"THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD" k Bright Suadaj Discourse Bj Ker. llTingston L Taylor. by Retlf lea la aa Affair ef th Soul nd flod Sectarian, Dogmatic Insistence li Perilous. BnnoKT.ri., N. Y. Sunday evening, in the Puritan Congregational Church, the pastor, the Itcv. Livingston I,. Taylor, had fur the subject of hi sermon. The Knowledge of Hod." The text was from Psalm Jxxxiv.-2: "My heart and my find cneth put for the living Uod." Mi-. Tay lor aid : X come back to this pulpit in no uncer tainty of mind with reference to what my message should be. I know, at any rute, where it must begin. Unless 1 mistake the term of my commission, unless i mis take the nature of the means placed at my disposal, which are the Bible and the church, unless I mistake the example of my Master, it is my business to help men, to tar a in me lies, to find Uod. There is no mistaking my own mind, nor what the aununrr has done to confirm it in this conviction. To me, as to many of you, the glory of the Lord has been re vealed anew in earth and sky and ana. To Hie. as to many of you, hag come the op portunity to read and to think and to en ter into the thoughts of other persons. We have gone out ot doors with our religion. .We have taken our idcaa of Hod nod life way from home with us. We have trav eled far afield with them in the books which we have read, llow have they fared? h'nr tnVHlf T I... -. . - .,.,. i.wv any mrttiu get rid of Jeremiah a words by preaching on them last bunday morning. They stay by me, as they began to stay by me in the earlv summer. "The coda that have not made the heavens and the earth, these hall perish from the- earth and from un der the heavens." Heaven and earth bear testimony against every inadequate idea of God. We must have a Cod whom nothing in heaven or on earth can dethrone. We must have a (iod our faith in whom need Dot be shaken by anything we may learn bout nature, or about the Bible, or about the liic of turn and nations. We must have a God who will not break down and perish out of our foil's in the hour of trial. We must have a God who shall be God to us, our God, even when we can only cry with Job. "Oh, that I knew where 1 might hud Him!" We must have a God to whom we may say, "Father, into Thy bands I commend my spirit" in the very tour in which we may have cried "Aly God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken hie? Such is the God and Father of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Such is the God from whom nothing in the heights or in the depths, nothing in the past, the present or the future could detach the faith of Paul. Such is the God our need of whom may be revealed to us at any mo ment by the lightning flash of some great calamity. Such is the God our need ot Whom will bear down upon our minds more and more heavily as wo face more nd more frankly the facts of life. Here is a man who has been summoned by a midnight message to the bedside of his child. As he goes from ferry to ferry to ascertain by what route he can rcaeli her most quickly, every man he addresses reads his secret and shows him kindness. Connections are close. Over every signal light that delays him the engineer sees a night lamp in a sick room that tella him every second lost must be made up. - The conductor nervously hurries passengers off and on the train at every stop. The race ta won. The father standa beside bis child. There are the doctors. There are the nurses. There are friends. Everything that human love and sympathy aud skill can suggest is being done. Where is thy God? I say, father, where is thy God? Nature says to him, "I have cout'rived a little sack in your child's body. I have filled it with poison. Within twentv-i'our tours I propose to break it. If X 'break Jt your child will die. If you are willing to take other chances, let the surgeons re move it. Then 1 will do the best X can for you." Some men tell me that their God is na ture. Does your God thus speak His whole mind? Why. that room where a father is making up his mind what answer to give to natures ultimatum is flooded with pure love. Everybody cares. Are vou ready to say ("Evcryhody cares but God?" There is a sick child there to be accounted for. There is a harsh, ultimatum of nature to be accounted for. But there are loving hearts in that room to bo accounted for, also. And there is a universal capacity for ympathy and helpful action to be ac counted for. It is a scene which fairly represents the tragedy of the world pro cess. In which aspects of it do you dis cern the working of the higher law in the merciless progress of the disease or in .what is being done to save, to heal, to comfort? If there is any purpose, or even any tendency, to be discovered in such a cene, is it the triumph of pain and the perfecting of cruelty that ia being pro moted? or i it the perfecting of faith and love? Christians should know where to look for God in such ccne. They will find Him in precisely the place in which they would look for Jesus Christ. .Sometimes we wonder why so many miracles of heal ing are recorded in the gospel. Mav it Hot be becaOse God wants us to know 'ji p'ace H'm when we ore confront ed by the elemental questions which sick Bens and pain and death are certain to raise in our minds? It is the higher law which should ever speak to us of God. It it with life and healing, with love and care, that we are taught to associate the thought of God. In the midst of life's con fusion! we know in part. When that Which is perfect is come it will prove to be love. We can even think of ourselves, when it is alf over, looking back and say ing: "With mercy and with judgment My web of time He wove, And aye the dews of sorrow Were lustered with His love; I II bless the hand that guided. I'll hUu lh I.... .1.... -.!'.. - utDi. t.iuv planum, When throned where glory dwclletb, In Emmanuel's land." T lilr. kinl. - ,L. .. V" 7 4 ",e positive aspects oi the rirstCommandment: "Thou ahalt have no other God before Me." That means, eta ted positively: Xhou shalt have God, and thou shalt have Mo for thy God. Hhou shalt have a God. it is the first law of the soul's own life. Thou ahalt have God whom nothing can ever make it un reasonable for you to trust. It is the soul law of self preservation. How do ,we know when we are going to be in criti cal need of faith like Paul's of faith like that of our dying Lord? Every man who Buffers need it. Every man who thinks needs it. I,,4y..,m,t ever'r n,an wll thinks needs God. We are thinking here to-night. We nave been thinking some of ilia very thoughts which have stolen away the faith of many a man and many woman. We have been facing facts which throw the mind into an agony. We have been dealing with conditions which faith baa to reckon isrith. 1 have talked with men. the tumult of whose minds made me think of the north coast waves, as Robert Louis Ste venson describes tbtm, in all the terror of them, in all the power of them to wreck the frail barks in which men voyage. There may be minds incapable of tumult. There tny be people who cannot understand tow any-question relating to religion can o stir; the mind. A young man who think and who knows bow to think said to me not long ago: "I am (wimming for tny life." And he reproached Christian minister for their aparcnt failure to real ise that there are multitudes like himself, who are wrestling with the great underly ing questions of God or ti God, soul or no oul, immortality or annihilation, liberty or necessity. Hutti a man wrote a lime wuiie ago in I... -.1....- - 111 .. - nui...l.,..l mum nmi ia.i( ii wouiu uu n.r iw reason witn nun. vui wnst wouiu ue ia not alwuvs sure to be what would b , fair and right. Faith has sometime had tun great a fondues for "Easy Method iVVith Doubters." This man say: "Moat pi the reliidoo dvn-usaton that 1 bear or oe cuuor ii were the subjects in thinking about which lie had become bewildered. He culls Hud lly fur help. It would be easy to aay that rii bad ainiplv got himself into "a state of read seem to me to (Teal wtth mere side it sues why young men don't attend church how. to reach the masses while I want to hear (and never do hear) about tho fundamental, elementary principles of re. bginn. Is man immortal? Is there a God, and if so, why does He leave Us in doubt? Whnt is the Christian religion reduced to its simplest expression? I am sick of plati tudes, evasions and glittering generalities. I want to be treated with sincerity. I want to hear the simple truth, not "as to A little child," but as to a grown man, who must reason ns well as feel, a man who has sinned and suffered mid now fain would find a safe anchorage for his soul in this sea of doubt and trouble." The editorial article written in answer to this communication breathes the spirit of Him who went to His disciples in the storm with which thev were battling on Galilee. It says very little about the trodli.esoine niicstinoM th. n..,n I i It takes God and the soul for granted. It j.ui. ,-, religion io us simplest terms and lets it go at that for the present. Whether it has accomplished anything for tho storm-tossed correspondent I do not know. But I do know some whom it hi. Iw.lnn.l j and others whom it is likely to help. Men ..sC BfuiiMui vH-iflsiiunes i nave some knowledge have spoken of it with grati tude. The narrower method of sectarian, dog matic insistence is perilous. The existence of a dex.oiuinatKm may depend upon the observance of the seventh day of the week as the Sabbath. But it is a ruinous thing for a young person to gt the idea that the existence of (iod ia wrapped up in that dogma and that he mif,ht as well abandon the religious life altogether as to let that dogma go. It has been an element of de nominational strength to have certain fixed ideas with reference to the proper mode and subject of baptism. But it is a spirit ual misfortune if a young Baptist has not a pastor wise enough to tell him. if he let go this doctrine, that i-olinious life is (initA possible without it. It is possible to cher ish and to insist on views of the Bible, the modification of which seems to some, when they find it necessary, to threaten -the very foundations of their faith in God. Heligion is an affair of the soul and God. The Bible, the church, the creeds, the sac raments are desinned to serve the soul and God in this high and holy relationship. God has a life in the souls of men which these means are meant to promote and never to hinder. They do not come be tween the soul and God. Some sweet old mystic lias said: "The eye by which I see God is the same eye by which He sees me." And we may wiv, also: "The longing with which we long for God ia the longing with which He longs for us. The love with which we love Him is from the fountain of His love for us." In a relationship which is the sharing, the identity of life, what room is there for intermediary means and ministeries? We have precious document, precious doctrines, precious sacraments anil ordinances. But it is not they that give life to the soul. They do minister richly tO that life, but it is. .IS it u-prp from without that they minister. If the soul ! ever really knows God at all. it knows Him as it knows itself. The soul is sure of it self. By the same sort of certitude it i sure of God. Don't get the idea that you can prove the existence of God. Some day you mav fall in with a man who is a better reason r who will take tho other side. Then, if vou really think you believe in God because you can prove that He exist, you mav find your faith badly shaken. "Every one that loveth is begotten of God ond knoweth God. He that loveth not, knoweth not flod: for God is love." We know ('.ml with that immediate kind of knowledge with i which we know the feelings of our own i hearts. If it ia possible for us to love, it is possible for us to know God and to know i that we know Him. And John tells ns i that the proof there is a God and to be ' known and that we know Him, ia the same 1 iwuu ui piuui. mi. very same proot, tliuc we must give, if we say that we love. Lnko tells us how .Testis sent out seventy of His disciples to do in all the towns of Galilee as they had seen Him do. Thev healed the sick. They preached the gospel of the kingdom. Men and devil gave heed to them. They returned to Him with great joy to tell Him all. As He listened to them, as He looked into their faces, He rejoiced. Thev had understood Ilim. Jt was then that He said: "I thank Thee. O Father, Lord of Heaven and Earth, that Thou didst hide t!iee things from the wise and prudent and didst reveal them unto babes." Tie has succeeded. Plain men. seventy of them, had come to know God tlirougrh Him. To every minister of ITis. to every fol lower, Jesus is saying: "Enter into this su preme joy of thy Lord. This is the joy for you to seek; this is the success for which you should work and prav: that through you men may come to know God." It wa lor uns very -mug mat lie gave thanks the nielil before He died. To some He knew He had given eternal life. And what could He aay in His thanksgiving that would be more pleasing to His Father than what He did soy? "And this is life eter nal, that, they might know Thee, the only true God. and Jesus Christ, whom Thou hast sent." As we begin our work, the words of tho beautiful old prayer ring in my ears: "O God, from whom all boly desires, all good counsel and all just works do proceed." We want our fellowship in service to be prompted and accompanied by holy desires, guided by good counsels and abounding in just works. The desire to know God is the holiest of all desires, the deepest foun tain of good counsel, the most effective in spiration of just works. May it be tbe honest and the constant desire of our hearts! Knew Bow. a All wa quiet in the invalid' room, nn- ti! a step wa heard coming up the atuirs. Then a faint voice called: "Alfred, is it you?" "No," answered another member of the family, looking in and then approaching the bed. "But what is it you are want ing? Cannot I do it?" I only wanted to be lifted and turned a little," was the reply. "I think I'll wait a lew minutes for Alfred to come. He know ! just how. Alfred wa only a boy, a merry, healthy young fellow of eighteen or twenty, full of J in eiuuiea ana out-uoor pursuits, wan tea on the cricket field and in all parties of young friends, tut he was no stranger in that sick room. He had thought it worth while to learn "just how" to minister to the sufferer, ajid his strong, young arms were the chonen ones to lift the grand mother's wasted, pain-racked form many time daily. Wa not that tender little aervice the very crown of manliness? It wa Bayard Taylor who wrote: "The bravest are the tenderest." Young I'co pie a Paper. Oar Weakness. God never makes us sensible of out weakness, except to give us of His strength. We must be disturbed by what is involun tary. The great point is, never to act in opposition to the iuwaid light, and to b uiilinz to go as far God would bavi u. Feueloa. Hat Learned Much of Africa. A recent statement In tbe Scientific American say tbat M. Chevalier, tbe noted French explorer, baa uxt re turned from a prolonged trip through Central Africa, where be secured valuable collection of Interesting doc uments acd photographs of tbe coun try and its people. A phonograph, which ha took with him was the me dium for obtaining records of the languages of the various natives In the region which he explored. In a course of lectures which M. Cheva lier Is to deliver he Intends to reprn" dure Mies records. River of Natural Ink. There Is such a river In Algeria. It Is caused by tbe Junction of two streams one of which drains a re gion strongly Impregnated with Iron, while tbe other flows from a peat bog,', and holds a large quantity ot calllo acid In solution. Thus the union of tho two streams causes tbe Iron and tho calllo acid to combine, this actios' producing natuea ' THE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS FOR NOVEMBER 27. World's Temperance Lesson, Tsst. vl!., 1-13 Oolilnn Text, Is, xxvlll., 7 Memory Verses, 8, 4 Commentary on the Day's Lesaon. Introduction. This prophecy, like near'y all of Isaiah's prophecies, was'prohali'.v de livered in Jeruaa!. m. Hut while spoken to the people of Judah it dealt largely with the neighboring kingdom of Israel and the calamities nbout to come upon that natio:i. Tho people had forgotten the claims of Je hovah and had forsaken His worship. The nation had plunged luadloni into sin of every description and especially into the sin of intemperance, until the land was filled with drunkards. Commentary. i. The crown that fad eth (vs. 1-4). 1. "Woe." Grief, sorrow, misery, n heavy calamity, a curse. "To the crown of pride." By the crown of pride the prophet refers to Samaria, the beauti ful capital of Israel. The city was situated on the top of a round hill and surrounded by a rich valley. "The drunkards ol I'.phraim. Kphiaini, the leading tribe of the nation, had become debased in vice They were a tribe of drunkards, and be cause of this the woe was upon them. ' A fading flower." A very iorcihle figure. Their beauty and g'ory would fado .is a flower. They did not have the riches anil beauty that endure. "The fat valleys." The valleys around Samaria were verv fer tile and beautiful. "Overcome with wine." Wine cause men to f ill an eusv vi. tin: to temptation. Alcohol destroys the will pow er. The drunkard has a bad character and generally enters recklessly into the viiest sins. What is overcome? 1. Beason. In temperance makes fools of men. 2. Con science. The moral sense becomes ib ad ened. 3. Physical powers. The drunkard indulges in that which entirely iinrits nim to meet the obligations that are resting upon him. He incapacitates himself for any position of trust. Tho penalty is Inst manhood, social degradation, an impo cr ashed and a desolate home and eternal ban ishment from God. 2. "The Lord hath a strong one." This in a reference to the army of Assyrians, which was soon to cme upon them like a devastating storm. The destruction would be complete, like a terrific hailstorm c r a great flood. It is almost impossible for us to realize the devastation that would come as the half savage bodes swept over the country, ravaging villages and mur dering women and children. .'1. "Trodden under foot." Shalmaneser, with the Assyrian host, invaded, over came and carried the people away, never to return. It is an unsolved prob'epi to this day where the ten tribes are-, wlu-tliei they continue to exist or arc entirely ex tinct. All of this was because of sin' and especially the sin of drunkenness. 4. "As the first ripe tig" (K. V.) As the first ripe fruit was eagerly seized by the fruit gatherer and hastily eaten, so Samaria would bo a delicious morsel for the Assyrians. The image expresses in the strongest manner the great ease with which the invaders would take the cuv and the whole kingdom of Israel, and the eagerness with which tlu-y would se.ze rind consume the ptey. It is still tit's tli.-t trouble and sorrow like an invading a: sin come upon and destroy those who' might have been happy and prosperous but for strong drink. II. The crown of glory (vs. B. 0). .". "L'nto the residue." The prophet now turns from the ten tribes to the two tribes of Judah and Benjamin, the remnant of God's people, who were to co.itinue a king dom for more than 100 yean ul'ter I-r.'.el wus carried into captivity, .fndaii " as to be favored and blessed. I'nilcr If-.zckiah mere was to be a revival oi i ciigion. 6. "A spirit of judgment." A clear per ception of God' truth. A clear head is promised as well as glory and beauty. Turn the battle to the gate." Who pur ine tha Heeing enemy even to the very iiaLes of their own city. We have n spiritual war fare to wage (Kph. 6:12", and we arc pledged to conquer the world for Christ. Beware lest we render ourselves unlit for military service by luxurious habits and sinful indulgences. The drunkards ol Kphraim could do nothing to oppose the invaders of their country. III. Lviu of strong drink (vs. 7, 8). 7. "But these also have erred'' (P.. V.) "Je rusalem as well as Samaria has her ine briates and Rcenes of disgusting intoxica tion. Though her punishment is not as near as that of the northern kingdom, there are seen the marks of sure decline. Note the effect of strong drink portrayed in this verse: 1, ICrring, wandering into forbidden wava and places. 2. Keen the religious teachers led astray. 3. Wholly absorbed in appetite. 4. They cannot see things as they are, or judge correctly. 5. The whole life is perverted. God's minis ters need a pure heart, a clean life and a clear vision. 8. "There is no place clean." The liquor business is a filthy business, and every one who is engaged in it or has any thing to do with it is made filthy by it. It ia the parent of uncleanness. The body, mind and soul of the one connected with it become polluted and corrupt. IV. Precept upoi precept (v. 9-13). 9, 10. "Whom shall He teach,'' etc. Many regard these verses as the words used by tho (coffer a tbey mocked the prophet. They treat God' method of dealing with them and warning them by. His prophet with contemnt and derision. Whot, ay tbey, doth He treat us as mere infants just weaned? Doth He teach us like little, children, constantly going over the same easy lessons? We must conceive verse 10 as spoken in mimicry with a mocking mo tion of tho bead, and in a childish, stam mering tone. 11. "Nay" (R. V.) The prophet's reply begin! with this verse. Isaiah attack them with great force end rcverily, turn ing their own language, spoken in mockery, back upon themselves; yes, it shall be a you aay, ye shall bo taught by a strange tongue, and in a strange land, whither you will be carried into captivity. Thea you will be forced to learn like children. 12. "This ia the rest," etc. Gcl had given them repeated and faithful warnings, pointing out to them the true rest and the way to obtain it, but they had closed their ears and "would not near," and were going on io their fancied cecurity to cer tain destruction. 13. "And fall back ward," etc. They bad lad great light, and this made them great (inner, and they de served a terrible punishment. We cannot violate God's law with iripunity. Those who, persist in their wickedness and spurn Hi offer of mercy will ultimately bt east (ton Hi presence. UNKNOWN 80URCE OF SOUND. Curious Phenomenon on the Borders of the Red Sea. A singular phenomenon occurs on the borders of the Red sea at a place called NakoiiH, where Intermittent un derground sounds have been board for an unknown number of centuries. It Is situated at about balf a mile dis tant from the shore, whence a long reucb of sand ascends rapidly to a height of 300 feet. This reach Is about 800 feet wide, and resembles an amphitheater, being walled by low rocks. The sounds coming up from the ground at this place recur at in tervals of about an 'hour. They al first resemble a low murmur, but ere long there Is heard a loud knocl.Ing sCinewhat like the strokes of a bell, and which at the end of about five minutes becomes so strong as to agi tate the sand. The explanation of this curious phenomenon given by tho Arabs Is that there Is a convent un der the ground, here, and that thene monks ring for prayers. Bu tbey call It Nakoua, which means a bell. The Arabs affirm that tbe noise so fright ens their camels wbon tbey hear it as to render thea furious. Philosophers attribute tbe , Bound to suppressed volcanic action probably to tbe bub Ung ot gas or vapor underground. NOVEMBER TWENTY-SEVENTH. "How Intemperance Hinders Mia slons." Rom. 14:13-21. Scripture Verses. Prov. HI;"; Lnko 21:3(5; Rom. 8:18, 28; M:X; 2 Cor. 10:5; Eph. 6:10. 11; 1 Th.-sa. 0:15: 1 Tim. 4:8; Tltui 2:11, 12; 1 Piter 3:13. Lesson Thoughts, The worst thing ahout t'oninmrco In Intoxicants Is that nun are will ing to destroy the souls of the honth en for the sordid return of a llttlo money profit. The work of foreign missions 1? difficult enough without any outside hindrances: but the liquor selling by Christian nations to heathen people more than doubles the difficulty by : tins, our "gooa is evil spoken of." I Selections, j The greed of Christian nations ha? ' turned the entire West Coast of I Africa Into one long bar-room from I which no fewer than two million Ravages go forth to die every year as a result of the traffic. Morris. Other vires make their own way: this makes way for all vices. He that Is a drunkard Is qunllfled for all vice. Intemperance wipes out God's Image and stamps It with the counter feit die of the devil. "If strong drink were driven from this nation, nearly all the prisons might be -closed, and the almshouses, and Idiot asylums, and Insane asy lums, the city missions, the public charities, the orphans' homes. We could dismiss most of our pollremen, we could pay our public debts, we could purify our mun'lclpnl politics, we could have twice as many happy homes. The liquor question is great er than all other national questions put together." If such are the effects of Intemperance upon the morals and Institutions of a Christian land, what must be its demoralizing Influence upon a heathen people, and Its hin drance to the work of Christian missions? EFWORTH LEAGUE LESSONS NOVEMBER TWENTY-SEVENTH. An Inspiring Outlook In India. Matt. 9. 36-38; Matt. 10. 1-7; Matt. 9. 36 to 10. 7. Measured by spiritual destitution. by responsiveness, or by success, j southern Asia Is our greatest mission liem to-day. India includes more than 1,300,000 square miles. It shores are washed by tbe Bay of Bengal and the Indian Ocean. Through it runs tho filthiest of rivers, the Ganges, whose waters are re garded as sacred and healing to body and soul. Its mountain range, tho Himalayas, surpasses all others In the height of its peaks. It is a vast country with inexhaustible ma terial resources. Nearly three hundred millions of people inhabit that beautiful land, most of them living In abject poven ty. But so girted are they that India has been called the mother of religions. Bdence, mathematics, and phJlosophy. Many of her men aro keen metaphysicians. Bishop Warne affirms that India has had the high est civilization, architecture, and art ever reached outside a Christian land. The Rev. William Butler, laid the Mission foundations In 1850 at Earellly; but the dreadful Sepoy re bellion in 1857 utterly destroyed them. The next year he began anew In Nalnl Tal, sixty-two hundred feet up the Himalayas. Here he "stretched forth the rod of faith and smote tbe rock, and, lo! India Methodism." Among the greatest and most sue cessful of these Is our. magnetic Splr-it-fllled, practical, deeply devoted Bishop Thoburn. We now have three Annual Confer ences there: the North, the North west, and tbe South IndJa Confer ences, all growing with rapid strides. A publishing house at Lucknow and another at Madras, a number of col lege, a theological seminary, mis sionary and deaconess training school, girl's and boys' boarding .schools and high schools, orphanages, aud hospitals. RAM'S HORN BLASTS. H.KE'can bo no iA" here tnere 18 ,u fTZ) If God bus a work for every man rie has a man for every work. Heavenly music is set for a congrega tion rather than a choir. A man has to for get his name before f If, he finds true fame. Gourmands are seldom giants. Keen thought need not be cutting. The graveyard is a great place for uniformity. Our own acts permanently seal our hearts. Aping the rich brings nothing but pain to tbe poor. None smile In summer like those who wept In winter. Persistency In prayer Is one secret of consistency In practice. The church loses her grip as soon aa she gets a cold In the heart It's hard for a man with corna to feel gure of hit consecration. It'e a poor collection that baa to be taken with, a corkscrew. The church that lives for figures la apt to have a figurative faith. Maxim's First Inventions. Sir Hiram Maxim began to Invent almost aa soon as he could Hap. When but a small boy be Invented a sort of extant made of wood, with alghts, a piece of thread with a bullet at tbe end, and an Indicator for the thread to awing along. On a dark night he took his Instrument outside, and while he sighted It to tbe North Star hit little ttster read the Indicator. "Forty-five. Hiram," she called out Thlt meant they were living In forty-five degrees north latitude. Tbe observa tion proved to be perfectly accural svr. w vuisf' r isV it "In Cfirlst." ST C. IUI RATTFRSBT. Cal. 2:'J0; Horn. 0:4. 5; Kph. 2:0; John 7:30. We died with Thee upon the cross, 'We live because Thou livest still. How can we shrink from scorn and loss Who watched on Calvary's solemn hill In crucifixion's owful hour. When weakness was transformed lo power We lay with Thee within the tomb. The door was closed and closed our eyes ; Oh. surely, 'twas a narrow room From whence the Lord of Life should rise! The stone moved back. The angels shy Their glory bade the night begone. We rose with Thee. O glorious King. And cast our gravp-elnlhes all away. The women ran such news to bring. And some believed, while some sairt "Xny"- (And some still ask. Can death depart? Can grace renew a buried heart!1) And now We take the Spirit's fire. Wo draw from Thee, Salvation's Well! We go wher'er Thou dost desire, The story of Thv love to tell: Tour out on us Thv richest store That we may drink and thirst no more. London Christian. The Power of Personal Influrnee. Spurgeon u.-ed to tell of a man in Scot land who had come under the terrible pow er of strong drink. One dav ho went lo the tavern, and took his little girl with him to lead him home after he had become drunk. He carried her on his shoulder. The poor child, as thev approached the tavern, heard from within the sound of shouting and fighting, and begged her father not to go in. As she pleaded, n tear from her eye fell on the man's cheek, llig man as he was. the influence of that lit tle tear saved him to a tenipcral" life, and he became one ,f the engineers of the crreat railroad bridge across the Firth at Kdin burgh. One of the tuna delightful of our iludies Up in heaven. I fancy, will be the hitorv nf the influence of little words and dced. We shall find the progress of Hie world has depended on these far more than on what the world thinks great. How inter esting will be the revised histories in the libraries of heaven! It is literally true that every wo'-d we ay sets in motion vibrations of ether that widen out nnd go on healing forever. J the same way every act of ours, though done in spcret. makes an imnreion that nothing can efface. Somewhere there is ringing every sentence that fell from the lips of our Lord: somewhere there are im pressions of every act of .ludas. Now if this is literally true, as everv student of physics knows, of our words and deeds, it is true also of the snri:nal result of whatever we do nnd say. Kvery n -t him some influence, for good or evil, ard it is an unending influence. As Henrv liurion sung: ' Never a word is said Hut it trembles in the air. And the truant voice has sped To vibrate everywhere: And perhaps far olf in etcr"a' re- The echo may ring upon our cars '' When we go to bed at night, do we think of our day's wprk as done? li is never dine: it has only begun. That ero.s v-nrd is still at work, poisoning some lit'o while we are asleep. That kind smile is still at work, making soiup life sweeter, lliiniali we have forgotten all about it. Ho such thoughts make our lives tio solemn? T)o you feel that you never ran stop to think of the influence of vour every word and deed ? You need not. Only make dm lic.irt. right and all your influence will b,. i iyht : for 'out of t lie licai t arc the i,uc of life " The brook docs not need In p!;t.i nil lis lovely curve, its dancing ripulc. i-- ji'.;i---ant sonps ns it flows over its Mom- ln-d, the drinks it gives m thirsty p-i.,'.!,.-, the rontrlbut ions it makes lo (lie mill wheel and the great river and the ocean. The brook merely flows on, from a nine source, and the rct lekes care of iUclr. Hut if some one honld nut a packi'?e of arsenic in the snorcp of the brook-, how sadly ill this would be changed? Vet even then the brook wou'd not titan the harm it would do; it would onb- flow on. out of an imoiire source. Amos I!, Wells, in .Sab bath Heading. What Is I lie Meaning of "I.nve Love is Hie bst thing in the wor'd. Love is abiul the worst thing in the world. Love is of God. and !ovt is. in a I scin.e. i.oUlike. I.ove again draws nin ) away from God and sets men against Coil. Love is a much misunderstood a"d greatly misused term. Love is soiHtiines used as if it were lust, or selfUh desire, but re.il love has no con. lection with lust or selfish desire. There are two contradictory and incom patible ideas ronne.-tcd with our Kngbsh, word love. There should be two different words in use to express those two ideas. There are two Hebrew words, and there are two Greek words. The misuse of the two words in the Itihle both hi log trans lated love is one cause of the l infusion ill the common mind. It is sometimes said that a 'oioit ir.m kills a woman because be lovci her: but a man who acts in that way never loved, nor is be pe-hips, capable of lovinc. Tho world would be a better world if man kind learned the meaning of the word love. It wou'd lie a gain to the be.t of us to realize that meaning. Do we under stand it? Sunday-School Times. lenlm tha Heart. There was a little boy whofc heart was touched by a sermon on th" words. "He hold. I stand at the door and knock. ' His mother said to him: "ltobcit, what would you say to any one who knocked at the door of your heart if you wished him to come in" He answered: "I would say, "Come in!" She said to him: "Then say to the Lord Jesus, 'Come in!' " Next morning there was a brightness and a joy about Hubert's face that made bis father ask: "What makes you so glad today?" He replied: "I awoke in the night, and I felt thut .lesiin was still knocking at tho door of my heart and I said, "oid .lesus. come in!' and I think He has come in. 1 feel happier this morning than 1 ever wa before." Soul Cultivation. Thi new department is for every Sab bath, for everybody, for eveiy denomina tion and God-bke faith, (fur earnest de ire ia to make thi column helpful and uplifting to all, and we invite the co-operation of our folks. Dricf, suitable con tributions will be welcomed. Surely, dear friends, soul cultivation is as importuut a soil cultivation. Let us not forget. Tr KM(loa. True religion shows it influence in every part of our ronduct; it is like the ap of a living tree, which penetislv t list most distaut Loughs, Definition of Inctnac. "Give a aentence containing a tyn onyniout expression for 'Incense,'" commended a Broklyn school teacher to her class. It was a very hard ques tion and If you don't believe It, you bad better try to answer It yourself. Tha resourcefulness of school chil dren, howevw, It remarkable. The toughest boy In tbe clans raised M hand When called upon by the teach er bis said: "Holy smoke, what a acrap It was! THE GREAT DESTROYER SOME STARTLING FACTS ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. Confession of Whisky Manufacturer "Nnne or My Ktnployrs Drink th 8lufr Tlirv Know It I Poison" Drunk, arils Must. Find lalratlon Within. The man who is a slave to physical force ,.(Ters within himself. The blows bio on him alone. " is not so n-,tl. tt.o ..-1.:t... ir snfW.. if is true, but he finds o-ensiona , forget mines, and while his brain is I "''owned lie has his moments of exaltation . a' rcco-npense. I " no u,h forgetfulncss for those "fin- ,.,. And. when he l.i.nw, hinnelf. ' is horrified nn.l astn.ird because nf ' awful ;,rt in the n(T,. ings of those i l li.n. not deserved it. I he b'jws fall in, on his wife ami chit. H,,,; ;.r,. fa...... dm.endcnt. badlv ! he,! l,s,.v ,e,I. ,,,.( , im ,v,Pn ,p -r.es b.el- from the delirium nf whiskv ! lc;o r:-il life. I The dis-ra-.. that f..'l- nnoo ,in. ;. felt I , ow. Ul-PIll' lie . wit'.. :,! LI.. .1.11.1...- o mnn Kpom-. (,e i iiy.' es dr"n';.i (Is .... h-t-ire ntvni- .o"-.. he'. it,.,,.:, . I... ami going I' Ill's been s,i,l l,i. Iv ".-t t,e vii tijoiisj Mian w i.i sees ,t ilrnnt;.,r,l f.,'!ituT into the villi-!- "-is nrnV.LW- ,u,ve,. i li,-,, m!t,)0 i.s hp., I ;Wt I" b.'lter himself a, 11-' '.li,;,, ,-,1 1,.., p,,lr Mln-l,v n-1 . ,,.,, ?TP .(rpjpp Ihm th- initivi'liMl wil'-thnt is the story -....I the will i attacked first of nil. ' II is c.y in criticise mi. I customary to rte. ui.o the -'runl.-ird. T( is easy to pass t'v on the other side nnd tool; down upon t'," mnn whose weakness happens to be d:oe:-'.nt fro.'i your own. I'erhans the world would be hcHrr off if more of us looked at the problem from the ,f the ,;, WK, .li;,,!;,. ,,, t,.;C( to help hiro instead nf telling bin, bow lo'-- he has fallen. flow can a man be freed from the clutch of whishy? Oi.'inuslv the shortest, sini'ilcit wnv w..iibl be lo do for him in a ..o,l a-.rl he'n fill wnv tha which wM-hv 'Vies for him in n vile n-d destructive wnv. Nine-tenths of all di in-lie,,. ...-.a is based on poverty, worry, the nvntal weirines that comes of hopeless stnile against material conditions. l-'ree the wor'd from r"'cviv .and von will lessen the hold of whisky upon tnd lior.. rorrunaieiv. T 1 1 a T Is lii" e'O'-oos w-oiV W'hich a slowlv advaiiri doing, and it can trnlv ! '' that (he present day is temperance itseh coinp.ii'd with the past. Take awav wo-rv fro-o n.'n. .a-i 1 von will lake the desire for drink from a great majority of them. Next in number to th-. .mi arret- of drunkards who drink fo- (1... ot for getfiilncfls are those who itri,,",- her.-'se thev crave excitement and beem-e tbty lark satisfactory mental oc'-imation. Idleness accounts for much drunken ness. This is proved by the .--,t nu'il ei- of idlers, spending inherited money, that drink to excess. If tiie man that In.i it i,rd to resist drinking. because life is iln'l ivoal.l force himse'f into some kind of o.vu-'.tion something to keep him aoin all i!,e time he could forget the craving for ill ink eventually. Lack of excitement in life is one g.-cat cause of drunkenness. Take the nvera.re dru iknrd on ,aa expe dition to the North l'ole. win re there are danger and an option unity for indi vidual achievement, nod that man. with something worth while, snme-hini to stimulate, to occupy him. would isive up drink nnd become energetic. The lack of rational amusements on Sun day accounts for a great deal ..f drunk- CtlllCsS. In the big cities hundreds of thousands of young men find themselves idle on one day nf the week, with nothing really in teresting to do. The saloon welcomes them, and drunkenness begins with fri I- ly conversation and Sunday talk close to a whisky bottle. The bicycle wa. a great piomot r of so briety and health. A revival of its pop. iilurity would be an excellent thing for the country. Wholesome Punday sports of nil kinds, outdoor . occupations, and r specially op tiortunities for rational M'ndav recreation in the city, would lessen the hold of whis ky t-onsidcrably. Kvery drinking man who feels that whi-kv is getting too strong for him liould study his own individual case. He should try especially to discover substitute for the excitement of whisky in other occupations. When his nerves crave alcohol or when be thinks that tbey crave ithe should make up bis mind to give them something ele. If the man who feels that he must have a drink in the morning will take two or three glumes of hot milk, he will no long er want to drink. If the man who feels thnt lie must have something to drink before he eats will control that desire, eat his fo d slowly, and eat plenty of it, he will d ..cover at the end of the meal that the craving for alcohol is gone. Thousands of those who drink mistake simple hunger for a desire to drink whis ky. Postponing the dunk and satisfying the hunger, in nine rases out of ten, will diminish the whisky craving or destroy it altogether, The drinking man. as a matter of fact, must find his salvation within himself in bis own strength of character. The moment a man really wants not to drink, the moment he wills not to. he stop.. But he must help the will intelli gently. The drinking mnn s.avs that life is dull. Tie himself is all tli.it he knows of hie, bis own existence is all that he poscses. He would not think his hie dull if he were in danger of losing it every minute from the attack of some savage Indian or Willi beast. How can it be dull when he has con stantly before him tin- danger of destruc tion through an enemy inside of himself? He ought to tind interesting occupation in devuing plans to gel the better of whisky. He ought to find the excitement that he lacks in making a successful fight against the power that has destroyed millions. To young men we say: K-ep awsy from whisky. Its friendships are false, its arti ficial warmth ends in cold destruction. It means failure, disgrace, shipwreck. due of the greatest whisky manufac turers in the world was asked if he had any dlfilculty in keeping bis employes from drinking whiskv. He owns one of the most famous of the popular brands. "No," he said: "there is no danger of my people drinking whiskv they know the stuff i poison." New Voik Evening Journal. The Crusade In llrlef. Hotels and drug stores in Boston selling liquor to women nave suffered the penalty of withdrawal of their license. The Birmingham corresiondent of th Daily New says that seventy-live per cent. oi the drinking which govs on in the many fashionable restaurants in the heart of the illy it indulged in by women. The saloons of Sn Praniito cost the taxpayers of that city 18.5O0.tl0t) k'- year. The cily receive from the saloons ui li-cta.-ie fciBO.OKU; or, if you please, the a- hhjii. ui .--an rraiicuH-o cost the people IH.:4.l.WX) year mure than they get out in them. The employment of barmaids iu Calcutta is uott forbidden, and even in Budapest h, tbe capita! ui Hungary, it is devreeu that no woman under forty years of age shall be employed in the cafe of that city. Tbe need of mining town for relicious aud temperance woik u very great. With in iW mile of Chicago is a nuuing town of liM pro pis without a church or uy kind of s religious service. Another town near by lis I'M) people, thirty-evu saloons, but not a church. Genera) Corronnat, conimonder-iu cuiel of the French troop iu lndo t hins, is making eiecial effort to suppress drunk enness aoiang. the soldiers. lie express hi. regret Hist warnings eoucerniug the seiiou effect of drinking habit upvu tha fetal i a art avt becdwi, . i i household patters Hints For Housewives, I A wouinn iimlorKoliig treatment fo that most dixtressing of nil alliiientsw ocrvous prostration, bns found help, imong other remedies tried, In the use Of salt water In her dully cold bath. She sonks a rough washcloth In a itrong solution of Bi-a-salt, tlrlex it, and j tubs vigorously with It, every morning. till the flesh is In n glow. A delicious palad dressing li mad with the yolks of throe liiinl-bnlleil tjrss rubbed line, one tnblespoonful of? )ll, tarragon vinegar to taste, nnd one) Jtip of whipped cream, nnd will pleas tome tastes better. Harper's llastar. A (Sewing ltoorf, ; nnvenlenee. No sewing room is complete, suggests I'ogno, without one or more wooiler lollies trees or costume banger, jvhich can be bought very ronsonnbly; it any furniture shop. On these may; 5P hung garments tbat are in process! if making, or if tbe various garments) !bat come from the laundry requiring t few stitches or mending aro bung In the sewing ro.im, It is an easy matter :o drop In for an hour or so and mentt :bein when one feels in the mood. Treshly laundered garments are kept, n a much better condition If while) halting to be mended tbey are hung m a clothes tree, than when they are aid over chair backs or uut away lit !bests aud drawers. To rEeinove tstalns, ff linen is badly stained with fruit; :h or coffee, put plenty of w ater Into a loller or other vessel, and when It bolls) lard drop iu tbe stained nriiele. 8tbr .'reiitiently, and after a few minute- npid boiling tbe stain will disappear iitu mo water oe colored, l.ye or Wishing fluid may be used for clean Jiff, but no soap, as that sets the stain, t bad a tablet-loth half covered with a )ml coffee stnln, and a few minutes Soiling made It ns white as ever. Itloodl ! italns imiy be removed in the saun ' vny. if the article Is soaked a short , tfine first in cold water. Cyanide ot jotusslum In the proportion of on i mnee to a quart of soft water, is a per loot cleanser of badly oxidized silver. Csed by dealers in cleansing wares. f'repare a sufllelent amount so tbe art!" I :le can be completely Immersed. Kx , imine every few minutes, but retura :o the bath until clean. Immediately in final removal, rub dry with a sort a-oolcn cloth, or the silver will loolc itreaked. The preparation will not 3urt the hands, but it is a poison, anil liust be kept carefully out of the way; )f children. Philadelphia Inquirer. To Do Little Things. Always keep your celery roots and try theui. They arc good for seasoning loups and saip-es. Table oilcloths or the linoleum on tha ! tlteben floor can be kept fresh aud j Meaner wilb oil than with soap and j iater. I When weighing molasses sprinkle j :be scale well wilb flour nnd then it R ill slip off again quite easily without ! nicking'. ! A plain brown or green wall paper ; aiakcs an Ideal bai-kgroiind i'or pio I ;uri s, mid the absence- of pattern on aalls adds Initueiiic-ly to the apparent llze of the room. When tomatoes and nillk are to ba put together, ns in a cream soup, have) :be tomato juh-e nud milk of the saint j temperature, thou beat vigorously a UMe tomato is added, lilt.e by little. A good general rule ulways to re member In the use of gelatins Is tot often the gelatin In cold water, them j to dissolve in boiling water. Neglect ! )f either part of the process will causer j trouble In making Jellies. To save tbe knees of boys ribbed! stockings one mother re-enforces tbem by sewing a piece of strong black cloth) aeblnd tbem before tbey are worn at ill. It is remarkable bow much longer toeklngs wear when treated In this) way. In banging a mirror choose a spot where it will reflect tbe view from tha wlntlow or something pretty; then It will add to tbe beauty of the room, la tny case, whether the object of that mirror be decorative or merely useful, do not place it anywhere where tliet tun's rays will fall on it, for tbe sun sets Injuriously ou tbe mercury audi slouds tbe glass. Steamed Pponge Pudding One cup ful of light bread sponge or dough, one tabu-spoonful of butter; mix well, and. let to rise In a warm place; when light, roll out tbln nnd spread with fresh or cauned fruit. Jam, raisins or dried cherries, or any oue kind of fruit de sired; roll up Into a small loaf, place In a buttered basin or tin and let rise again; when light, steam one Uour and a quarter. Maple Buns To a pint of bread sponge add one smull cupful of grated niuple sugar, two large eggs (well beaten), oue-half cupful of soft butter, a little salt, aud flour to make a soft dough. When light, shape into bun and let rise again. Bake in a quick syrup and sift grated maple augar and cinnamon over tbem. Nice for the children's lunch basket, and particu larly good with cocoa or chocolate. An Kasy Omelet This la made In an uncovered casserole, the aort one buy for tweuty cent at Italian groceries In any city. Beat the yolk of tbe eggs until they are light In color and quite stiff. Beat tbe whites stiffly. Add te the yolks grated cheese, chopped niusu roouis, or whatever variation of the omelet la required. Add salt aud pep per, a cupful, more or less, of milk, very gradually, aud fold in the whites of the eggs. Turn iuto the buttered casserole aud bake Iu a moderate oveu. These little shallow casseroles, which are to be had In several alses, are rath, er fragile affairs, glased on the Insidt only, aud soft' baked clay on the ouo aidi. The have a abort handle, like tbe old time porringer, aud are, alto getbor, very pretty dishes. For a IUt of baked macaroni, baked bean. R corn bread or any vegetable aa fs Un, tht I are rtcoiuniKUdes. i I !