YTbe PutpTFl A SERMON jRAVrtftNDEIo: (Subject : Murder. Brooklyn. N. Y. Preaching at ti frying Square Presbyterian Church on the above theme, the pastor, Roy. Ira Wemmell Henderson, took as his text. Exodus 20:13, "Thou shalt not kill." He said: The extent and force of the admon ition to recognize the Inalienable right of all men to life Is not widely recognized In our day. In view of the professed love of our forefathers and J sending ot any noui to his taut rest. The criminal ha the right to a death not of the State's making. The prln ' rlple of capital punishment Is as vie I long nt bottom as Is private murder I by the Individual, and is unwhole i some In that It disregards the very law of inalienable right to life that If essays to protect "Thou shalt not kill," says the State, "for If you do, an! we can prove the cane ngalnst you, we will slay you." The Incon sistency of the situation should ap peal to everyone, but queerly enough the very disciples of that Christ who said, "Father, forgive," are among the loudest elamorers for the life of the murderer. But the greatest etnmpl? of the violation of this commandment Is to be found In the actions of the Chris tian nations of to-day. Theoretically Christian! w are, as segregated peo ples, largely pagan. Praising Cod as Individuals and despising, most of us, In our private lives un-Chrlstlan conduct nnd un-Chrlstllke acts, we EPWORTH LEAGUE LESSONS SUNDAY, MAY 3. ua for Clod and the Christ. With no I 'stand ready a3 members of a great circumlocution and no wavering of ' social body to sustain and to serve the voice, Moses speaks out for God a principle that the modern world, aa the nations of all ages have done, itsregards. To be sure the civiliza tion of to-day la better In general than the manner of life thousands of j years ago. We do not kill our neigh- ! bors out In the open to gain our food. The settlement of private wrongs by "wild Justice" Is, In this country at least, limited largely to the mountain whites. No man of i enlighteament grants the right of a I ruler anywhere to stamp out a hu- j man life arbitrarily as of old. Fhys- ! leal disability In a babe to-day merits I more our sympathy than slaughter. ! Gradually we are coming to recog- i nlze the rights and privileges of the 1 children who are yet unborn. Ven- j dettas are unpopular, and the mere i threat to kill Is, very properly, suffi cient to put a man under bonds to I keep the peace. Nowhere Is the 1 murderer safe from the clutches of I outraged law. Does he slay his vic tim here, then whither shall he flee? The minions who upholds the law In Mohammedan Turkey will hound him to the earth to return him to the scene of his fortal sin In the borders of Christian America. Here and there a few far-seeing souls declare that even the State has no business to ex- Mt an eye for an eye, a life for a life, and they say that society has no more right to cut short a human career than has that unit of society the Individual. Yes, tho recognition by "he world of the wisdom of this commandment Is greater to-day than ever before, but ft Is not yet what It should be. To kill a man Is to deprive him of life. But the process may be varied a id the length of time consumed In stifling the light of life nay be greater or less, according to the means employed. "Thou ehalt not kill," says the commandment, and Instinctively we picture the quarrel, the hot fight, the hand quick to slay. "Thou shalt not kill," and we see the gun, the axe, the poison, tho bludgeon. "Thou shalt not kill," and the vision of a sharp, keen con flict, man to man, or of the silent, sudden blow flashes Into the mind's view. Yes, each photograph Is true to some scene In life. To these the law refers! But Is this all? Is It always the axe or the poison or the gun that fells a soul Into eternity? Must the murderer be the man with the instrument of immediate death'.' Are the murders which are the re sult of overt crime the only killings that take place? I think not. Slow work Is not so fast, but it is just as sure. The breaking of a human heart by Ill-treatment, either in word or act, Is murder, though the papers never hear of It. Constant abuse may end a life, though the body show never a scar. The man who hounds his family to an early grave with physical abuse Is u murderer. The smooth and careless youth who breaks his mother's heart Is no less guilty than the man who brains me with a maul. The scurrilous and unscrupulous measures that nre wholly corrupt and corrupting. Professing a love for I pearefulness nnd for the Prince of iv.tr.-. we pay without a grumble our military tithes. Indepd, we may often j ice the spectacle of two mighty po ! pies, each paying homage to the MOM God, clutching each at the other's ! thront, the meanwhile each Is asking I God to give the enemy defeat. All too often we may see the armies and i the navies of a wealthy Christian I nation full of power, menacing a ' weaker sister to collect a money dent. 1 The nations of this dav descend to the decision by fisticuffs which al' worthy men deny t.i be manly, or to lie of value to decide an issue. The situation would he ludicrous were It not so lamentable. Christian men nnd Christian na I tlons have no communion with dls I loyalty to the Father. Tho Individ ' ual. the church, the peoples have no I rail to kill. Cod gave us brnins with 1 which to settle our difficulties in i ober thoughtfulness. He gave ui : ciur hands to help ourselves, not to harm each other. The mre money I you may possess, the more must you rare for the men below and about ! you. Financiering that makes Its chief profits through the exploitation Of the man with small means, or through the financial wrecking of the 1 moneyed man, has no place In a I Christian economy, for Its fruit Is all I too often death. Many are the vic tims of unscrupulous Napoleons ot ! finance. The easier you make the task of the toller 1ft your shop, or mine, or mill, or field, the more do I you serve your God. Tho oftener we j settle disputes botween Individuals , or among nations, by the courts of ' arbitration, the more do we glorify j our Lord end manifest our manhood. Immense armaments merely prove t national weakness of will and lack 1 of mental poise. Wars often bring i victory to those who are In the right, ' and they should. But no war has 1 ever proven the validity of the case i of any victor no matter how well ' founded the argument of that wln 1 nlng party may have been. The crushing of little children at meu's tasks Is a short-sighted policy to Bcore It very little. The system which wrecks and destroys the youth i of a land, prepares a heritage of wrecked humanity for the worrlment of future generations. Gain at any J price la a poor business proposition, and is morally unjustifiable. My friends, the need of the hour in this matter la for an honest rocog ! nltlon, by Individuals and nations, of ! the force which the words of Jesus Christ add to the command "thou shalt not kill." We need a qulck , ened consclanco that t-hall always counsel for the right. We need a j holy manhood that shall Insist that no form of murder, be It brutal or I refined, shall soil the private or the ! public record. The call is for Christ ! men who dare to do good and to be upright, no matter how much the I dividends may suiter, no matter how '. much humanity may re:usiln unap- preclattve of klndnejf, charily and writers who hold honest men un to I love. The call is for men of high and men of low estate who snail ever rec ognize that war Is hell, and that God Is honored, not Dy the smoke and din of battle, but by the exercise of hu man self-coutrol. Let us, then, be mer., and be sure to keep our hands from Kood-sulltl-ness. Let not the death ci our broth ers be upon us. Let us live aud let live. Let us serve and save. Lei us not destroy. un obllquy and shatter sensitive souls till the hand of death draws them out Into the other life, are guilty of a mortal crime. The man who grinds the men who labor till they welcome death with Joy Is soiled with blood. The company of respectable and mon eyed men who use their reputable names to float financial schemes and then ruin those who. trusting them, have put their all Into their keeping, are guilty of robbery least of all. The record of the starved, the broken-hearted, the Insane, the suicides, is but the corollary of their greed. The man who sells his neighbor poison, be that poison arsenic or whisky, is accessory before the fact to a suicide. The employment of children In factory end mining work before their time 13 almost murder In the first degree. My friends, anything that tends to destroy or prematurely to curtail human life Is a means to murder, and the men who set Into motion the forces of unrighteousness that deal and hasten death are criminals In the slight of God, though the law may never touch them. Far be It from me to say that many of the men who commit these Indirect murders have any real Intention to cause misery or to commit crime. But the truth is that they are none the less cul pable. The one thing that Is needed Is a clear-cut vision of the meaning of the commandment which frames our text. The need Is for sharp and unmistakenhle definition of what It Is to kill. Tbo eyes of men must lie opened to their personal responsibil ity for tho outcome of their acts. A new realization of tho fullness of the command of Christ must Infill every human heart. Moral laziness must give the way to moral clarity of vis Ion. Spiritual Indlfferenc must yield the road to spiritual Insight. The Christ must come Into all men's hearts, not In small measure, but with a fullness that shall leave no room for unrighteousness. We must train our minds to thoughtfuluess for others, and not to satisfaction of salt. The money in our purses ought to burn our very souls If we see upon It any tinge of blood. Tho health and happiness of the man who tolls, and bends a weary back that we may live tu luxury, must bo our care. The f. melioration and betterment of the Ife of all the world Bhould be our constant aim. As Christian Individ uals we should guard the life of very human toul. As the right ot the Individual to siay nis brother li denied by the commandment, so also implicitly tho right of society to take human life Is questioned. The murderer Is an enemy to society, and for the best welfare ot the many It Is wisest to keep htni under guard. But tbo prin ciple of the lex tallonls, the life ex acted for the life destroyed, is un christian, and In the light of the I teachings of Jesus Is unwarranted. The Slate lowers Itself and commits real sin when It wreaks the penalty of death upon the modern Cain. Ven geance Is the business of the Lord, It Indeed there be any such thing. The auw dm nothing to gain by the The Gates of Pearl. In his sermon, "On the Twelve Gates," Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman savs, "I am sure that there Is some meanlni; In the fact that the gates are of pearl. Do you know the his tory of pearls? Humanly speaking, it is the history of suffering. When discovered it Is at the risk of the pearl fisher's life. It Is said that pearls are formed by the Intrusion of some foreign substance between the mantle of thu mollusk and Its shell. This Is a source of irritation, suffer ing and pain, and a substance is thrown around about that which la Intruded to prevent suffering, and iub pearls are formed." Counting the Cost. Luke 14.25-33. Passages for reference: Matt. 19. 21, 22; Luke !t. 5ft, 60, 62; Matt. 6. 19 23: Mark S. 34-38. The sight of the multitudes follow ing Christ from place to place, called forth an expression from him as to what It meant to be his follower. If any bad had a light conception of what It meant before this his words must certainly have convinced them differently. No earthly friendship can be suffered to come between the man and the Master; even life Itself must be secondary to his will. Neither Is It something that Is taken up as a kind of fad or fancy, because some one else does It, when It Is convenient, but laid aside when It does not suit. On the contrary, It Is a life that means sacri fice, self-denial; It means the will sub ject to Christ all the time. He al ludes to tho fact that. If a man wishes to build, he first counts the cost, to sc whether he will be nble to carry the project through; and that a king going to war first compares the strength of his army with that of the enemy, to see whether his chances of victory are enough to warrant him In going to war. If he cannot he makes terms of peace before he Is defeated. Tho com plete surrender Is what Christ de mands. When the test was applied to the crowd that followed Christ many of them went no more after him. Men and women of some temperaments are easily persuaded to take the step that Introduces Into the Christian life. They are not to blame for making this decision, but they are at fault In not recognizing the fact that loyalty will be called for when It will moan some thing to be true. Not having thought of that, and the Idoa of self-denial hav" lng so far no place In their creed, they stagger at the sternness of the life, and bo withdraw from the association of him and his friends. It does not take us long to say that It requires the giving up of all sin; a man must stop being dishonest, he must be truthful, and not breathe the He. The world In Its wickedness must be surrendered. It means the giving up of those things that are question able In our own lives. It menns the severing of all tho ties that bind us to a worldly life. In short. It requires the self-surrendered life. The Treacher Needs Help, i Aa long as tho winning of souls Is considered to be the work ot one ; man, he and the believers to whom he I ministers must 3uffer loss. They are ; kept from the spiritual exercise and activity which Is essential to a j healthy lite. Lo is robbed of the J support which their witness and their i prayers could give. Andrew Murray. Paying For Sin. Evrry sin must bo paid for; every e;usual Indulgence Is a harvest, the price of which Is so much ruin for the soul. Robertson, Shoes Hurt; Urlde Wed in Stockings, i From the classic regions known as ; "Barefoot Nation," near Falrheld, 1 ill., there appeared In that town an unsophisticated bride and groom, and ; were married at the court house by Squire Dickey, sayB the St. Louis Globe-bemocrat. The couple had arrived early In town, and the groom had bought his I prospective bride a new pair of shoos, , and tbey hurt her feet woefully. She wore them about an hour or so while shopping, but her feet hurt her eo badly she pulled off the shoes and ! went In her stocking feet to the court ; house, where. In the presence of the ' entire court bouse delegation and a score or more of lookers on, she stood j In a pair of striped stockings and said the vows. He wore a pair ol i blue striped overalls. She was Mrs. Martin Jane Green and he was John Green, both ot Gold en Gate. She was the widow of her new husband's deceased brother, Frank Green, who was drowned a few mouths since while rafting logs. A honeymoon back home was taken in a tumbledown wagon. MAY FIFTH The Power of a ContenteO Life. Phil. 4:10-20. (Consecration Meeting.) A contented king. Ps. 16: 1-11. Goodness satisfies. Prov. 14: 1-14. Content with little. Eccl. 4: 1-6. Content with wages. Luke 3: 1-14. Content with our work. 1 Cor. 7: 17-80. Content with Godliness. 1 Tim. 6: 1-S. Contentment Is not a natural grace; it U something to be learned. Moat etiquette deals with ncenes of nlenty nnd luxruy; but the Christian Is taught also how to bear himself In poverty nnd barrenness. This trarse Is worthy to be taken as the keynote -of Christian Endeavor. "1 can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me." Of coure one can be contented with nil one's needs supplied! And that is the condition of the Christian. Suggestions. If you would be strong, be con tented; every discontent is a weak ness. To gain contentment, remember what you have, and forget what oth ers have. A contented life Is not necessarily a r.atisfled life. Move ever forward, but with unruffled brow. A contented life Is based on God's will; a discontented life on self-will. Illustrations. Contentment Is like a teloscope tube; It shuts out the lights of earth so that one can see the stars. Contentment Is the poor man's bank: and It never falls. Contentment Is the only philoso pher's stone; It turns to gold every thing that It touches. Contentmont Is the language of heaven, and everything becomes me lodious that Is translated to It. Quotations. Contentment Is natural wealth; lux ury, artificial poverty. Socrates. Our content Is our best having. Shakespeare. If two angels were "t down from heaven one .to oon'jc? an empire, tho other to sweep a street they would feel no Inclination to change employments. John Newton. Contentment conslsteth not In ad ding more fuel, but In taking away some fire Fuller. Patriotic Endeavors. One of the best ways of . holding young men In Christian Endeavor work Is by establishing some patriot ic service In connection with the soci ety. Germany leads to-day In the manu facture and use of alcohol for light and power. In that country pota toes aro tho chief source from which alcohol Is produced. The potato crop last year reached the astound ing proportions of 1,775,679,000 bushels, or more than 53,000,000 standard tons. Of this amount near ly one-half was used In tho manufac ture of alcohol and starch. One eighth of all the tillable land In Ger many Is planted to potatoes, which show an average production of 217 bushels an acre, which sold at an average ot 27.6 cents a bushel, or about $G0 an acre. In Franco alco hol for manufacturing purposes Is made chiefly from molasses and sugar beets. One Secret She Kept. It was the same old story of a man who refused to tell his wife the out come of a business transaction, In which, naturally, she tools a deep in terest. "No," he aneered, "I won't tell you. If 1 did you'd repeat It. You wumea can never keep a secret." "John," said the wouian, qulotly, "have 1 ever told the secret about tho solitaire engagement ring you gave uie eighteen years ago being paste?" Tlt-Blts. Two Ways of Pruning Grapevines. In all grape growing localities the Knl ff en system Is the best and cheap est for srrong growing varieties, such as Niagara. It Is best because It re quires less care and work, and It Is cheap. It saves money In time and labor. Only two wires. Instead of three or four, are required for the trellis. Slow growing varieties, such as Delaware, aro better trained on the fan system, as they must be re newed from a point nearer the ground. When following tho fan system the pruner can always cut to good wood; when following a more definite system, as tho Knlffen, some times he r-,st cut at a loss. The fan stem Is briefly as fol lows: When planting, cut the vine bhek to two buds; next spring, again cut back to two buds; second spring after plnntlng, If vine is strong, leave one cane about two or three feet long, and tie up to trellis wires. When growth on this Is about six Inches long, rub off all sprouts below the point on the upright whore It Is de sired to start the fan. Third spring, prune back to six or eight buds the strongest canes that arise from near a central point below the first wire; tie about three ot these fan-shaped to tho wires and remove all the rest. The following seasons, renew the wood from as near the trunk as pos sible and Increase the number of arms to five or more If growth Is strong. A vine trained by the Knlffen sys tem consists of an upright trunk or standard and four arms. To produce this result the young vine Is treated similar to the fan system for two seasons. The second spring after planting, select tho strongest cane a'jd tie It straight and firmly to the top wire, cutting everything else away. The third spring, select four arms, two on opposite sides of the standard near the lower wire and two similarly placed near the upper wire, cut these back to six or eight buds, ac cording to the length of the points on the cane, tie them to tho wires, and remove all other canes. The fourth and subsequent years renew the arms with wood that arises from a point as near to the central stand ard aB possible. Canadian Horticulturist. Sweet Potnto Hotbed. The most convenient size for a sweet potato hotbed is one thnt will hold three barrels of potato seed. Take for the back a board sixteen feet long and one foot wide and for the front a board the same length, eight Inches wide, the end boards twenty-six Inches long, to como even with the front and back boards, nailed to a solid stake at each corner, also a stake In the middle of each sixteen-foot board. Then take a spade and dig the dirt out bo as to make the bed twenty Inches deep from the top of frame boards; tho same all over tho bed. Then fill In with fresh stable manure and tramp down to ten Inches In thickness. Tho manure should have considerable bedding In It and stay heaped up at least twenty-four hours before It Is packed In the pit, when It should be shaken well and thoroughly mixed, as some of the manure will heat eooner than other parts nnd will cause an uneven temperature and consequent uneven sprouting. After the manure has been placed nnd well tramped so that It slopes to the south, put in four inches of loose earth evenly all over tho bed. Let this stay until the dirt becomes warm, then place tho potatoes on so as not to touch each other and then cover two Inches deep with fine loose earth. If you find in a few days that your bed is too hot, make a sharp Htlrk and -tin It to the bottom of the bed and leave several holes through the centre nnd the hent will soon es cape; then fill the holes again. As for sprinkling or wetting them. It is not required, nor should they be rained on until plants nre well up; the steam from the manure furnishes all moisture that Is needed. The bed should be kept covered until sprouts are well up, but the top may be re moved to give the plants air and light when tho temperature is not so cold as to Injure the plants. The Eplto-mlst. Raising Carrots. It has always stemed strange to the writer that carrots were not more universally grown, for not only are thoy remunerative commercially, but they are most excellent for feeding live Btock, specially horsea. It Is a well-knowu fact that carrots when fod to horsos Improve their wind greatly. Tho gross profit from an acre ol well-grown enrrots should be about 1300. A light loam or sandy soil suits them best, with but a moderate application of manure. For general cultivation, tho writer prefers the Rubicon, DanverB and Long Orange-, for if grown In excess of the market, they can be profitably fed to tho live stock. It requires from three to-four pounds of seed per acre, depending on the distance between tbje rows. The plants should be from throe to six inches apart In the rows, und the rows wide enough apart for a horse cultivator to be used. A good bit ot hand thinning can be saved by going through the rows first with a boe and cutting out a hoe's width, leav ing about three or tour plums be tween the first hoe's width aud the next. Carrots are free from insect or other enemies, as a rule, and de maud no extra attention. There Is no farm-raised animal that doesn't relish carrots, from the fowls up. The writer still believes, at the risk of being called old fash ioned, that we would have healthier and more contented lire stock It wo fad more roots and leas mill feed; also that our farms would pay better It we didn't put all our eggs In one basket. For example, If a man goes In for dairying exclusively and is by chance unfortunate enough to have to kill all hlB herd on account ot tuberculosis, he faces temporary em bnrrassment, to say the least; where as, If ho had fewer cows, and other crops to depend on, such as beets, carrots, strawberries, potatoes, etc., he would feel the loss so much less. A Farmer, In the Country Gentleman. Beginner In Horse Brooding. In an article of caution to begin ners In this line of work, the English Live Stock Journal concludes as fol lows: As a general rule It Is not desira ble for a commencement to be made with more than one breed, even though the soil and climatic condi tions may favor tho course. The be ginner, no matter how extended his theoretical knowledge may be, will have much to learn when It comes to a question of practice, and although the experienced man may succeed with several varieties In his stud at the same time, tho prospects ot the newcomer will not be advanced by adopting thlB course. He may re member, too, that, if making money be his object, he will probably suc ceed bettor by taking up a breed that Is In demand In his district, as by doing so he will probably bo able to dispose of his misfits more easily and upon more advantageous terms. When he has made his name, pur chasers will come from all parts for his good horses, and therefore dis tance Is practically no object. Tho misfit, however, will always be with him, and, though the number ot these undesirables may be limited, they will continually be making their ex istence felt. There is no royal road for extinguishing the misfit, but tho best way to limit his appearance is to breed only from the best and beBt brod stock, following out the linos upon which the most famous families of the Stud Book have been produced, and by avoiding all fantastic experi ments. By adopting a policy such as the above the horse breeder may rest practically assured that success will ultimately attend him; though possi bly ho may be called upon meanwhile to exorcise the golden gift of patience. How to Foretell the Weather. The Farmers' Club of the American Institute has Issued the following rules for forecasting the weather: 1. The wind never blows unless rain or snow Is falling within 1000 miles of you. 2. When cirrus cloudB are rapidly moving from the north or northenst there will be rain within twenty-four hours, no matter how cold it Is. 3. Cumulus clouds always move from a region of fair weather to a region where a storm Is forming. 4. Tho wind always blows from a region of fair weather to a region where a storm is forming. 5. When the temperature sudden ly falls there Is a storm forming south of you. C. When the temperature sudden ly rises there is a storm forming north of you. . 7. Cirrus clouds always movo from a region where a storm Is in progress to a region of fair w'eather. 8. It Is said when the cumulous clouds aro moving from the south or southeast, there will be a cold rain storm on the morrow, if it Is in sum mer; If It Is In winter there will be a snowstorm. 9. Whenever heavy, white frost occurs, a storm 1b forming within 1000 miles north or northwest of you. 10. The wind always blows In a circle around a storm, and when It blows from the north the heaviest rnin Is east of you; If It blows from tho south, tho heaviest rain Is west of you; If It blows from the eaat, the heaviest rain is south of you; If It blows from the west, the "aviost rain Is north of you. Stumbling Horses. Some horses are addicted to stumbling, others acquire the fault, and still others have the stumbling habit thrust upon them. In tho first, it is almost Incurable, but the second aud third causes can be remedied by tho rider or driver. If tho ground is rough or uneven, hoiBes with a low action are prune to stumble. Other horses which are naturally slipshod, genernlly stumble because they do not lift their feet high enough from the ground. Laziness is another cause for stumbling, and horses that irre heavy in front, or whoso forelegs nre weak or unsound, have the same fault. Very often careless ness on the part of the driver causes a horse to stumble. This makes it necessary al ways to bear in mind the value of keeping the horses well In hand and sufficiently collected. If the habit Is duo to lazlneflB, It can olten bo cured by riding or driving the horae over rough ground until he has been broken of tho fault. But In all cases tho cure rests with the rider or driver. The most surefooted of horses Is bound to stumble at times, hut this can lie reduced to a minimum by keeping a tight rein. A slack rein la ofton the sole cause tor stumbling. If fatigue la tho cause, cixtra care must be taken to koep tho hut - well .up to the bit. No good horseman will erar take chancea ot his horse stumbling by allowing a slack rein. Stumbling Is not only an annoying habit, but It often results in serious injury and many times In the total disability ot the animal. Whlla ua habitual tendency to stumble often does not admit of a cure, the average case can be prevented by the methods su3ated absre. Indiana Farmer. A Tale of the Rail. By HORATIO WIN8LOW. "Well," said the President of the Railroad Board ot Director, "we won't put In any safety system be cause It's cheaper without." "O. K.," said the Board. "All right." muttered General Pub lic; "you Just wait and seo If you aren't taught a lesson." So the President and the Board of Directors waltel until the next meet ing, but as no one had taught them a lesson they concluded the O. P. must havo been mlstakeu. "This year," said tho Vlce-FresI-dent of the Board, "we might as well mnke these telegraph operators un derstand that forty is about the right alio for fhelr monthly envelopes. Of course, this means that we'll havo to hire a lot of kids, but what's the odds?" "O. K.," snickered the Board ot Directors. "All right," the O. P. nodded wisely; "but you Just wall aud see If you aren't taught a lesson. ' So tho President and the Vlce PraaktoUt and the Board of Directors waited until next dividend time, but ns no one came around with any school books they concludod the O P. muBt have been mistaken. "Seems to me," urged the Secre tary of tho Board," that we're spend ing too much money on extra shifts of men. If a man can't stay at his post sixteen hours a '.ay, he ought to bo fined." 1 "O. K.," chuckled the Directors. "All right," growled the Public; "but you Just wait and eee If you aren't taught a lesson. You Just wait." So the President and the Vice President and the Secretary and all the rest of them waited for some time, but as nobody with a teacher's certificate or other credential came around they decided to start out In a private car and find out what the General Public meant. About this time, along about the end of his sixtoon-hour day, a seventeen-year-old boy at $40 per month, and no cuts In pay for overtime, fell asleep over his telegraph Instrument. There was no safety system and a few moments later two trains tried to pass hurriedly on the same track. Unhappily the President and the Vice-President and the Secretary and tho Board generally had had their car unhitched at the last station up tho line to enjoy a champagne sup per, tendered by prominent citizens, so that nobody was killed except 25 0 Immigrants who couldn't vote and didn't count, and an engineer, fire man, and brakeman or two. Moral Tho General Public Is generally mis taken. Puck. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON COM ME NTS FOR MAY ft BY THE HKX. t W. HENDERSON. WORDS OF WISDOM. There has been a lot of happiness mlsBad In this world by worrying about getting It. Florida Times Union. Humility Is not servility, by whole dictionaries of meaning. The word Is from humus, the ground. The humble man 1b a man of position. He makes tracks, ho can be followed, he can be found. Homo Herald. No man Is more miserable than ho who hath no adversity; that man la not tried whether he be good or not; and God never, crowns those virtues which are only faculties and dispo sitions; but every act of virtue is an ingredient into reward. God so I dresses us for heaven. Jeremy Tay lor. Let us cultivate and reverently cherish the honest Indignations of our nature, for they are the life and fire that Is In us. Gou has given them; and the man is most happy who has them the warmest, the truest, the least wrenched by preju dice, the least dulled by sense and sin. Phillips Brooks. The time will come when techni cal education will become the strong est link In the great chain that Is be ing forged for the evolution of the farmer and It will be brought about by tho co-operation of children with i was clarified. parents and parents with teachers, and so reaching on uutil we have the universal co-operation of the level headed, far-seeing common people, tho American farmers. Fanui' Beocher White. Edison's Tnste in Timepieces. Some years ago Thomas A. Edison, tho great American Inventor, was presented with a beautiful 8wlse watch by a European scientific so ciety. That the gttt was really a magnificent timepiece may be judged from Its value, whtch was $2700. After some time the makers began Inquiry to find out of the watch was giving satisfaction. This Interroga tion brought to light the fact that Mr. EdiBon makes little use of the valu able gift. Instead ho buys a stem herds, as God would have him to do. Subject: .To.eph the Wise Ruler In Egypt, Oen. 41:38-49 Golden Text, James Memory Versos, 88-40. Two years have passed, as we are told In Oen. 41:1, between the events which are chronicled In the 8crlpture that we studied last week and those that are recorded In our lesson for to-day. With Joseph they have been years of confinement In an Egyptian prison. To be sure, he was a man of Importance above the men who were Jailed with him, he was a favorite and trusted lieutenant of the warders of the dungeons; but ho was never theless a prisoner. A good life In a prison Is still a prison life. Joseph was a prisoner under the dominion of Phnraoh. He was also a prisoner for Ood. He could unlto to-day with Paul In the declaration. "I am In chains for Ood." Joseph's only crime had been his desire to serve Ood and be faithful to the social obligation! of his surroundings and his man hood. He went to prison because he would rather be obedient to the vision and the call of Ood than to barter his character and the favor ot the Almighty for a mess of pottage. That which appeared to man, per haps, to be disadvantageous to the future success and prosperity of Jos eph, however. In the providence of God was working and did work out most splendidly and marvellously for his enduring fame. His wisdom as a diviner to the baker and the butler of Pharaoh In the prison leads him di rectly Into the court of the emperor. His explanation of the meaning and application of the queer dreams the Pharaoh had had about the cows and the ears made him a marked man In the estimation of the king. It was the means, for him, of entrance Into vice-regal power. One thing noticeable about Joseph, first, is this, that he gave substantial evidence of his nearness to Ood. Of course In those days among the nobles of the Egyptian court a man would perhaps be noted as a com panion of God for different reasons, so far as outward expression Is con cerned, than would Impress us of this day and generation. The court and the emperor were Impressed with tho godliness of Joseph because he was an Informing oracle of God. "Can we," says Pharaoh, "find such a one as this Is, a man In whom the Spirit of God Is?" Pharaoh saw In Joseph the lineaments and the min ings of the Spirit of 'Gad because Joseph declared the Implications of his dreams with courage, with sense, with tonvlctlon. He was impressed with the soothsaying powers of Jos eph. His gift for accurate divination caught his fancy and fixed his atten tion. That which Pharaoh saw In Joseph and honored with vice-regal favor the captain of the guard had dis cerned from quite another point of I view, iiiat which attracted the at i tentlon of Potlphar and gave him confidence In Joseph also Influenced the minds of tho keepers of the prison and led them lighten the burdens of j Joseph and to Install him In a place ; of responsibility and authority among ; the men with whom he was Incarcer ated. And that which they all saw we, too, seo to-day as wt gazo down tho perspective of the centuries. Joseph was faithful to Potlphar be cause he was the child of God. ,Ve was trustworthy In prison boc-use he was In right relations constancy with God. Ho was able to Interpret dreams and to unfold them with prophetic power and more than com mon accuracy because- he kept his senses alert and his wholv manhood alive to the ministrations of the liv ing God. Pharaoh was right. Jos eph was a man In whom the Spirit of God abode with power. If God had not been with him he would have been overwhelmed with the insistency of tho importunate invitations of Pot iphar's wife. Ht God had not given him grace ho might have used his lib erty In the prison to have escaped to a more hospitable soil. If Jehovah had not vouchsafed to him a more than common ability to understand the mind of God he never would have been able to have predicted the fam ine that with such oxactness came to pass. The power that came to Joseph In a material way wbb a tribute not to him, but to the God through whom he was strengthened and his vision Pharaoh was no fool. I H Rfiw with nroialfin lie. rinA I., ,1.1... 1 the man. And so he says, with a philosophy that is beyond question and an Insight that Is altogether eom mendable, "None so discreet and wise as thou." For God had given Joseph tho vision. Another thing that is noticeable la that Joseph was not unduly puffed up by the unexpected and unprece dented Influence that was so suddenly thrust Into his grasp. It might easily havo turned his hoad. But the Im petuous dreamy youth of yesterday Is now a man. He haa seen much of the world and he Is cautious. Called to a special work ho keeps to that work. He offends none by any exhibition of pride of position. He uses his Immense authority for tho future welfare of the people. In the days of prosperity he prepares for tho coming days of adversity. He shep- winder, costing a dollar and a halt breaks the chain ring off and thruBts It In his trousers pocket. It It be comes clogged with dirt, he squirts a little oil Into it by way of encour agement, aud If It proves obstinate after this treatment he smashes It with a hammer and buys a new one. Philadelphia Press. In Terms of Pig. The Ingenuity of the Chinese In surmounting difficulties Is well Illus trated by tho following dialogue, which recently took place on the Im perial Chinese Railway: Travelor "I wish to ship these two dogs to Pekln. What is the rate?" Railway Official "No got any rate for dog; one dog all same ona sheep; one sheep all same two pig; can book four pig." "But one dog Is only a puppy; ha ought to go for half fare." "Can do, all right." Then, turning to his clerk, "Write three pig," ho said. Llpplncott'a. The town of Paofi, Ind., la named tot Ueueial Paoll of Corsica, who de feuded that island against tha French In favor of the British. Ho dtifi In Eug.and and haa a moaa ment In Westminster Abbey. the people under his rule. The lesson ought to teach us that nothing Is Impossible to the man who lives near to God. It ahould make us humble, regardless ot tho heights to which we may gradually or suddenly attain. There Is said to be an Increasing de mand for dredging In Egypt, on ac count of the drainage works con templated by tho Egyptian Public Works department. Machines suited for use on tho small canals will be chiefly In request, and manufacturers of theso are recommended to bring them forward. A steam water-weed cutter would also sell well. 1 declare that tho joy of a perfect abiding love is the greatest this world contains, and yet, If you Und not this love, naught will bo lost ot all you have dona to deserve it; for this will go to doepen the peace of your heart, and roudor atlll truer aud purer tho calm of tho rest of your days. Maotorliuck. Just to be true to ono's own prin ciples, from day to day election day no less than other days being opou Blnded always aud hospitable to new facta, Is lu tho very highest sense, to live "the life of faith. " Home Herald.