THE PULPIT. RP.H.UANT SUNDAY SERMON BY Dfl. CHARLC8 EOWAnO LOCKE. Theme: Faith's VklTH Brooklyn. N. Y. The Rev Dr. rhnrles Edward Locke Sunday closed Mb pastorate at the Hanson Place Metliodiat Bplicopal Church. Ha leave to aaaume charge of tha great Elrst Methodlit Episcopal Church of Los Angeles, Cal. Largo audiences flllod tha church at both services. In the morning Dr. Locke's subject was "Faith s Victories." The text was 1 .Iflhn 5:4: "This is the victory that overeometh the world, even our . faith." Dr. Locke said. Early In the morning after refresh ing sleep amid the fragrant bowers of Bethany, on the second day of our Lord's sad and triumphant Passion Week. Jesus with His disciples was on Hla way around the graceful slopes of Olivet to the great city. All being hnngry, and seeing a fig tree, they ap proached It, confidently expecting to en joy the luscious fruit, for the season of the ripening fruit had come, but ! the time for the gathering of the har vest was not yet. When they reached the tree they found nothing but. leaves. Christ thereupon pronounced a curse upon tho unfruitful and uso le?s tree, and immediately It withered Way. When the wondering disciples aw the fig tree withered away they marveled, but Jesus said: "If ye, have faith and doubt not, ye shall not only do this which Is done to the fls : tree, but, also, If ye shall say unto this mountain, be thou removed and ; be thou cast Into the sea, it shall be j done; and all things whatsoever ye chall ask In prayer believing ye shall receive." John was the best loved of all the i rilsclnlcs nf Jesus. Our Introduction to him is when he Is a young man, ! era and sympathy me to fhTS tlbtlto ttburcJl with ITS mul- ' tltuda nt devoted and loynl popple. , I am deiply grateful to you all for your j love ana patience, lor your naouiy and your prayera. I wish 1 could have served you better. In the ardu ! ous, though happy, labors of this great parish I havo been assured of j your earnest and sympathetic sup port. Without your conatant co-operation I should havo utterly failed. I thank you tenderly for your generous sympathy, for during these five years my greatest sorrows have come to me. Thero was a happy trl-unlonato of us; my sainted father, my only brother, and myself. My father was a com rade and congenial companion to his boys. All unepectedly, In the morn ing of his brilliant career, my brother was stricken, and In a few hours the eminent young lawyer stood before the Great Judge. It was a deadening blow. My father, advancing In years, bent un der the chastening. Though It whit ened his locks. It divinely brightened his faith. It was your distinguished honor to know my father and hear him preach. Hla last sermon was preached In this pulpit, his last public prayer was offered at these holy al tars. He used to sit beside me here, and love me Into better service. Oc casionally, when I urged him to do so, ho would visit the other churches and listen to my brilliant confreres, who are widely known for their eminence and eloquence: and, then, with a par ent's fond Indulgence and extrava gance, he would say, "My son, none of these men preaches bettor than you." I smiled at the Action, but nevertheless my father's opinion was more to me than any other's, and his loving presence furnished tonic and Inspiration to my work; and when, In that parsonage In the very shadow of the sanctuary, his soul ascended to meet his Lord, the noblest and most exquisite Christian gentleman whom God ever made, ended his earthly pil grimage. In my great sorrow you sustained me with your tender pray- But the old world INTERNATIONAL LESSON COM MENTS FOR OCTOBER IS. when he and Andrew at the sugges tlon of John the Baptist, "Behold tho : Lamb of God!" follow Jesus and In- ! quire, "Where dwellest Thou?" and I Ho replies, "Come and see." Sixty ' years have passed; he Ib now an old man standing on the mountain top ot expectancy with the light of Immor tality aglow upon his face. Looking forward Into the future he cries, "It doth not yet. appear what we shall be!" and looking backward upon the . way ho has traveled, and upon the great world struggling for mastery, I he shouta triumphantly. "This Ib tho victory that overcometh tho world, ' even our faith." "Faith is the substance (assurance) M thlnir hoped for, the evidence j (proving) of things not seen." It has ; ben truthfully said that faith is a I higher faculty than reason. Reason builds laboriously and often fruitless- ly its towers of Babel, but faith quick- j ly soars into the very bosom of the Infinite. Faith is a grateful arch which spans the chasm between man : th? finite and God the Infinite. Faith j is a gift. "By grace ye are saved through faith it is the gift of God." Fntth Is the subtle force by which man adjusts himself to God. Faith Is pardon, peace regenera tion. "Being Justified by faith, we i have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ." We are saved from sin, not by evolution, or by revo- j lutlon. or by works alone, but by i faith "believe on th Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt 6e saved!" Faith is life "The lust shall live by faith" was Luther's discovery on I for you the staircase In the lateran. "The life which I now live In the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God." Christ Is life He came to Interpret and enlarge life for each of us. faith, also, is character. Faith In Christ is the foundation of character, the inspiration of achievement. Char acter Is what a man is doing all the time. When the disciples asked Jesus what thoy should do to work the works of God, He replied, "Bellovo on Him whom He hath sent." What we believe will determine what we do. Great men are great ideas incarnated. It was said of Abraham, "He believed Hod, and It was accounted unto him for righteousness. " "Faith is the substance of things hoped for." Faith realizes while oth er men dream and doubt and debate. has been ,retty lonesome to me since the going away of these two dear me. I leave you reluctantly, but I turn my face again to the sunset shore with happy expectations. Many friends await our coming. Nine yer.ra ago this very week I laid the cornerstone of that beautiful church; ind a piece of my heart went Into the Subject David's Kindness to Jona than's Son, 2 Sam. 0 Golden Text, Eph.4:iI2 Commit Verse 7 Read 2 Sum. 10:1-4; If): 24 -110 PLACE. Jerusalem. TIME. 1040 B. C. EXPOSITION. I. Mephibosheth In liodebar. 1-0. Now that David Is securely settled on the throne, he he glns to think of his dearest friend of the days of his trial Jonathan. The house of Saul as a whole had been his bitterest enemies, but ho will show them kindness for Jonathan's sake The sinner Is a btt'r enemv to God (Rom. 8:7: Jsi 4 4), but Cod lovei tho sinner and will search him out and show him klmlnesi for Jesus' sake. The house of Saul had sunken from ls formar greatness Into such obscurity that It took jnm time o( searching to find on" of the bouse, hold. A former servant of the hons" of Saul was better known than his children or zrnmlchlldren. The kind ness that David desired to show to some of the house of Spul was "the kindness of God," unmerited kindness and great kindness. As God had shown kindness to David, so David would show kindness to his enemies. Menhlbosheth is a fitting type of the sinner; h was "lame on his feet" and so is the sinner, unable to walk uprightly in the paths of rlsrhteous ness, constantly stumbling and fall ing; and he livwl In Lodehar (which means, "no pasture"), and the slnnet lr without pasture, starving. God ha? made the human soul on so large a plan that nothing can satisfy it but God Himself. Vve may flatter our selves that If we have much good? laid up for manv years, onr souls can ' take their ease, eat, drink and b? merry ' ( boko 1 .' : 1 It I . .nit the human soul that, drinks of nny other well than that to which Jesus Invltc3 him copper box. I want your prayers that ) will thirst again (John 41.1). It 1? my ministry thereinay Ifb faithful and fruitful. A - . .. 1 ... . 1 n .. mv suit. Hr. Henderson am! bis ' family, will be a token of true love and loyalty to me. He is most wor thy of your highest confidence and es only Vbefl he drink?, ot the water that Jesus gives tbar he never thirsts, but whosoever drinks of the water that Jesus gives shall never tbtrst and It will be in him a well of water spring ing up Into everlastini life (Jonn 4:14). Away from God there Is no teem. He has won many trophies, is i pastur: , but when we return to God a man who has been tried and not found wanting. He Is a stalwart: rugged in body, vigorous in mind and large of heart. He is capable, resourceful, victorious. God bless him and you, and make his comlna the most notable pastorate in the eventful history of this church. and He becomes our Shepherd He makes us to lie down In green pas tures and leads us beside the waters of rest and redemption iP. 23:2. R. V., margin I, Our David not merely sends for us, He comes for us (Luk" 13:10), and when i He finds us He rejoices over us, And. now, once more, I thank you ays ub en His shoulder and brines one and all tho trustees, the stew- lls safely horn (Luke 15:i'i-7). How ards. the class leaders, the Sunday- foolish Mephibosheth would have school, the presiding elders, the dea- I ,een If when tho king sent for him, conesses, tho sexton, the Epworth I ,e had refiiEed to go with the messen League, the Men's 2-3-2 Club, the ( srBi ana how foolish Ihfi Rinner is missionary societies, the organists ' wnPn t-lle Kin of k.ns K..ds fot hiln and choirs, tho ushers, the children through His messenger, the Holv who have loved me, the young people Spirit. If he refuses to leave the land GHRISTIflN ENDEAVOR MOTES . . . CCTOBER EIGHTEENTH. Topic Commending Our Society. IV. By Systematic Generous Giving. 1 Cor. 16: 1, 2; Mai. 3: 7-12. Llherallty pleases God. 2 Cor. 8: 6-11. SainU are liberal. Ps. 112: 1-10. Toward those In want. Matt. 6; IMS. To missions. Phil. 4: 14-18. To the saints. Rom. 12: 12, 13. A liberal widow. Mark 12: 41 44. It Is only obvious honesty that wa should give larger gifts to God as God gives larger gifts to us (I Cor. 1C: 2.) Nothing la beBt done till It Is ha bitually done. Giving should have a regular time. (1 Cor. 16: 2.) Can man rob God, who can take anything from him? Ye; for God cannot take from man a free will of fering! (Mai. 3: 8.) Giving for a return Is not the giv- Ing that brings a return. (Mai. 3: . 10.) Suggestions. It Is not enough to give unless the . gift Is lu proportion to our means; DOT that, unless It Is given regularly; nor that, unless It Is a generous pro portion. Great giving will greatly command our Society, hecauso It is greatly needed. Giving must begin when our gifts are small and easy, or It hardly will become a habit when our gifts may : Ue large ones. It Is not fair to expect the young people to pay the debts of the churches and mission boards; but to be In training to pay them when they ; grow up. Illustrations. No secular business can be success fill without tho keeping of accounts; ' how can tho King's business? Giving specially to God one-seventh of our time and one-tenth of our money helps us to give Him all our time and our money. The tenth Is the IntereBt we pay on our possessions to God, in token that they are all His. i If one loves another, one Is always trying to see hnw much one can give him, not how little. the mm mm dm PROGRESS MADE IIY CHAttl'IONS FIGHTING THE III M DKJMON. dHMf HN Alcohol ns a Medicine, by Mrs. Mar tha M. Allen. Superintendent of the Department of Medical Tem poraneo For the W. 0. T. II. In the middle of the nineteenth rentury the whisky bottle and tho brandy bottle were the mainstay of the average physician In his combat with disease. To-day alcohol Is a discredited drug; Its stimulating and ' tonic qualities are doubted or denied, I Its strengtnentng powers are known I to be a delusion resulting from Its i nerve deadening action, and tho claims made for It as a food are I shown by good authority to be no , stronger than might be made for J morphine and various other drugs which undergo tho change In the body called oxidation. The Influences which have been i Instrumental In the dethroning of al- j cohol as the great paneca have been various. The most Important has ' been the spirit of scientific research , of the past twenty to thirty years aided by the Invention of InstrnmentB of precision by which the effects of drugs upon animal life can bo much more definitely ascertained thnn formerly. In the great laboratories connected with some of tho leading medical schools of the world, sclen- j tlsts have been studying carefully the . effects of nleohol upon the various organs of the body, and although they differ In their conclusions on ! some points, they all agree thnt for- I mer opinions of the usefulness of I alcoholic liquors must be greatly mm FATHER KNOWS Thou knowest, 0 my i'ather! Why should I Wesry high Heaven with restless pmysn and tears" Thou knowest nil! My heart's unuttered cry Hath soared beyond the stars and reached Thine ears. Thou knownt ah, Thou knowest! Then whst netil, O loving God! to tell Thse o'er and o'er, And with persistent iteration plead As one who crieth at some closed door? "Tcab not!" we mothers to our children i say "Our wiser love will grant wbnte'er if beat." I Shnll we. Thy children, run to Thee alway. Begging for this and thnt in wild unrest: I dare not clamor at the heavenly gate, Lest I should low: the high, sweet trains within; 0 Love Divine! I can hut stnnd nnd wait Till Perfect Wisdom bids mc enter in! Julia C. I! Dorr, j The Changing Mnntlo. Tho change nnd (lux which mark the universe have never been more strikingly set forth than In the In- spired words of tho Epistle to the . HebrowB. The heavens and the 1 earth, says the writer, are to perish; I they all wax old like n garment, they modified, If not entirely changed. It i are rolled up as nn abandoned man- is certainly a fact that the physicians tie, they aro changed for something i Household' Matter Chocolate Mold. Two ounces of chocolate, soni whipped cream, halt a teaspoonful of vanilla extract, one and a bait cup ful of milk, two yolks of eggs, two lablespoonfuls of sugar, one heaping tablespoonful powdered gelatin. Remove the saucepan from the fire, add the remainder ot the milk, gel atin, sugar and yolks of eggs. Stir again over the' fire until almost boil ing, strain Into a basin, add vanilla, tool slightly. Pour Into a wet mold and set aside In a cool place. Serve with whipped cream. New Press. Curry of Fish. Three hard-boiled eggs, two table poonfuls of butter or dripping, two tabu-spoonfuls of flour, one dessert spoonful ot chutney, two cupfuls ot milk, halt a pound of cooked fish, three ounces of boiled rice. Melt the butter In a saucepan, stir In the flour smoothly, stir It over the fire for a few minutes, then add the curry powder and chutney. Next add the milk and stir tho sauce over the Are till It bolls and thickens. Next cut the eggs Into slices and the fish into flakes. Add them and the rice to the sauce, mix well togethor. Pile it up on a hot dish and garnish with croutons of bread. New York Press. who have familiarized themselves most thoroughly with these lnvestl- j gatlons are now making comparative- ly little use of alcohol as a remedy if they use It at all. Alcoholic liquors were at one time considered of great benefit In dlsor- i dors of the stomach. Different In- ; vestlgators have been experimenting , upon dogs and other animals, and j with foods In test tubes, to deter- I mine, If possible, the action of alco- j hoi upon digestion. Hndxlkowskl, a ! famous Russian scientist, found that i although alcohol causes nn increased ! flow of gastric Juice, the gastric Juice thus produced Is worthless as a dl These facts are Incontestable. universe Is perishing chang- else. The Ing. Science confirms this. "Perish i wax old change," It Is nlmost a i scientific vocabulary. "Tho aun," Bald the late Lord Kelvin. "Is an in- candescent mass, cooling." The moon j "a cinder." "Many stars aro begin Blag their career; many are complet- Ing It; for many It Is ovar." On our i own planet change Is marked every- where. Seas are where land was; land Is where oeenns were. An Ic? i age Is followed by a temperate one. I In the world or men. too, an ennnge. Countries rise and fall. In one r.ge EPWORTH LEAGUE LESSONS SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18. gestive agent because It contains no I n race is domlnnnt, In the next It Is pepsin. Professor Chittenden, of I dependent. who have listened to me, the older people who have prayed for me; all who have In any way helped In these five memorable years of my life, 1 thank you with all my heart and pray To tho members of other of "no pasture." and the house f bondage, to go to the King and re ceive the reward of the faithful. II. ' Mephibosheth at the King's Table, 7-1.1. When Mephibosheth flmt intn trio nrflCiinen nf t h a lr i vi it Vi n churches, and those who have attend- I wa8 Mi of fear , Ue o( tnn ed upon my ministry who were not, po8eg of love tllat the kln(? ha(l' ex. members of this church, I would say ! res8P(, ,v 3) So t snnpr , , you have gladdened and encouraged , o( fenr wnru ne draw8 , h (Q G fl my heart by your presenco and kindly , ,hnneh r,n,,.a nllrlmaps rpVealrt n., and I thank you. one and all, i nnr1 nv. . finite love. To trembling Mephibo- sr.ein uaviu said, f ear not, and :o words again and again Remember when you come to California I shall be there to warmly welcome you to my church and to my home. The Real Cause of Weakness. The decline In numbers among the free churches of Great Britain is a , subject for lament. The English pa pars are filled with anxious discus ions of the fact. It appears that the I passion for souls Is lacking and evan- gl htm is discredited. The churches are doing little more than the ethical societies ar doing. Seventy-five per Columbus first had a vision of a new I cent, of the population are reported world, and then found it. Morse was a man of faith and prayer, until In 1844 the flrBt telegraph wire between Washington and Baltimore carried the message, "What God hath wrought?" So of Eads with his jet ties, Stephenson with his steam en gine, and Field with his cable. What the trembling sinner God says, "Fear not" (Is 41:10,13; 431, 2, 5), There Is scarcely anything God Bays more frequently In His Word than "Fear not." David gave Mephibosheth good reason for not fearing, namely, "1 will surely show thee kindness for Jona than's, thy father's, sake." God gives us even better reason for putting fenr from us, because He will show us kindness for His only begotten Son's sake i Rom. 8:32: John 14 13, 14; 2 Cor 5:21). David not only promised to restore all the land to Saul, his father, but furthermore that Mephibosheth should eat at his own table continually, and this is what as being either Indifferent or hostile to tho churches. The churches are Sit day clubs, reform societies or benevolent agen- soul. Prayer Is not vital but for- I ?i?8, l" StJSLSS .1 boun.u'"y henslve understanding. The Value and Power of MlsaJenar, Information Acts 11. 4, 15-21; 15. 6-12 (Studies in Church Benevolences.) It serins strange to us that Peter should be compelled to stand up be fore a congregation of Christians and defend himself because he had preached the gospel to the Gentiles. And yet we are told that the apostles and brethren "contended with him" because he had fellowship with for eigners. Peter, however, "rehearsed the matter from the beglnlng," and they were soon convinced that ho was right. Those who contended with Peter were prejudiced, and their prejudice had to be removed. This was done by information. Prejudice and Indifference concern ing missions have existed In the Christian Church from the time of Peter until now. Information will remove It now as It did then. Tho church will never care whether tho world is saved or not until it knows the need of the world. The mission ary from the frontier and tho far distant land who pleads for money and help will find many Christians who will "contend" with htm, and his pleadings will be lu vain unless th-ay are backed up by Information. In Peter's day an address was a sufficient means of spreading this In formation, but he had only a few peo ,pl to inform and only one incident to relate. Now the campaign has broadened so as to take In every home and foreign problem, and mill Ions of Christians must be informed. The missionary cannot meet the entire church race to face, and the problems are so many and so varied that study a compro- mal. They Conviction have the Is not ethic of present religion these heroic men worked out was j without the evangel. This condition "subhtanee" to them before their dls coveries and inventions were actual ities. The same is truo ot the work and faith of our Pilgrim Fathers and Mothers, the founders of the Wea leyan movement, Francis Xavler, William Taylor, William Butler and Judson. I'ioneers of faith have dis mally discovered thai it la more diffi cult to overcome tho uubell f of nmn than to master the principles upon which their deductions and Inventions depended. After all, the stionger argument for our Christian faith Is not whut we say, but what we do. It has been thoughtfully remarked that although the unbeliever may not read the Bi ble, he does read the lite of Chris tians to sec how they live. A truth Incarnated In a consistent Christian life Is the church's invincible argu ment tor Christianity. Faith is salvation salvation from Hln and self and sorrow and sickness and adversity. There is no 111 of the soul for which faith Is not a specific, and many Ills of the body flee away like the poisonous fogs before the sunlight , dear Chaplain McCabe had a broth er who, after forty years of thralldom to strong rlrlns, was Anally, through the faith and love and perseverance of his hopeful brother, redeemed rorn the sad slavery. Tho chaplain used to say "When I get to heaven I am going to take my brother by the hand and lead him up to my mother and saw: 'Mother, here's George; I have brought him home!'" and nothing will save a vast multitude ot men un less their fellows, In love and faith, help them to fight their battles through to a victory. Abraham Lincoln was a man of boundless faith In God. He once said: "It Is not particular whether God Is Is a warning to all the world. The primary note In all our preaching and work should he evangelistic. Stagnation and death stare us in the face when we cease to seek the lost. Baptist Standard. God Invites us to do. No earthly I Is absolutely essential to 1W115 a lame wua ever so oounuruny spread as the table of the great King to which He InvlteB every sinner to mi uuivii auu iu eat mere continually, ' ha .1, , t .. ' David's kindness filled MenhinJEiVh h?.8 hoWn no better accom 11-j .... uuuor mese new conditions new methods niUBt be used. Experience wun a sense ot his own utter un worthiness (v. 8). He regarded him self as only a dead dog. When we see ourselves in the light of God's In finite grace, we too will see that we are no better than dead dogs In our selves, but by the grace of God we become children of God (John 1:12). uavia sought to relieve Mephibosheth pushing needed results than tho method proposed by the mission tudy movement. "Let the Almighty Steer. God hath a thousand keys to open 1 thousand doors for the deliverance 1 of all care by laying al) responsibility of His own when it has come to the 1 for looking after his large property greatest extremity, i-et us do raitn- , upon Zlba. the servant. Zibn himnif had fifteen sons and twenty servants, hut he In turn was to be servant to Mephibosheth. God provides us with PINK RAMRLER ROSES. fill and care for our own part, which Is to do and suffer for Him, and lay Hod's part on Himself, and leave It there; duties are ours, events are the Lord's. When our faith goes to meddle with events, and to hold a court (If I may so speak) upon God's providence, knd beglnneth to say, "How wilt Thou do this or that?" we lose ground, wo have nothing to do there; It Is our part to let the Almighty exercise His own office and Hteer H1b own helm. Bamuel Rutherford. They Lead the Crimson Ramblers In 'oguc. The orlmson rambler has suddenly come into fashion and in all the re cent accounts of functions in London one reads ot Its being employed as a decorative bloom. It has been a Yale, observed that nn equal quan tity of simple water causes as great a flow of gastric juice as does alco hol, and that the gnstrlc juice pro duced by the drinking of water Is possessed of much more powerful digestive properties than the gastric Juice produced by the drinking of alcohol. Sir William Roberts, one of Eng land's eminent physicians, found In his experiments with alcohol and food In test tubes thnt the liquor never hastened the digestive process, but that when It was present in the proportion of ten per cent, or more it caused delay. Food mixed with sherry wlno required throe times as long to digest as the normal. Malt liquors were also shown to' retard digestion. Physicians acquainted with these and other similar experiments havf naturally ceased to recommend alco holic liquors as aids to digestion. Alcohol for years was considered a valuable heart stimulant. But the keen eye of science has discovered error In that opinion also. Instru ments havo been Invented which show that the bounding pulse follow ing a dose of brandy Is not the re sult of added force, or vigor, but tlm result of paralysis of the tjniiphWrU vessels. Tests with the Isolated but surviving hearts of a dog and of a rabbit have shown conclusively that alcohol reduces the amount of work done by the heart, and causes irreg ularity of plusntlon. At a meeting in Atlantic City last yenr during the sessions of the Amer ican Medical Association, Dr. Frank Billings, of Chicago, said tha the belief in alcohol as a stimulant la rapidly passing away. English physicians have been much more outspoken against alco hol as a medicine than American physicians. During the past three years Sir Frederick Treves, King Ed ward's Burgeon; Sir Victor Horsley, Sir James Barr, Professor Sims Woodhead and other leading English medical men have spoken out so strongly against the old views of the utility of alcohol that the London Times has felt called upon to say: "According to recent developments of scientific opinion It Is not Impos sible that a belief in the strength ening and supporting qualities of al cohol will eventually become as ob solete as a belief In witchcraft." mightier servants yet. servants of no great favorite In this country for ! Icbs dignity than the angels (Heb. 1:1a, 141 Mephibosheth was not - only to eat at the king's table, but he was to eat there as one of the king's sons. we sit down at God's table some yoars, but the pink species Is now to rival It. In June and early July one sees It all through the suburbs, and It has not as guests, but as a child !Rom. QU,te tan the place of the honey Great Tolls, Great Rewurds. Nature Ib Just toward men. It rec ompenses them for their sufferings; It renders them laborious, because to the greatest tolls It attaches th gr stes( . re wards.- Montesquieu. Tho Maxim Muffler Peacemaker. Government tests of this noiseless rifle indicate that Mr. Hiram Maxim will soon carry the world a few Inches nearer to peace. A weapon which can kill a man at long range without any more fuss than a puff of gas and a hammer click helps not a little to convince disputants that arbitration 8:16, 17). The lesson closes with Mephibosheth no longer In Lodebar, the land of "no pasture," but In Jeru I oalem, which means, "founded In ; peace." And not only In Jerusalem, I the city of peace, but continually at the king's table. At this point the type falls, for Mephibosheth Is still lame on both his feet, and the re deemed sinner Is no longer lame but I made strong In his feet, able to walk In the paths ot righteousness (Ps. lilt: Eoh. 6:10L Is the better part of patriotism. on our side, but It la all Important ""'d the inventor make his gun not only smokeless and noiseless, but cer- bether we are on God's side." On ne occasion whn his pastor dostrad to make a call, the President fixed the hour at a o'clock in the morning. H found Mr. Lincoln reading tho Bible, and be turned that it wua the great suianclpator's custom to spend the early morning hour each day in Blbia reading and prayer. My dear friends. If any substantial rlctork-s huve been won in this dear church during my pastorate, which ends witli this sucred Sabbath, they have been faith victories. Nothing wu have endeavored to do together duri:i ; th.ise five happy years has been worth while unless it was what God wanted done. I am thankful for 4liu kindly Utuvidenc wblcll brought lain of Its aim, so that any law re oruit might bring down his ambushed foe merely by wishing it and pressing the trigger, tha device would be still more welcome The possibilities of a silent, gun In criminal hands are dis quieting. But this very fact may hasten the better public control of the sale aud use of all death-deullng in struments, which to-d.iy may be pur chased by any boy or burglar In pawnshop or hardware store. It this Is to be an effect of the Maxim muffler, lha latter will be an almas uumlxvd blMMlng. Now York Jivok iug Post. WHIPS HIS COUNTRY COUSIN. Young Samuel Greer, of New York, who was visiting his cousin, Johu Morris, near Hall's Eddy, N. Y., went Tishlng In the Delaware River with the latter. Both boys are about fif teen years old. When In a suitable spot young Greer threw out the stone anchor. At the wme time Morris rowod the boat several feet ahead. Greer's left, foot caught In the rope near the stone and he war hurled overboard with it. He sank to the bottom. With groat presence of mind he pot his hand In his poc ket aod holding his breath got out his pocket knife and cut the rope. He was none too soon, as he was be coming wlndud and when he reached the surface he clung to the bow of the bout to get air. Then he climbed in. "You did that on purposs," h said. . "1 didn't," said Morris. Tusa scrap occurred. In which the country cousin got the worst of it. Young Greer was sent honxi. suckle, the Virginia creeper and other climbers for summer houses and trelllB covering. Some years ago It was Introduced by the florists here as a potted plant , for Easter, the blooms being forced. Before that time, both In England and France, It was considered as rather an ordinary variety of the rose and was not held in high esteem. A new roBe, faint pluk and single, a climber and evidently a wild flower in Its native land, has been used In large quantities for decorative pur poses. The blossom Is quite small and feathery, but massed the plant si are most effective. The demand for pink flowers of any kind this year ex ceeds that ot any other color. Dur ing the winter the KUlarney rose led even the sterling favorite, the Ameri can beauty. Town and Country. In the summer, when so many thousands drink from tempting springs In the woods and on hillsides, a warning recently given by Mons. B. A. Martel, the celebrated French ex plorer of caverns, should not go un noticed. Contrary to a widely preva lent opinion, Mons. Martel says that springs of apparently pure water are. In many cases, merely the outflow of surface waters which have disap peared through fissures, carrying with thorn pollution from th soil, and not purified in their passags through the rocks. He thinks that svoa (ualk Is not sn effectual filter (or surface water passing through it. Bravely Protested Against Alcohol. One American physician whoBe great name gave weight for fifty years to the tight against alcohol was the late Nathan S. Davis, dean ot the Medical School of Northwestern University, Chicago. He was as grtat In principle, and In the cour age of his convictions as ho was In medical standing. Well would It be for public health and morals were there more physicians like him! He persisted In keeping before the medi cal profession the dangers to life of free recourse to alcoholic liquors in the treatment of disease, and be proved the superiority of non-alcoholic medication by the small death rate which resulted when alcohol was not used In fevers, pneumonia, and various other disorders. As a med ical teacher for years, he had great Influence, and many of his students accepted his views to their own great advantage and doubtless to the sav ing of many lives. A Tribute. "That's the only parade I've seen In ten years on this post," said the Park row policeman, "that hasn't brought any extra trade to the sa loons hereabouts." It was the night the Salvationists were waving torches aud bunds were playing to honor General Booth in City Hall Park. New York Sun.' Contemplation of the passing order has made many m;n pessimists. But ! the apostle and to all Christians, Buch change and decay breed optl- mlsm. All creation Is conceived as garment of the living God, which has Its fashion ror a time, ana men, having fulfilled its purpose, Is changed for nnother. God wove the garment. He wears it; He will change It when It pleases Him. It Is a triumphant note that Is struck: "Thou remalnest; Thou are the same; Thy years shall not fail." The soul's attention Is fixed, not upon the perishing garment, but upon the unchanging wearer. There is no chance about creation. Before it, God was; when the uni verse is worn out, He will be. But best of all, He Is with us now. It is notable that this buoyant note Is bor rowed by the writer from Psalm 102, and boldly applied to our Lord Jesus Christ. Here is our hope the Unchang ing One has visited us. ' The world has seen Him; He Is not an abstrac tion, He Is a living Person, whose heart wo know. Is It surprising that the Christian Is a man of unconquer able hope? Into the New Year he may take with him the precious word, "Thou remalnest." Whatever else passes or changes, Christ remains the same. To be attached to this passing order alone Is to Invite bit terness, to be condemned to see your years fail, your friends slip from you all coming under the influence of change. But to these who know Christ as their own, the new yeat can bring nothing but Joy London Christian. Gateau of Cherries With Cream. One pound ot cherries, juice of half a lemon, halt a cupful of sugar, half a cupful of whipped cream, one and a half cupfuls of water, one and a half heaping tablespoonfuls of powdered gelatine, a few drops of red coloring. Wash and pick the cherries, then cut them In two and remove the toneB. Put them in a saucepan with the water, lemon julco and sugar; cook gently till tender. Strain the Juice from the cherries and measure It; If not one and a halt cupfuls, make up the quantity with water. Return this juice to the sauce pan, add the gelatine and a lew drops of red coloring. Stir over the fire until the gelatine Is dissolved. Place tho cherries lu a ring mold that has been rinsed out with cold water, then strain the liquid over them. Set aside till firm, tben turn out and fill the centre with whipped and sweetened cream. New Press. Simplicity of Language. To a person whose attention has not been drawn particularly to the' subject it will be surprising to call to mind how many of the most su blime and comprehensive paBsagei in the English language consist whol ly or chiefly of monosyllables. Of the slxty-slx words composing the Lord's Prayer, forty-eight are of one syllable. Of the seventeen words composing the Golden Rule, fifteen are of one syllable. The sen tence most descriptive of the great creative power of Jehovah is ex pressed entirely in monosyllables, "And God said, let there be light; and there was light.". One of tho most encouraging prom ises of Scripture Is expressed In fif teen words, all but one of which are TTwmnnvilfihlei: "I love them that love I Me; and those that seek Me early shall find Me." in our aeauugs wiub young people, Indeed with the masses ot the people, care should be taken to use simple language. The Sunday-school Herald. Tlie Successful. They who look to God, listen to God, llv with God, and work for God, succeed. They who look to man or love the praise of man more than the praise ot God, they who are listening for men's hosannas or waiting for their palm branches, fall as Herod fell, and Annas and Culaphas and Pilate. Where are the legions whose files of soldiers led out the Son of David to His death? And He? He leads the world thU day, Inspires Its law and directs His victory, not be cause multitudes welcomed Him as King, but because He was obedient unto death, even the death ot the cross. Edward Everett Halo. Broiled Shoulder of Lamb. Have you ever tried broiling a shoulder of lamb Instead ot roasting It? Here la the way an English woman, who knows all there is to know about cooking mutton, does it and declares It Is delicious. "I choose a shoulder of lamb thai is young and small. In buying lamb see that the kidney fat is abundant, semi-transparent and clean and there is no sottnesB or discoloration, whlcb shows the meat to be on the verge of spoiling. "Put the roast in a moderate oven for about half an hour. Use as little water in the pan as will prevent burn ing. "Take it out and rub both side! with melted butter, black pepper and u dash of cayenne and a little lenioi juice. Broil over a clear and mod erate fire until well done. "Serve either with brown gravy ot sauce piquante. The lattwr is nice when you use the lamb for late sup per with a salad and Hollandaise po tatoes. "To make the sauce put one ounce of butter, three ounces of water, s tablespoonful of vinegar, a quarter ot a teaspoonful of flour, yolk ot one egg and a little stock into a saucepan and place on a good fire. Stir til! thick, but do not let it boll. "After "removing from the fire stli in slowly a teaspoonful ot lemon Juice." New York Pies DccrcuM- In Am-sts. Clarksburg, Tenn., reports 356 ar rests during ten raunths under pro hibition, as against 809 during It last ten months under license. Merely Transitory. Morning is at hand. The Day Star is near the rising. We are not many miles from home. What mat ter then the 111 entertainment in th smoky Inns ot this worthless world. Samuel Rutherford. "Saloons Arc Closed." This head-line m connection with the newspaper accounts of the great fire at Chelsea, Mass., In wblc.h ten thousand people were made home less, occasions no surprise. Ques tions of "personal liberty," ot the possibility of enforcement, of the Cans miracle and all the multifarious poppy-cock of the liquor sophist, were swept aside like chaff when aw ful calamity brought sober vision as to the relation ot the saloons to th community's welfare. When shall we cease to be Mnsibt ny wha w M frrulf A Preference. , I would sooner walk In the dark, and hold hard to a promts ot my Ood, than trust In the light of the brightest day that ever dawned. . H. Spurgson. ACCESSORIES. "By dumping a box of salt Into the tub 1 get an exact duplicate of as ocean bath." "Naw; you don't. You've omitted the empty cans and the melon rinds." Houston Chronicle. THE NATURAL CpNSEQUENCBj. Magistrate "You say you slapped the defendant on tho back and called him a brick. What happened theff?" Complainant "He threw himself at me." Punch- (KOVSEHoLD'b Try mixing ginger cookies with cold coffee instead of water. A pan of borax and sugar kept under the sink will soon destroy roaches. In mixing mustard add a drop 01 two of olive oil. It will greatly im prove the flavor. One source of Impurity of milk and cream is damp, poorly ventilated cel lars and milk rooms. If you use too much salt by mis take, add a trifle ot sugar or ot vin egar, according to the dish. The matter of cleanliness In the dairy Is after all more a matter of Inspiration than ot education. Salt will curdle new milk. In pre paring porridge and gravies salt should not be added until the dish Is prepared. Always cook vegetables grown above ground in salted water, those which grow beneath the ground in fresh water. Cream that Is too thin to whip may be made to do so by adding the un beaten white of an egg before be ginning to whip it. To prevent fruit pies from boiling over while baking, add a tablespoon ful ot cornstarch .to the fruit. Sweet en the fruit to taste, add cornstarch aud beat before adding the crust. A good rule tor Ironing a shirt waist is: Sleeves first, then waist. If back gets wrinkled when ironing front, then Iron on wrong side, as arinholes can thus be ulculy laun dered. To prevent glassware from being easily broken, put in a kettle of cold water, heat gradually uutll water has leached the boiling point. Set asld; when watar Is cold, take out glass. This Is an excellent way to toughen lamp chimneys. To cleau Japanese matting and Unofeum use bran water, which is made by taking two bandfuls ot bran and boiling it in a gallon of water. After this has bqllcd twenty minute strain and cleans j the matting or linoleum with a flannel cloth wet with the bran water. Wipe tu-uudlfttllX with dry sloth