to : n to ullix a label to the cross, giving a statement of the crime for which the per son suffered. "Was written." Pilate wrote this superscription evidently in derision (John l'.Mtt). It was written in Hebrew for the Jews, in Greek for the foreigners and visitors, in Latin for the Komans. "King of the Jews." The words are some what different in the different gospels, probably because some of the writers cop ied from one language and some from an other. The truth was proclaimed in jest; Jesus is in fact a "King with many crowns." 27. "Two thieves." This was probably done with the intention of giving the people to think that Jesus was to be classed with them. 2S. 'Scripture was ful tilled." Isaiah 53:12. Omitted in K. V. III. Christ mocked (vs. 29-32). 2!). "Hailed on Hun." They utter taunts founded on caluminoiis misrepresentations of His words; they ridicule His kingship and even His piety; they trample on His pretences and exult over His weakness. "Wagging." An accompanying gesture expressive of contempt. "Ah." An excla mation of derision. "Destroyest the tem ple." At the first, cleansing of the temple Jesus bad said. "Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up" (John 2: 111). They had never forgotten this. At His trial before Caiaphas, the previous night, they charged Him with saying that He was able to destroy the temple and build it in three days (Matt. 2H:ol). hut this was a perversion of His words. What He said was that if they destroyed it He was able to "raise it up" or rebuild it in three days. 3u. "Save Thyself." They thought that if Jesus were the Messiah, surely He could deliver Himself from the Itnnian cross. "Come down." Let Him show His power and save His own life. If He does not then He is so far from being the Messiah that He is justly crucified for making such pretensions. 31. "Chief priests scribes." The digni taries and members of the Sanhedrin, as well as the ordinary bystanders, mocked, for thev suppose they have gained a com plete victory. 32. "They reviled." From this it appears that at first both of the thieves reproached Christ. IV. Christ crucified (vs. 33 39). 33. "Sixth hour." Noon. "Darkness.'' The da.-kness contitui"d three hours, from noon until three o'clock. "The ninth hour.'' The hour of the offering of the evening surifice. 34. "Jesus cried." This was Christ's fourth utterance on the cross, and is the only one recorded by Mark. It was spoken toward the close of tha darkness. "Kloi. etc." Mark prese'ves the Arumiac words exactly as they w-re spoken by Jesus. The repetition, "My God! My God!" gives a deeply pathetic force. It is an expression of utter loneli ness and desolation. 3o. "He calleth Elias." They either only caught the first syllable, or misappre hended the words, or, as some think, spoke in wilful mockery and declared Ho called not on "Kli," God, but on "Klias," whose appearance was universally expected. 38. " inegar." Burning; thirst is the most painful aggravation ot death by crucifixion. Christ now uttered His fifth saying on the cross, "I thirst" (John l:28). This was His only expression of bodily suffering. It was then that a soldier ran and tilled a sponge with vinegar, or "the sour wine and water called posca, the ordinary drink of the Roman soldiers." and offered Him to drink. "On a reed." The short stem of a hyssop plant. With this they were able to reacn His mouth with the sponge. "Gave Him." The first drink of vinegar A and gall Jesus reiuseu, mil tins, unmixen with any drug, was accepted. "Let alone," etc. This was probably uttered seriously. 37. "A loud voice." As it were the tri umphant cry of a conqueror. He now ut tered His sixth saying: "It is finished" (John l'J:30). This is one word in the Greek, and has been railed the greatest single word ever uttered. What was finished? His life's work, the cup of suf fering, the atonement for the sins of the world, the old era and dispensation. The seventh saying was, "Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit" (Luke 23: 4ti). "Gave up the ghost." He dismissed the spirit. He Himself willingly give up Ijia own life. 38. "The veil was rent." The great veil of the temple that hung between tha holy place and the holy of holies, forty cu bits (sixty feet) long and twenty cubits (thirty feet) wide, of the thickness of the palm of the hand, and wrought in seventy two squares, which were joined together. 39. "The centurion." The Roman officer who had charge of. the crucifixion. "Saw." When he saw what was ijaine he acknowl edged that God Himself was showing His approval of Jesus (Luke 23:47). "bun of God." What a testimony! and from a lto luau officer. Clever Sparrow. One of the prettlPst sights as re gards seamen's pets was afforded by six sparrows which were tamed and trained by an old bluejacket ou board a coal barge. He bad trained thom to such a degree that they would march In regular military ordor, "turning" and "wheollng" as desired by merely moving his hand. On each of their heads he had fastened a small piece of scarlet cloth, cut so as to form a cockscomb,' which gave the birds a very saucy appearance a they went through their varied evolu tions. Oatt Growing on a Sheep. Country parsons are often natural ists and close observers. The Rev. W. H. Jenoure, rector of Barwlck, Ye ovil, England, describes a novel tight which may be seen In his' parish. A farmer bas been feeding bis sheep on aats, and some of the grain fell on the back of one of the animals. . It hat taken root In the wo l and sprout Id, and the young shoots may mq (rowing on Its bark. , SUNDAY, JUNE TWELVE. "What I Must Do to Become Christ's Disciple." Matt. 16:24-26; John 13:33-33. Scripture Verses. Matt. 10:37-39; Mark 8:65; Luke 14:25-33; John 1:53 42; Luke 6:40; John 5:51, 32; 13:35; 13:8; Acta 11:26; John 10:27, 28. Lesson Thought. Are you willing to be a disciple of Christ? Jesus sayt, "If any man will be my disciples." This is not a forced following, nor even a merely voluntary service. It meant a heartfelt desire to go after him. Remember, you are to he Christ's disciple, not your own, you are to go after him, not yourself. And to do thlt you must dpny yourself your self-will, self-indulgence, self-right-cousness. Selection. My -Ood, I love thee, not because I hope for heaven thereby. Nor yet because who love thee not Must die eternally. Not with the hope of gaining aught, Not seeking a reward, But as thysolf hast loved nio, O ever-loving Lord: Self uonlal is net the whole of reli gion. No, It is only one aspect of It. Suppose I should undertake to doscrlbe a beautiful garden by saying that It la a place fenced In. What Idea would you have of the sweet flowers Insld? the blnomina: rosea, tha lilnaun,inn shrubs, the delicate Miles, the modest pansles, and the fragrant air? Now, If you regard rellRlon merely as self denial, you see only the unattractive fence and none of the beauties of tho garden. A disciple Is a learner, that Is tho very meaning of the word Christ the teacher, his disciples the pupils! Christ's principal employment while on earth was that of a teacher. And how grandly he taught! Truly, "never man spake as this man." And who are his disciples? Why, those who learn of him. Those whose high est interest is In subjects of the Chris tian religion, those whose controlling motive Is to know more of the way of salvation. Those who are earnest students of Ood'fl word, those who are faithful and regular attendants at the serv ices of Ood's house, whore Christ teaches through his word and his sac ramenta JUNE TWELFTH. Conditions of Christian Oiscipleship. Matt. 16. 24-26; John 13. 33-35. One condition of Christian Disciple ship is Ciofs-bearing. Supreme Allegiance to God Substltu ted tor the Service of Self, Love ror UoU Vor Love for Self, the Denial of Seir is No Longer Very Difficult. Crucifixion Ib more than speaking In meeting, or discharging some Christ ian duty. Jesus stood facing the awful death by the cross. There must be In the heart of Christ's words the idea of death to something. And to what? Not tho body necessarily though that also was Involved In soma cases, as In Peter's. Haul elucidates the Idea. He says it is "the old man," the "flesh," the "carnal nature." the "carnal mind," that Is to be crucified. The works of tha "old man" ara bail, and he cannot be subdued and subjected to the law of God. So, there Is but one thing to do with this "old mail," and that is to put him off, to put him to death. No use trying to doctor him up, or dose him with cord ials or stimulants. Let him die. He is alieady condemned; he Is a felon In the cell since Christ became, in men who believe, the power to "fulfill thp righteousness of the law." (Rom. 8. 3; fi. 11). Let the sentence be exe cuted on him, therefore (Gal. 5. 24; 2. 19, 20). And being put to death, let him be burled (Rom. 6. 4). Who would wish to have this "old man" resurrected? An old lady said she wished he devil were buried, and face downward, so that if he should come to life and begin to dig, the more he dug the deeper down he would go. Now. the great act of the, human will Is this denial of the claims of the natural, that Is, the unregenprated, man, the renunciation of self, and the choice of God's will as a program of life; of Christ to bp the T-nly Saviour, not also Maxtor. Having done this which. Is not Pasy then claim by faith that the "old man" Is dead, believing that be Is faithful that hath promised he also will do it (1 Thess. 5. 23, 24). Thenceforward there will be dally testings, self-denials, cross-hearings, but they will appeur to be Incidental, the victory will be so short and de cisive. With perfect alb-giant'e to God. and love for him being substituted for love for the self, self-denial cannot be a yoke of sorrow. It Is only because we are not wholly submitted that the commands of Or.l are irksome to us. Mr. Spurgeon said that in northi n Italy he had noticed that, when two bullocks are yoked together, and are of one mind, the yoke is always easy to them both. This Illustrates, though Imperfectly, the relationship between the fully saved scut and Its Gr.l Imperfectly because the human will must be sunk In the divine. "Ye are my friends, if ye do whatsoever 1 command vou " Ancient Highland Custom. In connection with the burial a short time ago of tho late Canon Mc Coll. Fort Williams, a curious old highland custom was observed. When the Interment was completed, the biei on which the body hail been carried was broken in pieces, so tbat It might never be used again. The fragments were scattered in all directions, never again to be brought together The custom Is akin to that which used to be observed when the health of the young heir was drunk, the glass being broken as soon as th health was pledged. Rtlto Glvtn Flrtmtn. Mrs. Rotwell Atkins, widow of tha former Judge of probate at Bristol, Conn., baa given the member of hose, company No. 1 the bat that Judge! Atkins wore when be waa foreman ofj the company half century uo. Mandolin an Ancient Instrument. The mandolin was an old Instru ment a couple of centuries ago, hay Ing thon, after a long teriet of evolu tions, reached Its pruaent shape at Naples, whlcb city hat always claim ed the honor nf It origin uuoy The Coming Brotherhood. There shall come from out this noise ol strife and groaning. A broader and a juster brotherhood; A deep equality of aim. postponing All selfish seeking to the general good. There shall nine a time when each shall to another f!o as Christ would have him brother un lo brother. There shall come a time when brotherhooj grows stronger Than the narrow bounds which now dis tract the world; , Vi hen the cannons roar and trumpets blare no longer. And the ironclads rust, a. d battle flag are fur'ed; When the bus of creed and speech and i.ice, which sever. !?lia'.i be fused in one humanity forever. Sir Lewis Morris. A Word Almnt Sorrow. nirssed are they that mourn, for they h ill be coiuloi ted. Matt, v., 4. Th.s d h i not menu th.it sorrow, in and oi" itself, is a uo-id thing, and that we should deliberately go about in search of it. To ii'iite sue, construction unoii the words would be to do the- . a violent in justice. There is no r. jon for believing that Jesus ineint to spe.ik n beatitude for sor row purely as sucn. The Son of Man was not a glooniv iiiiii icd ascetic, a niter ol hi iuiiii joy ami ghnincss: anil to hold that He went ab. nit inviting men to wretched ness would tie as unnecessary as it would be iinrc.K nmiile and unwurriiiited. Here, then. ,s the substance of the sec ond h:itit', Ic: "If sorrow- comes, be not ilbcnuraar-l by it; be hopeful, be brave, fir ar'icr the. sorrow shall come the joy. The -toi T.tv," is only one side of the shield; Hold on in hop- unlil you see the other side, nml then nil will h eiii;iined, and iv the c;i.,nrKio,i .-. ou ahull rejoice." In other words, .Ic-us here announce the idea that tins strange old ife of man lias a meaning, a larger, kindlier meaning nun appears upon tne Mirtaee ol our hu man experience, ami that tha'. meaning finds its truest expression in the word love infinite love. Hehind the world and our life therein, behind le sen i-comic drama of our hu man existence, with its smiles and tears, its laughter and a ony. its iinleser.bjble rapture nnd its unlit ter able athos. stand the love which never slumbers nor sleeps, which never grows faint nor weary, which in the "night-time of sorrow- and care" a well as in the hcyd i.y ol gladnc.s and mirth, is slowly but surely working out it; beautiful purpose. ''hat was whit the Great Teacher said that day in the long ago lo the people. gathered about linn on the Mount, and every one who knows what it is to sit in the darkness with a mighty t-nef tugaiiu away at, ins heart string thanl s the Mm ter tor the comfort tini. His word brings. We are ail human. No mutter how inc.. h our creds may . Ifer; no ma' ter w hat "log.ca!" hohln lior.-es wt. tint v lie in 'he habit of riding, deep down in our hearts is the huniinry tint v ill not ie lriiird, and to everv one o us this se. ond h-vili-tude i-onies with (Ir- joy and strength that lift us un an-l give us courage. Sometime, when our evil angel h ' tem porary control of ns, we fe ! like crviru out: "What, is the ue? 'I nis ol life is nothing bin a iiirse. anvwav; so what's the Use of trying to make anything nut of it?" There is a gtea'. deal of hi-inau nature in that awful cry and the liner and tenderer the human nature the more liable it ia to give ep in despair. Human life looked at just as it is ian affair wherein the shade vastly predomin ates over the light. 'j'u. (.! uww .r. fertly well whit he was .lomg when lie sang that word about " i'l.e .:, sad mu sic of liunianil v." We have never yet dired to eonf.-s ta ontelves the actual sadness of our life. We must be dipiomitic and keep some thing back, covering up with conioliuient the cold, h.nd fact. Mut into life's sad ucss the Master flings the note of a ictori his hope! Life, lie tells us, is not a "curs1." True, there is sorrow m i'. but tha sorrow i not the hnal thing. Sorrow, rightly borne, sweetens, beautifies, si lengthens lis. Sor row is the i.i Djlorosa iiiong which inli nite love is leading us toward the character which no "I'liiurose 111111" could ever de velop in our souls. Ami so. v. hcn all is said, this is the sign by which ve con-pier: "lllessed are thev that mourn, for they shall he comforted." The Kev. J. II. Gregory. Time nml rrlHnilshf p. "Few people give themselves time to be friends," says one writer. l-Viciel-liip as an ideal is always lovely ami atlractue, but friendship in reality takes so much time that we can hardly find room for it in our busy lives of to day. It takes tune for. parents aud children to understand each other well enough to be friendly; tune spent in the home circle is one thing neces sary to genuine friendship between broth ers and sisters; young people have all sorts of social relations without that quiet knowledge of one another which makes for true friendship. And in the friendship that helps and uplifts the element of time is still more prominent. "What these peo ple need is not money but personal influ ence and helpful friendship, ' said an ear nest worker among the millions of a great city. Kven it we cast out everything that is evil and worthless there are more de mands upon our time than we ran respond to. We must make a choice in study, 111 recreiuion and ill duly. Hut whatever choice we make, if it is a wise choice it will leave time to be friendly. Philadel phia Voung I'eople. Holier Tholiixlit. VThen a man is tempted downward he oug.n to stoji and think. If some ellisb consideration entices him toward the iiliysi he should wait for the sober second thought, but when his nobler feelings are aroused and the angels of God allure him upward he ought to act with instant en ergy. No man should think twice as to whether or not ho should do a generous deed or fulfill his higher convictions. To Itcv. N. D. llillis. Honest)-. fTonestv is OCO of the til-st nrineinles nf Christianity. It lies al the base and also at the apex of Christian character. It must, be tiie dominant toi-ce in all tra'lic Tlui Kev. I'. 11. i'mdingtoii. Help Other to lie Happy. Whether at home or abroad the hanniesl are those wiio have helped some one else to be happy. Mach morning 1 etermine ta he proliled tln.t day, and you will not be disapnointcd, for "the will is muie tUuu half the man." TsfHt ol Teinftnttnn. ft is while vou are tiatienllv oilinr t the little tasks of life that the meaning and shape of tiie great w holi of life daw ns upon you. It is while you me resisting little temptation that Jou ure growing U'ouger. Aged Pedestrian Seekt Rivals. A place In the history of pedestri anlsm will be made for the recent Jog of the veteran walker, Dr. Delghton over the classical road between th two extremes of the British kingdom Land's End and John o' Oroata. At the age of 61 he has covered the dis tance of over 1.000 milt's In twenty four dayt and four hours, an average petal of nearly two miles an hour, or forty-two mile a day. Dr. Delghton Intends to visit the Uulted States and challenge any man of hit years to walk across the continent from th A'lantlc to the Paciac. THE GREAT DESTROYER SOME STARTLING FACTS A90UT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. Foem: The )ong of tli Ornnfc Pnlnfnl Parting nf Man anil Wife Whom Liquor Had Separated Ttie PaeVet That th Drunkard I.art. With breath that smelted nf rnre, With eyelids hevy and red. A drunkard sat in unmanly plight. Glancing around him with dread Drink! drink! drink! In drunkenness hopelessly sunk, And still with the voice ol dolorous pitch lie sang the "Song of the Druuk." "Drink! drink! drink! While the cock is crowing aloof! And drink! drink! drink! Till the stars shine through the rood It's, oh! to he unbound, And freed from the chain of drink, And never again to hear tho sou. id When glass and bottle clink! "Drink! drink! '.rink! Till the brain begins ti r,-i:n; Drink! drink! drink! Till the eyes are heavy and dil.i! Hum, and w hisky, and gin, (in, and whisky .and rum, Till ov?r the glass I fall aslei. And dream that Judgment iiaj comet "Drink! drink! drink' ' -My g.i7hng ncccr Hags; And what does it bring? A bed of straw A crust of bread, ami rags. Tint shattered roof, and this naked floor, A table, a broken chair. And a wall so blank, my shadow I tjank For sometimes falling there! "Drink! drink! drink! l-'roni weary chime to chime; Drink! drink! drink! It maddens every ti ne! Gin, and whi.-ky, and rum. Hum, and w hisky, and gin. Till the heart is sick, and the head is thick. And tlu wretch is otceped in ami" With breath that smclled of rum, With eyelids heavy ami red. A drunkard sat in unmanly plight. Glancing around him 111 dread Drink! drink! drink! In drunkenness Imiielpsalt.- atmlr And still a th a voice that misery rnng Would that its tone would teach (lie young! He sang this "Song of the Drunk!" New York Weekly. A Tragedy Through Una. Two friends of mine, a couple who hn? been married for twenty years, came to the conclusion that marriage was a failure for them. Years before, the man had been well off, but he had lost everything through specu lation. He took to drink and soon degen crated to a worthless burden upon the wife, who supported the family by taking boarders. Kor ten years these two had lived to gether in the same house, the estrange ment widening as the husband' folly in creased, until she could endure it no longer The papers were made out, and the day came when he was to leave the home he had made so wretched. I happened to be a witness to their part ing, writes J. C. Siuilev. 111 The Oaks. There was no one in the house at thu tune but we th.ee. She packed up his shirts and collars, which she had that dav ironed with het -n hands, and he stood on the threshold with the parcel under his arm, beside a trunk which contained hi other personal belongings. (scarce a word was spoken. Both seemed to feel that a crisis in their lives hud tame. For twenty years these two had been togetner, throught oglit and si.ade. in good fortune and ill, ami now thev were to part forever. Twenty years before, buoyant with youth and hope and confi dence in each other, t icse two had linked their lives lo-gether. They had co .e to look alike, so potent had beia thu foivj of association. V hat touching memories must have surged through both their hearis as they stood thus, she leaning again-t the sta r way in the hail, and ne standing on inc. doorstep with the dusky twilight cio-mg 111 about him as if to emph.isi :e thu dark ucss of the future year.-.. The hour oeemeil strangely in kcepin-j 1 m mi.-, snaiige pa. ring, mere are mo- menis o tragic m lit,, that sp It 14 d.i.mhiy lnaiieuu.ite. This was one of them. Have- l--got everything -Autre?" slow.y said, in a dazed way. as he turned toward the do. r. "All but this, Frank do you want it?" ami she h.uuled him .1 packet oi 1.1. 1. -d let ters tied with a crumpled ribbon. He turned pale as a corpse, as if not un til that instant realizing all tiie parting meant. He looked at tne imkei .'.. untie.' thp ribbon and wound it an-mt hn hand. Ins whole frame trembling violent'v "Keep them Annie forme!' be sobbed, r ude one convulsive step toward the wo -.tan. then turned and walked out intj tne i.ighi And she? Well, an uour later I stej ned softly iut'? the hallway, alarmed at the dea'.lilv silence Mill h-amng against the stairway she stood the letters clutched tightly in her frigid hands, her eyes strained out upon flu night as if they saw the ghosts of bygone d ays w hen 11 ti and happiness were hers" rhat look will haunt me forever. -Hau'4 II int. Temperance In T -nness-e. Ther- are now 5.VM) towns and cities in ennessej, ,md of this number tin- salom has been suppressed 111 44"il. or 11 more than loiir-iiftlis. The strong poiul of Ten-li--.ee's liquor law is the "Four-mile Law." which is not commonly understood out side of the Suite. Tins law originated in the heventie.. and has been strengthened and unproved from tune to time. I'nder in provisions the saloo.i wu prohibited with ii four mih.-s ot lucoi-poravd insiimi ions of learning, outside of municipalities. To, 11 the people began incorporating country schools everywhere, making them prohibit, orv ceniivs. They thus beia.ne the piolee. tor us well a the educators 01 t m ,y, Next the people amended the law so that saloons were prohibited within four unit of any si hool, whether incorporated tr not. The result is keen above. A Teetotal lletort. Mr. F. X. Charrington, one of the Char ringtous of brewery fame, but who some years ago renounced all connection with the firm, and devoted his life and money to work among the poor ot Kast London, has purchased a small island 011 the coast of K.seti, forty-five miles from London, which he purpose converting luto a tea toial seaside resort. Tha Crusade la llrlar. Tieer. with a good head, make a gooj held had. Ileer or w hisky drinking never produce clear thinking. In the rural districts of Norway and, Sweden there is but little drunkenness and the people rank among tho most tu ber nations of Clirntend jiu. In 131 Sweden had one saloon to every l'si inhabitants, and the consumption of pure white spirits was 6.17 gallons per capita; in 1!)00 she hud but one saloon to flfsw inhabitants, and the consumption had fallen to 1.3 gallon per capita. If you don't wish to go to ruin, you bad better not go to the grog shop. Statistic show that half a barrel of beer is produced annually for every man, woman and child iu tin country. Tho consolation U in knowing that the indi vidual ia not compelled to wallow bis or her thare. The paper tell of a soldier in th Phil, ippines who discourses upon a uew eura for drunkenness among the soldier. "We haw." he says, "t lot of native soldier en luted here. When one of th white boy pt drunk the captaiu put t native soldier ver him, and th nativt puu on lots of ur while marching lum tround. It grind ih boy so that their wouldn't get Oiuai: i wy could," " v YOU KNOW HIM. Ton (loubtless know the fellow; he Is what you'd rail a social pest; lie spoils the universal glee And nullities the univeisal jest. Whatever story you relate And you may have an ample store lie smiles and savs: "Yes, that's firal rat But then 1 ve heard that tale bvfore.'V' In some appreciative crowd You essay your best bon mot; You deem the laughter will be loud. You're confident that it will go. Then speaks that fiend in human shapeA "You needn't tell us any more. It's quite a venerable jape; We ve often heard the thing before.- He finishes himself sometime, And yanks the laurels from one's browj Men have been killed for lesser crimearsj I'd like to kill him, anyhow. It may sound sanguinary, still, Fve suffered till I'm pretty sore, He'll g-t it some day, surely, will That man who's heard mv joke rtefosr Chicago Nee Mistress "Do you love bat)b7 Mnid-".ot at $.1 u we-k. U)Utu."-Da trolt Free I'ress. Hubby "ion spend half of your tlmf before the gbiss." Wife "Hut I ilon'l say 'Mere's looking at you; have aa other.' "Chicago Daily News. , .Mistress "Did the tlslii riiiati wOi Stoppoil here this morning; have frogs) logs?" Nora "Sine ilium. 1 ilinnaw Ho wore punts." Cornell Widow. He who tights and runs away From awful bittie scenes,' May live to write them up some day l'or all the magazines. -Puck. "When your father conies lioui t sh.'ill tell It i tn to give you a whipping.1' "Hold on. nut : Let p.-i remain neutral don't drnij liiin Into this u(Iair."- Judge. "I hear the Japanese soldiers crenf tickled to dentil when war was rliy elured." "Yes. They went into trans ports when the news arrived." Cornell Widow. ; "Hi! tliere!" sulil Joseph' to his brothi ers. "What kind of a game are yotj phiyiuji on 1110V" 'Til." (bey cried, a. they pushed him over the edge. liar varil Lampoon. "Weill" be muttered, butting bit) beuil 011 a landing as he foil down tb elevator shaft. "As Mr. Kipling; would say, 'That is another sl.iry.' " Harr varil Lampoon. IVdillor ito supposed servanti -"Can I see the lady of the house?" Woman of the llousi "Well, if you cati't, yoa ought to go 11 ml see an eye doctor."- Cb vcland Leader. Heavy Tragedian "There's a tlicaO riiul manager in Now York City Jusf. crazy to have njo join his company." Siiuhri'tti' -"I should ay lie is." tho cago Daily News. "I bad an awful time persuading th landlord to paper our bouse." "Ar you pleased with the result?" "Hard, ly. I think It was put ou for revenge." Detroit Free I'ress. "What are you going- to do this sum mer?" "Well, we buven't finite deciib ed whether to go to St. Iiuis for tw days or to the seashore for a month." Chicago KveniliK I'o.st. The war news jumps the open switch, And scares the heathen jossky; Dut I can't tell a fakenvitcli i-'roiu a canatdovosky! ( tcveland J'lain Dealer. ' Clara ' Our club burs out jruiu chew ing and slanr." Herfha "It floes? Clara "Yes; women who chew gunj i' ml talk slung oughtn't lo cut any le in a literary club." Cincinnati Cou uiercial-Tiibtine. "What is th.it aiilomoliilist complain Ing about?" "He says the laws art wrong. He wants all pedestrians to wear numbers and secure permits bar fore lieing allowed to cross the streets." Washington Star. Distinguished Artist "IVrbans U you came here you will get a bettet light on the picture. This studio U not nearly iarge enough." I-'uir Vlsfc tor (desirous to understand! "Yes yes; I know. One can't get far enougt away from your pictures:" I'uih-U, Ilni'linlog Birth Kate. The con inued decline of the birtB rate in Knglaml bus begun to srous apprehension of the uutlon's futurt In LSiiii tin birth rate was 3I.2 pel HMN). Hy ihs) it bad fallen to 25).?, uml by l'.mi to -'S,.j. Attention was called to the mattet in the Hegistrar-Geiieral'a last annual report, Issued In June, UMKt. whlcl pointed ,,ut that Hie birth rate wal then the lowest on record, while li faiitile mortality was startlingly high), Dr. Shari'well. In a recent lecture al Sinn College, showed that tile (liH'Unf) especially pertained lo industrial cen tres. In Ktigiand generally It Is among the middle classes that the birth rati shows tiie must serious decline. Io Australia I lie working classes ure thf) pioneers of restricted families. lntnarj Marks Imaginary Troplr. Het w ecu the) stations gf Catorce and La Murona, In Mexico, Just mldwa between the twenty-third and twenty fourth ilcgret's of latitude, the Mexlcas Central Itailway some time ago erected an immense stone signpost. The nil way hert crosses the Imaginary lin that separates the temperate and th torrid zones, and the stone, with It wooden crow n and Index Augers, sbowl where the Tropic of Cnucer would ru if it were a tangible line. The tablet) benrs ou the southern side the words) "Tropico de Cancer. Zona Torrlda," aud on the northern side. "Tropic ol Cancer, Temperate Zone." - Animal Criminal. As a species of burdened criminal! among placid herbivorous animal! none I worse than the bison or Amer ican buffalo. Toward man and beast and even i.tnong themselves these vlo ious, vindictive aud agile brute whose half brothers on the continent! do not fear even the terrific onslaught of liont and tiger, are In a atate of almost continual warfare. They are among tne wickedest rogue ever teea lu a too. McClure't Magaslne. Tho I'ropar ltauajy. The recognition of the billboard at public uulsauce Is general, aud pro test) against It come from all sett lout of the country. Only by the creation of strong public sentiment can the nntsance be abated, aud it Is gratifying to note tbe growth of teutliueul lu Uii eUrecUon- Duukli k Grape Belt,,