THE PULPIT. A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY DR. C. S. MACFARLAND. Theme: Jesus' Imprrlnl Spirit. P-onklyn, N. Y. Ir h Park Con bt " iflonal Church. Elihth avenue nrt Second street, flnndsv morning, the Rev. Cbnrles S Marfarland. Ph. n . of the Convreaatlonal Church n( "5'inth Vnrwalk, Conn., author of 'The Inftnlto Affection " and other works, nrearheil on "The Imperial Spirit of .Testis . " Th texts were from .Tohn 14:27: "feaee I leave with von: Mv neae I tIvp unto jru not as the world glvetb. elv" I tinte, Ton. Lf not too' heart ho trnnb'd, neither let It he afraid: " InSn ltSS: "fn the world '-e shell have tribula tion: hnt b of (rood nher. T have overcome the world:" Matthew 10:34- "Think not that T am coma to send nonce on earth: t came not to spnd hut a sword." Dr. Marfarland said: .Testis Is rasswHntt Tils disciples. He ays to them' Tie courageous, he hold, overcome th world. By the world He m"ns the temporal life. Be masters. He savs ove- that life; let "on' snlrlts overcome It. What a sublime nlctur! There He is, awaiting the end. He Is going, down to apneront defeat, to human eye. HI? life seems nought. The cross awaits Hint, a cross between the crosses of two thieve. Bnranha la to be chosen Instpad of Himself. He no lonzo- has -mv followers, ex cept those talthfttl few, and even they are trembling, fearful and ready to flee. Yet H uttors these stranly contradictory words, "I am the Mas ter of the world." We so- here also the miral trran deur of Testis. r" translation of His oersonaltty nnd His Inner life Into terms of moral nower. As He was the great thinker, so He was the nohle liver of tjiu race. As Ho gain the mastery of loftv minds, so Ke li the sovereign of all noble live. His snlendtd Hfo a now centering In the cross toward which It he ben leading. From th hgfnnlng He has seen the red Tt'-hin-' Him Is a long trail of moral strength. From Him goes the Impression of a sovereign personality. He Is the supreme ex ample of noble living, 'or the man hood of our day. with Its alternating bravery ar d cowardlr", with its noble resolve and weak compliance. Jesus betomes, first, the sharo.er and then the Insplrer of human living Hazing in som- measure annr headed the snlendld mind of the M is ter and gathered something of the moral graro-ur of His 'ife, we seek to discover the hiaoer secret of Hie outward splendor. Let us trv to look Into His soul Mid discover the mean ing of this malestlc. brave, strong, Impelllifglv attractive manhood. Look again at our text, recall the alt. nation under which it was uttered, remember that He is facing a cross, listen to His words: "Peace I leave unto you," "Be full of confidence, "I have conquered the world." Another strange thine Is the con tradictories of the Master. For Upon another occasion did He not say, "Think not that I am come to send peace on the earth; I came not to send peaci, but a rfword?" How are we to explain the paradox of these twe contradictory, text? 8hall we avail ourselves of the liberty of criticism and say that one appears In the Synoptic Gospels and is his torical, while the other appears In the Fourth Gospel and is unhiBtorlcal? Shall we decided that one of them i an interpolation? This is alto gether too easy and ready a method. Let ms wait and Bee If we may not bring them Into harmony. First of all let us look at the sec ond text and see how true It Is. He sent those disciples forth into the world. Did not they And the sword? Their tory is a continuous one of persecution, imprisonment, death. If there was the one thing they did not find It was peace. Peter and John began ar Jerusalem. They were told that they must not speak or teach in the name of JesiiB. They went out, prayed for courage and went to preaching again. For it they were beaten with stripes. They received their hundredfold reward "with per secutions. " What mockery are Jesus' words to Him: "Peace I leave with you." How fortunate If the Fourth Gospel were written very late and is unrelia ble! Does It not make our Lord guilty of false prophecy? The story goes on through succeed ing ages. The successors of these disciples live and die In Roman cata comba and caves. They are hunted, hungered, despised, persecuted, suf fering unto death. How it must have mocked them: "Peace I leave with you." Jesus bequest was broken, or at least this codicil revoked. aut even all this is l?ss perplexing than the utterance coming from ths lips of the man who spoke It. Waa It a mistaken prophecy of Jesus? Be cause His own life was so calm and peaceful did He 'suppose that His disciples' would be also? Look for a moment at the life of the man from whose lips these words come. Fol low Him In His weariness, in His re jection, In HIb disputes with carping critics, with His misunderstanding and quarreling disciples. Not a place to lay His head. Go with Him on the mountainside at night. Witneas Him in the Garden, where Ho sweat, us It were, great dropa of blood. Behold Him on Calvary between thieves. Watch Him crowned with thorns, buffeted, spat upon, mocked in dis dain. What a contrast and contra diction are Hla words: "PMM 1 leave with you; My peace I give unto you." Evidently we mnst accept the prophecy of our aecond text and deny the truth of the llrst. 3f0M doing so let us go back and look at thoae disciples again and be hold another aspect of their life. Peter la there, It is true, In prison. Hut wt read about the presence of an angel of the Lord and of a light In the midst of the darknesa. Think of some of those little gatherings In the upper rooma with the breaking of bread and prayers. Look at Paul with hia visions all full of beauty. Head his epistles, vibrant with joy and hope and faith. On the sinking ship he ia the one buoyant spirit of them all. He goes into the midnight prison again where he alts (hi ust Into the Inner ward with .bis feet fait In the stocks, and you hear him, wltu Silas, singing hymns. Go back again and look at the life of Jeaua. Look beyond the outward vicissitudes. Seek to penetrate to the inner conaclouaneaa of the Buffering man. There ta no thought of pes lmlsm In HI Gospel. He la ever lighted up by faith and hope and joy. Behold Hloi before Pilate! HI coun tenance la untroubled. Pilate la the disturbed and restleaa one; the trou bleaoine drearna were those of the chamber of hla household. Our paradox la partly aolved. Both iirotiheciea Jire tsjm. He did vend a f Sword on earth." Ke dfiTaC the same time leave His bequest of peace. But our real question la not an swered. Is It true of human life in general? When has come the finest literature, the literature of peace, joy, light, hope. Inspiration, triumph? Has It come from men whose live were free from suffering, pain and disappointment ? Sometimes, per haps, hut not very often. It has not OaMu from those who lived In kings' palaces and wore soft raiment. Moat of It has come out of the depths of dungeon, from It I nil poets, from disease-racked bodies. Jeaus' prophecy is true. The rea son It did not 8fem to be true was be cause we did not read It aright. Read It again: ""Peace I leave with you; My peaco T give unto you." My perfte. "Not aa the world." It means that this outward life I not our realest life, it means that our outward and Inward life are In large measure Independent of each other. It means that true peace does not come from external situations, but from something that Is within us; our Inward sense of our Tightness with God, our consciousness of true purpose and true heart. It means the estimate of things by a view from above. It means that Heaven la not a place to go to, but a condition to attain. It means that a man. within himself, may he like one enfolded In the comfort of his home while the ttorm rages outside. The ultimate victory of human life Is tbla triumph of the Inward spirit over the outward life. I am trying to give to men a vital meaning for the cross. Lcok at the Master this morning, fresh from Geth nemano. facing that crosf, with not one brave soul to stand by Him to the end. Hear again the calm, majestic utterance, "I have conquered the world." Imagine yourself trere with the disciples, faring their life, and hear Him as He says to you, "You may suffer and yet dwell upon sub lime heights." "The storm of ruin may come and yet there need never bo any truce cf the spirit." It was just what He had been saying all a.ong it) them, "I will give you rest." Ke looked out on the city of His day; He sa.v men as we see them to day, racing .ach other for wealth, looking upon "ioh other with mutual suspicion. He WH saying to them, 'Do not be like the frail craft, like the little steam yacht; be like the great ocean steamer with her Iron lull, as she moves on her way with her ponderous throbs; do not let yourself be tosed about upon the acean, but ride through her billows." He was bidding men as Ho bids vou men to-rMy to seak and possess the great ultimate realities of life. He was Baying, "Forgst to watch your little engines and look out upon the ocean and up Jnto the sky." Do not guard your business, your paltry pleasures and little interests while you forget to thlrk about the deep things of life. Try this morning to catch His spirit as did the great Apostle Paul, who learned how to ibound and also how to be abased, to rejoice In adversity and to let all the experiences of life give their lessons ind their strength. Do not long for ?ome soft pine-laden balmy southern ilr, but be made stronger by the bleak winds of the rock-bound coast. Got hold of something that Is be fond the reach of men, some joy which no man taketh from you. Be like the rock unmoved by the surgins of the waters. When stricken down, rise again mightier than before. Such a the voice of these great gospels. My dear men (and women), the peace of Jesus Christ does not coine through some mythical contempla tion, nor through some vague experi ence. It comes by our sharing of the iplrlt of the Master, by the earnest 1 'ollowlne of dutv. the noble facing of -esponslblllty, the bold confronting f difficulties, the patient bearing of alumr.y, the quiet endurance of per secution, the brave carrying of sor row and the prayerful sanctifying of jur joya. Gethaemane and Calvary ira the price of this spirit. Rest can only follow labor. The overcoming of outward things is the condition of i inward peace. You men here, you young men 1 here, religion Is not simply something ' or women, or for you when you are ;ick or dying. In those closing days of JeBus they left this noble man to e admired and worshiped by a few faithful women. So you men have done; but now I ask you, do It nimbly, do It modeatly, do It knowing that you are not worthy to unloose the latchet of His shoes, but be His llsclples, admire Hia character, do things "for His sake," give Him a -eat, manly affection. EPWORTH LEAGUE LESSONS SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. &unbaii-&cf?oof K The Lord of the Sabbath Matt 1Z W Isa. 58. 13, 14. Matt. 12. 17. There Is nothing fl this pi -ar-,. to Indicate thai Chritl INTERNATIONAL LESSON COM. uiu not lencn perpetual oitllgatlon to OUT OF CHORD. TELE GREAT DESTROYEB SOME STARTLING FACTS ABOU1 THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. the religious observance of olio day In seven ns a holy Sabbath. This Sabbath will be lor all time under the direction of tho fourth command- I metit but not tinder the injunction of i the Jewish elders. Jesus nnd his disciples being In the grain fields, the disciples began to pluck the oars of grain and to eat. The act its. ll was In harmony with the law (Deut. 13, 25). To the pluck ing of the grain Itself, though It be longed to another, the Phnrlsees did not object; but the plunking and rub bing of cars of grain on the Sabbath day this was forbidden by the tra- dltlon of the elders, because it was a I kind of reaping. Jesus Justified his disciples in what they did by shnwlng thnt works of necessity nro lawful on the Sabbath day. nnd ho proneoded to liberate them, not only from the corruptions of the Pharisees but from their un scrlptural ImiMositlons also. J' -us further reminds them of the priests In the temple who did servile work on the Sabbath day, killing the MI NTS FOR SEITF.MHKR 27. IllbJeCll Temperance, Is. B: 11 -2ft Golden Text, Prov. 20:1 Com mit Versus 22, 2.1 Comments on the Lesson. TIME. 700 B. C. and 1908 A. D. PLATE. Jerusalem and all lands. EXPOSITION. I. The Woe of Those Who Live lr.tompernf ely, 11- 17. God pronounces six woes upon His people because of their sins. The first woe Is pronounced upon tho greedy monopolist. Verse 8 gives a very graphic picture of a large class among us to-day who count them telves happy, but Jehovah pronounces woe upon them. More and more will his be true ns time passes, even as it ame to pass In Jerusalem. The sec ond woo Is pronounced upon those who live for the gratification of ap petite. The description of the drunk ard In verse 1 1 exactly fits our own lay. The rising sun sees the wretch ed victim of alcohol up searching for When hough and stem, so lately black and bore, Are vital wit the glow of May-tide green, When with new life exultant everywhere The earth is trenching on a heaven unseen. I Je7 ""d the sound of mortal misery! I The din of evil in the world of men, ; lors with the Imnnoniea we hear and see. ; And Being trembles with the discord then : so that, dospite divinenesa of the mom, Through glorious gladneu bunt regretful grief. Dh! would that man were hero and now rcnorn! God! put a new humanity in loaf! Charlotte Fiske Bates, in the Christian Register. in open saloon; he hasn't slept much i aaoHni i..of. rZhi.k , ' "d now wants a drink to steady his XL 1 "1 . ' ." IL?" : rves. M he Is not only up early i cose, would have been profaning tho I babbath. und yet It was never con I aldered so, because tho temple serv ice required it. All this proves that cnrlst clearly taught that works of necessity on the Sabbath day are law- but tarries late Into night till wine Inflame him. He Is burning tho 1 'andle at both ends and will soon burn It out. God pronounces woo upon every such an one. And the woe never falls to come. It Is a alg- ful. But at the same lime there Is nlflcant fact that after speaking In nothing In this Incident to teach tho lax observance of the Sabbath aa a i divine Institution. Christ Justifies tho diBclples by several arguments. I L Standing In their presence In One greater than the temple (verse C.) If the temple Is greater than the Sab bath, and must bo served by the Sab- i bath, how much more must the Sab- I buth serve the One who Is greater j thun the temple. I 2. The superiority of tho moral i law over tho more ceremonial duty. God will have mercy and not sacrl- I flee. 3. Tho lordship of tho Son of man I over the Sabbath. He who Is Lord ' of the Sabbath and Sovereign of man : kind has power to use the dnv for general terms of the ruin of Judnh (vs. 1-7) such frequent references are made to drunkenness. It is clear that the prophet Isaiah (as well as other prophetr.) considered Judah's fall (nnd Israel's) as due largely to Intemperance (see also ch. 28:1, 7, 8; Hos. 7:G, fi. Tho effect of wine Is to "Inflame them." It Inflames the stomanh, the blood, the eyes, the brain, the vilest nnd fiercest passions of the soul and kindles the Area of hell. Tho man that fools with wine Is fooling with a fire that has caused the costliest conflagrations that the world has ever known. In verse 12 we have pictured tho veneering of art and refinement with which drunkards seek to rover their beastliness. Music Is constantly prostituted to become the boat Interests of his creatures ' tllc servitor of beastliness. While who are to be his chief clorv. Isa. 58. 13, 14. The Old Testament prophets place special emphasis on the need of tho Jews to observe the Sabbath ns a day of rest and worship, In which they shall turn aside from pleasure and find their delight In the Lord. The appointment of the Sab bath Is shown to bo a special token of God's favor, and the observance of it is regarded aa a special evidence of their righteous life und devotion to Johovuh. SEPTMEBER TWENTY-SEVENTH. Topic Home Missions: The Cry of the City Gen. 18: 16.33. The first city. Gen. 4: 16, 17. A wicked city. Gen. 19; 15-17. A city missionary. Jonah I: 1, An luolatiuua city. 21. Acta 17: 2 10- ( A city wept over. Luke 19: 41-44. The heavenly city. Rev. 22: 1-0. All evil thut men have developed oenters in the modern city, aa well as i possibilities of ull kinds of good. The city throws around Its citizens powerful bonds, which Involve the rlghtous In tho fate of the evil. We may bo sure that the Judge of , all the earth will do right; but His right will be comfortable for us only as we are righteous. We wish that Abraham had gone on and begged Sodom's safety for the sake of our soul. How we underes 1 tlmato God's care for Individuals! these ancient sinners gave themselves over to aesthetic and sensual indul gence they forgot "tho work of the Lord" (cf. Job 21:11-14; Am. C:4-G). One of tho most serious evils of the use of wino Is that It leads men to forget God. A fearful doom nwalts all those who forget God (Job 34:24 27; Pa. 2S:5; 9:17). The conse quence of their intemperance and for getting God wns that God's people had "gone Into captivity" (v. 13). Tho world to-day is full ol people who have gone Into tho most degrad ing and painful captivity through the same two causes Intemperance and forgetfulness of God. The Immediate cause of captivity was "lack of knowl edge." Knowledge of the truth Is lib. crty. Ignorance of tho truth is bond age (Jno. 8:32; cf. Hob. 4:6; Rom. 1:28; 2 Theaa. 1:8). The next result of Judah'a Intemperance was that "Hell (or Sheol, the underworld) enlarged her deBlre, and oponed her mouth without measure." Holl yawns wide because of Intemperance and the glory of tho multltuda and the pomp, and he that rejoices among us Is de scending Into It. All classes are brought down by this sin (v. 15). Not only the Insignificant nnd con temptible, but the great and lofty are humbled. But In tho midst of all this humbling "Jehovah of hosts is ex alted." Ho Is exalted by tho Judg ment He brings upon the offenders (cf. Ez. 2S:22; Rev. 15:3, 4). As He Is "the Holy One" (R. V.), His Holl ness shall be manifested In the rlgh' eous judgment He brings upon offend ers. Aa the final result of Israel's In temperance and forgetfulness of God all the splendid estates and palaces of Judah should becomo wasto and the feeding place of wandering hands. This Is now literally fulfilled and there Is a real danger that all the Citv Mission Nnteo The rush of tho city is lntenslfvlnu 1 P.resfnt splendor of our own laud all modern problems. There Is add- ; , " BOm(! duy becomo a feeding ed to Chicago every year a city of ?' "ock" and trampS ,rom ok Ann ..a . v. . I 'r causes. -.y, u,.u cw ,urK a Clly o, T. ... ! Themselves Over to Sin, lfl-23. The j third woe 13 pronounced upon thoBe 50,000. Men talk about the religious destl- Objects For Prayer. A man who stood out among men as the embodiment of all that Is dean, noble, gentle, humble and ittong was Major Whittle, the Bible teacher and evangelist. Written on tn fly-leaf of hla Blblo were these objects of dally prayer for himself. This may tell the secret of his noble riharacter. To be kept from carnality and luata of the flesh. To be delivered from a man-fearing spirit. To bo delivered from vanity and conceit. To be made pure in imagination and thought. To have a deeper conviction of sin. To love the Lord Jesus Christ more devotedly. Pacific Baptist. tution of the country; but the country has from three to six times as many churches for a given number of peo plo as the city. It would be lmpossl ble for the citizens of any city all to go to church together. Iany of the spiritual evils of the city spring from material evils, which the churches must remedy In order to get at men's souls. In and near three of our leading cities there are 6,300 "sisters," who who are so thoroughly given over to sin that they tug away at It to see how much they can draw (v. 18). The use of wine leads to this devotion to sin. In their enthusiasm for sin they mock at God and Hla Word and say: "Let God hurry up with His judgments and let Him hasten Hla works that we may actually aee It and not merely hear about it. Let tho purposes of the Holy One of Israel of which we have hoard so much ac tually come to pass" (v. 19; cf. Jer. The Orentest Battlefield. The greateat battlefield on which a roan ever fought la within himself. The greateat victories are there. Vic tory there Is the greateat victory posalhle In a man'a life. All the great achievement of men outalde of themselvea are les than the achievement of getting maatery of themselves. Victory here means victory elsewhere. All other problems of the personal sort are Included In this: Their so lution Is Included In lta solution. There must he practical understand ing about sin, and real power over It, before there can be self-mastery. For It was sin that first stole self mastery away. Selfishness must be seen and gripped In Its subtle ns well as Its coarse forms, before the sweets of tho finest self-mnstery can be tasted. Doubt must be mastered, at least far enough to give a steady footing and stondy going, If the fra grance of Belf-mastery Is to fill the life. Only he. who sees clearly the highest ambition of life, and holds everything else strictly under, can climb the heights hero. The groat mastery Is self-mastery. The greatest man Is he who has be come master of himself, not In the limited sense of some who do not able things on other fields, but In the finest', fullest sense. This Is the most fascinating of all problems. It Is a continuous problem, ever yield ing to solution, yet never fully solved. For every high level reached shows a higher beyond, so great Is the possibility lying within oneself. Man was made like God and to have a dominion over all the lower creation. That is tho Blbie way of saying that he was to bo master of his own self, and through that self mastery to be master of all creation." The man eager to reach the highest mastery will study God. for here Is the original plan for himself. He will keep In close contact with the Orlglnnl. The closer thnt touch the nearer does he come to his own true self. S. D. Gordon. Lifc-glvlng. All good teaching is llfe-glvlng. All good teachers are life-savers and llfe-enrfcherB. This Is to be accept ed literally by all teachers that as pire to teach In His power. Precious to men are the remote ledges in which are Imbedded the virgin gold; more precious still are the sandy stretches from which sparkle the sapphire and the diamond; but In finitely more precious to men are the gleaming gems of life that God's generosity has set In the bodies of children. To see this life as His gift, to polish It until It reflects again the Image of Its giver, or to keep It from the beginning pure and unspot ted as He kept It this is the teach er's task. To be the holy dustodlan of life, to vision It as God's precious and expanding gift, to enrich It by contact with the laws and purposes set by Him In the world of things about us. to help It in Its quest for kinship In the abounding life, to lead It at last to Identify itself with the life He gave and of which It is part this is the teacher's goal. It achievement is the teacher's highest reward. M. Brumbaugh, In Sunday school Times. The Drink Habit In Cnnnfln Aw Alarming Increase Ilolh Among the Men and the Women CMM That Contribute to This. Canon Welch rendered a good aer Tlce by hla atralght and rather cour ageous worda of denunciation touch ing the social hahlta of not a few of Toronto's "four hundred," and the general Increase not only In drink ing, but also In drunkenneaa. The sermon, addressod to a Mnsscy Hall audience composed largely of the mllttla forces of Toronto and the An cient and Honorable Artillery Com pany of Massachusetts, was a timely warning against a growing evil In Canadian life. And It required not only the prophet's sense of nubile re sponsibility, but also his fearlessness for the preacher from St. James' to strike so direct a blow at one of the :hlef sins of the social circles to which not a few of those who heard hla worda belong. Canon Welch la quite within the mark in hla eattmate of the down grade tendencies dnrlng the paat ten year. Not only do the police records show an alarming Increase in the number of convictions for drunken ness, but those who know the habits of society as seen at small pleasure parties, at social functions, at private and ..mi private dinners and at ban quets of various sorts, know right well that the use of wines and llquora baa conaiderably Increased and Is now common In circles where It was un known ten years ago. The Increase of the drink habit among women ia even more alarming than among men. Not only at private parties, but also on semi-public occasions at leading down-town restaurants and hotels the ugly facts are too often forced into prominence. A variety of causes -ontrlbutc to the present situation. i'he influx ot people from Britain, where the drink habit la more prevalent, has provided recruits for the roll of drunkenneaa at both ends of the social scale. The shifting of the emphasis In the tem perance crusade from the total absti nence of the Individual to prohibi tion by the State has allowed the growth of a generation very largely untaught and unpledged, so far aa personal convictions and habits are concerned. The general prosperity of the country, providing an abun dance for the average man and lux ury for not a few, haB made posslblo exceaslve expenditures In all direc tions, and with many excess in eating and drinking and dressing Is the most desirable way of using surplus wealth. Among women, especially among a certain class of young women, the foolish notion that drinking cham pagne is "chic," just a little bit wicked, is sufficient reason for ac quiring the habit. Toronto Globe. Ueaases tho V.stem Lff cct- ually;JJisppLs l;old.snndnead 1 1 acnes due 10 Uonslmaiion; cis namrauy, acis iruiy as o unxniive Best fbrMen)nien anil CKildt -ybungano1 Old. 01 us JJencTicialJLffect! I . J3 . 1 are the real atrength of Roman Cath- T7 2 Pet 3 4) nih'JV.- Sustaining. A man conscious of enthuaiasm for worthy alms Is sustained under petty hostilities by the memory of great workers who had to fight their way, not without wounds, and who hover In his mind as patron saints, Invisibly helping. George Eliot. fearod the deaconess movement more than any other activity of the Pro testants, or all together. "The city," Bay Dr. Joslah Strong "1b the Gibraltar of civilisation." II we fall there, ultimately we shall fall everywhere. The Right la Resistance. To luaist on right Is alwaya to re sist the; devil. The Opium TriMle. When, In 1776. the Eaat Indli Company took charge of the trade which waa the real beginning, except In a small way, of the Importation ol opium Into China, It waa bitterly op posed by the Chinese Government and opium smoking was punished with severe fines and penalties. IE 1839 a proclamation waa Issued threatening hostile measurea if the Engliih ships aervlng aa depota wen not aent away. In the aame year tin Chinese Government de8troyed ovei 20,000 cheata of opium. The Brltlab continued to imuggle, against the re monatrancea of the Chinese Govern ment, and outrages on both aldea led to a war, which waa ended by th treaty of Nanking In 1842. Tho Moray. The Aquarium yesterday acquired a aoa monster, a spotted moray, which ia a formidable name for a species of eel. It ia eight feet long, aa large in diameter aa a fat cat and resem bles an enormous eel except that ltl head, with a mouth like an undershot dirments la common among drunkards. The 1 iourtn woe Is upon Uioae who "call ! exil good, and good evil, that put uamness ior ngnt ana light Tor dark ness." This displays a determination in sin thnt Is wellulgh hopeless (Matt. 12:24, 31). This complete perveralon of the moral judgment often results from the persistent use of liquor. The fifth warning la one greatly needed In our day (v. 21; cf. Prov. 20:12; Ro. 1:22). No man is more likely to be wise In his own eyes than the drink ing man. He laughs at all warnings against the dangers of strong drink. The final woe la pronounced upon thoae who pride thomselvcB upon the amount ot wine iney can drink and 111.au, WiLll a M1UULU UAH all IlllUCISIlUb - , , . , - I bulldog, la crowned with a ridge of fffLJ r0" dhr .? kTey can mix and ., 71 . r. j waiK on wltu. The Inspired prophet spikes. It caino from Bermuda. , Bayg that thlB , not au Sjgjj; ) - ' .1 liiu luuiuj nan wctu luncu ; IliClit IU 36 DFOQQ Ol. . Touchstone of Love. What Is the touchstone of ohr love for Christ? Is It the willingness and desire to feed, In every sense, the lost sheep and the Bheep of the king dom? Often in tho humblest life we find this pure love given forth at the greatest sacrifice. Jacob Rtls tells. In his "The Battle With, the Slum," of a family of father and daughter In two rooms that had been made out of one by dividing off the deep dormer window. It whb midwinter and they had no fire. He was a pedler; but tho snow had stalled his push-cart, robbed them of their only other source of income, a lodger who hired cot room In the attic for a few centa a night. The daughter was not able to work. But she Bald, cheerfully, that they were "getting along." It came out that she had not tasted food for many days waa starving, In fact; indeed, she died within a year, of the slow starvation of the tenements. She met her pastor's gen tle chiding with the excuse: "Oh, your church ha many poorer than 1 am; I don't want to take your money." The Rlggest Trust. The biggest saloon keeper and liq uor seller In the world Is the Czar of the Russlas. He Is proprietor of all the saloons In his vast domain, and thus owns the biggest trust on earth, with competition totally barred and with profits Increasing enormously every year. The Great White Czar's Government encouraged drink to such a degree last year that the Income derived from tjie sale of vodka exceeded $390,000,000. Ev ery year the Russian peasants and workmen are said to get drunker, dirtier, more miserable and more brutal. The Imperial grogshops are small and unclean, with a counter at one end and rows of bottles of various sizes all around the walls from floor to Ceiling. The people are not allowed to drink on the prem ises, so they go to the doorstep, break off the neck! of their bottle and, after swallowing Its contents, fling it Into the street. The bottle holds about a wlneglassful of the Imperial drug and costs five cents. The dally wage of a workman In the fields Is from ten to fifteen cents. Tchelyseff is a member of the third duma who declared drink kills Ruusla, and thai neither a constitution nor a revolu tion is so much needed as temper ance. He says that the Government budget Is made up of poison. Chic agp Tribune. THOSE TRUTHFUL REMARKS. Departing Guest "We've had a imply delightful time!" Hoateaa "I'm so glad. At the aamo time I regret that the atorm kept all of our beat people away." Brooklyn Life. for a Bea serpent by green fishermen, a It lives near tho surface and often Hos with Its head on the rocks, seek ing birds' eggs and crabs. Superin tendent Morgan Bays this moray la not extraordinarily large, as they grow to fifteen feet and often swim with head elevated above the Bea. New York World. UNFRIENDLY VIEWS. Passenger Agent "Here are som postcard views along our line of rail road. Would you like them?" Patron "No, thank you. I rod over tho line one day last week and have views of my own op. 1L" Chi ai;o News. SL'ITABLB ATTIRE. "I think," said Sue Brot.t, "I'll tak a dip into vaudeville." "Take a dip, ph?" commented Yoiick Hamm. "Ho that'a why you'v ordered a batblng-ault rig.'' Kansas City Journal. A THREAT. "Maw, kin I go to the bail game?" "No, you kin not, William Eugene. I don't wan no son of mine runnln' all over this town alono." "Oh, coiuo on, maw! Let me go." "You kin not go, William Eugene." "I'll run away an' go. That'a what I'll do. I'm geltln' old enough to paddle my own canoe, I guess." "William Eugene, of you go to that ball game It won't be any canoo hatil get paddled. Mfud that, now, rtilllam Eugwal" Waahlngon Star. HAVE A CARE. "My miaalon In life," aald the latlr. lat, "ia to put tho dunce cap on th heads of other people." "Be careful," replied hi friend, "that, you don't oaten cold." Phila delphia Inquirer. OIVTNQ IT TIME. Jeweler "Ia your watch all rlgM now, Mr. Smart?" Mr. Smart "Well, no, not jt; bof It aeems to be gaining every day." Boston Transcript. Too Sublime For Theories. Declining to take theories of the unknown on trust, man travels over the way where science leads, only to find that the divine reality is too big for the creeds, too all-pervading for the definitions, loo sublime for the theories. And, on looking out nnd in and up and on, he rovercntly ex claims, It Is Thou, my Lord and my God. Frederic A. Hinckley. Crenting nn Appetl'c. The following from the speech of one of the officers of the Ohio State Liquor League Is both a text and a sermon: "It will appear from these facts, gentlemen, that the success ol our business is dependent largely upon the creation of nn anpetite for drink. Men who drink liquor, like others, will die, aad If there Is no new appetite created our counter? will be empty as will be our modey drawers. Our children must go hun gry or we must change our business to something more remunerative. Ths open field for the creation of this ap petite Is among the hoys. AHer men are grown and their appetites are formed, they rarely' change in this regard. It will be needful, therefore, that missionary work be done among the boys, and I make the suggestion, gentlemen, thnt nickels expended in treats now to the boys will return in dollars to your tlllB after the appetites have been formed Above all things, create an appetite." The Home and State. Becomes a Hlt-asing. Every contradiction of our will, every little ailment, every petty dlB appolntraent, will. If we take It pa tiently, become a bleBslng; it ia a touch of our Saviour's cross; and so, though painful at the moment, la Bweet and healthful afterward. E. B. Pusey. Look to Earth First. If you would make sure of your eatate In heaven you had better be come acquainted with the state of things on earth. THE BANK ROLL. "You took your vacation early." "Yea," laid the young man, pen sively. "I'm on my way borne." "Thinking of the girl you left be hind?" "No; of the wad." . Washington Uerald. THINKING PART FOR ETHEL. Ethol "Let's play bouse." Johnny- "All light; you be ma away In the country and I'll be pa." -N York Sun. Congressman Johnson on Prohibition Congressman Johnson, of North Dakota, declares that next to the great educational endowment of th State (amounting to about $60,000, 000), he considered Its prohibition law as the most valuable asset ol North Dakota, and concludes: "The people of the State are more emphat ic than ever In favor of prohibition." Temperance Notes. In England sometimes dlBBolute mothera drug their babiea to Bleep with gin. Th whisky manufacturers are still at odds with the Department of Jus tice as to what constitutes whiaky, eaya the New York Tribune. Mlnneaota clalma that during the firat three weeka of January there wea-e in that State directly owing to liquor the following: "Fourteen aut cldes, nineteen people aerloualy In jured and twelve actually killed." "How long, O Lord; how long!" THE SUMMER FLIRT. "You promised to be true forever and a day." "And I was true a day, ' reaponded the coquette. "At least, give me credit for living partially up to my contract." Loulavlllo Courier-Journal. In the last year the people of Canada paid over $23,000,000 for life Insurance, while the whole world gave a little over $22,000,000 for foreign miaalon work. flwexs w1 has the full ni pap ni . JJl . 1 e Uenutne which name of The Uom- CALIFORNIA Jia Sxrup Co. fay whom it is manufactured . pnnle'l on the front of every package. SOLD EfT ALL LEADING DRUGGIST on size only, regular price 50 (. bottle. g BOY PAINTERV8 PURE WHITE LEAD yj'Af A Dangerous Custom. There is a very prevalent practice all over the country of serving cua tomera with pieces of meat or Hah wrapped up In portions of news paper!. It la a cheap wrapping, and so commend Itself to both the butch er and fishmonger. But If it is cheap It Is alio nasty. Nor must the possi ble contact with cases of Infectious disease be forgotten. Any meat or fish fit for human consumption, even In the small quantities sold In the poor districts, ought to be worth a piece of clean paper. London Lancet, One Rcnson. "Carpets seem to be going out of fashion In favor of rugs." "Well, there's no denying that carpets are a bit tacky." Kansas City Times. t Hicks' Capudlne Cures Women's Monthly Pains, Backnche, Nervousness, and Headache. It's Liquid. KfTects imme diately. Prescribed by physicians with beat result. 10c, 25c., and 50c, at drug store. His Father Waa Doing Well. The Musical Home Journal of Lon don tells a story of George Gros smith and the income tax authori ties. Long after his father's death the commissioners, by mistake, sent the younger Grossmlth a notice as sessing the income of the deceased at $10,000. Mr. C'rosamlth returned the document to the proper quarter, with tho following note written across It: "I am glad ot learn my father Is doing so well In the next world; $10,000 Is a great deal more than he ever made In this. Kindly forward this notice to bis new ad dress, and remember me affection ately to him." New York Tribune. Remorse KiUa A Cow. In a spasm of remorae, following a protracted debauch, Brown Beaa, hitherto best behaved cow In the herd of J, A. Peter, of Macedonia, committed suicide by drowning. Brown Beaa had gorged heraelf In an orchard, the ground of which waa covered with partially decayed ap ples, ground and around the pas ture ahe ran, mooing hilariously, and scandalizing all the other animals. Occasionally she fell In a heap, but ataggered up again. Toward even ing, preaumably experiencing the first pangs of headache, ahe walked to the steep banks of the Pequabuck River and hurled herself over the brink. New York World. The Hero To The Rescue. "You shall bito the dust," hissed the villain, "as he strutted down the stage. The heroine trembled a few trem bles. Just then the hero, disguised as a sprinkling cart chaffeur, dashed Jown the pike with his machine. That settled it. There was no dust left to bite. "S-avedl" cried the heroine. Chi cago News. AFRAID TO EAT Girl Starving on Ill-Selected Food. "Several years ago I was actually starving," writes a Me. girl, "yet dared not eat for fear of the conse quences. "I had Buffered from Indigestion from overwork, irregular meals and improper food, until at last my stomach became so weak I could eat Bcarcely any food without great dis tress. "Many klndB of food were tried, all with tho same dlacouraglng ef fect. I steadily lost health &ni strongth until I was but a wreck of my former self. "Having heard of Grapo-Nuta and Its great merits, I purchased a pack age, but with little hope that it would help me I waa so discouraged. "I found It not only appetizing but that I could eat It as I liked and that It satisfied the craving for food with out causing distress, and It I may use the expression, it fljled the bill.' I "For months Grape-Nuts waa my principal article of diet I felt from the very flrst that I had found the riglh way to health, and happiness, and toy anticipations were fully realized. "With Its continued use I regain ad my usual health and strength. To day I am well and can eat anything I like, yet Grape-Nut food forms part of my bill of fare." "There' Reason. " Name given by Poatnm Co., Haiti Creek. Mich. Read "Th Rood w WellTllls." In pkga. Ever nrnd the above letter? A as one appear from tlma to tfaar. Thrj are graoine, urac, ami full of han utreC