PiPT A THE SUNDAY SCHOOL IRA W- ncNDERpON THE: PAOOS DMNE- INTERNATIONAL LESSON COM MKVTH I'OU ,J.I HV 0 RY THK REV. I. V. HENDERSON. Ihfinf : irnn Christ; n Estimate, Brooklyn, N. T. Preaching at the frying Square Presbyterian Church oo the theme, "Jesus Chriat; an Estl maie. the Rev. Ira Wommoll Hen leraon. paitor, took as hla text St. John 1:14 And the Word waa matte fleah and dwelt among us." He aatd: The blatory ot many lands and of many people through two thousand years la the record of the Influence and the Inspiration of Jesus Christ. Upon the atory of the world none haa made a deeper Impress, none has marked a richer fame. Rorn In a manger, Hla early acta almost un known, a mere pittance of Mis royal wealth of mind and divinity of soul preserved to ua to this day and that pittance a storehouse of wisdom and eternal life the character and the claims of Christ stand forth pre-eminent and predominant before the world Through every epoch and In every age the might and majesty of His life have been a force for uplift among nations, and a factor for righteousness In individual lives. Listening to the admonitions of the Saviour, rulers have learned the way to reign. Attending to the advice of the Master, many a sin-seared soul has entered Into Heaven's haven and found safety In a sure salvation. Lay ing His hand upon womanhood, Christ has bid her rise. Speaking to the hearts of men. He has counseled jus tice, and has bid mankind be fair. To the statesman, to the craftsman, to the captains of Industry and to the tillers of the soil, the words and the works and the lite of Christ have been the measure of true manhood and the guarantee of Hla divinity. Sent of Almighty God to be the Sav iour of human kind. Jesus has taught very mortal how to live. Preaching no gospel of minutiae, our Lord has given unto us a rule of faith and practice that must revolutionize the world. Born Into a world of caste, clan and prejudice of blrtb, Chriat taught the value and nobility ot each an.il every soul. Finding pride to be more of account than purity, He de manded cleanliness of heart. Finding hypocrisy to be far more prevalent than blgh-mlndedness, He asserted the necessity for sanctity of soul. Trusting In the assurance of divine guidance, and feeling the impulses of divine love, the Son of Man came to seek and to save that which was lost. With sublime confidence in the In vluclbtllty of the right, and that truth must win. the Christ assailed and ar raigned, with fearless fervor, all the host of spiritual wicked ones who prostituted to their own ends the holy places and the hallowed pur poses of the Most High. Filled with sympathy for all the army of the earth's oppressed, He spread a loving .arm about them all, and bade them , take courage and have peace and cheer. Knowing the beauty and the blessedness of holiness, and seeing the hldeousness of sin, our Lord yearned that men should experience and know the joy and glory of the Father's favor. First and foremost In the world of human action, Jesus Christ stands to day, yesterday and forever as the Saviour of mankind. The incarnation and the revelation of the Father, He has preached and practiced that no bility of life that awakens within the human heart the recognition of His divine authority. Hearing His words ot love and of light, and seeing His blameless life of beauty and of grace, men have recognized in Him that word from Heaven which shall sanc tify and save the world. Experienc ing the inability of wisdom to re real Jehovah In His ' fullness, and longing for that preachment from on high which shall point the way to sal vation and the perfect knowledge of our God, men have ever since the days of Chriat known In Him that power and ability which can save. "Words are good only when backed up by deels." Christ proclaimed His saving mission and His cleansing grace, and lived a life of love. "Ac tions speak louder than words " De claring His integrity with God, the Lord of Life revealed, In outward act, an inner and divluer grace. I'rglng the need for purity, Ha was pure; stating the nobility of righteousness. He was just; standing Arm for holi ness and for sanctity of life, He never strayed from God; a counselor ot loveliness, He was patient and kind and true; persuading men to godli ness, and dissuading human souls from sin, the Christ ever exemplified In His own career thai gouly and sin leis life that His promises Inspire. Christ as the Saviour Is supreme. Of Imitators He has many, and of equals none. To be the saviour of this world from sin, a man must have within his soul the fullness ot divin ity and of Godhtod. To be accepted tiy mankind as t.ie revelation of the Father and the healer of the race, a man must .how forth In act the hid den, inner power. The Christ rings true. The melodies of Heaven peal through His words. He speaks, and lo! we hear eternal truth. He acts, knd the very manner Is divine. We listen and we see. Our hearts re spond. We take Him at His word, and prove His power. We trust His promise, and we imitate His life. Christian experience sustains Him. He is indeed a Saviour. He Is In truth the way and the life. Revelation is information. To re veal is to disclose. To Inform is to disclose facts which wore before un known to those who may give ear. Disclosure Is an uncovering. Christ the Revealer has disclosed to man what Is the character of God, not only hy the words He spoke, but also by the life He lived. He has taken the Tall away and Informed us ot the tfollnese of the glory ot Jehovah. He has revealed to us not only what God la, but also what man should be. Chriat haa revealed to us the lov ing Father ot each ot ns In our Ood. The Fatherb ! la individual and not alona racial. Sonshlp la no mere matter of nationality, but Is rather the vlcioi s of taraoallly. Salvation t bottom Is tint pwJItleal, but per gonal; not social, but IndlMfual. trough tha individual recogultlon Ua obligation ot soushlp Is ua- lonal salvation assured. The agree- ant of sanctified personalities to ' God, and that well. Is the basis tha beginning of social dellver- ,ea from tha bondage of sin. God Qa tha Father of Israelites first, and Hhrourfh them of Israel. His lev. Is aha heritage ot every heart and not Alone the portion oi tha priests. His race will lift all okJn to g'ery and (through them the Statt. tTba power ot Jesus Chriat in the o.-i'i to-day Is due to tfc ru, , that, i Bit capacity oi ReveslSA and 3a v lous, He measured true to divine de- , mands. Truth triumphs. Sincerity counts. To straddle Is unsafe. In spiritual power Is the greatest strength. The straight way Is the aafa way. Principle Is potent to gain respect. Sham and shoddy are soon discovered Christ claimed divinity, and He lived a godly life. He Insist- I ed that His was the way unto life 1 eternal, and we know He spoke the truth. Investigation of His life flndB His action and speech in harmony. The measure of His conduct by His uttered Ideals can And no flaw. He is as He claims to be, and His glory Is as the glory of the Father. The Christ 'was a stalwart man. As the Anglo-Saxons had it. He was 1 a man who was "foundation-worthy." Fixed firm and constant the Christ was never guilty of deflection from the strict, straight path of loyal duty. Full worthy waa our Lord to be the founder of a spiritual and moral ren aissance that will overcome the world. Built strong and firm and true was He. upon whom the hopes of humanity are fixed. The Christ was a man of courage. He waa a man of heart. Courage is heartiness. To bp hearty Is to be full of heart. He did not shrink from danger. Without a sign of fear or fright, our Lord defied the very ; prince of the powers of darkness Gallantly, bravely, nobly He cleansed I His Father's house. How mightily He Inveighed against the powers of Palestine we may all attest. The Christ was not weak hearted. Hav ing a work to do He did it with a will. Conscious of the odds against Him. He hp.d no fear. Out In the open, despised, forsaken even by His friends, trusting only In the power of the truth. He battled ever on for human liberty. Bearing upon His broken body the sins of an evil world, He was yet courageous; He had always heart. The Christ was sound to the core. The Christ was a man of deter mination. He was a man' of resolu tion. Having determined His sphere and His call In life, He was resolved to fill It. To be determined Is to be ready to go to all lengths that is to say, to see the thing through to the finish. The Christ was true to Hla re solves, even unto an ignominious end. Having marked a clear line of duty. He walked without swerving. Hear ing the call of the dying world, He saw and conquered Calvary. The Christ was a sturdy man. He had power of resistance, and He could not less well force the fight. Born with antipathy to evil. He stood against sin firmly Seeing the Inhu manity of mankind to man, He forced the issue, and He flayed, with burn ing words, the evil of His day. Strong as the oak He stood against the storm. Keen as the tempered blade He smote His adversaries. Were they wary He was more. Were they subtle-He was shrewder. Did they lay a snare. He did but tangle all of them in the meshes of their selected net. When thev were mos cautious than did the Christ confound them. They smote Hlni and He did not Hee. They showed him Caesar's image, but He was not caught. They predicated marriage in the heavenly country and He pointed their mistake. They asked a sign and got not one. But sturdy and stalwart and strong of purpose and of will, as the Master was, He was yet the soul of sympa thy. Hating Iniquity and sroring evil. He had yet a healing hand for men. Disdaining sin, His heart held pity for the sinner. Crucified by wicked ness, He could yet pray mercy for His persecutors. His was the sympathy that cured. His was the tenderness that touched. Filled with divine com passion, He knew the sufferings of human souls, and He preferred heal ing and a rich release. Men, like nails, lose their useful ness when they lose their direction and begin to bend," runs a piece of sterling wisdom. The Saviour had His bearings, and He kept tue goal In sight. For Htm the straight way was the surest, and He walked the middle of the path of duty. The offer of a whole world's wealth could not swerve Him from His course. "Get thee behind Me, devil." was the motto ot His life as He dealt with sin. His fidelity should be the fash ion of our faith. His directness should insure our teal. His sympathy should sustain our love toward men and for God. His stalwart energy and sturtllness of soul should be our pattern. Our lives should radiate Hla light. Our spirits should suffuse His love. What Titian and Corot and Turner did for art; what Bach and Beethoven and Mendelssohn did for music; what Tennyson and all the lyric host have done for the eos-jrvatlon and the culture of the minds of men that, and infinitely more, can Jesus do to ward the saving of a soul. Sturdy and stalwart and strong He stands to-day the Saviour of the race, the Incarnation of the Word. His ac tions are an open book, and he who runs may read. His words are mighty unto life that Is eternal, and he who hears and heeds may live The Imi tation of His character la the calling ot the Christian, The re-presenting of His strength, His power, purity and love is the sign of Chrlstly grace. Have you much or none? Men who wear silk or "stovepipe hats know that the temperature in side the hat Is much higher thai) outside; but it haa remained for French physician to measure the dlf. ference. He has discovered that when the thermometer registers ninety de grees In the shade in the outec air II stands at one hundred and eight de grees In Ills silk hat, and that when It la sixty-eight outside it la eighty eight Inside. From these differences he concludes that the unnatural hoat causes many nervous diseases. Other persons have supposed that the haat ot the hat made men bald. EPWDRTH LEAGUE LESSONS ' f 1 A TRICK OK TIME. Ask any person to think of some hour of the day; tell him to deduct It from twenty and remember the remainder. You take out your watch and inform him that you ara going to count around on the dial, and that when you have counted the number corresponding with the remainder that he must remember, he most stop you. Subject; Ood the Creator, fion. I! 1-2.1 Guidon Text, Gen. 1:1 Memory Versos, 1 to .1 Com mentary. Whatever may bo our opinion as to the historicity of -the story which is the subject of this lesson, upon this we are all agreed: that the beau tiful word picture which so simply tells the story of nod's creative work In the days of the Infancy of the world states the central, ultimate nnd greatest fact of the universe of God. In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. Twenty five times In the first twenty-five verses Is the name or God used. What a sublime, what a scientific, what a philosophic record this Is. If It be an allegory It Is the profoundest alle gory that the world has ever read. These twenty-five verses reveal Ood, firstly, as a fact In the earliest his tory of the universe: "In the begin ning God." Secondly, they reveal Got as a creative force "In the be ginning God rreated." Thirdly, they reveal God as a creative personality ' and God said," "and Ood saw,'' ' and God made." The fact of God Is the ultimate s'atement of the wisest and the most searching philosophy. Whether we call God a force, an energy, a creat ing power or a personality! we must, in sound sense and as the result of universal experience, admit Him ns a fact. This lesson presents Ood, secondly, as we have seen, as n cre ative force. Out of chaos, by the ex ercise of His own will. God created tl'e world. But the Genesis story de.ineatts God to us as something more than a mere creative force. It takes us into the realm of the per-sonallty-jf God and It Introduces us to n Crator who speaks, who sees, who thitils. who Wills. And it gives to us a God who is a creative personal- I ity. It is noticeable also, as In the eighteenth verse, that Genesis gives ' to us a photograph of a God who Is I possessed of moral attributes "anil i God saw that it was good." A God , wiinout moral capacity would b un able to make a moral distinction ns between good and bud. A God who did not know the right, and who railed to exarcise righteo.isn -as, would be unable to distinguish moral worth either In His own actions or In i the works of men. The Genesis record daacltt all i'if- ference of opinion as between theo logical schools will be forever, as it has been and is to-day, the simplest, most easily understood, as well us a profoundly philosophic, statement of the fact of a personal, moral, crea tive God. This we should not forget, this we should not fall to force home upon the attention of all students of the Serlptur?. lnescapeably this lesson teaches the fact of God. The following notes may be found to be of value: Vs. 1. "In (the) beginning." No article in Hebrew is given. But It Is here properly supplied. The first verse tells In general language what God did. The rest of the verses par ticularize from this generalization. "Created." This is a special term for the new and unique. It does not of necessity imply creation from nothing. God likely In the Idea of the writer is conceived as begiunlng with primeval chao.s. The writer does not go back further than that. But either view may be held from the context. That is to saw there la reason to believe either that God is I pictured as making the world out of nothing or out of formless matter. Vs. I. "Without form nnd void." The R. V. gives waste and void." These two words represent our "chaos." "Deep." Primeval abyss. "Moved upon." R. V. "was brood ing upon." This word suggests a generative process. Vs. 3. "Said." God's word Is ab solute. Thus the words of a god were considered in that day to be unalterable. "Light." Not. the sun, moon, stars, etc., but generic light, cosmic light. "There was light." A creative act of God. It was a definite act and not a mere emanation from God. Vs. 4. "Divided." A further pic turing of the act of God in bringing chaos into shape. Vs. 5. "Called day." The name God gave It is important. Names were very Important among the early Jews. They never mentioned the real name of God. They used the symbols, but they used a different word having the same consonantal symbols to designate Him. "Evening morning." The Jews reckoned from the evening in count ing the hours of their day. That may explain the context. R. V. And there was evening and there was morning, one day. "Day." This author thought of n day In the narrow use of the word. This does not prevent us holding to au evolutionary theory ot creation if we so are im pressed by scientific knowledge. The writer of this story is not relating sclent iflc, but relig ious truth. He Is i ntiug to the fact of God. Vs. 6. "Firmament," expanse. Vs. . 11. "Grass," general vegetation. "Herb," grain. Vs. 14. "Lights, sun, moon and stars. Subdivisions of the light of vs. 3. "Signs," astronomical. Vs. 20. "Fowl," birds, Insects, fly ing things. Vs. 31. "Whales," sea monsters. Vs. 24. "Beast," wild beasts; "cattle," domestic animals; "creep ing things," reptlhr, Ready For the lluitl. Mrs. Sarah P'att Decker, of Den ver, aald recently that all nien, as . soon as they hud acquired a moderate fortuue, should retire from busiuesa ! and devote their lives to the State. "Then," said Mrs. Decker, ampll I tying her views the other day, "poll J tics would be pure. Then there would ; be no graft in public contract, j Every vote would count. There I would be no graft-protected crime. , "As to graft-protected crime, have you heard the latest? "A police captain was about to raid a gambling den. t midnight, taking bis place at the bead of a squad of stalwart men, be looked them over cloUy and then said to his lieuten ant: " Is everything in readiness for this raid?" " Yes. air,' replied the lieutenant, salutlug. 'Our arms ure in first-class order, here are the reports, there are the flashlight camera men, and 1 no tilled the proprietor of the place this afternoon.' " Philadelphia Bulletin. SUNDAY. JANUARY 6. ltcrst Communion With Qod. Matt. C. 6. Passages for reference: Gen. 32. 24 19; 2 Kings 4. 11-17; Matt. 14. 23; Lake 22. 41-43; John 1. 48. When Jesus gave the disciples the first principles of his kingdom In the Sermon on the Mount, among other things he gave them Instruction on the subject of prayer. In Matt. C.6 he tells them that the truest prayer Is In the secret place alone with the Father no ear but that of Him whose eye has seen all we have done and who knows our motives, us well as the things we do and the things we ask for. At Penlol, as recorded in (len. 112. 24-:il, is the place where Jacob met Ood face to face and learn ed that the promises were to be ful filled to him through God's merey. and not because of his own cunning or power, Alone with Ood by the brook .labbok, his nature was so changed that the wily supplanter be-, came the prince who had power with God and tnun. When Ellsha would gain u victory over death In behalf of I he son of the Shunammlte woman he shuts himself away from oven the anxious mother, alone with his task and his God. Full of suggestion for us Is the conduct of our great Exemplar when he sent the multi tudes away, and went tip Into I moun tain apart to pray; and when the evening was come lie was there alone." The wilderness campaign was fought nnd won by hlni alone, ami Gelhseniane settled Ihe confllcl as tilonc with God he said. ''Thy will, not nni. b done." Becret co,. rsVnlon with God Is the secret of power In life. It Is then that we learn his will for us, and catch Inspiration for the performance of our tasks. The hiding of his pow er Is found In the secret place. The business of my life has to do with hlni. My Innermost life concerns him and myself. No one else hut any right to enter Its mysteries. In the secret place I get. direction for my personal life. Men of power In the kingdom of God are the ones that get In touch with the current of power In the secret pluce. Public prayer, with all Its benefits, cannot meet, the de mands of the Individual soul. The essentials of the ' Morning Watch" are a quiet room closed doors a mun God between them The Book. The heart is lilted In prayer for the Spirit to Interpret the Book. Man looks Into the Hook, and thinks long enough on what It says to hear Ood's voice. Meditation brings God and man together in the Book. God speaks through the Book. Man alone vviih nature gets God 'a truth out of nature for the needj of the body. Man alone with the. Book gets God's truth for the soul. GOOD m mm ENDEAVOR NOTES JANUARY SIXTH Beginning With God, and Continuing With Him. Gen. 1:1; John 1:1- 14; 15: 4-7. "In Ihe beginning God" will nt any time create a new day for you, on- a ntw life. If you allow nothing to enter your life except whut God has made, this year will be for you as great a suc cess as God's natural world. There is this Inflnlie difference be tween Ihe natural world and the Spiritual world within you, that the one does not know Its Creator, and you may. You want to grow this year. There Is only one way; live In Him who created growth. Suggestions. If you begin Willi God, II is not cer tain that you will continue with Hlni; bin it' you do not begin with Him, it is certain that you will not continue with Him . There is nothing which God gives us so freely as time. Should we not us freely give It to Him? "It Is the first step thut costs," and It begins at once to pay good Inter est. The man who looks ahead Is Hie man who gets ahead. Illustrations. If your life Is not parallel with the light, tho farther It goes from the beginning, the further it is from the right. A foundation Is good or had, not only for Itself, but for every brick in the building above It. Morning starts are Inspiring, but evening starts are depressing. Begin early with Ood. The sooner you deiosit your life In the Hank of Heaven, the larger divi dends will you draw. Questions. Whut do 1 want to curry over from the last year Into this? What lias been the result with other beginnings when 1 did not make them with Ood? What are some of the things I wish to huve uccompllshed by the end of this year? Roads and the Automobile. Bicycles did not a little toward creating a general appreciation ol and desire for good roads, and they would have done more had It not been for the mysterious blight which fell upou the popularity of those very able little machines Just when they -seemed about to become an es sential and permanent part of civil ized life. But the task which the bicycle only began the more efficient automobile has taken up. and now it really looks as If a long-standing disgrace to tho country, the condi tion of its roads, was Boon to receive serious consideration. Of course, It needs nothing else to be remedied, for the question of good roads Is one with only a single side, and when the arguments are heard actions must be taken. II would be a mistake to assume RACE BETWEEN TRAINS. Neither of ihe Engineer Headed the "Broke In Two" Signal. The following story was told last week by J. D. McNamara, assistant general passenger agent of the Wa bash Railroad: "From Clark to Mexico, Mo,, our line ruus almost parallel with that of the Alton. The distance Is about twenty miles. It Is open country and the grades Are light. The 'going' Is good nnd trains race with each other ii often as occasion offers. "One day two long freight trains, one on each road, reached Clark about together. A race, of course, was In order. Passing Centralla the Wabash engineer turned partly around in his cnb and noting that the Alton man was minus a portion of his train gave a 'broke In two' whistle signal for the information ot his rival. The Alton man. hearing the signal Nmself. turned in his seat and observing that the Wabasb train was consldeiably shorter than when the race began be vulled the throttle It Is reported from Paris that Prof. Retiring has discovered a new' I method of sterilizing milk, without ; bolllug It or destroying any of Ua essential principles. The method ia based on tiio powerful qualities of German perphydrol, simply oxy genated. One gramme per liter of this substance Is sufficient to deBtroy all noxious germs. Milk thus steril ized can be kept a long time, and h not injured by transportation, but cannot be drunk until it has been gently warmed and a drop of a cata lytic substance addad. Dr. Behring has proved that light has a very harmful effect on milk, whether ster ilized hot or cold, and he recom mends that It should be kept In ft dark place or in red or greeu bottles. Appropriate Vehicle. Mrs. Newrlch lived In an expensive and luxurious hotel. She knew that well appointed equipages of many sorta ware to be had. and proposed to show that she knew what was suit able for each occasion "Chawles," ahe said to Mr. New rlch'e valet one afternoon, with great dignity, 'I am going to return some calls this afternoon, and you may go to the stable and tell them to send up the best cart-de-vlslt they have." that the automoblllsts are more in- Psn a notch ur two more and smiled as he looked forward to winning the contest. As the speed of the Wabash train continued to increase the Alton man In a spirit of banter gave with his whistle the 'broke In two' signal. As there was no apparent effort made to stop the signal was repeated. "Again and again was the signal given by the racing engitiemen. "At length Mexico was reached, both trains urrlvlng there at the same time, each engineer laughing at the terested In the Improvement of hlgn waya than other people. The farm ers, for Instance, suiter much more, In pocket at least, from bad roads than do Hie uutoniobilists. but both the expense and the personal incon venience fall so directly upon the automoblllsts that the latter are moved to "do something," while the farmer can and does forget how rap Idly bad roads wear out his horses and his wagons, and lie has not been tnh in number Ho. hnniim, of hla i Joke ho would have on his compel !- loads with a small expenditure ol snergy among the possibilities of li If life. Even for the autotnobilist good roads have some advantages to which he has paid little or uo attention. He knows what a difference It makes 'o the machine he now hus whethei highway grades are easy or steep. and whether the road surface I? tor when the break would be dis covered. As soon as he stopped nt the Mexico water tank the Alton man called ucroBB the right of way: "How far you goln' without - out tail llgrfts?" The Wabosh man. observing foi the first time his own predicament, said : "Oosh! but I thought you was smooth and hard or rough and soft ' whlstlin' for your own hind end. but it has not been noted by man) af the fraternity thai it is the low- power machine thut profits most bv j good 'roads that is turned by them from an unsatisfactory vehicle, fre- I City Times queutly stalled mid barred from mn I routes. Into one la many ways as effi cient for practlral purposes as th big cars. And low power means a comparatively small original invest ment, simpler engines, smaller con- " Ditto, Bud!' exclaimed he of the Chicago and Alton, as he noticed re gretfully that about two-thirds of his own train wns absent " Kansay WORDS OK WISDOM. sumption of fuel, and a marked de crease In bills for repairs. Good roads would therefore enor mously increase the number of peo ple who could afford to have auto mobiles of people, therefore who would buy and use them. And It would be much for the advantage, even of those to whom the cost ol the best of the present machines Is not prohibitive, If machines much lest expensive could come Into something i like common use. The greater ttu Mttbor of automoblllsts the less arc ' they a "class" to be viewed onVtOMlj and hoe tile ljt and the less will they be bothered by neadle33 and Irritat ing regulations. New York Times. Road to Adirondack, A preliminary survey has feeon made for macadamized roads, such a are built by the State, through Hit heart of the Adlrondacks from Old Forge to Blue Mountain. The gen eral plan proposes that the road shall start from New York City, proceed thence to Albany, to Utlca, Reinsen Old Forge and fourth Lake. Th( roud will then follow the northern shores of Sixth, Seventh and ptghtb lakes to Blue Mountain. The scheme Is to return by way ol North Creek to some point ou Lake George, nnd thence to Albany and New York, the starting poltu. The circuit -will include all of the Fulton chain of lakes and nearly all the The avenue ot escape is a popular thoroughfare. SchoolR for scandal seem to be badly overcrowded. Once in n great while a cook gets contrary nnd refuses to quit. A child's first Impression Is usual ly made by the paternal slipper. If a man is easily bought. It's dif ficult to make him stay bought. A man seldom prays that his friends may be saved from him. Old bachelors are men who have given marrid'ge a serious thought. Ever notice how polite the average man Is when he has something to sell? Some men are no mean that they even refuse to let their wives have the last word. It's difficult for a woman to make a dollar go farther than the nearest bargain counter. Some men cling to single blessed ness because they consider It the les ser of two evils. A baby is about the only precious thing a woman possesses thut doesn't excite thfe envy of other women. There may be sufficient money In circulation, but It's sometimes diffi cult to induce II to circulate o'ur way. Every woman is firmly convinced that she earns the money every lime she purchases a dollar article for ninety-eight cents. One of the things a conceited youth can't understand Is bow uny girl can Adirondack and other resorts en j be so foolish as to turn him down route. It Is said that this Improved highway will be hullt from the ?f,0,- 000,000 fund recently voted by the News State for highway improvements and new State roads. There will be com paratively little to do in the way ol new road building between I'tlcu and New York, as much of that distance for some other chap.- From "Point ed Paragraphs" in the Chicago Dally Till' Great "Fault.' One of the most Interesting and ailirieurlva nt-tlolna tha aiil.tant nf has already beeu covered by the Slate, ' earthquakes that has appeared since but the improvement along tbit tne great California disaster is con stretch will be extensive. The toad trlbuted to ilnrnnr'a WooiHv hv n,-. from Uticu to Old Forge will be im proved by widening and macadamiz ing. Then through the Adirondack Mountains, where tha course follows the highway, the road will be Im proved, but for the most part the road will bo new. Utlca (N. Y.) Correspondence of The Automobile. Improving Highways. Massachusetts is malntuiuing hei very enviable reputation of pi ogres slveness by adopting u policy ot lni- I proving the State highways by meant 9l shade tree planting. During the pust year, according to a recant re- I port of the Massachusetts Highway man Whltaker. It is called "The Fault," and traces the visible cause of the California earthquake from the point at which It conies out of the Pacific Ocean in the vicinity of Point Arena, 120 miles north of San Francisco, until it disappears at San Juan, IIS miles farther down the coast. The dictionaries define a "fault" us "a severing of the con tinuity of a body of rock by a break through tbe mass, attended by a movement on one aide or the other of the break. . . . Occasioned by movements of the crust of the earth." The great fault of April 18. says Mr. Whltaker, "was the most stupendous in history, exceeding by four times Commission over 3200 trees were the length ot the fault in tho ereat planted along tne various atttio roans, the varieties being restricted prlncl pally to Norway, white and-uugai maples and a considerable portion ol the different kinds of native elms. Vuporiiug Iron. Henri Moissan. the French chem ist, has recently continued bis ex periments In the distillation, with the 'electric arc, of various metals and metalloids. He concludes, as the result of these researches, that there exists no known substances which 'cannot be distilled in our labora lories. Tho ebullition of iron Is very difficult to produce, yet Moissan hus distilled 400 grams of Iron in twenty minutes with an electric current ol 1000 umperes at a pressure of 110 volts. In all t-a.- the vapors ot the metals condense In the form of a crystalline dust, possessing all the chemical properties of those metals when reduced to the form ot powder, Molssan's experiments throw light on tho probable temperature of the sun, where Iron and tho other chem ical elements exist la the state of vupor. The maximum temperature of the electric arc is about 3500 de grees Centigrude. But, owing to the greater pressure produced by gravitation on the sun, it is probable that the temperature of ebullition of the elements there Is higher thuu ou tbe earth. Japanese earthquake of 1891." Mr. Whltaker followed the line of the fault down the coast, taking a cam era with him; and lie tells with vivid plcturesquem ... of the freakish and widespread destruction wrought throughout Its length. It spilt and . rent tbe earth, rearranged the con , formation of the coast, threw dams and roadways many (eet out of plumb, flung railroad trains about as it tbey bad been children's toys, aud uprooted great forest trees six feet in diameter. Mr. Whltaker's article la Uiustratod with remarkable photographs Living on Air. A very distinct advuntage about motoring is that It does not give one uu uppetlte. Most open-air exercise sends one home n hungry as u htm ter; and If one oats largely in these daya of strict regime and restrict, u diet, all uorts of terrible things are sure to happen at leaat are prom ised by tbe doctor. It b pointed out in a daily contemporary that while all tbe good effects ot working up an appetite are produced by u long drive in a motor, yet the amount of food re quired to aatlsfy what seema to be one'a huge hunger is actually very small. The air Itself feeds one, and air neither upsets one's digestive ap paratus nor does It supply, one with adipose tlMue. London World. The proposal to transmit electric ity generated at the Victoria Falls to Pretoria and Johannesburg Is tak ing shape, and a first Issue of capital will, It Is said, be announced within tho next few weeks. The distance from the Fnlls to the Rand as the crow files is 600 miles, but It will be necessary to make deviations that will Increase the distance to be cov ered to nearly 700 miles. Th', ex traordinary pressure of 150.00C volte la proposed. At the outset provision Is to be made for 30,000 horse pow er, but this may be tncreaaed as ne cessity arises. According to Dr. P. Marchal. some Insects are as fond of eggs for food as human beings are. He haa ob aerved that a hymenopterous Insect. Tetrastichus xanthomelananoe, has made a practice of sucking the eggs of the elm beetle. It first perforates them with a small hole, and then swallows the contents. Afterward the tetrastichus utilizes the empty egg shell by depositing Its own eggs within. It might be supposed that the primary object of the operation was that implied by the last state ment, but Dr. Marchal Ib confident that the eating of the egg is a no less important motive. Every summer several astronomers visit the Janssen Observatory oa the extreme summit of Mont Blanc to take advantage of its great altitude, which favors the study of solar phe nomena. At present another effort Is being made there to photograph the sun's corona without an eclipse. The observatory Is remarkable for having its foundations laid In hard packed snow. The builders found it Impracticable to reach the underly ing rock. At a recent meeting of the Academy of Sciences In Paris, Mon sieur Janssen announced that the measurements of level executed In 1904 and 190(1 showed that during that interval the observatory had not appreciably shifted in position. Gas mounds is a popular name in Texas for the low, circular eminences, averaglug twenty feet In diameter and two feet In height, which abound In forest and prairie regions In Lou isiana, Texas, Southern Arkansas and the Indian Territory. On the suppo sition that the mounds have been raised by ascending gas from subter ranean oil pools, they are regarded as Indicating oil beneath. Robert T. Hill, the geologist, who has examined the mounds, -J'.sputes this theory of their origin. They occur In many dis tricts where not the least sign of oil or gas has been discovered. Mr. Hill thinks that they owe their existence mainly to unequal settling of the ground In poorly drained areas sub tected to abundant periodic rain fall. Some curious researches have re cently been made by French army (urgeons on the relationship between good eyesight and good target prac tice. At first glance one would say lhat the two things must itivariably iepend thu one upon the other. But the facts lead to a different conclu sion. At least they show that one may have very defective eyesight and yet be a very accurate marksman. Astigmatism, myopia and other de fects of vision may exist In a marked degree without destroying the abil ity to aim and shoot straight. In ihe French and German armies sol iiers are peruilted to shoot from the right or Hie left shoulder, according ;o their own preference, which is of ;en guided by the superiority of one ye over the other. Accuracy of iudgmont counts for as much as tcuteness of vision with the good iiarksman. EVEN HEAT IN TEMPERING. Fluid Ruth and Electric Furnace to Supply It. In tho process of annealing aud tempering Bteel It Is desired to con trol the heat, which is applied with great precision. If the temperature Ib too high, too low. or too fluctua ting the object under treatmeut may be ruined. To produce the best re sults. In hardening tools for high speed cutting, or gears or pinions, a continuous heat of 2340 degrees Far euhelt must be maintained for a con siderable time. The old methods of securing this directly, with gas or coke, presented difficulties which made them highly objectionable. One of the recent attempts to Improve on them Is described in the Loudon Standard. An English compauy is Introducing an electric furnace to do the work. In this apparatus a mutalllc salt or mixture Is brought into a molteu condition by means of an electric cur rent passlug through It, thus provid ing u bath In to which the pieces of metal to be heated are placed. The electric current flows through every part of the bath and the tool alike, thus Insuring a perfect uniform beat ing. By simply regulating t(je cur rent It Ib possible to attulu any tem perature between 1350 aud 2380 Far enhelt. The furnace consists of a fireproof rectangular tank for hold ing tbe aalt bath, which is built luto fireproof cement contained in an iron box. . The temperature is regulated by a awltch. The furnace, when cold, can be brought to a white heat in about hall an hour, and the makers assert that the cost ot operation Is very rea sonable. The exactness with which it can be controlled will appeal to t.u;se engineers who are desirous of turning jut only the best work. Makers of I. injur,-. i'i . British empire is built upon engineering achievement. ,The fab rication and perfection of firearms and heavy ordnance, ot great fighting ships aud speedy mercantile vessels, and the wholesale use ot steam power in other apheres, have placed Oreat Britain where It is to-day, poli tical Intrigue and diplomatic dls agreements notwithstanding. With out the engineer this vast over-sea empire of ours could not have com.6 into existence. London Electrician, i