A SERMON ' J SJ : THE MEN" 1 Subject : Tlio Religious Life. Brooklyn. N. Y. Preaching nt the Irving Square PresbvieHnn Church 1 on the theme "The Religious Life." ! the pastor, the Rev. Ira Wemmeil I Henderson, took ns his text Dent. It3, ".Van doth tint live by broad only, but hy everything tint proeocdeth out of the mouth of the Lord doth ! man live." He said: The one thing most nerossary In the life of 1h Individual and of no- ' clety la religion. A man may exist 1 In the possession of nil the temporal and material aids to comfort and to j the satisfaction of the natural man. but he never begins really to live ; until he Is conscious of the divine I per onallty and recognizes the valid- Hy of the divine control. A man may i exist without a thoroughgoing ponse of the reality and the control of "the : Divinity that shapes our ends," but I he only is alive when he gains a con- j sclousness of God and of his account- 1 ability and Infinite Indebtedness to Him. In our day too many men are drift ing rrom the religious life, too many -are endeavoring to live without a : controlling sense of the reality of Cod. too many are endeavoring to live as though C"..d were non-exlst- I nnt and as though He were entitled to no authority over their lives Many good men, confusing eccleslastlclsm with religion, and uncomprehending of the vnst difference that there often lo, though to be sure there should not be, between church membership and the Christian life, have turned and are turning, altogether ton commonly for the peace of mind of the church of the living God. away from organ ized tellgious systems primarily and from any sort of religious observ- P.C3 at all. Gazing upon the hope irss .Insincerity of many Christians nd the stupid indifference of many hutches to the needs of foclety and :he doivmds of the times, as con trasted with the beauty and the uni versal Interest of the Cod-pian and His Qospe), upon whose character and truth the Church is founded, meu j have misjudged Christianity by its j misrepresenting fruitage, and, in I numbers that annoy us, have turned I from religion entirely. Conteraplat- ing the sins of individuals In the , church, they have permitted their eyes to be withhnlden from the dls- I cernmenf. of the truth that the per- I tonality and the pronunclameutoei of I Jesus Christ as the oracle of God are the leaven that most surely could transform their own lives and effect a transformation in the social order of which they are a part. .Many bad men, with the determination not to know or to serve God under any con ditions, utterly are neglectful of the claims of the religious life upon their higher natures. They turn from religion because they are willfully deslrouts to be the followers of the uevii miner man me servants oi i God. Many meu have turned from or- ! ganized religion because of Intel- I leciual difficulties. Some of theBO have gone out of the church to fol low the bent of their peculiar and personal religious conceptions and convictions; some have turned to philosophy and have deified man as sufficient unto himself; still others have to their entire satisfaction eliminated God from the scheme of things. In spite of the attitude of a host of men. however, a true religious life is as necessary to the welfare of human ity as are fresh air and pure food and the creature comforts that we desire, need and strive so persistent ly to secure. No man is well round ed no man has realized the possibili ties of manhood; no man is com plete; no man is really alive until he is olive unto God. And no man has sounded the limits of the capaci ties of his own being until he hus en joyed a knowledge of the highest rev elation of the character of God that is in the world to-day. A true religious life ousht to ap peal to every man first, because it Is reasonable; secondly, because it is spiritually real; thirdly, because it is ethically influential The true religious life is reason able. It does no damage to our good sense, and It commends itself to our judgment. It does not shock our Ideas of the fllness of things. It sat isfies our Intellects. Man, in the wis dom of God, is an intelligent being; he possesses mntal qualities that are fundamental in his make-up. iMen must be convinced of tlio reasonable ness of things before they can have any lasting hold upon them. That which Is Intellectually unsatisfying or that will not stand the tests ap plied by the minds of men. thay re ject. Man does nor demand that he shall be able to exhaust every subject which comes under the province of his Intellect, but he does demand that, whether or no he is able to explain all the things in which, as a rational being, he holds an Interest, he shall at least be able to discern in them the evldeuces of reasonableness. Religion appeals to the mind of mm, Not because he is able to sound all the depths of relig ious philosophy or of religious truth or to explain all the manifold won ders of religious ouperience, but be cause there is in religion that which is intellectually reasonable and satis fying. No religious system that is worthy of attention holds the respect of humanity for long unless It oe first of nil of no damage to our sense of the fitness of things. The true relig ious life commends itself to our best Judgment and In the recognition of its imperatives we find jest and Joy. The true religious life Is transend antly e.nd delightfully real. It is not susceptible, perhaps, to arithmetical or geometrical demonstration. We are not able to prove It In its specu lative cud abstract phases by the ter miuo'ogy or the experiences of the senses altogether, but It la none the less teal. Laying hold as It. does upon the divine, It Is simply inexplic able in all Its outreachlngs through the medium of Unite speech. As true It Is that tongue cannot tell of the giorems r-ali i n-8 of the snlrltnnl !'.! as it U that the ton mo has not yet told the fulliiPbs of the glories of that richer life that Is yet to be. Out though the tongue may be unable lo explain It all or to reveal In finite language the Infinite experiences of the spiritual life it la none the less real. The spiritual religious life Is the result of experience. It Is ex perience. It Is Just os exact and scientific In its way and just as ex perimental mystical and abstract though It be, as any other scientific discipline. It cannot, of course be demonstrated by the exepriences of the uhvsicist alune- or by the ter minology of the geologist alone, or hy the rules of th algebraic formu lae. Rut tt has Its own lawn. Its own characteristics may be sclentlflc nllv tabulated. It;: e.perlences tuny b classified. Its realltv may be In vesti gated and proven by any open minded, open-hearted man who will place himself within the realm of Its manifestations and permit himself to bo moved upon by Its Influences. It Is spiritually real. Then, too, the true religious life such ns has been revealed unto us in Jesus Christ is ethically influen tial. It takes hold of the conduct nf the man, and whereas he was be fore satisfied with lax and easy reg ulations for the ordering of his per sonal and social life, It lends him past nil that Is superficial and Insufficient and less than wholly righteous, step by step into such a recognition of the claims tif God and of humanity upon his llf'" that he Is soon satisfied with nothing but the best In manners nnd morals, and Is continually test ing himself bv an Increasing measure to find whether or no he Is worthy of the approval of Almighty God, his King. The real religious life that was practiced bv our Lord nnd Sav lous Jesus Christ Is a life that Is militant in the life of the man seven days a week. It Is no week-end religion. It Is n force from the first stroke of the midnight chime on Saturday night to the precise moment when another week having gone ring ing down the grooves of the past the I shall boom again another mid night note. It declares to men the reality of the divine authority nnd :lie Insistency of human accountabil ity to Him. It lends the soul Into n larger recognition of the claims of personality nnd inspires humanity to square Itself with the claims of so ciety upon the individual life. The true religious life in Jesus Is as vital In national affairs as it is In individual. We do not need in our times more churches or a larger or ganization. Whut we need most Is that the present organization nnd the present churches shall make the re ligion of the Lord Jesus Christ to bo felt and realized as a vital force In all department! of our national life. The true religious life is the med ium whereby comfort, joy. hope and courage are mediated in divine fash ion to the human soul. In no other life Is comfort so satlsfyingly given. In no other life Is the joy that hu manity so largely needs so truly ministered. Here Is our highest hope. Here we drink deep of courage and nre most endued for conflict against principalities and powersf and pan oplied clfeetunllv for the conquering of sin. The greatest mistake In the world Is for a man to reject the privileges, the prerogatives, the nppeals of the religions life. Cor the soul without God Is not alive. Only in the con sciousness of His reality and in will ing subjection of self to Him do we live. The live man is the one who lives within God through the grace and love revealed and mediated in our Lord Jesus Christ. I Thirty Things to Remember Lime For Keg Enter. Trofessor J. E. Rico, of Cornell Cnlverslty, Ithaca, N. Y,, in the course of an address at the poultry Institute at Guclph, Can., said one of the results of withholding lime from pullets was that they ate all their eggs. When lime was sup plied they quit the habit. This may account for not a little of tho egg eating about which so many farmers are now complaining. no damage from the treatment, while i Its Inevitable destruction by the para site Is prevented. New York Sun. Water Willi Their Feed. Giving horses a bucket of water '.o sip with their feed, like men do when they eat. Why not? A horse man says of this plan In Norway when feeding horses, that In that SOuntrV you never see a broken minded horse, nnd It Is because horses ire allowed to drink while eating, 'he same as men do. He ndds: "Our horses, let them be as thirsty as 'get -ut," must still eat their dry fodder, 'heir dry hay and oats and corn, with nothing to wash them down. Rut In Norway every horse has a bucket of water beside his manger, and, as he iats, ho drinks nlso." Egg-Eating Birds Cured. There are several ways of handling ?gg-eatlng birds. They usually be have all right as soon as they get nut where they have more room and fresh air. and the shells grow harder, so that all works together to effect a cure. Ponding this, darkened nests, raised so that the birds cannot stand itid look Into them nil the time, are helpful. A cloth bottom Is some limes placed above the real bottom of the nest, having a slit for one egg lo pass through. In extreme cases an egg has been smeared or mixed with bitter aloes as a lessen of let-alone, which Is said to be effective. We have this difficulty occasionally to ward spring, but seldom do more than to provide abundant exercise, good food and dark .nests. If the sinners can be spotted it is well to coop them by themselves for a time, as such a vice spreads rapidly, espe cially In an idle Hock. Nests may be effectively darkened by tncklng a bur lap curtain at the top edge, to hang four-fifths of the way down, just so the hens can push them and easily. C. S. Valentine, in the Tribune Farmer Bverf Road Leads to Jesus. A young man Just starting upon his work in the ministry was one day talking to an aged minister in Lon don, who had spent a lifetime in the. service. The young man said, "You have a great deal of etperleuce; you know many things that I ought to learn . Can't you give me advice to carry with me In my new duties?" "Yes, I can," was the response. "I Will give you a piece of advice. You know that in every town in England, no matter how small, in every ham let, though it l; hidden in the folds of the mountains or wrapped round hy the far-off sea, in every clump of farmhouses, you can find a road which, if you will follow it, will take vou to London. Just so every text you shall choose to preach from tho bible will have a road that leads to Jesus. Be sure you find that road and follow it; be careful not lo miss It mce. This Is my advice to you." The Soul Winner's Equipment. Re filled with the Spirit. (Eph. 5: 15.) This is the call to every Chris tian to be filled with the Spirit. That Is what Is needed to-day. Only those who are filled with the Spirit cau be soul Winners, To be tilled is the privilege of ail. Christians are known by their fruits. "With out Me ye can do nothing" (Jno. 15: 6). It is as impossible to live the Christian life without the Holy Spir it as to live natural life without air. There must be an emptying of all else before there cau be a real filling. Holiness must prevail. The little sins If tolerated will hinder the Spir it from having full sway. This is not only a privilege for every Chris tian, but a duty; for it is a com mand: "Be filled with the Spirit." C. B. Styers. ilumus in the Soil. Professor Whitney, of the Bureau of Soils, says humus acts as a sponge in the soil and absorbs totic poisons which are given off by the plant roots. However this may be, the farmer must add humus to his soils to make them produce good crops. There are several ways In which hu mus is Increased in the soli. To make the matter clear to thoso who do not understand what humus Is it might be well to state that humus is the dark-colored mold left after or ganic matter or vegetable matter has decayed. Then in the light of this explanation farmers will understand that any organic matter turned uu der and allowed to decay will form humus. Barnyard manure, straw stalks, etc., the plowing tinder of green growing crops, such as clover, cowpeas, rye or any other crop used generally for green manuring will add humus to the soil. The lack of organic matter is usually noticed by the soils becoming out of condition. They run together and cako after heavy rains. When such a condition occurs the farmer Should spare no pains to add this highly essential part. Weekly Witness. Convenient Fountain. Once In a while we sae among the mass of inventions and contrivances presented by our fnrm and fruit nnd poultry pnpers one that needs no sec ond look to tell that it is an ideal fix ture for the intended purposo. A glance shows that it will do its work and do It better than any other ar rangement can. And now I come with my little con'ributlon. It Is a poultry water fountain, and my excuse for describ ing It to your renders Is th.U It, too, fills the bill better than anything I else of the kind. Fill It In the morn- , Ing, and your chickens, little or big. have a convenient supply of clean j water for the day. Gel your tinner to make a stralght- sldod gallon bucket, of tin or galvan ized iron, with a cover soldered on airtight. Cut one side loose from the bottom for n length of four or i five Inches and hammer the loosened side back toward the centre of the bottom. As It goes bnck the edge rises, and when you have an inch to nn Inch and a half of the bottom ex posed the edge will be about throe- eighths of nn Inch above it. To make the water seal, a strip of galvanized Iron or tin. three-fourths (2) (1) Before Strip is Soldered On. Finished. of an inch wide and as long its the . cut in the side, Is soldered around the edge of the bottom nnd at the ends. The cone-shaped dent or de- presslon in the Bide of the bucket i should extend two-thirds of its height. There are many poultry fountains made on the same principle, but none ' that I have seen or heard of that so completely protects the water from I filth. As there is no extension from the original circumference of tho bucket nothing can drop In the water from above. The drinking place seems small, and It would be small for a cow, but is not for a chicken. Often I have seen five and six grown hens drinking from It at once. To fill it, hold the opening under a faucet or use an old kettle with a spout, or submerge It in a larger bucket. To empty, lay on the ground, opening down. For little chicks, set it on the floor or ground; for those of larger growth, in a winter pen or scratching shed, set it on a block eight or ten inches high and turn the opening away from the most active scratching operations. Try it. It will save you lots of work and your chickens many a thirsty hour when you are absent, or when I they have your pans or open foun tains scratched full of chaff and dirt. It is not patented, and any tinner, can make one for a little more than the coat of a gallon bucket. E. J. Balrd, In New York Tribune Farmer. By JOHN TRAINOR. 1, Remember that work Is only a means, character Is the end. 2. That sincerity Is the foundation of nil honest work. ' 3. That sorrow Is the price most men pay for lasting attainments. 4. That you label your own work. B. Thnt no one can hold you down if you are determined to succeed. C. That, every man is destined to do something worth while, 7. That seven roads load to Rome. 8. That most people Judge you by first Impression. . That few men succeed until they try. 10. Thnt hard work Is no small part of genius. 11. Thnt It takes no longer to say kind words than those that cut. 12. That tho only way to keep your credit good la by paying your debts. 13. That It Is easier to do good work than poor. If you onco learn how. 14. That tho more difficult things nre to accomplish, tho more worth while. 15. Thnt o sensible employer la more anxious to push you ahead than to hold you down. 16. Thnt you are one link In a great chain. 17. Thnt ambition develops, self ishness thwarts, body and mind. 18. That rules nre necessary to a business ns laws are for right gov ernment. 19. That you can't learn nnylhlng in a day. 20. That the fact that you are being employed is a promise of good work. 21,. Thnt your boss often appreci ates your work, but does not find time to tell you so. 22. That time progresses and methods change. 23. That it is legitimate to talk about your goods as long as you tell the truth. 2 4. That there Is only one way to sell goods; place them in the market to advantnge. 25. That many a man might seek you' as a customer if he could find you out. " 26. That only cowards are afraid to venture. 27. That even angels are Impatient once in a while. 38. That It Is foolish to bear n grudge. Unkind feelings are not marketable. 29. That it pays to dress well, even In business. 30. That every workman thinks that if he were the boss he would act differently. Chicago Tribune. Drawing Men. The holiness of Christ did not awe men away from Him, nor repel them. It inspired them with hope. It was not 'hat vulgar, unapproachable Banc lity which makes men awkward In its presence, and stands aloof. Its pe culiar characteristic was that it made men enamored of goodness. It "drew all meu unto Him." This is the dif ference between greatness that Is first rate and greatness which is sec ond rate between heavenly and earthly goodness. The second rate and earthly kind draws admiration on itself. You say, "How great an act how good a man!" The first rate and the heavenly imparts Itself Inspires a spirit. Story r,f God's Love, i Christ's life makes the letters that alone cnu tell tho story of the love of God to man. Home Herald Less Motion Than Emotion. Two men were coming into Denver from a nearby town on a local train the other day. The train stopped every five minutes, It seemed, and one of the men became impatient, finally, when the train halted for the engine to get up steam the man's im patience overflowed. "Now, what do you think of this train?" he said to the other. "It isn't making much progress," replied his friend. "Progress! I should say not," said the impatient man. "It would be a fierce job to take a moving picture of this train." Denver Post. Middleton, an English engineer, who thinks he baa solved the prob lem of propelling and steering large vessels under water, believes that Great Britain's food supplies in fu ture times of war will be brought here by large submarines, which bis Invention makes possible. He Is try Ing to get the Admiralty to test his liventiou, wuich is kept secret. Surgery For Trees. The successful treatment of trees by surgery Is the subject of a report iride recently by a botanist named Eberhardt to the Academy of Sci ences, in Paris. M. Eberhardt has practiced It, he saya, with entire suc cess In Iudo-China. He has often performed operations on tea plants, mulberry trees, orange trees and other tropical plants. Expert m-nts in cold climates have not met with much success so far, but it is believed the system can be used with advantage In the southern regions of Europe. The operations are not amputations, neither are they mere subcutaneous Injections, such ' ns have been made successfully in Europe for the cure of some parasitic disease of plants; they are surgical in the strictly modern sense. The method is adopted when the trees are attacked by Insects which penetrate the bark and deposit their eggs In the wood. The long-horned beetle is a serious plague In ludo China. Una larvae hollow out galleries in the tissue of the trunk and branches; these interrupt the circulation of the sap, and the tree speedily withers and dies. Eberhardt's method consists of Opening up the gal'ery with a scalpel, removing the larvae with a forceps or curetting instrument and then Hush ing out the cavity with an antiseptic fluid, consisting of forty parts of gylcerine, 11(1 of formaline and 850 of water. Three or four washings are given at Intervals extending over about fifteen days, and at the end of that time cushions of vegotable tissue begin to appear along the edge of the scar. which heals completely In from six to eight months. It Is essential during the first two or three months lo protect the wound from light, which seems to stop the formation of n.ew tissue. When the trunk Is so seriously at tacked as to render so radical at) op eration undesirable, M. Eberhardt pricks the cavity in the tree with a trocar, to which he affixes a syringe and injects a solution of 180 parts of formaline, sixty of glycerine and 760 of water. This he forces In until the cavity is filled to overflowing. Either t ue larvae come to the surface, when they are extracted with i lie forceps, or else they are poisoned. Two injections are. usually made at jlght days' interval.' Tho formaline hardly seems to penetrate the woody fiber beyond the surface broken down by the parasites. The wound beats In fciiue. and 'he tree keumt, to suffer Farm Notes. In a clover country a farmer who owns a -eed huller can make from $5 to $10 with it, net, by huillug for his neighbors. A good tool to cut turf around trees and along borders of walks cau be made from an old hoe. Bend the shank out straight and sharpen from both sides. in calculating the size of the silo which you will need, the Cornell L'nlverBlty bulletin says that it Is ad visable to estimate than an average 1000-pound cow will consume about forty pounds of silage per day. If you do not know how handy they are, attach chains to yourman gers, tho hitching post, aud wherever you wunt to fasten a horse. Have a good snap in the end of the chain which cau he quickly attached to the bit rein. When ventilating poultry houses or hog houses, let the ventilator take In air about twelve inches from the bot tom and carry it up to within twelve inches of the top before the next opening is made. The ventilator should run diagonally through the house. A good hog fence can be made by setting posts three feet high sixteen feet apart. Run a barbed wire three inches from the ground and another on the top. Then nail on good strong wire nei'.lng thirty Inches wide. Draw all tight, aud this fence will iast a ion?; time. An Iowa farmer suggests that a good way to prevent the dirt from getting to the oil bowls of the old style disc harrows is to attach pieces of one-quarter inch gaa pipe so they extend up from the oil pipes through the box, keeping them closed with woodeu plugs. A blacksmith will do this work at small cost. One quart of mash to twelve grown hens once a day la the proper allow ance If you inslBt upon feeding a mash. If you will conform to mod ern methods, however, aud feed your mixed meals and clover In a dry state, you need not fret over how much to feed. Put In the hopper aud let each hen choke down all she will. It's the natural way. If you cannot afford to build an ex pensive hog house, take ten foot boards aid nail them to a stout frame made In the shape of a peaked roof. Cover these with long straw and batten them down with strips running crosswise. The boards should run from the peak downward, and the straw should be laid the same way in order to carry off the water. A window for light and ventilation : i mi ill be put In oue end, aud a self closing door in the other. Saved the Situation. She raised her head from his shoul der for a moment. "Do you believe that exercise and lotions and toilet preparations will Improve a woman's looks?" she asked. He pressed her blond curls back upon his chest. "They couldn't Improve the looks of-some women," he said. "Whose?" she asked. "Well, yours and Violet Cochrane's, for instance," he replied, thought lessly. "I don't understand you," Bhe said, raising her head for the second time and chilling him with a look. "We are not at all alike." "I mean," ho replied, turning her head for the second time and think ing quickly, "that your looks couldn't be Improved because they are perfect as they are, and that hers couldn't be Improved because no amount of work could make her pretty." And the firelight flickered know ingly as she sighed a great sigh of contentment and relief, while he drew- a deop breath. Penny Pictorial. Will Milkers' Whims. The late T. Bevan, one time M. P. for Gravesend, who directed In his will that his body should bo cremated aud "the ash residue ground to pow der and again burned and dissipated in the air," is one of many men (and women) who have made equally re markable arrangements for the dis posal of their mortal remains. 1 An angler who dlod recently di rected that his aEhes should be car ried In a halt can and scattered from a boat over the surface of his favorite stream; Mrs. Ernle-Erle-Drax directed that her body should be embalmed and placed In a glass panelled coffin, for the reception of which a circular mausoleum with stained glaaa dome was to be built; while, at his own wish, the body of oue of the Lords Newborough, after twelve months' Interment, was exhumed and reburled in Bardaey Island, the reputed rest ing place of 20,000 Balnts. West minster Gazette. Platform and Policy For AH. Fellow Pilgrims! Now that the Sun has started out on the fifth tow path of its exlstenco our motto here after will be: To tell the truth though tlie heavens take a tumble. To nave a newsy paper taken and paid for by the people. We will be orthodox In our religion with a firm belief in purgatory for delinquent subscribers and paradise for those who pay up. Our pplicy will be to love our friends aud brimstone for ouj- enemies. We will advocate one country, one flag, one wife at a time and if you want us to live In pemp and oriental splendor you had bet ter come in now and subscribe. In fact, now Is the propitious time.--"-nley (N. D.) Sun. Two Squabbles. Senator Tillman was discussing u recent quarrel among financiers. "Those men threw a good deal of mud at each other," he said, smil ing, "and most of the mud stuck, it was an intereatlug squabble. It re minded me of an Incident In a South ern jail. "There were two prisoners In the jail. One was In for stealing a cow. The other waa In for stealing a watch. "Exorcising in the courtyard one morning, the first prisoner said taunt ingly to the other; " 'What time Is It?' " 'Milking time,' was the retort." Washington Star. EPWORTH LEAGUE LESSONS BUNDAY, MAY 19. Stewards of Grace. 1 Pet. 4. 10, la. 11. Passages for reference: Rom. 6-8; 2 Cor. 6. 1-10. ' In this lesson there Is'a great deal of light on the relation of our powers to the work we hav to perform and the spirit In which It is to be done. The "glttti" we poaaeas are the be Btowmonta of "grace." They are not originated by us. nor nro they ours to use with no reference to anyone else. They are bestowed with n view to service to others. The word "stewards" Indicates the relation which wo hnve to these things and what wp are to do with thpm. It makes no difference what the talents are, they are Intrusted to us for use In helping others on to a better life In tho service of the Master. In Ro mans we have a rehearsal of some of the gifts bestowed, and the teaching I hat underlies the passage Is that we Hhould receive the gifts as God's be stowment for us, nnd to use them nn the talentn which God hns given with which are hi serve. It encourages n? to feel that our service is in the line of God's will as much as that which n more conspicuous talent may render. In Corlnthlnns we see the possibility of proving ourselves the ministers of God by all sorts of un favorable conditions nnd circumstan ces. It gives us the hard conditions nnd thett tells us hy what graee wo are to prove our devotion to God In thoso surroundings. How often we find the plea made, "I cannot do it. I have no ability." They may not bp nble to do the par ticular thing asked of them, but they can do nothing la false. It Is n dis honest answer, for anyone that hns mind enough to answer a sensible question has talent enough to do something. There Is no sane mind but has gifts. We as Epworth Leag uers, or as men and women without regard to membership In any society, ought to be made to feel that we have gifts. These gifts are from Ood. What are we to do with them? It will save us many hard experiences if we first find out what talents wo have, and then sei-ve In the place those tal ents would naturally put us. Too many think that only the professions are honorable, and that a trade Is not so desirable. But God wants Chris tian men in the ranks of trades as well as In the professions. What an opportunity there Is for Christian worklngmen to moid the forces of so ciety into a rlprtit spirit through the union?! God has given to some men the ability to make money, but. still It Is a gjft from him, nnd should be used to the advancement of the Re deemer's kingdom. That ability Is not to he used to amass great person al fortunes, but to bring tho money of tho world Into the service of our King. So it is with all positions In the social organization. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON COM MENTS FOR MAY IP RY THE REV. I. W, HENDERSON. MAY NINETEETNTH. Little Faults That Spoil Our Lives. Song of Solomon 2: 15. The fault of slothfulness. Prov. 12: 24-28- Nagging, 2 Cor. 13: 1014. Roasting. Jas. 4: 13-17. Backbiting. Rom. 1 30-32. Vanity. Prov. 30: 7-9. Brawling. Prov. 21: 8-10. The little foxes or Jackals bf Pales tine were seldom more than fifteen Inches high; but mischief la not pro portionate to size. The vineyard, throughout this poem of the Song of Solomon, Is the love of the two speakers for each other. Tru ly love Is a vineyard, full of rich clusters of fruit. Foxes are fond of grapes Our little faults attack what Is beat In our characters. In the passage from which tho verse is taken the little foxes symbo lize whatever hurts the vineyard of love. Rightly they have been made to mean the little faults Cit spoil our lives. Suggestions. Every fault, however little, may grow Into a Bin, however large. 'it's qnly a little fault!" It's only a little flame back of the wainscoat lng!" It's the little things that make a vineyard little drops of water, little rays of sunahine; and lt's,the little things that Bpoll a vineyard. Measure your own faults by your dislike of the faults of others. Illustrations. We set. traps for some foxes, but the little faults set traps for us. Little faults are like Samson's fox es; every one of them has a firebrand fastened to its tall. It is easy to kill the foxes before they open their eyes; but let them As little grains of sand are most mischievous when they get In the beatings of wheels, so little faults are most hurtful whore lives rub up grow up, and you have many a hunt, against Uvea. Dull lighter Still Popular in Mevico. In spite of the agitation that has been carried on by foreign and native reformers, It seems to be n fact that '.he old Spanish sporl of bull fighting '.a still popular In the minds of the masses in this country. The popularity of the sport and .he almost universal regard In which .ho men who make a profession of t are belt1 were graphically Ulustrat d in connection with the recent leath of one of the moat popular of '.he Spanish tareres, Antonio Montes, U the result of Injuries received in :he ring. The unfortunate fighter waa severely wounded and lingered for a few days before succumbing finally, and during thlB Interval there waa hardly an hour of the day or night when the street In front of the hotel where he lodged and finally passed away was not thronged wlili sympathizing admirer who called to read the bulletins Issued by the med Ical men In attendance, or even con tented themselveB with gazing sadly lithe walls which held their favorite. Men from all walks of life could ho seen In the groups silently paying n il. in e to tho popalarlty of i ho man. The funeral waa a largely attend solemn occasion, ami the entire attitude of the general public was an indication Qf the hold that the spurt has upon the large number of Its devotees. Modern Mexico. Subject: Israel Enslaved in Egypt, Ex. 1:1-14 Golden Text, Ps. 107:18 Memory Verses, 13, 14 Commentary. This lesson takee us out of the book of Genesis into tho second book of the Bible, tho book of the Exodus. The bonk of Exodus is the record of the enslavement, the deliverance of a people; it tells of the economic and religious struggles of the early Jews. The lesson for to-day plunges us directly into the heart of the begin ning of the trials and tribulations of the Israelites after they fell, in Egypt, Into the tolls of a Pharaoh who knew not Joseph. Jacob and Joseph and their Immediate descendants are dead. With the passing of the years the Hebrews have so multiplied that the laud Is filled with them, and their power and Influence is a cause of dread to the Pharaoh of their day. And so measures are taken to Check their growth. The Pharaoh put upon them the hardest labor that could be devised, they were reduced to con ditions of tho most abject slavery, their boy babies were ordered to be killed. Everything was done to check their progress and to counteract and destroy their power. But Btlll, as under the promise of Ood to Abra ham and Isaac and Jacob, they grew in numbers even in the face of the most discouraging economic condi tions. The book of the Exodus Is not well grasped until we understand In some measure at least that It Is the record of the Industrial hardships and deliv erance of a people as well as the his tory of tho beginnings of a national religion.! consciousness and spirit that was to blossom Into the most Influen tial and pure religious system of tho ancient world. Qod had to get Israel out of economic and industrial bond age before they could be greatly in fluenced by the deeper forces of spir itual truth. Their affliction in a ma terial way was good because It brought them face to face with the need of a Balvatlon and a savior. It caused them to turn to Ood. Op pressed as they were the way was dark about them. They were undone. They were in danger of becoming submerged altogether under the pressure of the impure religious thought with which they were sur rounded. In the face of these adversities God was yet with them. The promise made to their fathers was continually fulfilled In their experience. They throve on adversity. That which was Intended to bo their destruction was for them socially, as the prison had been for Joseph individually, their discipline, their strengthening, their energizing. The deeper down they were plunged the nearer apparently God drew to them. The more they were hounded and driven and de spoiled, the more they augmented. Overwhelmed with a common evil they had an ever increasing social need. And with the social need there came an Increasing social conscious ness. Desiring in their common woe a deliverer they looked forward to one who should lead them as a social unit out of the industrial, economic and spiritual darkness into which they had been Immersed. The lesson of the industrial and spiritual bondage of the children of Jacob in the land of Egypt is one that is essentially apropos. We are face to face to-day with condi tions that are as startling economic ally and spiritually as those which alarmed Israel in the time of which our lesson treats. To be sure, In civ ilized countries the system of chattel slavery, which for many years was a factor of civilized life, Is quite abol ished. But multitudes of men and women and children are to-day, by virtue of the economic conditions in cidental to the mighty age of ma chinery aud individualism in which we are living, as truly in a land of bondage as ever the children of Israel were. The masters are prosperous even as the masters of Egypt were. The oppression of the people also, different in kind, perhaps different in degree, Is Just as real as the Egyptian bondage ever was. And this con temporaneous industrial distress is nowhere more felt than, on the one hand, in the prevailing distrust of ecclesiastical institutions upon the part of the industrially oppressed, and, on the other hand, in the pre vailing call for and confidence that God will Bend an Inspired deliverer who shall regenerate with flaming truth the social as well as the indi vidual life of man. As with Israel so with modern so ciety. The very injustices of our modern industrial conditions are leading men to grasp the idea of uni versal brotherhood, and to desire and to strive to bring to pasB by the grace of God such a regeneration of mod ern life as Bhall transform not only individual conditions of life and char acter but also society. And Ood is brooding over modern society as really as He brooded over Israel. The cry of the oppressed reaches up to His ears. The sin that is done in darkness for the spoliation of His people In His own good time will be brought to light. He will send the deliverer to the modern bondman. He will send the prophet of His simple, unsullied, life impart ing truth to the people of our own time. The cry of lives that are "bit ter with hard service" falls on a Di vine ear that heeds. The social life of to-day as surely as Ood lives will go through the wilderness to Canaan. We shall have to have our Sinai. May the church be the pillar of cloud and of fire. While cancer mortality is Increas ing :,i ill In England and Wales, it la at a diminishing rate. In the five years ending with 1905, the death rate for both sexes showed an in crease of eight per cent., which was about half as great as the Increase for the five years ending with 1890. The deaths In 1904 were 741 per 1,000,000 among males of all ages, and 1006 among females. In nearly all comparable cases the rate is greater among females. A remark able oxceptlon Is cancer of the mouth, for in the four years ending with 1904 this caused the death of 7246 in, ilen and only 1667 females. Whether this la un effect of nlcotlno poisoning remains to be showu. THE DEAR GIRLS. Clara i wish I could believe what ho says, but " Maud "What does he say?" Clara "Why, he says he loves me and he has knuwnme only two days." Maud "Well, perhaps that's the rea on." Philadelphia Inquirer.