"JESDS HIS OWN SIGN" A Brilliant Sunday Sermon Bj Ret. Hugh Hack, M. A. Iter Wssder Wsrklsf, to Ns Evldeact l la TklBft Christ Caa to Tick lb World. ' Nrw Tows ClTT. Fifth Avenue Pres byterian Church, which is a very large building, was filled in every part Sunday jnorniug to hear the Kev. Hugh Black, pi. A., associate of Dr. White in t lie Free 1. George's Church. Edinburgh, Scotland. Mr. Blnck hnd for hi auhjcct "detn Hm llwn Sim and Miracle." The text was from Matthew xii:H8: "Then certain of the scribes and of the Pharisees answered, caring: Master, wc would see a aim from 9'hee. But Ho answered and said unto then), An evil and adulterous Reiteration Seeketh after a sign; and there shall no sign be given to it, lint the sign of the pro Vliet Jonas." Mr. Black an id: We gather from its source, as coming from the Pharisees, that this question had C malicious purpose to undermine the au thority of the new Teacher with the peo pie by asking from Him what He could Kot or would not perform, but from the istorical connection in which the evan gelic! place it the purpose va not only (nalieioua, but almost insult inn. Our 1onl isd bsen in tho pursuit of Ui beneficent baling ministry, tmd cured many suffeiing men and women, and the Pharisees' expla nation was that He had power from an evil source; He did it, they asserted, by virtue of His connection with Beelzebub, the prince of devils. And now, after this explanation of the signs and wonder Jesus did among men. they came with the insulting question, "Master, we would see sign from Thee." What cort of cign did they want, nnd what cort of evidence could convince them if they could attrib ute His healing ministry to diabolic art? The veiled insult of the demand is the supercilious passing over of all He had been and of all He had done, as if it did not count and as if He must now begin to do something of sufficient magnitude to convince them that His pretension were trustworthy. Now there is a demand for .evidence which ic legitimate, evidence which is necessary for the highest faith, but in this case, apart from the hypocrisy of the ques tion, there underlay a wrong conception of revelation and a wrong conception of the nature end the place of miracle. They wanted Christ to perform some prodigy, as if a piece of wonder-working could be real evidence of apiritual things; hence, our Lord's rebuke. It ic a religious rebuke. God should be recognized for what He is, and the recognition of Him should not be dependent upon external signs, which in themselves, after all, have no spiritual sig nificance. Christ's feeling ac regards this is seen through graphic touch recorded by St. Mark, who writes that when the Pharisees came seeking a sign from Him Jesus sighed deeply in Uic cpirit. It showed to Him a lamentable dullness of soul, to think that the recognition of the spiritual ahould be made to hang on prodi gies and on miracie-mongering of any kind. "There chall no sign be given unto thin generation." This attitude of our Lord, notice, ic not contradictory to the value He elsewhere 'placed on miracles ac evi dence. He pointed, you remember, to Hi deeds of mercy to authenticate His claims .when, as in the case of John the fiaptist, there was a sincere desire to know the mark of the Messiah, but His miracles were moral acts to educate and to reveal, not to surprise and to astonish. He knew from sad experience that it was possible for men to believe in the reality of miracles end at the same time lose all its true evi dential force, even to ascribe it to evil fiowers ac the Pharisee did. "There shall be no cign given to curios ity monger." There can be no cign given to those who imagine that the spiritual ban be proved by the material. Mere won der working ic no evidence of the things whiea Jecuc came to teach the world. Men re not to be led to (Jod, then or now men are not to be led to God, in the sense that Jesus meant by display and conjur ing trick. The demand of the Pharisees chowed radically false idea of the whole nature and place of the miracle and the came mistake ic possible to us, and possi ble to us in many way and forms. Wo make tho same mistake, for example, when We think that faith in God would be easier to us if only some portent were vouch safed to us; if only we could see some pliy- cical evidence, especially designed to con vince us. We fall into the Pharisee' error end merit their rebuke when we sigh for the certitude which we imagine would tome from a celestial appearance or from a voice from heaven, or if we could put our finger into the print of the nails, i To understand Christ's attitude o-i thia question we need to have our minds dis abused of the idea that a mere miracle in the sense nf prodigy is ever evidence of spiritual things. Nome miracles are signs indeed, but on'y when there is sniritual evidence in them; that is. when they are more than mere wonder-working, which the Pharisees here desired. For example, our Lord's healing ministry wes a great nnd constant sign of the love of God, car rying a revelation with as truly as any lov ing word of the Master ever did. This lets light in upon the true way in which to view tho whole question. Our Lory- mir acles cannot be separated from thY "great revelation of Hi whole life and V .ach ing. Hi words and His works nreV'o-re-lated; the miracles are not to be looked on as. isolated exhibitions of power, but as themselves contributing to the revelation. I'licy were not signs, but vehicles of teach ing. They are not signs externally at tached to the teaching to give it weight, end therefore to make it creditable; not 1 utxplained occurrences testifying in a i.vstt-rinus fashion to the possession of di vide power; they did not evidence the leaching, thry them-ielvn are the teach ing. They are parables in action instead .f in words, moral nnd spiritual in their effect, not evidential at all, except by the way. TUH are an integral part of the rev elation of the love of God in Christ Jesu our Ijord. They have an essential place in the whole round of the Christian revela tion as fruits -fruits of the pity of God. (is manifestations of the divine love and wisdom; they are part of the manifesta tion oi Christ; they are not guarantee of His message as the Pharisees here meant tiicn, but part of the message itself, a much evidence of God's love as His gra cious, tender words are or ever could be, therefore Christ's minifies are never to be conceived of a mere displays of power. He persistently refused from first to last to ticrk wonder to make men believe. It is not that the demand for evidence is Wrong, it is a natural demand that proof chi.uld he given of all claims, but we must make sure what really is evidence. A mir- aide in in iUdf no proof of a moral truth, end a miracle can never in itself engender suiiitaal aith not if one rose from tho lirad v ou'd it necessarily imply the exist lnc nf Gna and the soul's immortality. Of course, it is true that every miracle was a sign n sign designed to induce to spirit ual result i, Id lead men to God, but, like 1li. teaching itself, I hey could find no foot ine :n tho sou! nf man extent throih spiritual susceptibility in the man hiuistt1'. We rightly ask for evidence, art what evidence, and evidence rf what? Wc say we wmiM believe in Christ if only wi could lie convinced, but convinced how, and be lieve what about Christ? Men have some times asked, with an injured air, why they cnuld not be convinced n- an unmistakable sign from heaven, why Christ if He should lie what HA claims could not break down by supernatural means le barrier of un be'iif and forcibly open the door of Uut lieart and find entrance? What would such an entrance be worth morally A mere sensuous or intellectual gralMtratlos) Mliich might come from sign from lies- ' cu would be quite outside the purpose rimed at by our Lord. What would per suade the rarnal maid of the spiritual, what not the -carnal, surely. Not if one lone fro nithu deed. Christ wa acered- . iimi to Hi generation, not by this or that kign or wonder-working, but by Hi whole minislty, by Himself, by His life end teaching. He Himself was the cign. If the sign of Jesu will not be to Jerusalem what the sign of Jonah was to Nineveh, would s moment of astonishment st some wonder working create spiritual certitude? ' it the snn of Christ will not now convince ?ou of las eternal lore of God, what igu ) yu Lcivta will? In asking to be convinced of the apirit ual by some impression of the senses w ask the impossible. A sign to prove the apiritual must itself be spiritual. If God asks from man love, will some celestial ap pearance create love? If God asks from man that free allegiance of the will, could a voice from heaven or a succession of voices subdue the mind and rapture the heart? If God asks for righteousness or loval obedience of the life to the law of life could anything material generate the moral? There can ne no sign given to men who cannot see the sign which Jesu is Himself. He authenticates the spiritual to us. Seeing Him we must believe in God, or if not now could we be made more mire of God? Christ is the revealer of the Father. He is the sign nnd symbol and evidence of God. He is Immanuol, the Sign and Seal of (Jod with us and God fur lis, the proof of the divine in our midst. There shall be no sign given to thia gener ation other than that; there can lie no other. He is the highest sign, and if the greater fails how can the lesser convince, and as a matter of fact Jesus has con vinced the world of God, and is convincing Hie world. Through Him we, too, know God. By Him we have access to God. In slim we recognize God. For His sake we love God. The vision of Kim ic the vision of God. Thia generation thirstcth for a sign. We think it an evidence of our spirituality that we do so thirst, and so we iind many modern versions of the demand of the Pharisees, (sometimes in the name of sejence, sometimes in the name of religion. We can even manufacture signs when they seem to be lacking. Sometimes by emulat ing the methods of medievalism, in which the so-called lives of tho saints are flouted before us, and asking us to believe in the great realities of spiritual life because of some material sign. Answers to prayer, it may be, providences which, however co gent to the individual concerned, have lit tle meaning to others, or sometimes we have a recrudescence of the crudest spirit ualism, spirit rapping, table turning, tea cup manipulating, after which the devo tees go home feeling that they themselves have been assisting nt some act of pro found worship, as if the melodramatic vul garisms of ' spiritualism could prove any thing but the folly of the race. Or again, we have the same claims appear in a more pretentious garb in Theosophy, or Chris tian Science, or whatever happens to be the fashionable form of it at the time, where esoteric mysteries of some kind are prac ticed. The root of all auch things ia this same unspiritual thirst for a sign, after thaumaturgical wonder.i, faith healing and other things pretty much on the level of conjuring tricks. Ah, me: All this is a sign in itself, a sign of the weariness and despair and breakdown of the black materialism of our day to satisfy the heart of man. but it ba the terrible danger of inducing a worse form of materialism sti l, deceiving the carnal heart by wearing the dress of spirit ual religion. How unstable it ia we see from the constant swing of the pendulum now from atheism and materialism to the most outrageous supernaturalism as in the cuse-of Mrs. Besant and others, and now in the opposite direction from ultra-mysticism to ultra-rationalism. The cause of these seemingly contradictory changes it is not far to seek, as both are really based on the same foundation a wrong conception of what the spiritual is and therefore of what is true evidence of the spiritual. Thia Eeneration thirsteth for a sign. There shall e no sign given to it. No sign can be given to an unspiritual generation which would judge all things by material stand ards, a generation that is blind to the snir itual signs of which life is already full. There can be no voice from heaven to men who are deaf to the heavenly voice of which the whole world is already full; if the spiritual does not evidence itself; if man will not see God in Christ reconciling the world to Himself; it the sign of the cross cannot convince Ihe stubborn heart and bend it to acknowledge its divine pow er. If Jesus Himself is not seen to he His own sign and miracle. His own evidence and proof, there shall be no sign given; there can be no sign given. . "There shall be no sign given unto this generation." Is that the last word? Is that the clang of the closed door in the face of a seeking soul? "Master, we would see a sign from Thee." That pitiful cry if truly asked, not a by thoee Phurisees, but craving for spiritual enlightenment and spiritual communion, that pitiful cry has ever been answered. Never turned He away from earnest, sincere, honest inquiry after light and truth. He condescends to our weakness when we cry, "Oh. that I knew where I might find Him." He meet us by the way. He makes our hearts to burn within us as we walk, with Him, con vincing us of His love, convincing us of the path, showing us the path, and it suf ficeth us. When the heart thirsts with a deeper thirst than for a sign, when it thirsts after the love of God, when the heart and flesh cry out. He shows us the signs of His passion, at with Thomas, "lie hold My hands and My feet." He com forts us. He comforts us with the sign of the cross, and before that wondrous mani festation of the eternal love, before that revelation of the Father's heart, we be lieve and worship, and adore and love, and we say in peijtenee and in faith, "Mv Lord and my God." l)o we believe? "God's Veils." Little Mary had juxt come from the win dow with evident pleasure, und tat down on her little stool ut her pupa's feel. It was just ut sunset, and a most glorious suuet it was. The Western sky wo man tled with clouds of the most gorgeous hues, upon which the little girl gazed tilth thuughttul pleasure. "Papa," she said at length, "do you know what 1 think when I ice those pretty cloud?" "No. What do you think of them, Mary?'" "1 always think they are God's veils. Doesn't He have beautiful veils, pupa, to hide Hiin from lis?" '"True enough, my little one. .thought I. The clouds that veil Him from our sight are now beautiful. There is a rain bow on them if we will see it. They shine with mercy and truth." Was that not a pretty thought of little Mary's? Does it not remind you of the time when the veils shall be parted, and Ho shall come without clouds and every eye shall see Him ? Think More of Others. The surest criterion of our advancing in real excellence and perfection of char acter, is our acquired disposition to think less of ourselves and of our own happi ness and more of that of others.. ii Priestley, Enriched smd Expaud. Life is the goal of knowledge. All learning has, as its ultimate aim, better living. When what one knows is assidu ously applied to what one does, the knowl edge itself becomes enriched and expanded. Scottish Beformur, Kitten Aroused Dog's Jealousy. A curious instance of a dog's lutein gent jealousy is reported from Uuul alien. A happy family there consisted of a lady, a cat, a kitten, and a Yorkshire terrier. All four were on excellent terms until the terrier took umbrage at attentions, which its mistress t towed upon the kitten. The terrier straightway began to dig a hole In the garden, and finished Its task to its satisfaction lu three daya. Then the kitten disappeared. A search waa made, and aa the terrici wan seen patting down the earth ovt-i tbe bole which It had refilled, the aoll was removed, and tbe kitten was found to have been burled alive. Tbe dog waa punished, but It took (be kitten to the grave again, and t following day took it to a ditch a.id left It there. Ixmdon Dally express Scotland Claims Oldest Twlna. Scotland claim to bar the oldest living twlna in the world. They arc Thomas A. and George Hill Melville i Fife, and ant la thnlr 5 vr. THE SUNDAY SCH001 INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENT! FOR DECEMBER' IS. Itsvtew of the Fourth Quarter Rearf Psalms Ulll., 1-11 Oolflen Text, Lnk lv 8 Toplci Israel's Ueelln sn Fall, Lesson I. Topic: Elisha entering npor tbis work as a prophet. Place: Gilead, east of the Jordan. Klisha saw Elijah w-hen he was translated, and cried, "Mv father, my father, the chariot of Israe! and the horsemen thereof." Klisha toot up Elijah's mantle; returned to the Jor dan; smote the waters: the rivet war divided; Elisha crossed over on dr ground; the spirit of Elijah rested on Klisha; fifty sons of the prophets aiked the privilege of seeking Elijah: Klisha re fused; they urged until Elisha wa ashamed; he permitted them to go; they sought three days, but found him not. The men of Jericho told Elisha that the water of the city was poor; Elisha cast salt into the spring of the waters, and the waters were healed. II. Topic: Elisha relieving a poor widow and her family. Place: Not known. A woman in trouble came to Klisha and said that she had lieen the wife of one of the prophets, but that her husband was now dead and the creditot bad come to take her sons aa bondsmen. Elisha said: "What shall I do for thee? Tell me, what hast thou in the house?" She replied that she had nothing save a pot ot oil. Klisha instructed her to borrow vessels of her Beighbors, "not a few." ghe was then told to pout out oil into all the bor rowed vessels, and set aside those whioh were filled. She did so and all of the ves sels which she had borrowed were filled; the prophet instructed her to sell the oil and pay the debt, and to use what re mained over foi herself and children. Hi. Topic: Restoring the life of a dend child. Places: 1. Shunem. 2. Mount Carmel. Elisha in his work as a prophet traveled from place to place; he frequently visited the village of Shunem; was en tertained by one of the leading families of the place; as a reward for this woman's kindness Elisha promised that within a yeai she -hould embrace a son; when the child was four or live years old it was in the harvest fields with its father; it was suddenly taken sick; carried to the house; died at noon; the mother went to find Elisha; the woman told Elisha about her great affliction; Elisha went with her; the child was restored to life. IV. Topic: The healing of a leper. Places: 1. Damascus. 2. Samaria. These cities were about 110 miles apart. Naaman was a leper. The Syrians had taken cap tive a little maid who waited on Naaman's wife. This child told her mistress about the prophet in Samaria. It was probably Naaman who told the king of Syria what the captive girl nad said. The king sent Naaman to the king of Israel. The king of Israel rent his clothes; thought the king of Syria sought a quarrel with him; Elisha sent to the king asking that Naa man be sent to him: Elisha instructed him to wash in the Jordan seven times; Naaman waa healed. V. Topic Divine protection. Places: 1. Samaria. 2. Dothan. The king of Syria was warring against Israel; ETisha warned the king of Israel of the plans of the Syrians; Israel was thus saved from defeat by the Syrians; the king of Syria asked his servants to show which of them was informing the king of Israel; they replied that none of them were acting as traitors, but that Elisha, the prophet, wo telling ihe king of Israel the words which, he spoke in his bedchamber; the king -of Syria sought Elisha; found him in Dothan; 1 sent horses and chariots and a great host to take him; the Syrians were smitten with blindness; Elisha led them to Sa maria; the king of Israel asked if lie should smite them; Elisha provided for their necessities; sent them home; the Syrian came no more unto the land of Israel. VI. Topic: Joash made king. Place; Jerusalem, the capital of the southern kingdom. Our lessons now return to the kingdom of Judah. At the death of Je boram, Ahaziah became king; at his death. Athaliah usurped the throne; she com manded that all the members of the royal family be put to death- in the midst of the general slaughter, Joash was hidden in the temple, where he remained con cealed for six years; Jehoiadu the high Iiriest then brought bun out and made him :ing. Vlf. Topic: God's bouse repaired. Place: Jerusalem. As soon as Joash be came king steps were tuken to inaugurate a great reformation, and a solemn covenant was made between the Lord, the king and the people; Baal worship was over thrown, and the priests and the Levites were appointed to serve in the temple; a chest was placed beside the altar in the priests' court, and the people were asked to put their offerings in the chest. In this way much money was raised, and the tem ple was repaired, VIII. Topic: Isaiah warning Judah. Place: .Jerusalem, the prophets home. There was great prosperity in Judah, but in the midst of it the people were rebel lious and profligate, the claims of God were forgotten, and His worship ignored. Isaiah saw that because of their wicked ness tbe Lord would soon permit heathen nations to carry them a way captive; he Warns the people. IX. Topic: The evil effects of strong drink. Isuiah shows that the people were especially given to drunkenness. The laud was tilled with tilthiness, and God pro nounced a woe upon them because of this. To-day the liquor traffic is like a cancer eating the very lif out of society; it de stroys the moral of the country and blights wherever ic touches. The man who sanctions this iniquitous business is a par taker of all the evil connected with it. X. Topic: The temple rededicated. Place: Jerusalem. Hezekiah was the twelfth king of Judah; he sought the Lord earnestly; under Abas tbe people had be come exceedingly wicked, and the kingdom was fust going into decay, but now Heze kiah cleansed the temple; made great offerings unto the Lord; lie and the people worshiped the Lord; the singers sang; the people brought sacrifice in such great numliers that it became necessary for tbe Levites to assist the priests. Al. Topic: The cuusc of tbe captivity. Place: Samaria. Hezekiah was king of Judah; Hushes was king of Israel; the kingdom of Israel had become thoroughly corrupt and the government was now over thrown, and the people were carried away captive; Hhalmaneaer and the Syrian army came upon them and besieged Samaria for three years; Samaria waa taken; Shalman eser was succeeded by Sargon, one of his generals. Although Israel was very wick ed yet God put forth every effort possible t save them; they had been warned by the prophets and urged to repent, but Israel was rebellious and would not listen, therefore the Lord removed the ten tribes out of the holy lai.d and none but the tubes of Judah aud Benjauiia was left. VICTIM OF RED TAPE. Lift of Brilliant Russian a Sacrifice to Official Dilatorlness. Vassll Youisbkin, a brilliant gradu ate of Moscow University, hat Just died there In poverty at Ut aao ot 60, and tbe story of his which was ruined by tbe policy of tbe cen sor's department, baa attracted great sympathy and Interest. Twenty-three years ago Yaruoshkln wrote a work on physolo j, .embodying a number of remarki.ole discoveries he had made. His scientific friends pro nounced it epoch-making. The manu script went to the censor In 1873. Again and again the author applied for permission to print, and for tbe return of his manuscript. He accumtt lated a drawer full of formal replies, saying that the matter' wo-jld receive attention. Soured and disappointed, M. Yaruisbkln never undertook othoi work. On the very morning of the funeral a packet of manuscript ar rived at the house where be died, with tbe stereotyped' approval of the censor expressed in a firmulnoto. CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR NOTES D'ICEM JER EIGHTEENTH. "Whatever He Would Like to Have Me Do." Matt. 6:10i John 15: 10-16. Scripture Verces. Ps. 119:9, 11: Matt. 6:10; Gal. 5:22-2(5; 1 Tim. 4:8, 12; 6:6-14; 2 Tim. 2:16, 16, 19-22; Titus 2:11-14; Jus. 1:21, 22, 2G, 27; 1 John 2:1-3. Lesson Thoughts. t'nlcss we aro willing to do what ever He would like to hnve us do, we ore not truly fulthful; if a husband is faithful to his wife only in pnrt. though that pnrt he very small, he Is yet not worthy of Iming culled faith ful. Tho doing' whatever He would like to have me do niukex the humblest service glorious, for the glory is not In the tusk, but In the doing It. for lira. Selections. The Southern Pacific railway ha9 recently secured for president at a princely salary a man noted for faith ful performance of duty. As presl dent of the Grand Trunk he was cull ed upon to Institute unpopular re forms. But he sotiKht to do whatever duty demanded. Thus he pleased the stockholders und won promotion. Christ desires of us similar obedience. He will help us to please hlui thus; then he will call upon us to enter into the Joy of our Lord. The theory of war is that every soldier must yield himself to give in stant and entire obedience to his com manding officer. "Whatever" means "whutever," in the army. Now If this Is true of the obedience paid to poor blundering mortals, how much more should It. be true of our obedience to the all-wise, all-loving Lord ot tbe universe! Of a man chosen by tho church council of a Uganda mission, to act as father to the , boys and to see that they kept out of mischief, a missionary writes: "An ordinary candidate, an extremely nice, sensible man, was suggested, and I was much struck by his reply when asked If he would un dertake the post. He at once said. 'Is it for me to choose my work? You tell me what to do, and I am ready to obey.' " Every duty, even the least, duty, in volves the whole principle of obedi ence, and little duties make the will dutiful that is, supple und prompt to obey. EPWORTH LEAGUeIeSSGNS DECEMBER EIGHTEENTH. The New Testament Standard of Experience and Life. Matt. 6. 10; John 15. 10-16. Heaven could not be heaven if God's wlli were not there supreme. The will of the all-wise, the ever-present, the all-loving, that makes para dise. Each one of us may hinder or hasten Its arrival. Indifference as well as active disobedience will re tard It. But never can It be perma nently checked by any form of opposi tion. Every living kernel contains a life germ. It is a mystery. Just what it is, how it got there, what are its limi tations, we know not. As a part of Ihe great vegetable kingdom It is vi tal to plant, flower, fruit. In the spiritual realm the life-germ is Christ. There can be no vitality without him. It Is In the very essence of Christ's kingdom to gain final and universal supremacy. Knowing this, who Would ask a standard of lire low er than that of the Now Testament? The highest success is achieved only through observing highest standards. Willingness to do whatever the King desires to have done 13 the se cret of spiritual progress. To accept cheerfully his plan lor our lives, to question neither bis wisdom nor his Impartiality, to chetlsh bis dictates as the whisperings of Infinite love, ah. this is the way to real blessedness here and eternal joys hereafter. The Koran contains a story . which Illustrates the spirit of perfect obedi ence. Gabriel while waiting at the gates of gold was sent of God to eurtb on two errands. One was to prevent King Solomon from forgetting the hour of prayer while exultiifg over his royal steeds, and the other was to help a little yellow ant on the slope of Ararat that was almost exhausted in trying to get its food to the nest, and would soon perish In the threat ening tempest If unaided. To Gabriel the one behest seemed Just as dig nified as the other because God gave the orders. Ye are my friends, If ye do what soever I command you (John 15.14). Your power Is not lu your own strength, but in your obedience. One of the most valuable effects of friendship with the goad is assimila tion into His likeness. By u genuine friendship with Christ will be secured the highest and best attainable character. Friendship Implies mutual service. We often make It hard for Christ to be our friend because we fail so sadly in doing our part. RAM'S HORN BLASTS HE Father of lights makes the family of ligbt. . A man with a big sign la not alwaya the sign of A bi( man. , ratientfl pays. Kailb makes nt. Life la all a les son. Frost leads fruits. . No prayer. to uo praise, Worship fl for work. Borrow is God's sieve. Pardoning another may our own pride, .. , . The III at to shout for war aro the last to enlist. . Painting tho wagon puts no ginger in the horse. Tbe steps of greed do not lead to tua tin one of grace. Huian can always make, better use of a saint Jhan of a sinner. God's augels are never apparent lost we should depend on them, nor ever absent lest we ahould despair without them. , lUllh! lnalD always make the man racket. A Htralght sword ia belter thao t looked tanuou, , . . What Will It Malterf What will it matter, dearest, When the day of life is done. And the sheaves we've toiled to gather Shall lie counted, one by one. Whether we worked in sunthinr, Or whether the storm cloud rose. If only wc have the bundles For the Master hath need of thonet What will it matter, dearest, When the pearly gates are paed, And our feet, all torn and bleeding. Find shelter and rest at last, Whether the path was thorny. Or whether the way was plain, If India's poor lost children Shall join in our glad refrain? What will it mutter, dearest. At rest at the Master's feet. Chanting our hallelujahs In rapture and jov complete; If China can join the chorus. And Africa latest, born Shall rise up to call us blessed On the Resurrection morn? What will it matter, dearest Thrice welcome the toil and care, Thrice welcome the pain and heartache iThere will be no tears up there!) Thrice welcome the thorny pathways For our Christ Imth led the way; And. finally, with "all nations" We'll praise Him through endless day. Christ Taught Courage (o Live. Courage to live, to take up our burden again and go forward, stageerini, stinnh jing it may he. but forward: to an back into the fight, thounh it seemed a losing fight: the courage to assume a great re sponsibility an l dare 'o face a poililo crushing disaster: the courage to live that is what Christ has given to men. In nn incomparable way .Tesns ha renewed among men the desire for life. The Budd hist says this instinct is sin. and pleads for the holy Inc. which is extinction, with the result that his civilization is without accomplishments; science, he knows not what it is; nhilisophy is but a system of disordered dreaming: sncial prorcs he has none, neither universal education. Pessimism is the tone co'or of his thouc'it and paralyzes his will. But to Jesus the instinct to live is holy. He claim it for God, and seeks to change the desire into' love love hat is pure nnd glorious iov. Therefore, for the race t'.at wants to live. Christ must be Hie sunrcnie guide and teacher. When He came into life men shook off the look of despair and smiled with ioy. censed to iah fr relief in dcatli and thought of work to 'n. , The assurance that because .Te lives we shall also live, gives increased cour age to live. M"n have nrntested awrnst belief in the life bevond. beer.u." it his taken the thoughts of mm sviy from the duties of the present and led them to tem porize with the evil feelinir that thrv vnuld soon be rid of the whole world nnd attain a quiet nlaee in the heavenly man sion. I svmp.Uluze deen'v with that tiro test. Such assurance of the life bevond fs riart of a cownH or a tired man. ft is selfishness enrried up into the most holy of holies of life. Such n" assurance -'ves no courage to li.c, but the cowardice to run away, the co'"rdiee to die. in the hope the God will giyp everlfing Hfe to one who hnd never begin M live. Tut this is not the assuranr- nf Christ. It is the man into whom the Fnthe" mid the Christ has come and t-iken up His abo-le who is to be where He is and share His gloiy. It is not a oaaiv waiting, bur an active endeavoring, seeking the things which nr .- above and not a nook in a cor ner of tbe heavenly mansion. It is the assurance Mint we are hghtintr a iiuht for eternity, that we are encaged in a wnk which is everlasi iug. that gives n the coinage to live. The flev. Howard M'ih. in hi sermon in the Church of the Holy Trinity. The Joy ot Our tnrcl. M:'V ft rule, and prav to nr1 to Iic'o you to keep it, never, if possibly, to lie dow i at ii i; t without being able to snv, ''I heve made one human being at le.nt n little wier or a inle hnnpier o' u lit'le better tin dav. You will find it easier tliiin you think, and p!e;i-anr--r. Fa-,ier. b-CMir" if yn-.t ivi'i to do God's vnik. God will stirelv find you work to do: nnd lileasanter, hecniitc in return for the little troub'e it irn- cost vnti or the Jiti'e c'io'.: ing of toolisii. vulvar pride it may co-t you. you will hnve a peace of rn' ul. a ei'iel of temper, a dic'riiilne- nnd liooe fu'ncss ahni' yourself nnd all around jom. fucIi a vo'i never 'elt h.-fore And, o''er anil above that, if you loctr for n re'.vnnl in the lite to come. reo'Wt th'S: What we have to hone fur in the life to come is to enter into the tov ot our lord. .Am ho'v did lie lul'i'l that lo ? Bv humbling iliuiself and tabiua the f'.rin of n i-'.ave a'd roniine. not to lie viin-i'l-'Med .to. but to minister and to uivc His whole life, even unto the death upon th- eros. a ransom for many. He mre that unless von tike up l' s I cro-s you will never share Mis crown: be sure that unless you toll- in His toot steps you wnl never reach the pliiee where lie is. If you wi-h to enter into the juv of our f.oril. be sure that His joy i now. :n it wiw in the Judca of t Id. over every "in ner tint renentetli. iveiv mourner that Is "on,frted. every hungry tumuli thai is ft -I. everv pcor nnl, suk or in prison, v. ,io i aiilcd. C. Kinsley. The tlylia-lles.lf.l Sin. sins, comnnraiivelv. may dii be. fore us: but pride hath lite in it. seiisiu.y, as long n wc. It is as the heart ot all. tiie I i rl living, und the la! living, and it h.uh this adianlau'e. that, wheteas other sir. are foui.'Uted by one another, this feeds tven on virtues and graces-, as a moih that breeds in them and consumes them, even the finest of them, if it be not rarefiiiiy looked to. This hydra, as one head is cut oil, another rises up; it will secretly cleave to the best actions aud prey upon them. And therefore is there so iii'itli need that we continually watch, and titrht. and prav against it, and be rest less in the pursuit of real and deep hu iniliation. I.tightoii. l ie To-day Itlaln. The only preparation for tho morrow Is the right use of to iluv. The stone in the baiiii. of the builder must be nut in its iiiace and lilted to receive another. Neg lee. nut the call that comes to I lice this day, lor such neglect is nothing else than boasting thyself oi to-morrow. O. llnweu. Ouinlsrlrot-c ("" "Inroiivenlsm.' A missionary iu Japau tells of a little heathen gill who went to Sunday-school twice, and, going home, said to her heath en grandmother: "The tiod iu Sunday school is very different from my god. I hsve to go to the temple to pray to 111 v god. hut this God they have in Suuiluv school you can piay to when you air warm iu bed, or most any time and H can hear you just as well. But there i one thing 1 don't like. He cuu see you all the time everywhere, aud sometimes I should think that would lie quite incon venient." Miuiouary He view ui the .World. Enormous Debts to Milliners. Tbe other day I saw published the balance sheet of a limitod liability milliners' establishment. If I remem ber rightly, the debts unpaid were set down at about 30,0(Kl. ay the amount cf credit In this one establishment one can Judge of the- enormous sum owed to all milliners by their customers col lectively. It Is well known that heavy commissions are offered to ladles who introduce customers, and that many ladles are not above accepting then l,ondon Truth. THE GREAT DESTROYER SOME STARTLING FACTS ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. Unman snil Intemperance all" Is the (Inn Wlui StufTers the Most Frnm tho sle nnd Manufacture or Intoxicating Keversees. Women, as a genera! thing, are not In temperate: yet ahc is the one that suffers the more from the sale and manufacture of nch beverages. The wife sits up alone till the' midnmht hour mil often much Inter, waiting for the coming nf him who but a few years ago pmmi'cd " love and protect her. ami now with trembling heart and baied breath she lis, ens for his coming footsteps, longing to have him conic, yet dreading his imbe oil" words and often cruel words.- Don't you supnose. as she looks on the drunken fin e and bloated form nf htm thnt nt 'nc time she loved with all the strength of her mire, 'ounr heart, and real ires the bliul'i that hs fallen on her life, the !'nne'esne of her future, don't yon think she lias n depth of suffering of which no one 'an hsve any idea save those who and in the iir storm toed shadows nd thre are thousands and thousands of won-en in this free, benntiful land of ours who ninht after night keep just such rtTnvv viirils. And sure tbu mother, who for days to- i "ether denies herself the full nmnunt of j tood that she may the Letter feed her lit tle rhi'drcn: and. as she tucks the thin, wen covering nroitnd them in their little bed". P"il sees their pale, pinched faces, hamuird from wnnt of food, and hears them murmur in their troubled sleep. "Bread, mamma," and knows that he who should be th" snnport of those little ones, is sncnHing his eamintrs in drink drink! As sh" kneels beside the empty urate, nnd litis her eyes to heaven in nrnyer. she sure ly knows whnt it is to suffer when, in low. nconiinp wail she rries out. "Oh, Cod, wl"- hnst Thou forsaken me?" There is nnnther .pother. Time l;s written lona lines on her face: her hair is well silvered. Years ago she was leit a widow with one chihl. a lovely little lmv. She loved him with all the strength of her intense nnin-e. She made many saeriPces that he midil be the better fitted for life's journey. She tried to teach him to svoid evil, and to become a good and useful man. She thought her teachings were heeded. But they who deal in strona drink iinlnced him to visit their places ol ruin nnil death. Many and manv a night that faithful mother st up and listened with aching heart for the coining footsteps of her once pure, now ruined, boy. Amidst it all she still loved him, and prayed and honed b" might reform. One night she waited all the long, weary hours for him to come, but the morning light found his bed still emntv. He had gotten into a drunken quarrel, and in a heat of passion struck a companion a blow that deprived him of life. He had his trial and was sentenced to a long term of years in State Trison. The evening before he was to be taken to prison his mother vis ited him in the count v jail. The narting of those two broutht tears to all who wit nessed it. Then the poor old mother went slowlv back to her lonely home. She went in nnd direcflv up to her boy's room; there, with clasped hands, she knelt down h'-snle her boy's empty bed. and bowed her head on the white counterpane. And there hct neighbors found her the next morning. One soft, silver lock of hair fell beside the tust parted litw. It hung there motion less. No breath caused it to tremble. Sho was dead dend of a broken heart. And yet, amid all this suffering that wo man is constnntlv enduring, we see everj (lav some pure, fair, young girl giving her self in marriuge to a man that she must know is a user of stronir drink. And so long as woman will do this, so long must sh bear untold suffering. If every young woman would utterly re fuse the' company of every and all men who indulge in intoxicants of anv kind or form, or who in any way favor the lirpioi traffic, it would bring about a greater tem perance reform than ad and everythinn that is now or has ever been done. But will they do it? -Western Christian Advocate. The "Colli Weather" Ksenae. Another talk about whiskv its deadly work, the great harm that it does. Read this patiently, be thankful if the advice and the lesson do not apply to you. and hand both on to others badly in need of them. With the beginning of the cold season there conies a new set of whisky argu ments the winter set, or cold weather set. The poor devil who can't leave whisky atone now takes his drink with the mum bled explanation thai he needs it to keep out the cold. He miiihl much better light a match and, hold it to his tinner. That would only burn the outside instead of burning the inside, and attaching, i -st of all, the machinery of thought. The whisky is taken with the old foolish customary remnrk about "happy days" or "good health," and the mnn goes out. just so much nearer to the end of his hap py days and to the end of his good health. The foolish whisky drinker imagines that alcohol really keeps nut the cold, that it really heats him. It docs nothing of the kind. It deceives him by sending the blood to his brain, start" within him an artiticinl fire which burns at the ex pense of permanent vitality. When thnt sues out. as it soon docs. leaving him colder than before, there is another ehillv feeling and the demand for another drink and so it goes, until that particular human diip goes ashore in the same old rocky place. New Yurk Evening Journal, Drunk! Young man! Did you ever stop to think how that word sounds? Did you ever think what misery and woe you brought upon your friends when you degraded your manhood bv getting drunk? How it rings in the ears of a loving wite? How it makes the heart of a iond mother bleed? How it crushes out the hopes of a father and brings reproach and shame upon lov ing sisters! Drunk! See In in as be leans against some friendly house. He stands ready to tall, uurnnscious as to his ap proaching fate. The wife, with tearlul eyes and aching heart, aits at the window to hear her husband's footsteps; alas! they come not. The husband, the parent, is drunk, spending bis means of support for liquor, while his family ia starving for bread, his children are suffering for cloth ing. His friends, one by one, reluctantly leave him to a miserable fate; still be con tinues on, step by step, in drunkenness, until at length he tills a drunkard's grave. Fathers, mothers, sisieus, brothers, are taking their final and farewell look upon their beloved one, and iu silence they utter to themselves "11 was stronv di-niL dul it all." Header, do you use ll? Tbe Supreme Demand. To .stop l fie liquor industry that defraud myriads of people oi tbe chance to buy the necessaries of life it the tirst concern of every producer and of every working' man. There ia 110 question of economics or h nance that comtMres with this. This is the supreme demand' in our industry to- day. But business indiutrv is nut the su I pieine good of man. "The lite is more 1 than meat, and the body than raiment." . Health to enjuy is more Ihsu tut abund ance of ihinus to be enjoyed. Life to ed I joy and work and help and love is more than quantity nt treasure that life can gather. Not a Cent of Uoad 1st It All, The Itu nor traffic gives us .10.004 trsmps, l.Vl.ism insane people. S.'sl.OUG criminals, sud lOn.'JOD drunkards. It costs more ti.au three tiiuea as much as meat, live times as much as Vhues, aeven times as much sa tea aud lottre, ten times as much as our public schools, snd fifty times as much as preaching the Uosk-I. Ann with all its cost there is nut a caul's north nt' I good iu it all The Harper high liceiu.' law in Illinois fixes the minimum license for selling li quors iu the Stale st SrtX). Anv i-it'. town or municipality may hx the lirenae foe as much hiahr as it desires, but it cannot b lest tluu If WO, - , COMMERCIAL REVIEW. R. C. Dun & Company'a "Weekljr Review of Trade" says: "Holiday goods arc moving free!y and in staple lines there is more ac tivity, even the products that are be twecti seasons finding a fair market Packing and shipping departments ar increasing forces, and traffic conges tion at several points indicates thai the growth of business has overtaxed! railway facilities. Earnings of ait roads excepting for November show an average gain of J.l per cent, ovet last year. "Weather conditions have forced jobbing and retail distribution ol heavy wearing apparel, and also ac r.elcnitcd the marketing of new coin, but there is not sufficient moisture for winter wheat or coke production. Ai record breaking yield of cotton i brinuing the price nearer the point at which normal consumption may be re sumed, although t!n.rc is still much idle machinery at Fall Kiver. "Cither manufacturing news !s most gratifying, especially regarding th leading lines. Structural work in creases and car slinpj are crowded with orders, while many idle steel mills have rcnimcd. "Relations between supply anil de mand in the iron and steel industry must be largely in favor of the pso ducer when quotations advance stead ily without checking distribution. "Commercial failures this week in. the United States arc 245, against 203 last week, 2t" the preceding week, and. ,V?t the corresponding week last yew. Failures in Canada number 20, against ,19 last week, 27 the preceding week and. 2.) the corresponding week last year." Bradstrect's says: "Wheat, includ ing flour, exports for the week aggre gate 2,101,773 bushels, against r,3.V." 306 last week, 4,201,504 this week last year, 5.704,440 in 1002 and 4,604,846 f 1001. Corn exports for the week ag gregate 364,841 bushels, against 29,69. last week, 1,008,951 a year ago, 1,151, 563 in 1902, and 362,844 in 1901." WHOLESALE MARKETS. Baltimore. l'iour Quiet and un changed; receipts, 4,402 barrels; ex ports, 6077 barrels. Wheat Firmer. Spot contract, 1.1 1 t oj-i ; No. 2 red Western. Novem ber, t.ioi&i.io!4; December. i.ioVi i.iofi; January, 1.1 2-4i.l3; steanace No. 2 red, i.p2f!.03; receipts, 4,94& bushels; Southern, by sample. 90(gfe 1.10; Southern, on grade, ool.ll. Corn Firmer. Spot, new. S3 54; November, new, year, 5.VS34 January, SU'i'SjzM; February, 5i-st Q'siy; March. S'5j'S5'4; steamer mixed, Sl52; receipts, 27,586 buh els; new Southern white corn, 48f'Sf 53)i; new Southern yellow corn, 48f, (5.5.VU-, Oats Firm. No. 2 white. 35& talcs; No. 2 mixed, 34'S35; receipts, 6,261 bushels. Rye Dull. No. 2 Western, up town, 90; receipts, 7.755 bushels. Hay Steady and unchanged. Butter Firm and unchanged. Fan cy imitation, i8jo; fancy creamery, 2627; fancy lablc, i6l7; store pack er, I3i5- Eggs Firm and unchanged, at 28- Cheese Firm and unchanged. Larga 1 1 A'g, 1 1 yt ; medium, I Ijgfu: Ifi; small Sugar Strong and unchanged. Coarse granulated, 5.55; fine, S-S5- New York. Flour Receipts, 20,83 barrels; exports, 537 barrels; sale 4,300 packages; market was quiet n nominally higher. Potatoes Steady ; Long Island, r.7J 642.00; State and Western, 1.401.60, Jersey sweets, 2.00(03.50. Peanuts Steady; fancy band-pickedV 5' a; other domestic, iMQ'l'i., Cabbages Firm; per barrel. SO'S'ZS Lard Steady; Western steamed. 7.50; November closed 7.50 nominal refined firm; continent, 7.70. Cottonseed Oil Easy; prime cruds nominal; do. yellow, 2$i'i(il.:6i. Turpentine Steady ; SJ'-Sffi-SJ- Coffee Spot Rio'stcady; No. 7 in voice, 8)g: mild steady. Sugar Raw firm; fair refilling, 4Tl' centrifugal, 26 test, 44'. molasses, su gar, 4; refined nominal. Live Slock. Chicago. Cattle Market steady ts 10. lower; good to prime steers, 6.o C'i7-15'i Por to medium, 3 SO'?5 8o blockers and feeders. 2 oo(Vi''4.io; cows, 1 .351S.4.20; heifers, !75(i5-00; canncrs 1.3512.35; bulls, 2001:4.20; calves, 3.00(06 50; Western steers, 3.00 (5.13- Hogs Mixed and butchers, 4.55' 4 75; good to choice heavy, 4.65(475, rough heavy, 4.401Q4.60; light, 450; 4.67'i; bulk of sales, 4 SS'QlA-S. Sheep Sheep steady; lambs closed? weak; good to choice wethers, 4.301 500; fair to choice mixed, 3 50(g4-3 native lambs. 4306.I5. New York Beeves Good to choice steers firm to 15c. higher; medium and common slow to 10c. lower; bull firm to loc. higher; thin cows iol5c higher; others full steady; about air sold; steers, 3 50575". bulls, a.aj'ov 190; cows, 125(33.30; cables quoted iive cattle higher at 8'iiiKc per pound; tops 12c. dressed weight; sheep higher at I2uc; lambs, 14c. dressed weight; refrigerator beef lower at B'ic per pound. Calves Market firm; veals, 4S 875; culls, 400; good grassers, 3.25: dressed calves firm; city dressed veals, 7(0 M P pound; country dress ed, 7i"l. WORLD OP LABOR. W?.icrloo County (Canada) farmers are to build a telephone system. .There arc over half a million team sters and dra inert in the UnitcJ States. A section ol tlte Mexiran press ia combatting the immigration of Chi nese to that country. Mincowners in Wales have appealed to the miners to concede a reductior of 5 per cent, in wages. The Ontario Government has de cided to abolish the manufacture of biooms at the Central Prison, To ronto. j All members of the famous Boston 'Symphony Orchestra have quit rftr Musicians' Union. The orchestra thus becomes definitely and absolutely non-union organization. ! Steel mill men snd sheet mill roes in the Wales tinplate industry liavf withdrawn from the wages dispute board. I.ynn (Mass) Knights of Lafcot shoe cirtlcs and stitchers organisa tions have requested tbe Saturday half-holiday all the year. It b expected the construction- work on the New York barge canal, ?" ploying' thousands of men, will t started about January t. It is claimed that in New Zc - the fisc in prices of the it-ceswn? of life is out of all proyort.u ti t t incrra.e in wages.