wmmL and THE PULPIT. SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY DEAN H0DGE3. Theme: Defense of Hip Failli. Cow peas I'or Cows. Cowpas make an excellent foul (or dairy cows wh"ti combined with Jther grain ami fodder In proper pro portion, but tin y are so highly con jentiated ninl nitrogenous that thoy ho'.'!U I)" fid In moderate quuntitiei nd mixed with cut f -ed in bran. V.'.-.lily Witness. I'iistiirin Sheep. or,: -,!"i!:l"iM a?.ks us how manv Jli ! -a:i : p:i.--!'ir- .1 on eighty acrM of I. .iily v. i-'il land In blue gt,ns. l:i In this in-iuiry. It may b' a M th;.t there is no hard ami fast ill". I' ii-pcn-l.-i entirely on the li 3 : ::: i- of the pasture, the s-:i -on, t' . 1'i.i'Mi al sheep men s.iy tlin--:o fj 1 1 1 sV-op per acre are eiioiish. r.d y- i, as already stated, this would J"I i,i i,n tlu season, character of :ho prtni-p, etc. Much in all thi-.-t" pra':i a things must b- left to the 3'i':). inasnT. In ibid connection It nay b - wild that on" g.o'.vlnj sheep jho-ild have a few aires of rape to (urn the sheep to from the pasture K easioiially. Hap" is a rapid grower, tnd is very valuable fur sheep, till late in the fall season. Indiana Far A Handy Hani, Here are plans for a handy barn. It will hold seven head of horses and l!)Otit ten head of rows. A frill op posite th" fe"ilway will hold about COii bu.-iuis ol corn am.' an oats bin .l joininc this will hold from lnon lo 1 J no bushels of that grain. This i av -s a space fifteen by eighteen for Implements, hay or anything that the fjrn.er may wUh t put in it. The ' -n mn r, DCP if,?'' c:rn oat ma-thins ' C?18 f.H P90rj i J ?.J-J jE "l ( f-!0R3i ..' STALLS i , I uiu ua lu ' ' A Handy Tarn. on the row shed ari wile no -fill so you can drive through them with a ivann or manure Cii -.rler. The Iioijp stable has dou b!': stalls ten feet wide and fifteen fee; from inside of mallear to the wall. This, together with the fart that the doors are oUht feet wide, pnable you to net out with your team very easily. The si.o of the struc t ire is thirty-five by thirty-eight feet, with a hay mow over the lower Hour, fh" eaves are six f""t. affording more than usual prjtect.on to the outside of the building. Th-. accompanying plan, ays I he Journal of Agriculture, will give the i ,il a b' tti r under standing of the i::.eiior arrango-ni'i!'.. during the sensorf of service and It will not be necessary to feed grain. The samp will be true of a vigorous i shearing ram running with a flock 1 of, say, twelve to twenty ewes. Hut should the number of the ewes Iip in creased beyond the limit named, then the management should be up- , proximately us stated below. Th" rains should be confined to a stale or shed having at the same time .I'css to a paddock. They should be f"d i;ood hay and s'Uiie u tl ';:'"en food such as rape or cab la j". They should net In addition from one to two pounds nrai:i per d;iy, areordins lo the service exacted of them, and an ample wnt"r snjeily. ; Half the rain by bulk may li" com. posed of bran, the oilier half beini; ; almost any kind of main, but pre ferably oats or wheal . ' The ewes should lie driven to a yard, say in I he mornin g. The ram turned in with ihein will soon single ! out the ewes In season. These should be kept in till the next day. After the season of service is over, the Krain ration given to the ram phould be gradually reduced, but It , Is usually not wise to withhold grain altogether during thp winter. Itam lambs want it to further development and old rams to sustain yield. Pro fessor Thomas Shaw. Making l aiiiiiiu I'ay. Secretary Wilson in a recent ai'i flr.ss summarize J in a few sentences the processes of a far:r,"r who sue reeds In making fare. ;:!'; pay. This successful farmer If thus describes: "He rotates his i to; s. "He has good pas:uis. "H- lias a s;oo l aanleii. "He tile-Jiains his l.i.i l., "He keeps up K.) d ! lies. " He puts all manure promptly on th" fields. keeps dairy r-rvs or mutton siirep. or boih. "lie breeds drafi-ao: s. and doe firu work with brood-mares and ijr'j'ving colts. ' lie has a library witii periodicals and standard work, and a musical in tnimi'ii'. "He keeps improved stock whi-h respond to tli Mr k.-cping and put on the greatest per cent, of meat on the win ii she ir-e-ls ii. has a sprlns vehl I'rini" ,r i- s. "I!" i.. !ps Jt i.-, wife lu the hoilFe rl frjr her to i'i.i i::. ar.d drives her t.irhiiic'.' hlniiir" !i; ..burg Chris tian Advo.-ate. I'lowiif; l iuler Cirresi 'lips, My ixpe:iee( e in .i.:.; i j iirprovo land by plowing under green forage crops leads m- t i believe that unless we make a wise selection of crops to in lurri-d under our work Is often done hi a lo-s. Th be of value the c.-op that is plowed under mist be one that obtains a large percentage of lis pl uit foo l from the atmosphere, 1 1 In p direr. ly or Indirectly, or else one i bat lias a deep rjoting system hnl brings up much of its plant food from below the depths reached by the plow. Any plant that obtains all of Its food from the top soil adds nothing lo the fertility of tht land when plowed under, except that It may In tume land make the soil more pro ductive by improving Its texture or mechanical condition. Kcd clover we have found espec ially adapted for this purpose. It and other members of the legume family are, In my opinion, the only plants we ran afford to use la the work of improving our soils. The rloverund legumes alone ran not maintain soil fertility, but when they are rotated with other farm crops, and w here them crops are fed to II vr stock and the manure saved and returned to the field, they make It possible to increaio the fertility of the soil every year. KpltomUt. Caring For tlio Ham, The management that should be given rams, young or old. before and after service will depord largely on tbe atze of the flock. If a strong, well-grown ram lamb funs with a flock ot eight or ten heep which have an ample provision of variable pasture tbe two may run together Differences in Dairy Salt. The lending brands seem to be, none of them, wanting In the main constituent chloride of sodium for the chemical unnylses of ten brands show that a variation of only 1.03 per cent, in the quantity of salt present the difference between a maximum of !)S.3J per cent, and a minimum of !i".4" per cent. Surely i here is enough clear salt in any of these samples to make one as good as another If there were no other in gredients, and if there was nothing in the grr.nular formation of one brand to give it superiority over an other. Some of the other substances, even in the small quantities In which they exisc. vary five per cent. The most objectionable matter In salt Is chloride of calcium, which is found only In the Onondaga, and to the presence of which may be attributed the milky appearance of solutions of that salt. Sulphate of lime, which 13 found more largely in foreign than in domestic brands, Is obi dutiable. If found In large quantities, but there Is not enough found in any leading brand to have any effect. To the other ingredients separately no seri ous objection is made in view of the very small percentage in which they exist. We must believe, however, that in combination they all help to produce certain chemical results, which more or less affect the flavor of butter. From all these facts I am forced to conclude that there are es sential differences lu dairy salts, and that the actual superiority between the best makes depends more upon the character of the foreign sub stances present, and upon the texture and grain of the stilt and the process by which that grain Is formed, than it does upon the mere percentage of chloride of sodiu.a in any given quan tity, Weekly Witness, T5e Otitic lo the Cow. "The cow is an intelligent animal,'1 says Mrs. Howie, of Klk Grove, Wis., who, like Mrs. Durand, of Lake For est, 111., is foremost in cow culture She udds: "It. Is not good form to he rude to t lie sensitive cow." Mrs. Howie is assisting l'rofessot Hoverstad, of the North Dakota Agri cultural College, in his Institute work In the State. She is Instructing thi farmers in tiie temperament of the cow, und she asserts that thu gentle creature is lacteally responsive to con. l iJerate treatm '.it. At. Mrs. Howie's Jaiiy farm, seven miles from Mllwuukee, each cow Ii groutifd every day. The bovine i brushed, washed and her hoofs and horns polished. Some people nilghl laugh at this," aays Mrs. Howie, "but it has brought results." The gentling Improves the tow's self-lYHpect, and self-respect in cow Is profitable to the owner that it Mrs. Howie s proposition. The cow, like the prima donna, Is possessed of a temperament, which must br consulted if maximum resuks are de sired. The cow has a psychology but, like the psychologies of evvry other living thing, It yields to trjut ment. .Mrs. Howie's prescription Ii simple: "Good, common-sense prin ciples, soap, fresh water and kind ul-s-i." What kindness will do for horses if notorious. Why not for cows'.' This agricultural business ever) year becomes more interesting. It ii getting fashionable, moreover. Thf day of the "rube' Is about over. The farmer Is becoming every day mon the scientist. All he can know o chemistry, of botany, of zoology, li can pretty well apply. And now, lc and behold! he Is lectured to by so clety women, like Mrs. Durand am! Mrs. Howie, who, having beconu bored to death with stupid society have turned to cow culture In ordei to be Interested. Minneapolis Jour oal. Xever, Xevrr Land. The "Never, Never Land," abor which Mr. J. F. Ilogan writes It "Notes and Queries," Is tbe name be stowed on the vast plains of Northers Queensland. Who actually Invented tbe phrase Is not known, but the orlg Inal germ or suggestion Is said to b found In tbe writings of a Sydney hu morist who likened this part of Aus tralia to Shakespeare's "uodiscoverec country from whose bourne no trav eler returns." And many of the earl adventurers Into this region of end lesa distances never did return to civ luxation. London Chronicle. Brooklyn. X. Y. Sunday evening, t Holy Trinity P. K. Church, the t'ery Hev. Oeorge Hodg"S, dean of the Cambridge Theological School, deliv ered a lecture on the early church. The subject wos "The Defense of the Faith." Dean Hodges said: The first antagonist of the faith was prejudice, crowned In Ignorance, growing up Into contempt and then Into hatred, and resulting In preju dice whereby the Christians were ac cused of atheism and sedition, and of immorality. Of atheism, because ihey had no Images In their sanctit iries and because they worshiped In i fashion unknown among the relig ious of their time; of sedition be riuise thev refused to acknowledge the divinity of the Human Kninire; and of Immorality because ihey held secret meetings, and not knowing what took place at these meetings, everybody might guess what h chose and the mind of man Is s i consti tuted that under such circumstance? some people will guess very unnleas ant things. So, by virtue of Ignor ance, In almost entire absence of facts, there grew up around the Christians a thick atmosphere of prej udice. It Is nstonlshing, remember ing all that, afterward happened, that Christianity should have existed for one or 1wr centuries alnio;t unno ticed, and thei only with derision nnd antagonism. Ther.j was l.ucian the satirist, who makes one of his char acters, Perlgrinus I'rotens. profess to bo a Christian, and when he Is put In prison Is visited by prominent Christians, who reverence him be cause he Is in danger of martyrdom, and then saya of them: "These mis guided 'rreatures have so persuaded themselves that I hev are going to live forever that thev have lost all fear of death:" and he says, again, that "they have been taught by their Master that they are all brothprs. and thpy love one another In an amazing manner." It is a friendly comment, but mingled wllh contempt. There w-as Celsus. the critic, who wrote a long nnd substantial book against the Christian religion. In which he decried it first on the ground of his tory. II" savs It Is not historical be cause it 1? filled with accounts of mlr-n-les, iu;d rilrarles onnof happen; and so he begins with the virgin birth and the resurrection, and dis credits miracles, which he says Christ was able to do by meals of tricks He learned In Kgvpt. And, second, if philosophy. He says the ircarnafton is Impossible because Lei Is Intangible, and unnecessary b 'cause Cod Is good. It Is absurd, he says, to thi.ik that God cares for any little company of people and services c:i this pU.net, and he praises the Greeks, who put their trust in reason over Egalnst the Christians, who put their trust In faith. Thera was Marcus Aurellus, em peror, philosopher, moralist, the one i;ii.i) in the pagan world wheni we votild have said . beforehand would have appreciated the Christian relig ion and would have gone out to meet it. He vlewa them with a far-off rontempt and refers with some de rision to tbe alacrity with which Christians go to martyrdom. This religion, which within a few centur ies was to take possession of the i.utiiati world, which was to be the Ii.ost notable fact in the history of the race, began in obscurity, an ob scurity .mazing to us. When Chrls t unity came to be a little known theie came in Its defense against its LiUagonists the Apologists, chief of wfcotn was Justin Martyr. Born at S.vchar, ic Palestine, of pagan par entage, at an early age Justin devoted himself to philosophy. la his desire i learn the relation between God ind tne world, he lu turn sought this knowledge from the Stoics, the peri patetics end the Pythagorians, and filially turned to Christianity and died martyr at. Home. From some writ ings ot his v.o learn that in the mid cMe cf the second century the Chris tiana had no creed and no recitation of the creed, and no formulation of the truths of their religion. Justin made some Inferences from the Bible in the direction of faith. He laid great stress upon the argument from prophecy, and had much to say about devils, with whom be Identifies the gods of the Pagan world, and he be lieved in a literal mlllenlum. There was a lack or order and formality in the church, but they took collections, 1 says, and describes a sarvlce at which there was a reading of the bible, a long prayer, a hymn and a taoramental feast of bread and wine. The second antagonist ot the Christian faith was Heresy. The time came when men of education and b arnlng began to be attracted toward tne Christian religion, and then was a natu -al desire on the part of Chris tian ter.chprs to prove the Christian religion to those persons, to make it reasonable to their cultivated minds, and the result was sometimes heresy. Heresy, 1 suppose, is almost always the result of that kind of purpose. These heretics were the Gnostics, whose aim it was to make some kind of a combination between Christian truth and the other kinds of truths floating about In tbe minds ot men. (InoHtics found two great difficulties in religion: One, the difficulty of re conciling the New Testament with the Old Testament, partly on the ground of morality, which is taught from so much higher a plane In tbe New Testament than in the Old Testament, the difficulty emphasized by the teaching ot St. Paul, wherein he seemed to set a new system of grace' over against the old system of works.) How to reconcile these discrepancies! between tbe Old and New Testaments. perplexed them. And the other per' plexlty was, how to reconcile the bad world with the good and mighty God. These they met with a series of prop ositions, i They said there are two antagon-: Istlc facts. "There Is matter which is essentially evil, and there Is a spir it which Is essentially divine." They, also said, "There are two worlds: the lower world. In which we live, clothed In matter, and thereby hav ing our spirit hindered 6y this envir onment ot evil; and a higher world, where Cod dwells, remotely distant and having between Him and uc a long series of spiritual being, ema nations from Hlin, called aeons, and at the end ot this long line ot aeons reaching down Is tbe Demiurge, pretty poor kind of aeon." The Dem-. lurge was the maker ot the world, and he was responsible for all this evil matter, and the Demiurge was the God of the Old Testament. Every thing that takes place In the Old Testament Is under tbe control of the Demiurge, not of the Supreme God, and we may deal with It with all ths freedom we like . Tbe Supreme Aeon, they said, was the Christ who cam a redeem. !n l the, txranor ot the Demiurge; anil Chrlstrdeotnod man, not by the sacrifice of His death upon the cross, because, matter being evil, Christ, had no body. That was only an appearance. There was no Incarnation, no resurrection, or any of the rest of It. He saves man, not by the death of the cross, but by Illumination, by the shining In of Ills Spirit upon the spirit of man. The third antagonist ot the faith was Competition. There came- Into existence two grent new religions, on the one side the religion of Plato (a revival of philosophy), and on the other Bid the religion of Mithras (a revival of r.i.-'-'"nl, These came i In the way of a revo" the pro- I sale religion of the Roman Empire. : It had 'in it no emotion. It wai a bare contract between man and God. I wherein man said, 111 and down, "I will give you a certain amount of ritual If you will give me a corres ' ponding amount of protection." It had in it no sense of mystery, It i was Just as commonplace as the mor- ality. Now, the world was longing i for some appeal to emotion, for some i satisfaction of its sense of mystery, ' and these tw'o religions came at the ' place to do that work. Xeoplaton ' Ism, n revival of phllnsonhy, found ; Its exponent In Plotlnus. From frag i ments ot books be wrot we get some Idea how he tried to bind together all the truth there was Into one svs tern, except the truth of Christianity. And then opposed to Xeoplatonlsm was an ideal, an ideal nnd not a per son. Mlthralsm was the most for midable competitor that Christianity ever had. It seemed at one time as If It were likely to become the rellg Ion of Europe. It entered very little Into literature, and scarcely anything was known about it until men began to study the ruins of Mlthralc shrines and read the Inscriptions and gradu ; ally to find how far spread It was and what It. meant. It came from Pprs'a and Its supreme god was Mithras, who was the representative of the in vlsable and eternal deltv behind and ! the mediator between Him and us. ; He was sutiernalurally horn, and III? first appearance was to shepherds. He fought with a wild boar that was ravaging the country which He killed whose blood became a vine and whose marrow sown In the earth became the wheat. After Ills victorious battle He dined with the sun. He was to come again In a Becond advent, and hold a general Judgment of all man kind In whl'h the good went, one way and the bad another Into heaven or hell. TIipv had a baptism of blood ; and water for newness of life followed : bv a sealing an anointing of confirm ation, and after that a holy commun : Ion of bread and wine. They had ' sanctuaries In which liturgies were : chanted by vested priests ministering at sltnr3 ndorned with lights. This dav on which we meet Is called Sunday because of Mithras. When Constantino gave out his edict In the days whpn the emolre became Christian Iip dprreed that the first day of the week should be kppt as a dav of rest and thev called It by Its Mlthralstlc name, the venerable dav of the sun. Whv Is ChrlstmaB k"ot on the twenty-fifth cf December? No body knows when our Lord was born. Evon the season of the year has to tally deenrted from the memory of man - TIip only Indications of thp tlmp or ypar r.olnt to the summer when the' shepherds were abiding In the fields. CIrlstmas is kept on the twentv-fifth of December because It was Mithras' birthday. That was Mithras' birthday kept as a dr.v of reiolclng among the votnrle? if thts religion scattered all over trom '. the desert of Sahara to the glens of Scotland, where shrines of Mlthr ; have been found. When Christianity ' becane victorious over this religion she found It wIsp to say to the con verts. "Keep on with your domestic rejoicing on December 25, but do nil . these joyful things In remembrance of .7eru -"hrlst, our Saviour." The essentia1 rtefort, however, in this re ligion or Mlthra was that there was no Mlthra: he was only a Mith. Nos tlc'sm was founded on an Idea: not a nerson. Mlthralsm was founded on pllegorv. not a person. But. the hu man soul cries out for some manlfes. latlon of God In the form of actual, hb'oric personality. Thpre were the four men who de fended the faith pre-eminently In the second end fourth centuries: Justin, the apologist: Irenaeus, the theolo i "dsn: Clement, the Instructor, and ; Orlgen. the commentator. These wer the men who defended the faith : malnst the three agnostics preju dice, heresy and competition. THE CRUSADE AGAINST DRINK APRIL FOURTH ri;o(.itr:ss made hy riimrioxa l lGllll.VO THK HUM DEMON. lATEriXATIONAL LESSON com ments von wnii 4. A Prayer. Our Heavenly Father and truest Friend, who hast so loved and saved ' us, the thought ot Whom Is sweet and always growing sweeter, come and dwell In our huarts; then Thou wilt . keep watch on our lips, our deeds, 1 and we shall not need to be anxlour. either for our souls or our bodies, i Give us charity, sweetest of a'.l gilts, which knows no enemy. Give us in our hearts pure love, born of Thy love I to us, that we may love others as Thou lovest. Loving Father of Jesus I Christ, from Whom fioweth all love, I let our hearts, frozen in sin, cold to ' Thee and cold to others, be warmed ' by this divine Ore. So help and bless us through Christ, Thy Son. The Lord's Maiiilutc. "The White Man'a Burden" In Us highest and noblest aspect is, surely, the duty that our Lord has committed to us of evangelizing the world. Tbe time "the sut time" for doing this lias come. Happy are they who can dlscarn the times, and respond to the call of God and man. Blessed are they who sow beside all waters. Hev. F. W. Macdonald. ,1 I Condemnation of Sin. Sin against the body must be con- , demned as severely as sin against the j ioui. A German physician, by means of a Class cabinet with a partial vacuum, has solved tbe problem of operating on the lungs. , Ho probably has paved the way to successful surgery In cases ot Internal cancer, and possibly ot consumption where tbe lung tis sue Is affected. By tbe use ot his cabinet the patient, it Is said, ran breathe easily with the cheat cavity 0"en and without danger ot collapse cf the limns, which has been the dan-- hitherto, owing to atmospheric sure. After the surgeon and his J iif iitnntt have taken their places In- cldo this cabinet the subject is placed upon the operating table and his bead allowed to project through a tight fitting rubber collar In the wall of the cabinet. By means of a auction pump the air Inside la then reduced to negative pressure. Subject: IVler nnd Cornelius, Act 10: 1-4H Gulden Text. Acts 10: 3." Commit Verses 13-13. Commentary on Dny's Lesson. TIME. A. D. 40. PLACES, Caesarca and Joppa. EXPOSITION. I. A Godly Sol. tiler, 1-8. The central figure of this lesson Is a captain In the Roman army. The barracks at Caesarea would seem to be a most unlikely place to find the first Gentile convert to Christianity, but there is where he was found. Cornelius was a God fearing man. He was one who did not keep his piety to himself, but called upon his whole household to share It with him. He was a man of prayer and a generous giver. He prayed for light (cf. vs. 31, 32) and followed the light when it was given. It was because he asked for light that he got It (cf. James 1:5). The alms he gave to others had much to do with God's giving the saving truth to him (v. 4: cf. Luke C:3S; Prov. 21:13; 2 Cor. 9:fi-8). Cornelius does not eem to have been a proselvte of the Jewish faith (v. 28; cf. ch. 11:3) and he certainly was not as yet a saved man (ch. 11:13, 14). but he was on the road that leads to salvation. He became a saved man by believing on Jesus Christ (v. 43; cf. ch. 16:7-9). There are those who contend we should never get a man to pray until .1e Is definitely aaved, but It was in answer to prayer that Cornelius got -he light by which he was saved. Of ;ourse, if a man Is a deliberate rebel against God. we should not get him to pray; for the prayer of such a one Is an abomination unto God (Prov 15:8; 28:9; Is. 69:1, 2). But a man may be a sincere seeker after truth like.CornelluB, though he has not yet found the truth. There is nothing better for him to do than to pray (James 1:5). God will always lead Into light all those who slncerelv de sire It (John 7:17). It was while Cornelius was praying that the first leadings came to Cornelius. It Is when we draw near unto God that He draws near unto us (Jas. 4:8). Cornelius was frightened by the ce lestial visitor as sinful man alwavs is by the approach of the supernatural (cf. Dan. 10:11; Luke 1:12-19: 24: 6). But Cornelius while Mghtened maintained his equilibrium and was ready to obey; he was every inch a Roman soldier. He was encouraged by being told that God had noted and remembered his prayers and alms Ills prayers and alms did not Bave him (ch. IT : 13, 14; 10:43). but they had prepared the way for his salva tion. God iakes note of sincere pray er and of the alms that accompany them. Praying and giving Bhould al ways go hand In hand (1 John 316 22). Cornelius' faith was put to a severe test; he was told to Bend to a certain unknown man who would tell him what he ought to do (cf. ch. 11: 14). The augel himself might have told Cornelius this, but it is the plan of God to have the way of life made plain to man by. man (cf. ch. 9:6-17; 8:26). Cornelius proved his faith by his prompt obedience. Cornelius' piety was of the communicative sort; for the soldier who waited upon him continually was also a religious man If. Peter Prepared to I 'reach the Gospel to the Gentiles, 9-20. While God prepares one man to hear the Gospel, He also prepares another man to preach It to him. It certainly cannot be explained awav as empty dreams or a fevered Imagination that Cornelius at one end of the line saw an angel who bade him send for Peter, and that Peter at the other end of the line should have a vision pre paring him for the call Just before the messengers arrived, and should hear the voice of the Spirit bidding hlra go. There is, beyond question, a supernatural world and a possibility of present contact between the super natural world and human life. His tory demonstrates this. One can be an Atheist or a Deist or Agnostic only by deliberately shutting his eyes to caiiiuusiiea lacis or nistory. Note how the supernatural and natural play into one another In Bible his tory: Peter'a hunger was natural, and there Is nothing more natural than that a hungry man dream of eating, but God gave supernatural direction to the dream that had a natural ori gin. God knows how to time things Just right. Just when Peter was in a perplexity about the meaning ot the vision of unclean beasts, the "un clean" Gentiles are asking for him at the gate. Tbe Spirit wbb very defi nite in His words to Peter. He told him Just how many men there were at the gate asking for him (v. 18). Peter had a very practical test as to whether It was the Spirit of truth that was speaking to him. How un like the confused and uncertain (of tentimes mistaken) voices that people tell us are voices of tbe Spirit. When the Spirit sands there is nothing left to do but to go and that without doubting, even though we do not un derstand at all (v. 20). Peter'a faith was equal to the occasion, he obeyed orders. It was while Peter was In prayer that the guidance came to him (V. 9). Ilreaks Ilia Bridge. He that cannot forgive others break tbe bridge over which be must pass himself ; for every man has need to be forgiven. Herbert. Life Lessons for Me From the Boon of Proverbs Prov. 8: 1-17. The great lesson: wisdom. Prov 1: 1-9. Obedience to God's Word. Prov 3-1-10. Avoidance of evil. Prov. 4: 14-27. Diligence, Prov. 6: I'll; 24: 33. Value of rlghteousni ;;s. Prov 25: 8-15. The value of silence. Prov, 25: 8-15. A rich man Is Indeed poor If be Is unwise, and a poor man Is Indeed rich If he Is wise (v. 10). Is not goodneBB more than wisdom? No, for wisdom Is goodness. Knowl edge Is not goodness, but wisdom Is, for wisdom Is knowledge In action (v. 11). Kings relgn In wlsdon. If they de serve to be said lo re! 1 at all, and any wise man is king i ;' :i wonderful realm (v. 15). The way to wisdom I 1 vp love of study, of the Bible, of man and of God (v. 17). Proverb Hints. Surely In vain Is the net spread In the sight of uny bird, but not, alas! in ihe sight of any ran (1: 17). We are to carry nu i cy nnd truth around with us, and l.ot leave them at home on the center table 3). Our own understanding is a rotten reed, sure to break under us if we lean upon It (3: 6). Honor the Lord with your sub stance, as He has honored you with It. and will honor you for the right use of It (3: 9). God's correction Is a sign of His love; why should we not love Him for It? (3: 12.) The path about the Just the world around the Just Is made shining by their presence (4: 18). Don't let an insect beat a man (6: C). It Is a severe test of your wisdom, but a sure one: Do you love those that rebuke you? (9: 8.) The fear of the Lord Is the begin ning of wisdom, but the love of the Lord Is the end of it (9: 10). A young man or a young woman can entertain no higher ambition than to gladden a father or mother (10: 1). God's blessing Is the only kind of wealth that can take out an Insurance against sorrow (10: 22). "Off Hip Wagon Again." I drcnnied tlml I dwelt in an isle ot cracked ice, In the miilnt. of a lake nf rlmmpngiie. Where Mourned the mint julep in meadow ; Kreen, ' Amid ulion ers nf lit bin ruin, i I r"clincd fin a divnn nf lager beer foam, With n pillow of liolli lor my head, j While the npray from a fountain of spark. ! ling gin lir. 1 Descended like dew on my head. From far away niniintiiins of crystalline ice, A aephyr, refreshing nnd cool. Came wnfting the incense of sweet mils i catel, , .That "piirkled in mnnv n pnol. My sensea were Boot lied bv the oft, purl ing Hong Of a brooklet nf pnusxe cafe. That rippled along over pebble of snow l'o a river of nlninthe iiiippc. ' Then, lulled by the iiiiikic m tinkling glass irom the schooner that danced on the deep, I dreamily sipped n liixlilmli or two, And languidly flouted to .pp. And then I awoke on a bed of rocks, With a bolster ns hard ns n brick, A wrench in my back, n nick in my head, And a stomach detestably s-'ek. With sand in my eyes and .. grit in my throat, Where the taste of lu.t e cning still clung, And felt a bnthtowcl s! "'.V '. into my mout h Which 1 afterwards : and was my tongue, And I groped for the tlin.nl of the evening before, In a mystified maze of a brain. Until a great light burst upon me at last, "I'm off on the wagon again." SUNDAY, APRIL 4. Called to Serve Mark 1. 16-20; Luke 5. 1-11, 27-28. In attaching these fir-H disciples to h'linself .Jesus stuted claarly that It was a call to larger responsibility and mere exucting( service. Catch ing fish had Its hardships, Its expos ure, its routine of toll; but catching men world Involve an expenditure ot sacrifice, of patlnt and persistant service, such as they had not dream ed of. He did not cull men to ease and Inactivity. That "Follow me" meant going from one village to an other lu ceaseless ministration, thronged by the Jostling crowds, re Hioiisive to every cry of need, always open to Intrusii n und Insult, frequent ly without a line to lay one's head, lu labors abundant, in weariness and painfull: .'so, t.ud sacrifice even unto death. The topic opens up at once the whole problem of existence. Why are we here, any way? What la the significance of human life? What relation do w.' sustain tp lllm who called us here? Is the world a vast playground where Gcd Is under obli ' gatlon lo entertain us? Or is it a vineyard wherein every man must la bor for the fruitage of the kingdom? There are not wanting those who i tell us that God Is under obligation i to us. We are his guests here, they say, and he ought lo entertain' us right royally with a feast of fat ; things full of marow and wines upon the lees. It Is quite evident, how ever, thut the Christian Interpretation i of life is very different. It is sum med up In that word "service." That life means other things happiness, culture, achievements, and u thou sand elements beyond our ken we need not question, but over and above all this Jesus teaches us that life means preeminently an ever-widening opportunity for sacrifice and serv ice. The chief end of man Is to do the will of God. ! To the Christian, then, the world la not a garden among whose fruits and flowers and playing fountains one may lie at ease for long hours, stiv , nlng himself in indolent delight. It Is. rather, a vineyard, where there is hard luck to do under the scorching : sun, and to each of us God's call Is ' summed up In Dr. Babcock'a stirring hymn. WISE WORDS. Sir James Crlchton-Browna said, recently: 'The flght with the fly will be a stiff one. One fly, It lias been calculated, will lay 1000 eggs and must, oo tbe snowball prlnolple, leave IS, 000, 000 dascandanU in a season. A Hud Plan. Running another down la a poor way of making the Christian race. A TRIUMPH OF SCIENCE. "I have been taking some moving pictures ot life on your farm." "Did you ketch the hired man in notion?" "I think o." "Ah, science kin do anythlns these days." Louisville Courier-Journal. A Rare Exception. . "1 see by a literary note some, where," saya the man with the dis couraged eyebrows, "that one ot tha Indiana school ot novelists gets his best Ideas while sh&rjng." "Is that so?" .saya tbe man vith tbe violin vest. "Most of them must wear full NtarUi." Jud. Like Shop Windows. We are Ilk shop windows, where in we are constantly arranging, hid ing or exhibiting those supposed qual ities which others attribute to us- and all lo order to deceive ojtsslves. Frledrtch NiuUsahe. Character 13 what we make of life's conditions. .It takes more than 61 Jiving to make the good life. No day is long enough to waste any of It In nursing enmity. The holy life Is the one that If healthy all the way through. The unanswered prayer finds Its fruitage In tbe disciplined heart. The man who la going to heaven never tries to take up all the road. No man is as good as he might be who does not try tq be better than he can be. , No man needs our pity mere than he who is Indifferent to the sorrows ot others. It's always sate to deny the au thority of an opportunity that thrusts itself in on a duty. The steps downward are so many and so small that men seldom 'recog nize the grade. There Is some moral disease pres ent when the sight of another's hap piness gives us pain. It is often worth while to do an apparently fruitless act for tbe sake ot acquiring a helpful habit. Idleness makes the hours wearily long and the days woefully short. He can never know any deep Joy who can laugh at the sorrows of an other. The proof of an education lies In a wind so tilled that prejudices gain no root. From "Sentence Sermons," In the Chicago Tribune. Getting Away From Oneself. David Grayson writes an interview with a drunkard in the American Magazine. The drunkard explains why he sometimes wants liquor, and ' Mr. Grayson tells how men who nev er touch liquor are sometimes Just as much intoxicated. The drunkard is speaking: "Every day I work, work, work. I have friends, but somehow I can't get to them; I can't even get to my wife. It seems as if a wall hemmed me In, as If I were bound to a rock , which I couldn't get away from. I am also afraid. When I am sober I know how to do great things, but I can't do them. After a few glasses I never take more I not only know I can do great things, but I feel as though I were really doing them." "'But you never do?" "No, I never do, but I feel that I can. All the bonds break and the . wall falls down and I am free. I can I really touch people. 1 feel friendly ' "and neighborly." He was talking eagerly now, try ing to explain for the first time in his life, he said how it was that he did what he did. He told me how beautli'ul It made the world, where before It was mis erable and friendless, how he thought I of great things and made great plans, how his home seemed finer and bet ter to him, and his work more noble. The man had a real gift of imaglna ; Hon and spoke with an eagerness and j eloquence that stirred me deeply. 1 , was almost on the point of asking him where his magic liquor was to be found! When he finally gave me an opening, I said : "I think I understand. Many men I know are In some respects drunk ards. They all want some way to es cape themselves to be free of their own limitations." "That's it! That's it!" he ex claimed, eagerly, We sat for a time side by side, say ing nothing. I could not help thlnk . Ing of that line of Virgil referring to quite another sort of intoxication: "With voluntary dreams tlicy cheat their niiiidH." "Instead of that beautiful unity of thought and action which marks tha finest character, here was this poor tragedy of the divided life. When fate would destroy a man It first sep arates his forces! It drives him to think one way and act another: It en courages him to seek through oiit , ward stimulation whether drink or i riches, or fame a deceptive and iin ' worthy satisfaction In place ot that true contentment which comes from unity within. No man can be two men successfully. "Most ot us." I raid finally, "are in ; some respects drunkards. We donT give it so harsh a name, but we are Just that. Drunkenness Is not a mere matter of intoxicating liquors: it goes deeoer far deeper. Drunken ness is the failure of a man t) con trol his mind." A Little Sermon on Drink. In -the first place, it. is Injurious physically, mentally and morally. In the second place. It deceives its vicilnu to all kinds of perils. Thirdly, It Invariably leads tc other sins. In the fourth place, tt exposes its victims, and that wtthont exception. Fifthly, there can bs no question that it weakens the will. The one who takes one glass is not as able to refuse thp second as he was to re fuse the first. Sixthly, the only safety Is In total abstinence. Seventhly and lastly. In order to se cure total abstinence for certain, the prohibition of the manufacture and i sale oT alcoholic beverages Is a necss , aity. The Battle In Illinois. Th members of the Illinois State Liquor Dealers' Association have agreed to raise 1100,000 to defeat any losal option bill that may be in troduced in the Legislature. Temperance Notes. Wisconsin baa 050 towns where liquor selling is prohibited. It is tbe duty of every total ab stainer to discourage drinking every where, t The clients of the bum factory seem to supply more than their share ot patrons for the bomb factory. Here's what Is meanl by cause and effect: "The county Jail in Macon. Mo.. Is empty for the first time In twenty years." Mayon County has been "dry" since Jnly 1. Kansas City Times. The liquor laws are said by some to be ahead of public sentiment. "That," responds the Boston News, "Is what's tbe matter with tbe Ten Commandments, too." It develops that the tax ot two cents per barrel which the United Brewers' Association recently decid ed to place on beer la to create a fund with which to fight prohibition. So far-rtachlng is the saloon's evil Influence that In some Instauces thef law against the traffic had tailed, for 1 the ruason that tbe corrupting influ ence ot the- dram shop at time j-eachee the iner pvoclncts of Justice and subverts all law.