AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY S THE REV A. B. SIMPSON. priori punt Subject: The Gospel of Tears. f the. it at a 1 L r 7 C c -I er 1 V New York City. The famous head of the Christian Alliance, the Rev. A. B. Simpson, on Sunday preached a notable sermon, having for Its subject The Gospel of Tears." The texts were : Jesus wept. John 11:35. And when He was come near He beheld the city, and wept over It Luke 19 41. Who In the dayR of Ills flesh, when He had offered up prayers and sup plications with strong crying: and tears unto Him that was nble to save Him from death, and was heard In trat He feared Heb 5:7. who has not wept? Weeping we begin life as helpless babes and. amid the tears of mourning friends, we pass oat to the grave. Tears are the badges of sorrow. How ran they bo the expression of the Gospel, the glad tidings of great Joy and divine love? And yet redemption has trans formed the curse into a blessing and made a rainbow of our tears. "Jesus wept." This little phrase, the shortest In the Bible, has more In It than all the books that man has written. A single drop of ink could write it, but all the world could not contain Its depths of love. It tells me that my Redeemer Is human. Tears are human and the tears of Jesus proclaim Him my Brother ar.i my Friend. He is the great heroic Head of our fallen race. One has come to us who Is "bone of our bone" and "flesh of our flesh" and has the right to represent us; who Is able to right our wrongs and recover our lost heritage of happiness and blessing. When God determined to save this fallen world, He did not send some mighty angel. He did not come In His own awful deity; but He stooped to become a nan that He might meet us In a gentle human form of which we should not be afraid. How the Roman Catholic clings to the tender sympathy of the virgin mother, but we do not need even woman's tender ness to Introduce us to the Father's heart; for Jesus Christ, our Saviour, has a hear' both of woman and of . man. He has been an infant child like us. He has traversed every stn; of the pilgrimage of man from the cradle to the grave. He has been everywhere that we have been. He has felt everything that we can feel. He knows our nature. He bears our name. He wears our humanity. And for evermore the Head of this uni verse, the King of Kings, the Lord of angels shall be a Man like us, our Friend "that stlcketh closer than a brother." Oh, what a gospel of comfort we And in the humanity of Christ. You can come to Him to-night as you would to the gentlest friend, the most intelligent father, the noblest man you ever knew; and though we have sinned and gone far astray, "He is not ashamed to ra'.l us brethren." They tell us that He Is able to sym pathize with our sorrows. He wept those tears for others. He saw two breaking hearts before Him. He felt their agony! He groaned in spirit and was troubled and at last He broke down altogether and burst Into a flood of tears. How we think Him for those tears. This salvation is not all for the pearly gate.', the streets of gold and the glorious Heaven that is coming tore and bye. We need a lot of It ' down here in this broken-hearted world amid our poverty and puin, our Ickness and death, our broken friend ships, our wrecked home-j, our wrong;! and sorrows and, thank God, He has It for us. He has experienced it and He has not forgotten It and still In His heavenly home we are told "He is able to be touched with the feeling of our Infirmities." He was a child and ha.-i felt every childish sorrow. He had the hard struggle to support His mother at Nazareth and He knows all about hard work and hard times. Hw was despised and scorned and He under stands the sense of wrong and sting of Insult. He was deceived, betraye I and murdered and there Is no wronf or insult can come to us that He ha not borne and is still ready to bear for us. Yes, He has felt the awful weight of sin, for there was an hour When He sank under His Father'' wrath in puniBhment for the sins ol men. He knows the cloud of spir itual darkness. Ho knows the weak ness and agony of death and He Is with us in it all. Blessed Friend, how we thank God for Christ and what a gospel of love and sympathy and help speaks to us through the tcafo of Bethany. The tears of Jesus tell tis that He understands our danger, our destiny and our estate. He shed those tears over the grave of Lazarus' They meant much more than a sense of be reavement. He was not weeping be cause He had lost Lazarus. He na not weeping because the sisters at Bethany had lost their brother. He knew that Lazarus was coming forth again in a little while and that the sorrow would be forgotten in the glad reunion. Oh, no, He saw deeper than that. He saw In the grave of Lazarus every grave that had been opened and filled through earth's forty cen turies and tha. would be filled in the twenty centuries that have passed since then. He saw all the horrors ud agonies of the battlefield, the ocean wreck, the lingering deathbed, the scourge of famine and pestilence nd the ravages of the king of terrors with the millions and billions of vic tims that he has smitten In the past Six thousand yearB; and as He saw It all, realized it all, and the vision loomed In iurld horror before His Omniscient eye, He realized the fear ful curse of sin and His heart broke down in agony and sorrow. Nay more, He saw a sadder sight. He saw a deeper grave. He saw the eternal grave beyond all, that we be held In death. He saw the death that never dies; the Are that never Is f touched; the yawning gulf of end ess woe Into which the sinful soul must sink forever. It was the sight of that horror that had brought Him from Heaven to earth. It was the thought of man perishing in ever lasting darkness that had made Hlra glad to live and suffer and die, and as It all rose before Him as through a glass In the tomb of Lazarus "Jesus wept. " Oh, that we might realize It as He did. Did Christ o'er sinner weep And shall our tears be dry Christ never thought or spake of eternal punishment In cold, hard words. He did It with a breaking heart He did it with tenderness and tears, but none the less He did It; (or none .u.iw so well as He that uternal sin must bring eteimtl hell And that all we know and fear of death Is but a paradise compared with that Jacond durh Out tutu t Oh. What eterrs Around the second itth The tears of Jesus tell us of His atonement. He did not come down to earth to weep In helpless sorrow but to rise In almighty strength against our doom and rescue us from It. When Hercules came to the place where the helpless virgin lay bound upon the rock and the dragon was coming to devour her, her parents and all around were frantic with tears, but Hercules cried, "This Is no time for tears; this hour Is for res cue," and he slew the dragon and saved the maiden. So Jesus came, not merely to weep but to help, and by His own tears and His own agony and His own blood to meet our peril and our penalty and save us from eternal sorrow. And so we read of another Instance of His tears In Heb. 5:7. These were the tears of Gethsemane and the an guish of His passion. These were the tears that we deserved to shed. These were the pains that we deserved to suffer. But as our groat Substitute and Sacrifice, He bore our sins In His own body on the tree, and having paid the penalty and satisfied the claims of Justice. He comes In the glad message of the Gospel to an nounce our pardon and salvation. O Chrit, what burdens bowed Thy bead; Our load wan laid on Thee; Thou etoodest in the sinner's stead, Didnt bear nil sin for me; Jehovah lifted up His rod, O Christ, it fell on Thee; Thou wast sore stricken of Thy God, Thy bruising healcth me. Hindu mythology has a strange tale typical of the atonement, the story of a dove pursued by a hawk until in desperation It flung Itself Into the bosom of Vishnu, one of their deities. But the hawk demanded sat isfaction, declaring that the dove was her lawful prey and that Vishnu muBt not only be merciful to the dove but lust to Its claims. Then Vishnu, hold ing the trembling dove In her boaom, bared her breast and bade the hawk devour of her own living flesh as much as would compensate for the dove, while all the time the dove lay fluttering there and knowing the fear ful cost of her deliverance. Yes, wo ire safe within His bosom, but oh, the cost to Him. "He saved ub, Hlm ielf He could not save." He wipes tway our tears, but In order to do "his He had to weep when there was no eye to pity and no arm to save. Don't you think the least that you could do would be to thank Him and give Him your heart, your love, your grateful team? We hnve yet one more picture, Luke 19:41. He was entering Jeru salem from Olivet. He had Just turned that point where the whole city suddenly bursts upon the trav eler's view. As He gazed upon it in its singular beauty, there arose be Hnd the scone another vision that a few years later was to 1111 all that valley: a city besieged, cruel Roman lesions around on every hill top, the narrowing cordon of destruction, a breach nt lsst In the walls of defense, the breaking- In of the brutal con queror, the streets running with bleod, the Temple rising In smoke and flames, the shrieks of mothers, maiiL-ns atid little children In the cruel grasp of the conqueror, and , a Ion': tvoin of captives going forth to distant lands while behind them lay a plowed field of desolation bars once their beautiful city had ben. And as He saw It all and how it th't have been prevented if they 1 only received Him, He cried, "If u hadst known even now In this day the thlr.ss that belong to thy , hut now thev are hid from ''Ire eyes." It war. too lato; but n yet He had for them His tears. These tears tell 01 of Christ's com passion. They tell us how H longs to save. They tell us that Ho lc here to night with infinite pity and power to wipe away your tears, to wash away your sins r.nd make you happy and holy through His love. Eut they tell us also that If you re fuse and reject Him, there may come a time, tliere will come I time, when He can do nothlnc for you but weep. They tell of a judge before whom was brought for punishment his old est friend. As he stood up to pro nounce the sentence upon him, the memory of their boyhood Cays io- : gether came upon the Judge's heart with overwhelming force and he broke out In floods of weeping. "My friend," he Bald, "how can L by a single word. conBlgn you to a felon's cell and n life of banishment from home and friends and all that earth holds dear? But ! am a Judge and must be just. Why did you force ine to do thlB thing?" And they wept to- ' gether, but It was too late to save i him from his fate. From thrt scene of weeping, he went forth a doomed, I ruined man to spend hlB days In fruit- 1 less tears. Oh, sinner, beware! lest some d.y on the Throne of Judgment you look in the face of a weeping Saviour and hoar Him say: "How often would I hive gathered you even as hen doth gather her brood under her wings I and ye vould not. Oh, that thou hadst knewn the things that belong ' to thy peace, but now they are bid i from thine eyes." EPM III LEAGUE LESSONS SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23. Liberal Toward God Mark 12: 41 44. Pasages for reference: Exod. 2,": 2: 3, r fi: Prov. til 24, 25; 2 Cor, R: 15, 12; : -12. Gifts show the strenelh of our love to dear ones. We fit their needs and sacrifice time and conveniences, If not necessities, to get them. Ex travagance gmwlng out of a lov for display Is to be condemned. Some times a costlv box of ointment brok en over weary feet does more good than many gifts rn the poor Pity the young fellow who Is not willing to miss his lunch for davs. to walk home Instead of paving car fare, to press his own clothing, to save at everv possible place In order to buv a fine diamond to bind promises with his sweetheart. Let the careless son or danchter at once plan to sun mother's heart with caresses, with surprise, fancy, or useful articles made bv ronblng sleep, with gifts that are usable and mean going without some coveted thing yourself. At all costs, cultivate love. God save us from an economy that leads to stingi ness' If the great love of ChrlRt will not move us to liberality toward him. then we will be "close" every place rise. Let love dictate the gifts to his cause. Sho who loved much iMnry Magdalene) saved and sacri ficed to give him a cosily anointing. He Is our KIder Brother. Will our gifts to his body, the church, his flesh, the poor, spell weak, bloodless, shabby love? Let us Imitate tho widow, going without needed things, trusting him for future care that we may help fill the church collection boxes. Jesus had been severely and pr slstently abused by the Jewish offi cials. He clearly condemned their hypocrisy, but at once cried out in love, ''O Jerusalem, Jerusalem" (Matt. 23: 37). There was no anger roughness. Indignation brought In no harshness. He was tender and alert to the obscure act of the widow. It Is not easy to always keep a, touchable heart and n gentle hand. Though some temple nuth',iritles were dishonest, the widow did not abuso and refuse all. God. not the prlest3, tested her heart and falthfulnebs. Heavy Weight Seeds. According to the Canadian experi mental farms' report the selection of plump and well-rlpened seed for sow ing Is a great advantage. In each seed Is laid up a store of food to be used by the young plant In the early stages of Its growth. In a shrivelled seed the store which can be drawn oa Is very meagre and the growth un der such circumstances Is slow, but In a well-developed and plump kernel the supply Is abundant and the plant .starts out with a degree of vigor which Is usually maintained and the resulting crop, all other conditions being equal, is usually satisfactory. The Morgan Horse. Frequent reference has in thi Inst year been made to the plans of the Department of Agriculture to rescuo the Morgan horse type. Referring again to the matter one of our con temporaries says: Our Government has at last made a modest beginning, and has placed the Morgan at the head of the stud. This is practically the original Ameri can trotting roadster, with much of the Individual beauty and action of the Hackney, so much so that he has been called the American Hackney If these horses are bred to tho right kind of mares and scrupulous atten tion is paid to reproducing and, if possible, Intensifying the best points of the Morgan type, while at the same time keeping the size up to a well proportioned horse of about 15.2 hands high, the department will do good work and will lay broad and deep the foundation for a great Gov ernment stud, which will be a con stantly Increasing source of wealth to the country. Indianapolis Farmer. SEPTEMBER TWENTY-NINTH. Home missions: Religious progres3 In our cities. Jonah 1: 1-3; 3: 1-10; 4: 9-11. Prayer for a city. Gen. 18: 23-33. One household saved. Josh. 2: 14 21. A city purged. 1 Kings 18: 40-4G. A city wept over. Luke 19- 41-44. A city evangelized. Acts 19: 13-20. The Ideal city. Rev. 21: 1-4. Whoever cries against the wicked ness of a city Is not crying against the city, but for it (Jonah 1: 2). Nothing will save a city not museums or sanitation or parks or free schools until It has repented of Its sin and turned to the Lord. What our cities need is not tho proclamation of law, but the offer of mercy; though the law must be pro claimed first. Our fathers had foreign missions and home evangelization; we have these, and also we have foreign mis sions at home, for the antipodes has risen up at our back doors. Cities bring human sin and suffer ing where ail can see it. and be moved to relievo it. London citizens alone give away pome twenty million dollars every year. New York city had In 1830 one place of worship for every 1,833 of its people; in 1SS3, one for every 2, 254. If a great revival should break out, the people would bo obliged to take turns going to church. Every Christian Endeavor Sodety should be In close touch with some city mission, helping its meetings with singing If In the city, sending flowers and clothing if In the coun try, and In each case praying for it and giving to It. Sixty languages are spoken In Chi cago, and 90 per cent of the people are foreign by birth or parentage. Chicago Is the second German city of the world, and the first Polish city. Of 1,280 families visited once In a single section of Chicago, 1,220 did BOt possess a copy of the Bible. Dry Soil as a Deodorizer. We do not use any board floors and have no need of them. With dry soil, a tight roof and good ve ltllatlon no deodorizer is needed In this cli mate. If you must have a board floor, by all means put it up trom tho ground so th:it there will no bo a harbor for rats or other vermin. The following from Poultry Life In America gives the ideas of a corre spondent of that paper, and they 'are the same as those given in nuuit other poultry journals: Don't let your poultry houses get to smelling bad. If you nro In n damp location a board floor is an ab solute necessity, and while you are making the floor you might an well raise it three feet and let the ht.is play under it In bad weather. Then when you clean the house, or the boards rather, sprinkle a Utile dry soli and there will be no bad odor. The soil mixed with the droppings makes an elegant top dressing for the melon, berry or potato patch. It Is always best 'to keep some dry soil under cover to use in bad weather. When the weather is dry your chicks do not need protection from the rain, but when It Is wet it is too late to prepare It, so remember they need sheltered feeding grounds. An open ' M will answer It. Cheapness, After all that may be said on the subject of advertising, the fact re mains that the most powerful argu ment that can be used is that of cheapness. People will buy things because they are cheap, where the consideration of quality would have no effect whatever. People have come to look upon advertisements as a means of finding where they can buy goods the cheapest. An advertise-' ment should always contain the price of the article advertised. In fact, unless you can offer an article cheaper than it can be purchased any where else, there is not much use ad vertising it. Tho people who are in fluenced by advertisements are the great middle class, whose Incomes are limited and whose constant study is to adjust their purchases to fit them. Advertising. TWO CURLS MIST FIVE BEARS. Miss Carolina S. Barnes, of Wat kins, N. Y , and Miss Isabel M. Chan dler, of Ithaca, N. Y., were much startled wbllo walking down the mountain trom Mount Elllo.t Springs, in Virginia, to coma upon two old bears and three cubs feeding in a Held. Not realizing the nature of the anioials at first tbe young women ap proached, and one of the old animals, evidently thinking the Intruders were after their cubs, showed light The young women ran screaming back to the hotel. Miss Humes was com pletely overcome and required the iorvlc.es of a physician. HIS OWN KNEW HIM. One of the occupations In Austra lia Is sheep-raising. There are large ranches upon which many sheep and lambs find food, uud the shepherds guard their own. One day a man was arrested for stealing a sheep. The man claimed that the aheap was his own, that he had bean missing from the flock for some days, but, as soon as he bsw the animal he knew him. The other man claimed the sheep and sr.ld be had owned him since he was a lamb, and that he had usver been away from tho flock. The Judge was puzzled how to de cide the matter. At last he Bent for the sheep. He fl;r;t took the man In whose possession the sheep was toind to the courtyard, and told him to call the sheep. The animal made no response, only to raise his head and look fright ened as if in a strunge place and among strangers. Bidding tbe ofllcers to take the man back to the court-room, be told them to bring down the defendant. Tho accused man did not wait until he entered tbe yard, but at the gate, and where tho sheep could not see him, he began a peculiar call. At once the sheep bounded toward the gate, and by his actions showed that a familiar voice was calling. 1 "His own knows him," said the Judge. Tno Sunday Companion. A Cokl Dairy Without Ice. An ingenious woman has devised a plan for having good, cold milk and butter all Bummer without ice. It is a home-made dairy, is so cheap, easily taken care of, and Is successful. I will give the plan, and any house wife can have It with very little work. Get four pieces of scantling 2x4 Inches, six feet long, and nail pieces two feet long each way, about 2 feet from the ground, and nail pieces of the same at the top. Then board over top and also lay a floor at bot tom. Now put a shelf on each side and cover all around and on top with nice tlean bran sacks or burlap. Leave one side open and put loops on It, and nails on the side to fasten It. Put a tub on top and fill it with water, and put woolen strips of cloth two and three Inches wide in it, so that they feed the water down and keep the sacking wet all the time. The air blowing through the wet sacks keeps everything almost as cool as if It were in a refrigerator, and the butter and milk tastes better than If it were shut from the air, and will keep fresh much longer iu this dairy. An old blanket makes the best feed ing strips; put in enough to have three or four to each side. This dairy was kept In the yard under a shade tree, but the back porch Is equally as good a place and more convenient. Any one who tries this plan, I am sure, will be delighted with it H. E. K., in the American Cultivator. A BIG LOSER. Mrs. My lea "I see the twenty-four-year-old son of a London dry goods man Is a bankrupt, having managed to get rid of 12,100,000 vines he came of age." Mrs. Style "Oh, well, boys will be boys!" Mrs. Myles "Well, this looks as If a boy had an ambition to be a bridge whist player." Yonker Statesman. Pointers For Milkers. n , , . v-uh snouia ue milked In a com fortable, clean, thoroughly drained and well-lighted place. Every time you tbuse and Mghter a cow, you throw her milk and butter machinery out of gear. Tho value of a cow should be fixed by the amount of fat there is In ner milk, and what It costs to produce The udder should be carefully cleaned before commenclnr to milk and the last drop of milk should be drawn from the udder. Heavy milkers are often rough boned cowb with large frames, but Joint and ill-shapes are not essential In the make-up of a good cow. To allow a certain quantity of food to each cow in the herd alike may result in an insufficient quantity for some and teo much food for otners. To realize tbe greatest profit, the dairyman should have cows bred dis tinctly for milk. To combine milk and boef In one animal is a sure fail ure for either or both. If your cow has a sore teat, try to get the sore spot in the palm of your hand. Yon will dad that she will make less fuss about the jc J of milking If you do this. In buying a dairy cow look well to the udder. It should be well up in front and high up In tbe rear, teats of good size, and well placed, and far enough apart so that the animal can be milked without con stantly hitting the knuckles. The Composition of Eggs. Jf the poultry keeper knows the composition of eggs he will better understand how to feed to furnish the proper food elements needed to pro duce them. Scientists have found, aft j- many analyses, that eggs con tain nbout five per cent, water, sev enteen per cent, protein and thirty three per cent, carbohydrates. There is only about twice as much carbohydrates as protein, while In most grain there are from six to ten times as much. Wheat bran, which is considered very rich In protein, con tains more than three times as much carbohydrates as protein. Wheat contains nearly seven times as much; oats, five times; corn, nine times, and barley, eight times. Oil meal, on the other hand, contains nearly as much protein as carbohydrates; gluten meal, one and one-third times as much carbohydrates as protein; cot tonseed meal, twice as much; cow's milk, nearly as much; dried blood, fifty-two times as much; meat meal, nearly thirty times as much. When It Is desired to make a ration of any of the grains for the produc tion of eggs, it can be seen that It ,1s necessary to mix with any of them some of the concentrated feeds, which contain a great deal of pro tein. Thus, if wheat is fed, meat meal should be taken into the ration. If corn Is made tho bulk of the grain ration, a liberal amount of dried blood should also be fed. Since wa ter makes up a half of tho composi tion of eggs, it is essential that the laying hens have an abundance of clean water at all times of tho dy. Colmau's Rural World. An Old Hunter's Memories THE SUNDAlF SCHOOL New York Egg Rules. Several changes have been made lately In the egg rules of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The gen eral requirements for the leading grades are now as follow: Extras Free from dirty eggs, of good uniform Blze, eighty per cent, fresh, reasonably full, strong-bodied, sweet eggs; maximum loss permitted, 1V4 dozen to the case. Eltrg Fir3ts Reasonably clean and of good average size; fifty per c;nt. fresh, reasonably full, strong bodied, sweet eggs; balance other than tho Iobs may be defective in strength or fullness but must be sweet; maximum total loss, threo dozen to case. Firsts Same as extra firsts except forty per cent, maximum fresh, etc., and four dozen maximum lo3B. Seconds Reasonably clean and of fair average size; thirty per cent, fresh, reasonably full eggs; maximum total loss, five dozen to case. It Is Important to shippers to know what "loss" means In this connection, and especially In view of the recent activity of the Health Board in pre venting the sale of very inferior re jections; the rules provide: "19. 'Loss,' as used in these rules, shall comprise all rotten, spotted, broken (leaking), broken yelked, hatched (blood-veined) and sour eggs. V ery small, very dirty, cracked (not leaking), badly heated, badly shrunken and salt eggs shall be counted as half loss In all grades ex cepting dirties and checks." Any egg containing a considerable quantity of the rejections classed above as full loss are now very ob jectionable to buyers, and shippers are advised to candle out all such before shipment. From the Country Gentleman. Farm Notes. Don't allow the hogs to become lousy, when a very light spraying with some of the prepared insecti cides will rid the animals of these pests. Barley makes a fine feed for hogs. Grow some this year. The cheapest lot of pigs the writer has ever brought up to 150 pounds bad barley as their main ration. An Iowa man has provided a ce ment swimming tank for his pigs. He keeps It filled with freBh, flowing water all the time, and claims that his pigs thrive in it better than In mud. In California tho experiment will be made of crossing the Merino and Persian breeds of sheep, with the ob ject of producing a breed with a large fleece of wool and superior car cass for mutton. Sometimes hogs will not thrive, al though they have au abundance of pasture and grain. There is such a thing as keeping hogs too long on clover and the system demands some thing else. Cut down the rations for u while and feed some charcoal, salt and copperas. This frequently will start a hog on the up-grade. A correspondent asks whether it pays to "hog down" corn. Many do not think it a good practice to allow hogs the run of a large field. But if any five acres can be fenced off, and the hogs are turned in early, they will harvest It without much waste. Some sow cow peas on a few acres, and turn their hogs in about September 15. Indiana Farmer. A correspondent asks whether It would be feasible to fatten hogs close to creameries or cheese factories, something after the manner In which steers are fattened at distilleries. No doubt with proper care bogs could be fattened off on whey and giain with profit. The finishing or fattening period would have to run over ten or twelve weeks. Indiana Farmer. By It. K. MUNKITTRICK. The way train was dragging Its low, monotonous length through a densely wooded part of New Jersey, when a passenger who had been gaz ing vacantly out of the window, Bald to the stranger who sat beside him: "I'm glad some of the woods are left. I tell you, these fine houses with cupolas, and cast-Iron animals on the grass, are the things that give these regions a set-back." "How so?" Inquired the other, with a look of surprise. "Why, because they spoil the hunt ing. There used to be a time that the game was so plentiful around here that there really wasn't any fun In shooting It. It seemed cruel. Sometimes I have seen two part ridges sitting on a rail fence, but 1 would't shoot at th9m direct, because It didn't seem sportsmanlike. I'would put a bullet In the gun and fire at a rock and try to carrom on the birds. Sometimes I would fire against a rock and have tne hall come back and kl a bird behind me. It took some practice, of course, but I finally got so I could do It without much chance of missing. Thoso draw shots I was always proud of." "The game must have been abund ant," said theother. "Indeed It was. I have r.een quail sitting in strings on the pump handle, and once a hawk swooped down on the brass rooster on the weather-vnne, nnd was split as for the grill. Why, it got so that the cats "would not kill tho birds, and I have frequently set rat-traps for woodcock because they became a nuisance, but made fine fertilizer. Sometimes they would fly into tha rooms, like June-bugs, and we had to keep tennis rackets handy to knock them down with. All kinds of birds became so monotonous on the table that corned beef was developed Into a real luxury. One day I was out driving when a big thunder storm came up, and a great cloud of birds was moving over me and in the same direction. They kept the rnin off, and not a drop touched me, while many of the birds dropped to the earth, drowned." The man of hunting reminiscences paused for breath nnd wiped away a tear of regret regret for the changed condition of things when the other said: "You must notice the change greatly." "Indeed I do," replied the hunter. "It Is getting so that it all you can do to find game In the market. I keep a retriever now, but he doesn't know what his mission on earth Is. We use him to retrieve the tennis balls that are knocked beyond the bound ary line. In the oldon days my re triever would watch the birds skim ming close to the grass In circles, and he would'circle In the same way until the birds thenight he was only play ing, like themcelvcs. "Then he would reverse suddenly, meet a bird and capture It on the fly." "Did you have any other game be sides birds?" asked the ft ranger. "We did; we had wild cats that used to destroy overytbing. But they made fine sport. We used to stalk them. We would sit In the dining room in eaBy chairs, and put the tiger nkln rug out on the grass. The wild cats would be attracted to It, and then we would blaze away. 1 But now these fine houses and roads and things have driven all the game away, and that's why I am dowu on pro gress. In order to keep the birds out of the garden I used a number of stuffed snakes. You see, the birds were afraid of being charmed and eaten, so they kept away, and gave me a chance to go shooting without Bitting down to it on the back stoop. Now one day when tho stuffed snake had frightened a plover into hyster ics, I looked and happened to notice the leopard skin rug, and what do you think? One of the sheep that had strayed in went scampering off, terror strloken. and I noticed then that the leopard rug was changing its spots." The hunter paused for a moment, and the stranger, feeling that he must say somothlng to fill the gap,' asked, "What did you do then?" "I Just sat and watched," replied the old hunter; "and what do you think the spots began to change Into stripes, and then Into checks, and from one to the other, till 11 looked like a kaleidoscopic tiger, and I got frightened and fled. I tell you, this building and improving ain't no good when it Interferes with hunt ing, and there ought to be a game lav to stop it." Harper's Magazine. INTERNATIONAL LESSON COM MKNTS FOR SKIT. 20 BY THE HEV. I. Hr. IIKNDKItSOV 2. 8. 4. 5. 2. 3. 4. 6. 6. America has a golden calf. ii is not a dream cair. America needs to recognize 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Review of the Lessons Prom July 7 to September 22, Inclusive Golden Text, Ps. 103:8 An Epitome Helpful to Students. July 7. 1. The charm of Israel's history lies In its humanness. 2. Israel sighing for slavery. 3. The wonderful providence of Ood. 4. Israel in the wilderness only an example. 5. Israel's experience has pro found spiritual significance. 6. We are all human like Israol. July 14. 1. The ten commandments eternal. The first commandment. The second commandment The third commandment. The fourth commandment. July 21. 1. The fifth commandment The sixth commandment. The seventh commandment. Tho eighth commandment. The ninth commandment. The tenth commandment July 28. t. Moses on the mount pleading' for Israel 2. The golden calf a lesson and a warning to America. 3. God's providence has made America possible. 4. Some would seem to lay it to men. 5. C. 7. God. August 4. 1. The tabernacle The place of meeting. The tabernacle holy. A clean priesthood. God's presence. Men as tabernacles. August 11. 1. The drunkenness of Nadab and Ablhu. 2. Liquor a snare. 3. To be let alone. 4. Nothing gained by lta use. 5. The liquor traffic should be abolished. August 18. 1. Tho fact of sin. 2. Confession of sin. 5. Forgiveness of Fin 4. Forgetting of sin. August 25. X. The preparation. 2. Israel prepared. 3. Hobab Invited. 4. The invitation of the church. September L 1. Israel's attempt to enterCunaan u failure. 2. God allows the splos to be sont. 3. The spies report. 4. The land was what God de clared It to be. 6. Two men saw success. 7. We Bhould DO like Joshua and Caleb. September S. 1. Doubting Israel Is confounded. 2. The brazen serpent Is sugges Mve. 3. Results of sin bring Israel to her senses. 4. Salvation was limply effective. 5. So Is Christ's salvation to-day. C. Israel and wo make a mistake to progress without God. September 15. 1. Moses' address a masterpiece. 2. Book of Deuteronomy majestic. 8. Love for God. 4. Teaching children. 5. God'B gifts. September 22. 1, Moses' death pathetic. Death sad but joyous. God's promise fulfilled. Moses work finished. Joshua called. Moses' exemplary manhood. 2. 3. 4. 5. C. Work With Hope. To work without hope la discour aging. Wo need the sense of pro gress to cheer and sustain us. To go round and .round on a treadmill of mere drudgery takeB our spirit out of us. Therefore, wo need a deeper and larger hope. We need to have faith in mental, moral aud spiritual progress, In the growth of tho soul, In the unfolding of its higher pow ers, Its larger faculties. We need to have faith that the yoars, as they :ome and go, may give us a deeper experience, may lift us to a large vision, may enable ua to come nearer to Ood In faith, nearer to man In human sympathy and love. James Freeman Clarke. An Important Decision. Under- a recent decision of the Michigan Supreme Court, announces The Inland Printer, a newspaper pub lisher can collect from an advertiser who breaks his contract only the dif ference between the amount of the contract and the amount secured for the space which would have been occu pied by the advertiser. The publisher must make every reasonable effort to diBtose of the space which the adver tiser refuses to take, and if he is able to secure the same price as the advertiser contracted to pay, the in ference would be that there are no damages. Unless a contract speci fies a certain location It would ap pear to be extremely difficult under this ruling to prove damages, ;s any new order, for spare after the re nouncing of the contract might be construed as a sale of the space which tbe advertiser would have taken. Saving by Relieving. The Christian lifts others by be lieving In them. He sees In each the subject of redemption. "Accord ing to thy faith be it unto thee" means not only " You can be saved if you believe;" it means also, "You can save others" save them by be lieving in them and In God; Bave them, not according to your foolish desires, but In accordance with God's Intention for them, with the original law of their being. Charles Oore. D.D. Growing Like God. When we allow our best life to un fold and express Itself In word or deed, or to go out from ua as pure Influence, we grow ltko God, whose utterance creation is. And always we find it more blessed to give than to receive. We are ourselves served best by serving others. C. G. Ames. Must Ride the Ass' Colt. To-day is the ass' colt upon which every son of man must ride into His kingdom. Wireless For Clocks. The regulation of clocks by wire less telegraphy seems to have been quite successful. In tho experiments at Vienna pf Helthoffer and Mora wets the clock was controlled by wireless Impulses from a regulator three and three-quarter miles away, and It kept pe-fect time, with no In terference from stray currents. Pittsburg Post-Dispatch. A Caesar Vindicated. Nero fiddled while Rome burned. "Followed Coney Island's ex ample," he explained briefly. Herewith history was dlspcsed to take a kinder view of the matter, New York 8un, PERHAPS. 'I vent to a fortune teller yester day," she suld, with a cunning little giggle, "and what do you suppose she told me?" He confessed that be was a poor guesser. "Well, she said it would not be long before I would pass most of my time within the walls of a marble palace." "Perhaps," he suggested, "you are going to become a clerk In one of oar big department stores. " Chicago Record-Herald. ANOTHER SEA YARN. Mr. Flatdweli (hi first Atlantic voyage) "i0 you know, Mary, that this ship burn 400 tons of coal every day?" Mi FhttiwelJ "William Heury, have you been letting tho janitor tuff you with any such fairy tale as that?" Pock.