'SLEEP AS GOD'S GIFT" la Eloquent Sunday Serron By Rev. T. A. Nelson, D. 0. i Stirring Addrttt With Aa Appropriate Text el Comprcbeaslrt Mslof. KBOOKI.TX, N. Y. At the Second Pre byterian Church Sunday morning the pas tor, the Rev. T. A. Nelson, D. 1)., preached on the subject,' "Sleeplessness." He took for his text, Daniel ii, part of first verse. "His spirit was troubled and sleep went from him," and said: That line of the poet Young, "Sleep, na ture's sweet restorer," like every other true Jiopt's saying, was inspired. "Blessings ight on him who first invented sleep," pays Sancho Fanka, in "Don uixote," and Coleridge exclaims, in the "Ancient Mari ner," "O, sleep, it is a gentle thing!" Ten nyson speaks of "the mystery of golden Jleep," and what a mystery indeed it is. It s the most interesting and the moat per plexing of all physical and metaphysical mysteries. The mother bends lovingly over her infant in the cradle and wonders what it means this harmless, painless, lapsing of all life into unbroken tranquil lity. Those little hands, now so quiet, but o busy most of the time, how beautiful nd still tliev are now. Those limbs com posed in attitudes of such unconscious grace, lying on the pillow: how hard it generally is to keep them in order during wakeful hours. And how unspeakably sol emn it is to think how far the child is now beyond our reach. Who is it, when the face of the mother fades from the vision, that takes its soul in charge? But when a man sleeps the spectacle is more suggestive. Think of Caesar on his couch, his vigilant eyes closed, his voice si lent, his brain udworking and still. Think of Alexander in the night, looking as he finally looked in the coffin, dead. Imagine how David felt when he saw iSaul entering the cave. Think of Cicero fast asleep. Think of the sleeping Christ lying asleep in the midst of the tempest, aa if He were resting in the heart of God. When Christ turns way from us with closed eyes there is al ways afforded opportunity for the storm. We are only at peace while He is wakefully with us. While He sleeps not only is the light withdrawn, but the darkness is felt to the utmost; lite s ship is tossed with the torm and we are threatened with mortal danger. A sleeper Christ will do me no good. A painted Christ will not be of the Vaguest service in my life. A wooden cru cifix or ivory cross will not help me. It must be a wakeful Christ with every en ergy astir; power in every look and move ment; an actual, positive, real and per sonal Christ. We are mocked by His figure; we are saved by His personality. It is Christ, not in the temporary paralysis of unconscious sleep, but Christ alert in Watchful omnipotence that I need. Unless .we nightlv sink into sleep we are not pre pared to live, and anything over which we nave control which prevents out sleeping in proportion to our need should be es teemed guilt before God. Since the strength of our life belongs to Him we are not at liberty to waste it. Nevertheless, in our day we live in such fashion that, like the eastern monarch, our spirits are troubled and our sleep departs. This has come about sometimes from the baste to get rich. People rise early and sit up late in their eager pursuit of wealth, and when the jading day is done at last and they lay their heads upon their pil lows, sleep may fly from them and they may seek it in vain. Now this is not a light matter. There are few things more dispiriting and truly exhausting than the loss of natural aleep; to count hour after iiour in feverish wakefulness, seeking for getfulness which will not come. Now what is the root of all this dis tress? The physician will doubtless diag nose it aa owing to unhealthy excitement of brain and undue sensitiveness of the nervous system. But in its last analysis you will find aa a general rule the great cause of this weary wakefulness, anxiety and misery is simply want of faith in God. It is because we are not able, as we ought to trust ourselves and all that concerns us to a sure providence, and many of you know that it is mental anxiety that break your rest. It is because you are trying to bear the burden and build the house your aelves, to keep the city yourselves, that you have the anxious hours. It is because you will plan too far ahead instead of let ting each day bear its own burden; be cause yon will ask what is to become of you and your children if such and such an event takes place; because you wiH take the future into your own hands instead of leaving it to Jesus. t But why ahould we not have faith in God? If we had, many of us, would not we sleep? If, once for all, you have in trusted your soul to His keening you are aure that all things will so well; that noth ing can go amiss; that God will keep you, angels will guide your footsteps and the Holy Spirit will dwell within you from hour to hour. You will then lay your head down upon your pillow and rise again, with the morning light, refreshed. After trying to explain away our weary hours of sleeplessness on the basis of phy aical infirmity, we have to confess that the real source is found in the things that prey on our minds by day and break our rest at night, and mixed with those anxious thoughts there are the thoughts that will intrude themselves of a more serious char acter. In the still, wakeful hours, even the most heedless one is forced occasionally to think of Him before whom we niust urely appear and give account of our selves.' It is impossible, then, quite to sup press a question as to where the soul will he when the body shall be down in its lit tle bed, when all earthly things have faded from us. But if you can truly trust that it is well with you, that amid your deep un worthiness you are simply believing on your Saviour and are striving to grow like Him; that your tank is appointed you of God, however humble your sphere, it ia large enough to achieve character; if you can always feel that Christ is near and ready to help: that you and those near to you are provided for by Him and that you ahall never want; if you have once for all learned whether awake or asleep that you are the Lord's and that you ahall live to gether with Him, then surely you may sink into untroubled rest and sleep a refreshing and peaceful sleep. But let me come closer still to the exper ience of some perhaps among professing Christians. You know that healthful aleep is our most peaceful state. You see human nature in that state in which it ia most thoroughly free from all annoyance and trouble, and that ia a symbol of the prov ince, ''Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind ia stayed on Thee." That is a wonderful promise, but there ia no blinking the fact that comnaratively few even among those who claim to be true followers, ever experience it in its ful ness. As a rule it is far from being per fect. One of the aucient schoolmen wrote in summing up the chief characteristic of life: "I entered this world in loneliness; I have lived in anxiety; I aball leave it in fear." That about expresses the aituation of many of you. Look at the faces en the street. Almost every one is careworn and anxious. There ia no doubt that care aita heavily on mankind. What is wrong? fciniply thia: That while God baa promised peace and ia ready to give it it must be re ceived by faith. It goes without saying that the amount of peace and quiet we aLall experience will be in proportion to our trust in Uod. If we were really able to trust God with everything instead of doing, aa most Christians do, never trust ing God and more than they can help and never feeling quite aure a to what He may do; if we would cast our cares upon Him iustead of bearing then ourselves What unspeakable peace we should enjoy. But we have not quit got at the real root of the difficulty yet. Doubtless some of you are thinking that if some particular thing which vexes you were out of the way yon would be all right and your pence would flow a a river. No, that is not the trouble. It is not some petty vexation that constitute the bitterness in your euii. If you probe your hearts deeper you will discover that the real reason is that you are not right with God. You have not truly and heartily believed in Jesus. You have thought a Rood deal about religion, hut you have never clearly taken the peace ful step, and until you do you will never experience a true and abiding peace. Un til you do this fully in obedience and devo tion to Jesus Christ; nut until you are !) f J My very humbly, yet with sincerity; "X know" wnoW I hae believed." Not till then can you he at peace. I am not called upon to explain the mys tery of Christ by which we are able to ar rive at this blessed conviction of faith. It would be a difficult thing to follow by a logical process. There are mnny things in the working out of your deepest conscience which are beyond our logic. Nevertheless, I say there is no escape into the realm of rest save by faith in the atoning grace of Jesus Christ. The thing that is at the bot tom of the fear is the Intent conviction that you are not right with God. Tt is that which kept you vaguely unsatisfied. It is eating the heart out of your enjoyment of life. Get that right once and you will re ceive the "peace of God which passeth un derstanding." Perhaps I may not have been sufficiently personal, direct and pun gent, and, if so, I pray God's forgiveness and yours. It will not heal a deeply poisoned wound to skin It over. I pray yiu. probe your hearts to the uttermost. If you feel you have been wrong until now begin to be right from thia hour. Get the central stav made firm and strong. Get fast hold of God. The great step is to be really persuaded that God is your Tuther Til be persuaded that He loved you, unworthy as you are; that He reckons yon among the number of those to whom He gives eternal life. The unrest comes from the fear that you have not got on the solid f round; that you are still worse, risking he losing of your soul. At any moment the Master may rise and clone the door. Your soul may suddenly look back upon the probation period forever and look for ward toward heaven for everlasting. O, try. I beseech you, for the hone set forth in the gosnel. Have it out with God, once for all. Get on terms of peace with Him before the day may close. Cast yourself in the everUsting arms. I have apoken of two things. First, the consuming care; second, the latent convic tion. There is one other experience that may break our sleep. I pray God that none of yon may have it. It is the experience of one who has committed spiritual suicide. In one of Victor Hugo's books there is a character who, after a long series of exper iences, at last arrived at a great crisis; he wavers, hesitates, and then commits a co lossal sin. Conscience is insulted beyond forgiveness. Then suddenly he hears, as it were, an internal burst of laughter laugh ter of the soul and the soul rarely hears this innermost laughter more thnn once without hearing it forever. Thia character afterward falls asleep and dreams. He en ters the town; he comes upon many men standing in various postures, silent and im movable, as if dead. In unspeakable terror he tries to flee out of the lifeless city, when, looking back, he is appalled to see the inhabitants coming nfter him. They overtake him and hold him and cry: "Do you know that you have been dead for a long while?" Now and then, in polite so ciety, in select communities even in this fellowship, unknown to us, but not un known to God, one comes upon one of these dead men, who have heard the inter nal burst of laughter, who mocks and de fies God and insults divine tnercv. There is such a thing as spiritual suicide. Men sometime by their action or non-action take the life of the soul; thev are dead to repentance and to hope, and at last they are dead to God. Thus men drive sleep forever from their eyelids, like Macbeth. When once the conviction seizes upon the soul then farewell to slumber and peace. God forgive me if I have spoken too plainly, if I have misrepresented the spirit of truth, but if I have been true to the word of God then let him that hath ears hear what the spirit says: "To-day. if you will hear His voice, harden not vour hearts." Lay hold upon eternal life. Then you may lay down in sleep, since when yon awake you shall still be with Him; lid whether you wake or not, you will be ths Lord's and His forever. God's Overture to Ue. Jehovah is the unchanging God. To-day He answer' our longing desires, saying. "There is a place beside Me." He would hot keep us at a distance, but always woo us to nearness That place i the place of understanding. You must see the picture at it right angle if you would know it meaning. So it i in life. History and ex perience have their dark problems. The stained glass window is a mystery when seen from within by artificial light. But when the sunlight streama through and transfigure it, we read its meaning. So God would let Hia light fall upon our past experiences, and reveal Hi purposes work ing through their ever-changing vicissi tudes. It is also the place of His presence. Jacob is, much slower to leave Bethel than he was to run into it. The thought of Ksau filled him with fear. But he saw "the place beside God," and said, "The Lord is in this place. The experiences of life may not alter, but they are vastly different when we are conscious of God'a presence amid them. It is the place of transfiguration. The unbroken calm of God's peace, and the assurance of eternal aeeurity and success take possession of the soul and the outer life responds to this in ner possession. This reserved place and waiting blessing is God's overture to us at the threshold of another year. May His Spirit help us to stand beside Him snd ac cept this unspeakable gift. Keep Moral ltleae Clear. We need, above all things, to keep our moral ideal clear and high. "Woe unto him that puts light for darkness and dark ness for light, sweet for bitter," etc. That is, woe unto him that confounds moral dis tinctions. Not our patriotism or our par tisanship must blind us to truth. Neither for .ourselves nor our country nor our party may we condone sin or falsehood or meanness. If a prophetess, a chosen mes senger of God, could go wrong, bow easily may we. Dean Hodge i just publishing a book on "The Human Nature of the Saints." A companion volume might be "The False Judgments of Christian Peo ple." Bias is almost irresistible. What helps on that which we much care for we are apt to praise without looking too close ly at its moral quality. So doing, we close our insight, extinguish the light of God kindled within us, and by and by we may than light, perishing, perhups, as Balaam ! perished among the enemies of the Lord, Be Completely Satisfies. God is lovet God is light! This ancient message i also the most recent report of our own personal experience. Oh, God is our home indeed! We can no mora de scribe this consciousness to a man who has never possessed it than we can make a foundling from a workhouse understand the mysterious joys of an earthly Christian home. Yes, we are at home with God. He satisfies I He satisfies! It is He who gives the completing touch to thought, to work, Ia nleaaure snd to life. Without Him our j intellectual ladder has neither foundation I to stand upon balow nor rest to lean ' against above. Without Him our purposes miss their best fruition and our joys their ' perfume. He is our nome indeed, and w ' Iknow the unmistakable sign when we feel 1 the outstretched lor of stir Father bsad- log over us. A Hug Charger. When the celebrated king of Mace-, donla, Alexander the Great, was car rying on a war la the Bast be went gainst a prince of India called Porus. It Is aald that to large was Porus that when be rode bis elephant Into tattle be looked In proportion to It as an ordinary inaa does to a horse. This elephant was almost human in bla cleverness, and when his master waa fainting from the many wounds he had received, the faithful beast knelt carefully down, drew his master gently off hla back and plucked out the sharp darts from the wounds with I his proboscis. J You may have seen the elephants I take peanuts Into the opening at the I end of tbelr trunks and then pass i them into their huge mouths, using the trunk almost as an arm with two fingers, but surely you never dream ed that a clumsy, stupid looking beast had such a remarkable cleverness that he could care for bis muster a did the yet of the Indian Prince Porus, THE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS FOR NOVEMBER 20. Bnlject' Isaiah's Message to .lurtnh. I 1-9 10-40-Oolilen Text, Isa. I.. 16, 17 Memory Verses, 1R-S0-Commentary on the Day's Lesson, I. The superscription (v. 1). 1. "The vision." A title applying to this entire book of prophecies, spoken or written dur ing the reigns herein mentioned. The word denotes a supernatural perception, inspiration, revelation, prophecy; here taken collectively for a body of prophecies. "Isaiah." Of his origin nothing is posi tively known beyond what is stated in this verse. His name means "The salvation of Jehovah." His home was in Jerusalem. Ho exercised the prophetical oflicc about sixty years. Tradition tells us that he suf fered martyrdom, being sawn asunder at the hands of Manassch, King of .Judah. The story i that he was placed within n rifted cedar tree, and then tree and pro phet were sawn in two lengthwise, lien. 11:37 muy be nn allusion to it. "Concern ing Judah," etc. Other nations are also the subjects of his prophecies, but only as they had a bearing on the Jews. "Uz ziali." Called also Azariali. Isaiah began to prophesy near the close of Uzzioh's reign Ichap. 6:1). It. A rebellious people (vs. 2, 31, 2. "Hear," etc. Heaven and earth are ap pealed to and are asked to listen as wit nesses. "The Lord." The Hebrew is Je hovah, a nnme considered so sacred thnt it was never uttered by the Jews, the word Lord being used in its stead. '"Have nour ished," etc. God had cared for Israel from their infancy. Notice, 1. The Fatherhood of God. 2. The wickedness of man. 3. The purpose of divine chastisement. "Have rebelled." This would include three things: 1. The sin of idolatry. 2. Breaking the moral law. 3. Rejection of the prophetic message. 3. "Ox knoweth," etc. The in gratitude of God's people is rebuked by the fidelity shown by the dumb animals to their keepers. Ox and ass are mentioned, not as the most stupid animals, but as the only thoroughly domesticated animals of the Hebrews, f hey were lodged probably under the same roof as their owner and his family. "Doth not know." iy people have lust their knowledge of Me and do not recognize Me as their rightful owner. III. A corrupt people (vs. 4 9). 4. "Ah." The same as alas! The exclama tion denotes sorrow. "Seed of evildoers." Offspring or race of evildoers. Compare Matt. 3:7. "That are corrupters." See K. V. The word denotes violence. "Have provoked," etc. The real meaning is brought out in the Revised Version. "Backward." They had despised and for saken God. This conduct is (1) criminal and (2) inexcusable, but (3) common. fl. "Why." It is doubtful whether the question in Hebrew is, "For what reason," or "upon what part," will ye be stricken? The sense is, Why permit yourselves to be smitten more? Your whole person is al ready bruised in every part, as the proper punishment of your evil doings. "Ye will revolt." See R. V. "Sick faint." In this figure the nation is meant. The moral con dition of the people i represented by a body sorely wounded and sick unto death, ti. "No soundness." Here we see the des perate moral state of God's chosen people. Priests and prophets, subjects and rulers ...n ll i I I XT - - nwc ail mvuiveu. mil n spot III llie CUlllcn or body politic was left unsmitten. The moral is that priests and false prophet did not turn the people to God, who alone could heal their maladies, but instead adopted worldly policy. 7. "Your country." The figurative lan guage ia now dropped. "Desolate." Notice now nearly every word corresponds to the curses threatened in Lev. 26 and Deut. 28. ".Strangers devour." In this verse we see the- terrible devastation and oppression that was to come or had already come upon them from foreign conquerors. 8. "Daugh ter of Zion." The church God's people. Zion was the strong hill of Jerusalem, on which the king' palace wa built. The term Zion is frequently used figuratively, sometime meaning all Jerusalem ana sometimes God' Israel the church. The church wa called "Daughter of Zion," de noting virgin innocence and youthful prom ise ot vigor and fruitfulness. There would be a faithful few in Jerusalem even when ravage of war would be upon her. These Isaiah sees are to be left aa a desolated, tumble-down lodge ia left after the harvest of the country garden. "Cottage lodge." These were erected as a temporary shelter for those who guarded the vines and cu cumbers from robbers and wild animals. After the harvest these would be left. R. "Small remnant." By remnant Isaiah means the righteous, in distinction from the multitude, of the ungodly. Had it not been for the few godly one the nation would have been wiped out as were Sodom and Gomorrah. IV. Reformation demanded (vs. 1017). In verses 10-15 the prophet shows how ut terly valueless are their prayers and relig ious ceremonies while they still continue in their ungodly practices. Their sacrifices would not be accepted and their prayeu would not be heard. It). "Wash ye." What (iod desire is a thorough moral reformation. The allusion here is doubt less to the injunction on priests, who, on pain of death (Exod. 30:10-21), were re quired to wash their hands and feet before they ministered at the altar. The svmbol, no doubt, wa at once understood by the wicked men before the prophet. 17. "Cease learn." Note tho order here; before we can "do well" we must "cease evil." "Seek judgment." Or jus tice. Instead of aeeking bribes and per verting justice, a was the connro.i prac tice, they were to seek to do justly. " Re lieve the oppressed." This verb should be translated "set right." The condition of the oppressed, the one r.njustiy dealt with, must be set right. But the Revised Ver sion, margin, renders this, "Set right tho oppressor; that is, restrains lum within the bounds of justice." "Fatlicrlesu widow." Defend and help the wta't thoro who have no natural protectors, rice i'su. 10:18; 72:4; Exod. 22:22-2; James 1:27. V. God's offer of mercy (vs. 18-20). 13. "Come now." Cod is here pleadinj witH backslidden Israel, "ilea.ion together." Let us discuss the case together. To se cure their consent to examine tho iisue is to secure their own self-conviction. How wonderful that God ahould conJcscer.il to reason with sinful men! "Scarlet crim son." Scarlet and crimson are really syno nyms for one color, properly crimson. There is perhaps no ot'icr instance of red used as a general symbol for sin, though white is tho natural emblem of innocence. 10. 20. On condition of obedience, land and city shall bo preserved; on continued disobedience the ru.hlcss i-ivider will briug destruction, a sure as Cod livctli. Why Cows Dislike Dogs. Why should a cow so bate a dog? If only an innocent little poodle bap pens Into a pasture with a cow you will see a lowering of horns and a stamping of feet that sends the poodle scampering for a place of safety. The reason dates back for hundreds of years to the time when all dogs were wclves and all cows were wild, shaggy cattle almost as savage. There was a constant warfare between them, and the wild cattle, nearly every day, had to use horns and hoofs to keep them selves and tbelr calves from being eaten by the buugry wolves. Dogs have been for so many hundreds ot yeara the close frieuds of men tbst they have forgotten some of their nat ural enemies, but tho cattle have not, as you can see almost any day In the gelds. Wring on Mosquitoes. , Mosquitoes belong to the fly family, but differ from common flies In many respects. One of the most Interest ing differences Is the fringe of balr Ilke scales on the edge of the wing end on the wing veins. These scales are exceedingly transparent and dain ty In appearauce, and the accom plished mioruscopUt looks at thorn with great Interest, because, once up on a time, the English-speaking ml- NOVEMBER TWENTIETH. "How to Express Our Thanks to God." Psa. 138:1-8. 8crlpture Verses. Ps. 1:23; 72:15; Isa. 12:1-6; 47:8; 48:21; 1 Thoss. 6: 18; 1 Cor, 15:67; 2 Cor. 9:15; Eph. 6:11-16. Lerson Thoughts. "The things we should miss the most if we did not have them are Just the things for which we forget to be thankful." "You are not In the right habit of thanksgiving unless you pray a word of thanks to Ood just as soon as a good thing comes Into your life." "Just as you use your handsomest tote paper in writing notes of thanks, so use your best powers of express Ion In giving thanks to God." Selections. The best thing thut hearts that are thankful can do Is this to make thankful some other heart too. It is a pleasant sight to sen any body thanking Gord for the air is heavy with the hum of murmuring, and the roads are dusty with com plaints and lamentations. I am grateful for Joys ami for the sorrows that have taught ma more than my Joys. Grateful for health and fur sickness which has been health to my soul. Grateful for faith and for doubts which have been stepping-stones to higher faith. Grateful for money and for money withheld In God's knowledge that It would have been my ruin. I am grateful for successes and for fail ures; for life and for death into eternal life; for all things that have been ordered by the all-wise God. I tended the plant of gratitude, and lo, I found upon It the flower of con tentment, and later the fruit of happi ness. The fact that we said, "Thank you," yesterday, when water was handed us at the table, does not excuse us from saying "Thank you" today. Gratitude is for every day. EPWORTH LEAGUE LESSONS NOVEMBER TWENTIETH. Our Thanks to God Psa. 138. 1-8. The sweetest, richest music that swells and sweeps through God's word and God's world is the music of thankfulness. Bible writers summon us more frequently to praise than to prayer. Grumbling Is not commend able. Murmuring makes no music. No true person ever admires It. Com plaint against Providence Is ungrac ious. It soon mars and jars the soul, rendering the spirit harsh and dls' cordant. What a burning shame! American Epworthlans finding fault when their lines have fallen in such pleasant places and they have so goodly a heritage! How can we feel ungrate ful who live In this best age of hu man history, this freest land beneath the sun, with all the light and warmth and Inspiration of the purest form of Christianity ever enjoyed by man? How can we be ungrateful who dally breathe the wholesome, exhilarating air of happy Christian homes, loving and being loved, shielded, guarded, sheltered by affection's tender con slderateness? Why complain? The recollection of God's bounties ought to shame us out of the ugly practice. Said a missionary of Persia' to a young friend, "Do you ever feel thankful when God blesses you?" "Always," was the reply. "Did you ever tell him so?" "Well, I don't know that I have." "Then try It, my young friend. Tell him so; tell him aloud; tell him so that you will hear It yourself." Sing thankful hymns. Pray thankful prayers. Live thank ful lives. How easily we forget his benefits toward us! Ingratitude has been styled the devil's sponge because It wipes out from the memory the favors our Father has bestowed so lovingly and so liberally. The Israelites bad .scarcely dropped their chains of cruel bondage when they murmured against God who had delivered them, by miraculous power and Infinite com' passion. When we sustain losses and meet new trials we forget past mercies. Thanks to Him from whom comes every possibility of enjoyment. It ought to be easy to feel grateful to him constantly. A lady said one day, "My husband feels thankful all the while; I only know that I ought to feel so." Each Christian heart ought to be a perennial fountain of thanks giving. Let us Increase and Improve the tone of our thankfulness by think ing much upon God's character. Re member that thankful and thought ful are derived from the same root and have a kindred meaning. RAM'S HORN BLASTS. srjj rr. HE height of fush JLJ I ion Is usually the v 01 cowrdly ,olly' F Airl VtfvlfE? Better a dry ser mon than one that evaporates before It can be applied. Love never metis to be taught by du ty. A new bat does not make a new heart. There's no such thing aa living God's way until you love God's way. No human character can ripen or sweeten without the sunshine of love. Some try to quench a man's thirst by tbrowlug him Into boiling water. The people with the opera cloaks won't have all the front seats In Heaven. Many people who reside In hell got there by resting on the road to Heaven, God never falls to open you a path though. He may refuse you a phlloso- rhy. The clouds may shut out today's sun, but they cannot hide yesterday's uroin Ues. Many who fear to walk under a lad der have no, hesitation In climbing all over the commandments of God. It Is hard to catch heavenly fruits when .you are carrying earthly frets. The flowers of sweet character bljoai where the storms of trM fciTi Llown. M THE GREAT DESTROYER SOME STARTLING FACTS ' ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. Talcs Ahnut Men Who Ilnve Heroine the Victims nf the ftnlnon Wolves- The Cnrpt.nter and Hie Wild lleasta Whlcb lpvotireil Him Hulls For Prey, One who becomes a patron of the saloon Is often worse than a prey of wild beasts. One cannot rend of a man's being torn by the wolves without desiring two things, to help the in ii n in his hunt and to wish to destroy the wolves. 1 have known ninny a man to become the victim of the saloon wolves, and have tried to help free him from them. But they would pursue him as relentlessly as wild beasts would. A man whom 1 knew waa elected to the Legislature of Ohio. He owned a farm worth $10,000. Hut as ho got into politics he began to drink with other politicians, and the appetite for drink became strong. He mtide numerous efforts to break away from the habit, but the liquor men were after his money, and they invented all aorta of devices to get him into the saloon ao that they could cause him to break his pieugc. Again and again he tried to oe- einmo Iran f.,m tl,tn ntirl nirain .nil atriitti ' they captured him. In less than ten years from the time he entered the Legislature an honorable, upright citizen they hud got ten all his money anu involved him heavily in debt, and the shcrilf sold his beautiful farm to pay his debts. It left him with little money no home covered with dis grace and his proud spirit broken. He had been the prey of the wolves. He took his family and went to the pro hibition State of Kansas and settled where there were no saloons, to begin life anew at fifty years of age. I knew a mechanic in Indiana who earned $t a day as foreman for a house I building company. Of course with his wages wisely expended he could have kept his family in comfort. But he had an appetite for drink, and the wolves were ever ready to devour him. When he would receive his $24, a week's wages, he would go to the saloon nnd pay out the greater portion of it for his drink and treating bills. Then sometimes, if he had a few dollar left alter "settling" he would treat some of the "boys," and the saloonkeeper would "mix" his liquors so as to render mm incapame ot Knowing now much change he should get, then take hi last $5 bill for fifty cents worth of drinks, and hand him back fifty cents instead of 14.50. Then the carpenter would go to his home with fiftv cents left out of his 24. Of course fifty cents would not go far toward feeding a family for a week, hence there would be distress in the house and various expedients used to get food and clothing. 'The mechanic often quit drinking and would save his money for awhile. But the wolves behind the bar would send other drinking men with a bottle of liquor to get him to drink and break his pledge. If he took one drink after he had re formed for months they knew they were sure of their prey. They cared nothing that the man cut up the bedstead and burned it in the stove to keep his family from freezing one hitter cold night aftct the saloon had gotten all his money and left not a penny with which to buy wood. On one occasion this mechanic had a Slut) bill paid him on a job he was doing. His family was destitute, needed every thing. On his way home with the money he stepped into a saloon to buy one glass of beer, thinking he would then go imme diately home and purchase the many things the f'umily needed. Ah! The wolves! Their fat prey! What a meal they made of him! He told me himself: "I don't know what happened during the next three days after I drank the glass of beer. I only know that when my distressed wife sent some one in search of me three days later they found me iu the back room of the sa loon, with no money and just 'coming to' from the effects of the drugs put into that beer." Ah! mv young friends, the wolves ol northern Michigan never gnawed the bones of an unfortunate hunter more greedily than these wolves in human shape devour the blood of their unfortunate victims. W. G. II., in Dial of Progress. Abstinence and Longevity. "How Abstinence Pays" is the title of a little pamphlet received recently by the Herald. Their author attempts to ahow, and he does show, that abstinence from intoxicants pays higher dividends in health, wealth and happiness thnn any other form ot self-denial. Especially interesting are the mortuary tables taken from the report of a life insurance actuary who has made a careful study of the subject, ("ompari-iona are made, uot between excessive drinkers and total abstainers, for excessive drinkers cannot secure life insurance, but lictwccu total abstainers and moderate drinkers. The table shows, for the caM's investi gated, that the deaths among moderate ill-inkers between the ages of twenty and thirtv yens were heavier by eleven per cent." than among the total abstuiners. Be tween thirty una forty years of age the dif ference in favor of the total abstainers was sixty-eight per cent. Between fifty and sixty the abstainers were forty-two per cent, better off, and between sixty and sev enty the difference was nineteen per cent. The figures show conclusively, therefore, that the man who drinks not at all lias a far better chance to arrive at mature years than the man who drinks moderately. The small percentage of difference between the ages of twenty and thirty years is ac counted for that the habit of drinking, even in moderation, can hardly be said to be fixed until after the individual ha passed the nte of thirty years. Bui cveu then there was a difference. It will be generally conceded, wc be lieve, that the average man's period nf real usefulness and influence, his greatest ca pacity for work, lies between the ages of thirty ami sixty yars. It will be noted that the avei-.if of deaths of non-driuhcrs during those years is sixty-one and one third per cent, less than amon moderate drinkers, 'lhut is to say, out ot every KiO deaths of men between the ages of thirty and sixty, yeara something like sixty-three are moderate drinkers and thirty-seven aio total abstainers, a proportion of not fur from two to one. There are enouirh other reasons why men should not drink at all, but these figures are more illuminating than anything ol the kind we have reccutly come across. bait Iikc Herald. . . Th Church Aroused. At last the church is rousing itself to direct contest with the one great evil that more than all others haa hindered its ad vance and negatived its work. We are to have pledges instead of platitudes, speech instead ot silence, direct action instead of vague negation. The young people' socie ties are going to work against the young people' destroyer. Th Crusad la Hrlcf. Of 22,154 persons arrested in New York City for disorderly conduct 18,770 admitted being intoxicated. "Buffalo Hill" is a atrict total abstainer, which is doubtless the secret of hi tireless energy and splendid physique. Hotel and drug store in Boston selling liquor to women nave suffered the penalty of withdrawal of their license. The Total Abstinence Society of Copen hagen, Denmark, report a membership of over 100,000, among whom are thirty-seven ministers and 403 teacher. Lost yesr the society arranged for 30H1 temperance lec tures at a cost of about tl7.000. A. H. Berg, a Swedish Good Templar, ia aid to have given 10.WK) temperanc lec ture in the past thirty-two years. The French Government ia having put up in all army baracka an illuminated post er with th legend, "Alcohol ia your ene my." (Similar diagrama era being displayed iu th school. Th Uwcdish Temiieranee Publishing Company bos published a collection of all th temperance literature written by Kev. Per Wieselgren, the father of the modern temperanc movement iu bwedeu. Who wife and children do you want to en well dressed this year, your own or .t'ie fcalooukecper's? If you help to clothe his family tirst you will not have much lett with whirls to clothe your own. If you think his family is better than )uuu, giv it the prsfvieut:. iivaoy ire&Jtfbf Bhins Just Where fan Ar. F.VA WILLIAMS Mil.LOSI. Don't waste your time in longing ror bright, impossible things Don't sit supineiy yearning ror the swiftness ot angel wings Don't spurn to be a rushlight Because you are not a star. But brighten some bit of darkness By shining just where you are. Tlicie is need of the tiniest enndle, As well as the garish sun The humblest deed is ennobled When it is worthily done, You may never lie called to brighten The darkened regions afar So tiil for the day your mission By shining just where you are. Just -vherc you arc, my brother, lust where (iod bids you stand, Though down in the deepest shadow, In-tead of the sunlight land. You may cany a brightness with you That no gloom or darkness can mar, Foi the light of a (,'hnst-hke spirit Will be shining wherever you are. A rowhnys Funeral. A little adobe schoollioiise fenced in from the surrounding nmg"s with barbed wire, a wide expanse of semi arid land with Mnall areas under cultivation, and large herds of cattle roaming over extend ed tracts nf nearly sterile country thia was the picture outside. Within was a little Massachusetts schoolteacher, "not bigger than a pint of cider," as her ad mirers in the neighborhood said, beginning a missionary school with half a dozen pu pils. There was need of work. There was no place of worship, and thcie had been no ai'hool until the opening of the little mis sion, and the coining ol the little woman from Massachusetts. Slowly tiie school grew, and Tadually other pupils entered than the very little ones who had constituted the tirst half dozen. But there was a wide disparity be tween the age of the oldest pupil i nd that of the one who arrived one morning after the school had been iu operation about a month. He was a tall young man, with spill's, lariat and sombrero, and lie sat his Indian pony as if he had been a centaur. Fastening his horse to the barbed wire fence he came inside without knocking, and took his seat without removing his hat. "Would you like to become a member of the school?" asked Miss Selhv. "Well, I don't know," said he. ' I'll sea how I like it." His invesfisation continued that day and the next. He took no part in the school beyond the occasional throwing of paper wads. This disconcerted the school a lit tle at first, but later attracted no atten tion, for the teacher herself disregarded it, and found means to suggest quietly to the younger children that they show theii visitor a model school. When the school was dismissed at the close of the second day he approached the teacher with his sombrero iu hand and raid: "I know I hain't behaved decent. 1 hain't been to school since I was a little shaver, and don't know how to act, but I know better'n I've done, anil it you'll for give me I'll settle down to studv. I'd like to come and learn." The teacher had been waiting for this capitulation, and she improved the oppor tunity by. telling him what obligations be must assume in the way of conduct if he became a member of the school, and by this time he was ready to promise any thing. With great diligence he applied himself to his books, and with even greater ardor to the reading of the papers and maguzincs which friends in the r.ast were sending to the teacher. The little schoolteacher also had a Sun day-school, and although at first the cow boy pupil thought little of this institution, he attended that he might assist the teach er in the arrangement of the seats. He soon became a most attentive pupil, and before long an earnest seeker alter a bet- ter life. So matters went on for more than a year and the second winter came, the severest known in the settlement. Cattle perished on the prairie. The horses which the children rode to school shivered in the frail sheds in the rear of the building, and in one terrible blizzard these very sheds had to be torn down and burned, since other fuel was lacking. A week the bliz xard lasted, and when it was over the cow boy pupil did not reappear in srhool. He was sick with pneumonia, and in a few days he died. There wa no minister within twenty-five miles, and no Christian funeral had ever been held ill the settlement, but the whole community deemed it urjucoining that Jack should he buried without a religious service. So they brought his body three miles across the plains to the b tie school house, and the frail young teacher atood before the open coffin and read, "I am the resurrection and the life." Then alio closed her Bible and spoke to the people who had gathered. What she said she never could remember. At first it had I seemed impossible that she should say anything, but the blood ol I'uritan ances tors that had never quailed at duty rose within her, and she stood between the living and the dead, and spoke of the change that had taken place in .lack since first he gained the love of learning, and then the love of God. The little schoolteacher' health broke down soon afterward, and she returned to her Maksacliiinctts home, but tiie school had grown, and two ten hei-s c.ime to take her place. Many were the traditions which these gathered of their predecessor ill the work, but of all her good inlluenret. thnt I most frequently referred to whj the ear I nest word and prayer of the little school I teacher at the grave of her cowboy pupil. I Youth's Companion. L The Kenrless Treacher. The venerable Dr. T. C. Cuvler advocate the fearless preacher. "Bear thia in mind," said he, before a recent Methodist Confer ence, "that no Presidential chair, no em peror'a throne, was ever yet built high enough to be within ten leagues of the pul pit in which the fearless preacher stand winuing immortal souls to Jeau Christ." Th Command to (to. B. F. Jacobs says of the gospel's message: "There ia a mighty go in the gosjiel aa well aa come, it is come, go. Go preach and heal; go horn to thy friends; go into the highways; go into all the world. Many (christians do not obey; many churches hive no blessings, because they do not go." ' Hoaor th C. E. Soelatr- ' The Rev. Harlan P. Beach pays a trib ute to ths Christian Endeavor Society in these words: "I am especially grateful for the foreign department of the Endeavor Society, since it means so much to have an organiaation in non-Christian land which make real th phrase of th creed, 'believe in th communion of saint.' " After th Wolf. Tter. Mark Guy Pearsa waa one re proved for making too many temperanse siieeches, and when told he ouht to be I taking care of his flock, he auswi-red: "Th I flock all right, just now; 1 am looking I after the wolf." Watoh More Than a Century Old. A man named Tiffany of Bristol, Couu., ha just received from a Win sted friend a watch formerly owned by his grandfather. It Is an open face bullseye, over 125 years old and keeps good time. Snow Whit Partridge. Michael J. Toomey of Rutland, Vt., shot ' aa albino partridge ' on Bold mountain. The bird Is snow white ond weighs one and three-quarter pounds. WAWaWaWsVaWAW. HOUSEHOLD . - 5 i r S 9 9 MATTERS 88 SI i'AW.V.WA'rVrWJW, Itadlsh and Cucumber Salad. Arrange on a bed of carefully wash ed watercress, alternate thin slices of red skinned radishes and cucumbers, snd pour over a French dressing. The combination of scnrlet, wlte and twe shades of green Is attractive, while tb criapness and blending of spiclncss and. coolness pleases the pnlute. Chlrhen Fricassee. Have the chicken disjointed snfT cooK nntll nearly done; then drain from tb broth. Put one-half cup of butter la a frying pan and fry the chicken until brown. Pour the broth Into the pan and thicken by allowing one levef tablespoon of flour to each cup oP broth. Put the chicken In a deep disk, nnd pour the gravy over. Artichoke Pnnp. Artichoke soup Is another Tnrinnt. but It needs to be thickened with little white roux. The artichokes peeled and put for a few minutes Into cold water) must be boiled In a quart of ml Ik, rubbed through a sieve and (ensoncd; nnd If creniu Is at bnnil ay spoonful or two may be added. Cream tlwnys adds to the velvet smoothness; of thick soups. For Hour Milk. riere Is a new use for sour milk: Put your silver Into the milk when it is thick; let it stand for half nn hour; take the pieces out and wrkIi them In clean lint soapsuds; wipe dry, and you. hnve clear, bright silver. It would pay a busy housekeeper who lias to do her own polishing to buy two or three quarts of milk and let it sour lor the purpose. Deborah. Crap Catsup. Cook five pounds of ripe grape wlthv n little water until soft and strain through a colander. Add five cups of sugar, two cups of vinegar, one leve tablespoonful each of clnumon, clove, nllspice and black pepper and salt. If this Is not spiced enough to suit the taste add a little more of all kinds) In the same proportion. Cook together until thickened, th.-u seal in bottler or jars. Parsnip Fritters. Cook parsnips In boiling wafer until tender and then press through a ricer or sieve. Measure two cups of sifted pastry flour and sift with one and one holf level teaspoons of bnklng powder. Beat two ecis light, and two cups of milk, then add the flour: beat and add the cold sifted parsnip. Bent well and fry In tablespoonfuls in deep hot fat In dropping the spoonful Into the fat hold the spoon near to top of the fnt. When a light brown drain the frit ters and serve at once. Knuath Pies. For two squash pics allow three enpt Of stewed and sifted squash, two cups of boiling milk, one cup of Huuur. one level teaspoon of salt, one-hnlf levef teaspoon of cinnamon and two eggs beaten slightly. If the squash Is very dry a little more milk put In a round mi; tablespoon of powdered cracker. Neither squash nor pumpkin plea; ihotild be made with many eggs, for they should retain the taste of th vegetable from which they are made fliid not taste like a custard pie. ' rr Hints1 for Housewlvt For pponplng out bureau drawers or sideboards use tepid water containing a small quantity of thymolln. The old Idea of putting oilcloth under the washstand cover is now adopted for dollies ou highly polished tables. Jars and bottles thut smell of onions w 111 be quite sweet and odorless if left outiof doors filled with sund or gurdea mold. Raisins for fruit cake are much Im proved by cooking. Let them soak slowly aud then sltumer until the skin, is tender. A great convenience, at trifling cost, when building a new house. Is a dumb waiter connecting the kitchen with tb floors above. If stilt Is sprinkled over the range before frying Is commenced, there will be no disiip-eeuble odor If the fat sputters over. Varnished walls In the bathroom and balls are easily washed off, and It costs) little In either money, time or trouble) to varnish theui. If silver Is washed every week la warm suds containing a tublcspoonfut pf ammonia the polish can be pre served for a long time. , When using a broom don't swecp with your back; use your arms. Sweep In one direction with long, light strokes. Sweep the carpet with tbe pile, not against It. Nuts are said to make a gTeat Im provement In chicken salad. A eup of English walnut meats to a cup of celery cubed and one of chicken also- cut In cubes Is the proper proportion. The cano furniture, with white aud gilded woodward, so much in vogue lot tho eighteenth century, la bavins; quite a fashionable revival at present for elaborate roocia of the French tle. , Desk sett of brilliant scarlet leather give a pretty touch of color to ombr desks of weathered oak. The brons f urnlshlngs now so much In vogue har monise beautifully with the dull brown of this wood. When the eyes are tired from too long use or reading by insufficient light, moisten pieces of old linen or absorbent cotton with some good ex tract, and plsce Ihem on the closed eyelids for fifteen minutes or longer while you lie down In a quiet room. For bachelor apartment ef re stricted dimensions, a abavlng stand thut Is really a small chiffonier, raise! ou legs, 1 a most convenient article. This has a square swinging mirror ft the t end sli shallow drawees. J t large enough to accowttieals a f of folded shirts.