The lion's Work. Tlie ht-u gathers, mixes nnd puts together In organic form, 650 grains of water, 120 grains of fat, lOfi grains lime, eighty grains of albumen, twenty-Fit grains of sugar, nnd ten grains of ash. With her marvelous inside fixtures she puts her humble grist to gether and shells out the most mirac ulous of animal products the egg. Farm Journal. The seeds we planted under glass failed to s;rout. Wo expect to try some In the open ground. Ilrrctling Hurley. Tor a number of years seed Im provement has been under way at tho different agricultural experiment Bta tlons. Last year the agronomy de partment of the l.'nivei-.-ity of Mich igan secured a superior type of ped igreed barley. Fifty ucrea were grown nnd small amounts of Seed arc being di: l:'ibul' J. Breeding ex periments are l ing conducted vi;!i many other small grains and some forage crops. CJiiMiline Knuiiip on Farm. t have a three horse p:r.ver :a:- en cine with which I run n creau s pa rator, puni water, run my grind stone, a two holo corn sii II' r. a feed grinder and a post drill. I have the rnsine mounted on a :-; i 1 1 gear made from iin old mower so that I can move It from one phuc to anoth er, making It better adapted for the different kinds of wo;-:. I believe that an engine Pent- every form of power upon the farm. When not In use It costs nothing to keep it. Mine earns a good man's wages right along. Williari Woodall, in Kim ball's Farmer. Combating Lire in Chick. If fowls are healthy, the premises kept rlnnn. and a dust bath or ashes provided, lice rarely pet the upper hand, It being through the brood hens, transmitting them to the chick ens, that most harm ensues, A hen with many or few lice on her when sitting transmits them to the chick ens immediately they are hatched. They are to be found stationary on the chicken')) head, above the beak and eyes, and In a few days when they get more plentiful, nre to be found behind nnd on top of head and throat. A simple and effective treat ment adopted by the government sta tion In New South Wales, is to place a small quantity of olive oil in a saucer, and the day after hatching dip the finger In the oil and thorough ly rub It Into the fluff of the chicken's head and under the throat. This will kill the lice if present nnd If re peated the second or third day there will be little fear of any escaping. When a week or ten days old the chickens should be examined again and if any of the vermin are found at this age a little kerosene can be add ed to tho olive oil. It Is best to an oint all chickens with the oil imme diately after they nre hatched, such being a sure preventive of tho scourge. Indiana Farmer. Vnlue of Sheep to Soil. There Is no farm animal that bet ter conserves soil fertility than sheep. It Is true that wherever considerable Bocks are kept the soil baa constant ly Improved in productiveness. This, added to their value for wool and mutton, make sheep most desirable. Every farm of any considerable s!;-.o can be made better by keeping a flock on It. An experienced sheep grower reeentlv wrote of his own experiences as to cheep, saying that the valuable characteristic of sheep over other kinds of domestic live stock is their ready adaptability to almost T.ny con ditions of soil and climate under which successful agriculture can be profitably carried on. In this coun try there nre lnded but few locali ties that nre suitable for crop produc tion and live stock husbandry where Bheep cannot be maintained. There are to-day thousands upon thousands of acres over our broad land that could profitably graze sheep, and In stead of reducing Its available fer tility, as Is the result of present methods of handling this land could be made to absorb millions of pounds of manuriiil fertilizer that would be come more available from year to year for the production of pasture for grazing purposes and also store up In the soil large quantities of sol uble plant food for future genera tions. A potent factor In restoring lands low in available fertility sheep pre-eminently lead all other kiuds of live slock. Indiana Farmer. More Silo Needed. More silos are being built every year, but they ate not being built fast enough. There were In the Stale of Iowa last year about 210.000 farms, and there were about 4 000 silos at the be ginning of tin? year. The silo is growing In popularity In Iowa and many now ones have been put tip since this estimate was made, but at that there are probably not ."en' In the State at this time. Thi means that there are not more than live for each county. In all probability there nre many barns ns there are farms. This is as It should be. We cannot have in., good barns, but we must begin to realize that the silo is as Important as any other building. There is no reason why every barn should not lie accompanied by a silo. In fact, farm without live? stock Is surely on the road to depletion. The fIIo makes live stock profitable checks the farm In Its downward course and starts It back toward its original con dition of fertility. The silo is about the most Important building around the barnyard. Most farmers could keep more stock and would do so If they had !ior- feed. The silo doesn't Increase the amount of feed that the farm pro duces, but It prevents waste, which Is just about as good. Corn packs away so closely In a silo that It costs less to house corn In this wny than in r.ny other. In fact, It Is tho onlv possible wny to preserve green corn, and that Is the condition in which it contains the greatest feeding value. Kpitomlst. THE PULPIT, A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON Bv THE REV. H. G. GREENSMITH. Hit Stmbati-fecfwc-f Theme: l imiting Jesus Christ. I INTrn ITION 1. l rcni i mi. MKXTS FOR JULY i The WonderlKTry. Speaking of this much advertised fruit a writer In the Rural New Yorker says: "If the berries are no better than those produced by the 'Garden "huckleberry" otherwise plain black nightshade Solanum nigrum tho Wonderberry will not long remain In cultivation. Although the names fiolanum Gulneense and S. vlllosum stand for distinct speclef In some of the moBt authoritative botanical pub lications, It Is said herbarium speci mens show tbem to be only forms of 8. nigrum, which Is a widely dis persed wild plant. No less credit is due to Mr. Durbank If he has pro duced a useful novelty by crossing the two geographical forms of a sin gle, variable species than if It had bred a true bt-speclflc hybrid. The main question remains: Will the Wonderberry make good as a garden fruit any considerable part of the claims put forth by its dlsietnlnators? A signed statement by Mr. Burbank reads thus: " 'The Bunberry. or Wonderberry, Is a new fruiting plant which origin ated la my grounds three years sgo. This new fruit was not in existence anywhere on this planet four years ago. It Is unlike any fruit ever befeje known, but most reserablos the low-bush blueberry, Vacclnlum Pennsylvanlcum of the Eastern States.' "It the resemblance extends to quality also, the Wonderberry may b rightly named. The low-bush blue berry la everywhere regarded as the most agreeably flavored as well as the earliest of wild huckleberries. Few tncaltlTSted !ruts are better liked." Protecting: Squash Plants. The most difficult matter about 1 growing squashes is to protect the vines from the various insects that ' prey upon them. This is especially true In the homo garden and small ! plots near buildings or near where . squashes or other vine crops were grown the previous year, because the Insects hibernate In the buildings and i In the ground near the vines they fed upon, for the winter. For the striped cucumber-beetle there Is no poison or repellent that will prove effective and satisfactory at all times. We make a box 12x12 inches and six Inches ' high, covered with wire Bcreen, which 13 set over the hill when the seeds are planted and left on until the plants get too large. They may be made of an old pine box or other 1 odd3 and ends, and need not cost over five cents even if the lumber must be purchased. Another style is made en- i tlrely of wire Bcreen by cutting a circular piece of wire screen twenty four inches In diameter and then folding over a section, amounting to one-fourth to one-third of the cir cumference, and fastening with short pieces of small wire pushed through the meshes and the ends twisted to gether. At retail prices the protec tors made this way will cost eight ' cent3 each, but they have this ajlvan- 1 tage over the box style: the light nnd air have full access to the plants. Another advantage of this style is that the protectors may be nested to gether and stored easily when no longer needed. If given a coating of coal tar or sdme weather-proof paint occasionally these protectors should last for years. Some of the smallest beetles can crawl through the meshes of wire screen, but one can easily kill the very few that get Inside. For the large brown bug (stink bug) hand picking Is the best reme dy. Place shingle or pieces of boards near the hills, and then enrly in the morning kill the bugs that have col lected on the under Bide during the night. The bugs do this because the : board affords them protection from i the cool night air. Quito a lot of the striped beetles nre caught In the same way and at the pame time. Later the young bugs or nymphs may be killed with a spray of kerosene emulsion, while huddled together In the bunches. ! For the squash borer we must have a trap crop of bush squashes, which are to be planted two or three weeks before the kind to bo protected is : planted, and which the borers seem ' to prefer to the other kinds of squashes. Beside drawing the borers the bush squaHh vines interest a lot of the other pests also, thus .making the fight to protect the other vines, ; where no screens are used, much j nnulaii Tlin lmuli np cummer Knnnshc9 ' If taken when tender and cooked like eggplant are much superior to thai well known vegetable. Of course, where tho bush squashes are about mature and before the borers leave the stems to hibernate In the soil the vines should be pulled and destroyed to kill the borer. This should be done about August 1 here in south' ern Ohio, and the time varies with the latitude. Spraying the first tout or five Joints of the squash vine (not the leaves) with kerosene emulsion Is a good plan, as also is catching and killing the adult moth, which is very conspicuous and easily found when once known. However, the trap crop plan will be found to be the most practical and satisfactory method ol ' dealing with the squash borer. In j using the above-described screen pro tectors It Is well to remember thai the soli should be drawn up about th edges of the box or wire screen and firmed down, so as to be sure that none of the bugs can crawl under the sides. These screens afford the planti protection during the most critical time in their existence and prevent their becoming stunted, enabling them to make a vigorous growth. W. E. D., In Rural New Yorker. Cats as Art Models. The strange Inscrutability of the cat In her calmer moods, her thou sand and one humors and motloni and expressions differing always, to careful observation, from the thou sand and one humors, etc., of otbet cats have defied the painter or bro ken bit heart. London Dally Gra phic. - Oswego, N. Y. In the First Bap tist Church here, Sunday morning, tho minister, .the Rev. Harry Glad stone GreenBmlth, preached on "Lim iting Jesus Christ." Tho sermon touched upon what he declared to be the limitations of the Emmanuel I Movement. Ho also spoke of Chris- I tian Science. Tho text was from Mat- thew 13:68: "And He did not many i mighty works there because of theit ! unbelief." Mr. Greensmlth said, i among other things: Even the Holy One of God, seem- j ingly, had limitations. He was a I prophet without honor in His own land. In Christ wo find tho wisdom of tho ages, tho skill of the universe, i He was the "vis medlcatrlx'' of all j science, religion and medicine. Pre eminent over all, and yet limited. In Capernaum, per contrary to Naz areth, there seems to have been no limit to the "powers" of Jesus. There ! and In adjacent places He had 1 wrought the mightiest miracle! known to the ages. No other man J has turned water into wine, or healed ; a nobleman's son of palsy. None but Jesus has cleaned out devils out ol t the temple of man's soul, or out ol ! the visible temple of God's Kingdom on earth. Entering Into Jerusalem. His be loved city, the city which caused the ' very nerve centres of Ills being to I leap with joy, or travail in anguish, ' He saw a man Impotent for thirty- 1 eight years. By a word from the lipi ; of this "rejected Nazarcne" the man ; takes up his bed and goes away re- i Jolting. Even here we find limlta- : tlons. Christ could do nothing ol ' Himself. "I am come in My Father'! name and ye receive Me not." "The , Scriptures testify of Me, and yet ye ! will not come unto Me." And here we see forthcoming "isms." "If an- ' other come in his own name, him ye i will receive." And how wild th I world has gone over Dowle and Mrs. Eddy. They set forth a religion in j their own name, and people have gon j wild, and Christ instead of being ex- j alted has been bowed from Hit j throne. Eddylstn, falsely called ; "Christian Science," as there Is sc j little of Christ in it, is nothing short i of idolatry, worse than Mariolatry, and Uowieism, Is fast "going unto it! i own to its founder. Christ s pow er Is limited by these two fads. ' Entering the temple one Sabbath, Jesus meets a man whose right hand is withered. "What will He do?" cries the Scribes. "Will Ho heal him?" the Pharisees ask. And Id Bpite of them, Jesus shows forth Ills power and commands the man to stand forth. Then after a quiet talk ! on His sovereignty, He orders the I man to stretch forth his hand, and he i was immediately healed. This In- j creased the anger of His adversaries to madness, and they plotted how ' they might destroy Him, thus limiting again His powers. Thus far we have seen Christ'! power over the lower limbs, In that He caused a man to walk for the first ! time In thirty-eight years; to another j He gives the use of an arm that was useless; others who on the point ol death He restores to strength. These exemplify His powers over life, but, entering the City of Naln, He shows His power over death. The only Bon of a widowed mother Is being carried to the grave. Jesus commands him ! to arise. And the young man sits up ' and speaks. To another born blind He gives sight. Surely such miracu- 1 lous deeds ought to have removed all unbelief. lint, sad to relate, He could j not do In His own city any mighty 1 works because of their unbelief. Even His own disciples at times manifested I this unbelief, or lack of explicit trust, j John In -prison shows this spirit In his i last message, Christ's answer was j not sufficient to remove all doubt, I even when He said: "Co, tell John ! what ye have seen and heard: The ! blind receive their Bight, lame walk, deaf hear, and the dead are raised," etc. And all these doubts limited the Son of God. In the calling of the twelve we see Christ's limitations. Ho was sub servient to His Father's will, and He must have helpers with Him. Every step He took He counseled with the Father before taking It. "And He continued all night In prayer to God. And when it was day He appointed twelve, that they might be with Him, and that He might Bend them forth to preach, and to have authority to heal," cast out demons. "And as He came down from the mount a great number of people from all sections came to hear Him and to be healed of their diseases. And the multitude sought to touch Him, for power came forth from Him, and He healed them all." Now, this power of healing was given to these new "Chrlsts," or, as they were afterwards called, "Chris tian?," at Antloch. These men re ceived their new power and went out under orders. How well they obeyed is recorded. They were to be voices of God, "For it Is not ye that Bpeak, but the Spirit of your Father that spenkcth in you." "I will give you u mouth and wisdom, which all your adver saries shall not be able to withstand or to galutay." And they went preached, cast out devils, anointed with oil those that were sick, healed them all. All power was given to them which Christ had. "I have given you au thority," He said to the seventy. Peter was rebuked for not using au thority over the waves upon which he attempted to walk. "Ob, thou of lit tle faith wherefore didst thou doubt?" The disciples were also rebuked be cause their little Yalth prevented their healing tho demoniac boy.v- Power bad been given them, and they were rebuked for their failure to use It, Just as much as the one talent man was rebuked. These brlof suggestions lead to the question: When did the authority given to the disciples end? Why should there not be direct manifesta tions of the miraculous saving powei over diseases to-day among the disci ples of Christ as in the apostolic days? The closing of the canon certaluly did not close the door of healing. Another question arises: Why should we limit the power of the Spirit? Surely the psychical nature is not greater than the physical? I am In great sympathy with the Emmanuel movement. I am reading all I can get my hands on about It, but when I read the wonderful changes wrought In so many lives, I ask. Why could not we cast blm out? Why cannot the game mighty works be wrought In boston, as were wrought In Capernaum? Is this not putting a limitation on the work of Christ? And Is not this limitation simply because our faltb Is so "little," and Christ cannot do many mighty, WQkf tier feecAUfa of our unJieUyM '. JULY FOURTH. Subject: Paul's Second Missionary Journey Antloch to PliillppJ, Acts 15:30.1(1: 13 Golden Tct, Acts 1 (I : Commit Verses 1) 10. TIME. A. D. 0-. PLACE. - - Troas, Phlllppl. EXPOSITION I. Paul Forbidden to Preach in Asln, -S. "Asia" here does not mean our modern Asln, nor even Asia .Minor, but a part of Asia ; Minor, the Roman Province of Asia, j The time for Paul to speak the Word In Asia had not yet come. So the Holy Spirit snid to rani, you must not speak the word In Asia. This I probably seemed strange to Paul, but I he wisely obeyed and asked no quep- Hons. If wo would speak tho right, j word, in the right place, r.t the light 1 time, we must look to the Holy Spirit t for His guidance, and He will give it. The time came later for Paul to speak "the word of the Lord Jesus" In Asia, 1 nnd wonderful results followed (ch. : 19:1, S, 10, 2C, 27). If he had dls- ; obeyed the Spirit nnd followed his i own Inclination and Judgment there ! would have been no such results. But ! though Paul obeyed the Spirit and 1 did not speak the Word In Asia, ho did not give u; preaching. As tho Spirit would not suffer him to'spealt ! In one place, he went to another. Tho j Word was a fire in Paul's bones, find he must speak somewhere. If Paul ! had been like many of us. ho would ; have taken tho Holy Spirit's prohibi tion of his preaching in Asia as an j excellent warrant for taking a vaca- j tion. Paul's labors In Phrygia and Galatla at this time were greatly hleesed. There Is no description of them here, but we learn from later al lusions to them that there were many conversions and a number or churches organized (ch. 1S:23; Gal. 1:2). It Is well to note that Paul did not need the guidance of the Spirit to set him to preaching, but to keep him from it (comp. v. 7). If it had not been for the express prohibition of the Spirit he would have gone to preaching in the place nearest at hand. The Word of God tells us to preach, and so we need no special revelation for that (Matt. 28:19, 20; Mk. 16:15). As Bithynla was the nearest country at hand, they Immediately attempted an entrance to conquer It for Christ. But here again the Holy Spirit blocks the way. How strange It all must havo appeared at the lime. But God had larger tilnns for His faithful Bervant. II. Paul Called to French In Mace donia, O, 10; vs. H-12. Step by step God leads His servunt on. The means God used for his guidance are va rious; the direct guidance of the Holy Spirit, a vision (comp. ch. 9:10-12; 10:10-17, 30; 18:9. 10; 22:17-21; 27:23, 24; 2 Cor. 12:1-4, 7; Acts 2: 17), his own Judgment (v. 10. R. V. ). The promptness with which Paul re sponded to the guidance of God, no matter how It came, is worthy not only of spe"lal note, but of careful lmitntlon. This is one of the greatest secrets not only of a happy, but an efficient life. If we respond at once to God's leading, It becomes clearer and clearer. If we falter, the guiding light grows dimmer until It goes out j In thick darkness, and we are left to" j grope our way as best we ran. "Come ! over Into Macedonia and help us." j What! an outcast, wandering Jew help proud and potent Macedonians, j especially people of the distinguished colony at Phlllppl? Yes. for he was the bearer of that In which alone Is help for man the Gospel. When Paul heard that cry he knew It was the preaching of the Gospel that was called for (v. 10). III. The First Convert In Europe, 11-1.". Paul lost no time In starting for tho field to which the Lord had railed him. There had been no su- ! pernaturnl direction as to what part i of Macedonia he was to begin at. So ! Paul used his common sense and went i straight for the first city of tho dis trict (R. V.). Paul and his compan- ; ions did not begin preaching at once. ' (v. 12, R. V.). They waited and watched, and doubtless prayed for a favorable time and place to strike thu first blow (comp. ch. 13:14; 17:2; i 18:4). They began at last, in a very quiet and humble way. They did not advertise largely nnd pot a great crowd Into the largest public build ing. They Just spoke to an obscure but earnest comnany of praying wom en. Some one has said the "man of Macedonia" turned out to be a wom en; it may have been the Phlllppian Jailer. Be thnt as it may, the work of European evangelization began with a handful of praying women. That was one of the most notable gather ings of all history. The word spoken resulted In the conversion of a prom inent and pious woman, Lydla, "Whose heart the Lordopcned." That was the turning point. There Is no hope for any woman, or man either, unless the Lord opens their heart (Jno. 6:44, 45: Eph. 1:17, 18; Luke 24:45 ). But this Ho Is more than willing to do. The steps In Lydla's conversion are very plainly marked and typical. (1) She went out to pray (v. IS). (2) She heard tho Word (vs. 13, 14: comp. Jno. 5:24). (3) The Lord opened her heart. (4) She gave heed unto the thing? which were spoken (v. 14 R. V.). (6) Shu was baptized (v. 15; comp. ch. 2:41; Mark 16:16). Lydla carried her whole household with h'er (vs. 31, 33; 1 Cor. 1:16). Lydla's heart went out In gratitude toward those whom God had used as Instruments In her conversion and she constrained them to come into her house and abide U?rs. I i Clock That Tells Much. One of the most wonderful clocks In etlstence Is now In the possession of Louis Desoutter, who has had the honor of. taking It to Buckingham Palace for lnsnect!on by the Queen. Her Majesty showed great Interest In Us beautiful mechanism. The clock Is fixed on a Louis Seize stand and has four 'faces. Besides marking the hours, It shows the tides at sis different parts of the world, the mean time and the solar time, the tie of the moon, the movements of tr?e planets, all eclipses, and Is a per ,tuul calendar. It was made by Jan vier, of Paris, In 1789 for the French Academy, and took eleven years to manufacture; the workmanship Is r-anIEcent. London Evening Stan. Cii-d. Topic Patriotism That Counts, Neh. 4: 6, 12-18. Passion for home. Ps. 137; 1-0. A patriot's faith. Isa. 7: 1-9. A patriot's tears. Lam. 1: 1-12. A patriot's struggle. Judg. 7: 15 23. , Higher patriotism. Acts 10: 28, 34, 35. The ablddlng country. Heb. 11: 10, 13-1G. The "mind to work" Is soon follow ed by the work Itself. "We are not able" Is always heard when n great task Is proposed. That saying is the signboard of cowardice. We are to fight for our dear ones, but remember not them, but the Lord, for our encouragement, A trowel or a hod, and a sword or a spear. It Is not enough to build our liberties; we must defend them. Suggestions. Patriotism that counts first counts In God, nnd knows that He will tri umph. Patriotism thnt counts does not work alone, but realizes that ten men are more than ten times stronger than one man. Patrltotlsm that counts keeps the largest alms In view, nnd nccepts a hillock only as a step to a mountain top. Patriotism (hat counts Is based on knowledge; it knows Just what It wants nnd why It wants it. A Few Illustrations. 4'Hltch your wagon to a star," but noj: to a falling star. Never say, "My country, right or wrong." Nations are prosperous as their commerce knits them with all the world, nnd wisely governed as their sympathies knit them with all the world. White ants eat out the Inside of furniture till an apparently solid table will fall to dust. The white ants of a nation are selfish public servants. National life Is a pond, whose sur face Is equally high everywhere; no higher' in public morality than In private. THE WARFARE AGAINST DRINK TEMPERANCE BATTLK GATIIER9 STRENGTH EVERY DAY. EflHTH LEAGUE LESSONS SUNDAY JULY 4. Godless Commercialism Mark 5. 1-20. The Theme and the Scriptures. This incident is one of peculiar dif ficulty. It must have happened, for It li told by ecah of the synoptics. It is instructive to compare the accounts of the same event in Matt. 8. 28-34, and Luke S. 2C-39. The difficulties of the narrative are threefold. Tho man was evidently violently insane. Neither the church nor physicians believe, as a rule, that Insanity da demoniac pos session. It is taught by spiritualists, and may be true, but it its difficult to accept. There has been no change In humanity which would Justify the beMef that demoniac possession exist ed then and not today. A legion consisted of six thousand men, and in the narrative was symbol ical of a large number. Mark men tions two thousand swine, presuming two thousand evil spirits. If evil Bpir ilts could dwell In men they might, possibly, also dwell in BWiuo, but it is difficult to understand, nnd tho num ber seems excessive. One hesitates also ut the unnecessary destruction of animal life and property by the Sav iour. For two thousand animals to suffer and for thousands of dollars' worth or property to be destroyed without cuuse, is contrary to the spir it of Christ. It Is not sufficient to say that these animals were swine, Tor that was a Jewish prejudice, thrown over by Saint Paul a little later, and now disregarded. It seems to the w.Mter that we must recognize that Christ did go to the country of the Gadarenes, that the In sane man was cured In a notable way, and that the swine were drowned, but that we are free to believe or not to believe that two thousand devils dwelt In one man, and that they entered In to tho swine by tho permission of Christ. It may have been a stamiedo of the herd caused by tho excitement Incident to the vlolenco of the Insane man, nnd the agltution of the specta tors. The picture of the demoniac in his right mind Is tender nnd beautiful. WISE WORDS. PROSE VS. POETRT. The Sentimental Olrl "April Is my favorite month. I wish It would last forever!" The Practical Man "Same here. I have a note coming due on the 1st of May." Judge. Death but entombs the body, life the soul. Young. Dangers breed fears, and feara more dangers bring. R. Baxter. Custom Is the pillar round which opinion twines, and Interest Is the tie that binds it. T. L. Peacock. Curses, like young chickens, come home to roost. Soutbey. Courage from hearts, and not from numbers, grows. Dryden. He only la a well made -man who has a good determination. Ralph Waldo Emerson. With an habitual sense of the di vine presence the trials of life are lightened. E. Peabody. Choose an author as you choose a friend. Roscommon. Character must be kept bright as well as clean. Lord Chesterfield. Blood only serves to wash ambi tion's hands. Byron. ' It Is better ends should, go first than last. Walpole. Age glides steadily on and begulfes Ut as it flies. Ovid. Dfflculties are things that show what men are. Eplctetus. A liar ends with making truth ap. pear like falsehood. Bheustone. A man should be upright, not be kept upright. Marcus Aurellus. Men do less than they ought un less they do all that they can. Car lyle. Peace bath higher tests of man hood than battle ever knew. Welt tier. I had rather men should ask why my statue Is not set up than wby It Is. -Cato, i The desire of glory clings even to the best men longer than any other passion. Tacitus. Moral good Is a practical stimulus; It Is no sooner seen than It Inspires an Impulse to practice. Plutarch. Europe has cine museums for ex hibiting the dangerous parts of nia- lilnery, - " - !, The Wrong Face In tho Rogue's Gallery, Prohibition is coming. Already half the territory of the Unltud States Is dry, and the gains In recent years have been rapid. And yet we must admit that certain parts of our coun try (notably the large cities) will have saloons for many years to come. As long as these saloons remain, the questions of saloon regulation and responsibility will be Important. To an outsider It would seem as If the keeppr of the saloon had no re sponsibilities , except paying his license, closing his front door at 1 o'clock and (this In a whisper) keep ing the police captain sweetened. They Beem to be above the law, or perhaps, below the law. For instance, suppose you own a little fox terrier whose canine soul Is Btlrred by the sight of the moon to such a pitch that ho Just cannot re strain his voice. You find that you are maintaining a nuisance nnd that you and your pocketbook are respons ible. But you can hear the strident piano thumping and the maudlin shouts from the saloon four blocks away long after midnight. Is this a nuisance? It Is still going on at any rate. Some day a neighbor's child tor ments your terrier until it nips him with his teeth. Then a fat police man calls upon you to shoot the dog and the tongue-twisted lawyers servo notice that you are guilty of trespass, although you had always supposed that trespass was Invading someone else's land. And yet the same night the saloonkeeper may let loose a wild ly drunken maniac with a revolver to make night hideous and, Incidentally, to put a bullet through the shoulder of a passerby. Is the saloonkeeper responsible? Why, he Isn't even men tioned in the case. Perhaps you left a small wooden box out in front of your store. Some one stumbled over it and you were responsible for neglect. But do you know what kind of pictures they have In saloons, what sort of games they play In the back rooms, what kind of places they keep above them? If stumbling blocks are actionable, why not these? You have read of drunken assaults, drunken fights and drunken murders. Your morning paper tells you of the trials of the drunkards. What do you hear of the responsibilities of the drunkard maker? Home Herald. Noble Response of. Illinois. Illinois has responded nobly to the call of temperance. With a large foreign population, she has difficulties In the way of prohibiting that many States, whose populations are more native, do not meet. Of great encour agement to her workers should be the ringing address which Abraham Lin coln delivered In 1842, February 22, on the occasion of Washington's birth day. First of all, he naturally spoke of the glorious Revolution of '76, Then, with the tongue of prophecy, he spoke of a still greater revolution. "Turn now to the temperance revo lution. In it we shall find a stronger bondage broken, a viler slavery manu mitted, a greater tyrant deposed; in It more of want supplied, more dis ease healed, more sorrow assuaged. By It no orphans starving, no widows weeping. By it none wounded in feel ing, none injured in interest; even the dram-maker and the dram-seller will have glided into other occupa tions so gradually as never to have felt the change, and will stand ready to join all others in the universal song of gladness. And what a noble ally this is to the cause of political freedom; and with such an aid Its march cannot fall to be .on and on, till every son of earth shall drink in rich fruition the sorrow-quenching draught of perfect liberty. Happy day when all appetites controlled, all poisons subdued, all matter sub jected mind, all conquering mind, shall live and move, the monarch of the world. Glorious consummation! Hall, fall of Fury! Reign of Reason, all hall!" Abraham Lincoln lived to see the day when slavery was no longer per mitted. Is It too much to hope that his own son may live to see fulfilled the father's prophecy In regard to temperance? The work that Illinois Is now doing Is a worthy sequence to those eloquent words of her most Illustrious son. 1 Religious Truths From the Writings of Great Preacher. KEST FROM TIIE BURDEN, For Then hnrt been a strength to th poor, a strength to the needy in his dis tress, n refuge from the storm, a shadu from the heat. Isa. 25:4. Qod sends sometimes a stillness in our life The bivouac, the sleep, When on the silent battlefield the strife is hushed in slumber deep. When wearied hearts exhausted sink to rest, Remembering not the struggle nor tha quest. We know such hours, when the dim, dcw night, ' Rids day's hot turmoil cease; When star by star steals noiselessly a sight. With silent smiles of peace; When we lay down our load, and hill forgot. The morrow comet and we must bear it yet. We know such hflurs, when after days ol pain And nifflits when sleep was not God gives us ease, and peace and caltn again. ' ' Till, nil the past foriot. We say, in rent and thankfulness most deep. E'en so "He giveth His beloved sleep." When some strong chain that bound us by God's strength ' is loosed or torn apart; Or when, beloved and longed for, come at length, ' (Some friend makes fflad our heart; We know the calm that follows on euch blis, That looks no farther, satisfied with this, God docs not always loose the chain, nor give The loved ones back to us; Sometimes 'mid strife and tumult we must live, Learning His silence thus: There is a rest for those who bear His will, A peacefuluess, than freedom sweeter still. He giveth rest, more perfect, pure and true. While we His burden bear; It springeth not from parted pain, but through The accepted blessing there; The lesson pondered o'er with tearful oyM, The faith that sees in all a meaning wise. Deep in the heart af pain God's hand hath 4 set '' A hidden rest nnd bliss: Take as His gift the pain, the gift brinij yet A truer happiness: God s voice speaks, through it all. the high behest That bids His people enter into rest. Lucy Fletcher, in London S. S. Times. Hard on Women Drinkers. Society women who are addicted to an immoderate use of intoxicants are less susceptible than men to treatment of hypnotic suggestion, ac cording to tb view expressed by Dr. J. D. Quackenbos, of New York City, before the American Society for the Study of Alcohol and Other Drug Narcotics. They do not wish to bo cured in most instances, he asserted, and are prompted to indulge to ex cess too frequently by the added sense of pleasure they feel In the flattery of their admirers. Dr. Quack enbos emphasized this point in giv ing the small percentage of women drinkers who are possessed of powers of resistance. Say the Right Thing at the Right Time. When you come to the choice of a profession or trade, how important It is for you to say the right word and to do the right thing. If you make a mistake It is often very difficult to right It. And the issues may be most serious. More serious still Is it when you come to make your choice of a life partner. If you are a parent, there is a message to be delivered to children at every stage as long as they are with you. If you miss giving them what they need up to the age of ten, you can never give it later on. Many parents give the devil too many years start, and they never quite overtake bis work. Never was better counsel given than this: "As ye go, preach;" don't pass a station In the hope of coming back to it. "Redeem the time," or, as Luther translates, "Buy up the op portunity;" an opportunity lost never precisely recurs. This line of reflec tion has to most of us its gloomy side. We look back, and, oh, how many blunders we have made! Well, go back we cannot; we cannot be now as if those mistakes had not been uade. What then? Shall we despair? No;we must rise to a manly and brave life, to make the best of the present, and turn the fu ture to good account. If now we have learned a message, let us de liver it with fidelity. And surely we have not come so Tar without learning something, and something of Importance. We have failed much; but from failures, too. If we take them rightly, we may learn much much of man and life and God. Upon what we have learned, let us live; turn It into practical wis dom, and give the good of it to those about us. T. Rhondda Williams, In the Divine Artist. Milwaukee Under Fire. The applause at the second Rose Dickie debate showed that the au dience, composed largely of Chicago's business men, was fully half in sym pathy with the Prohibition side. The marked Usue of veracity over Professor Dickie's assertion concern ing the policy of Milwaukee police men in not arresting drunks Is not to rest. Court records will be produced to condemn Mayor Rose's position. . Temperance Notes. Mexico bas a new temperance In struction law, reaching 70,000 school children. Prohibition Is not only to be the rule at the Alaska-Yukon-Paciflc Ex position, opened June 1, but the tale of liquor Is prohibited within two miles of the grounds. The Supreme Court of Kansas on May 8 decided that no brewer, dis tiller or wholesale wine maker can invoke the aid of the courts In col lecting a bill for liquor ta Kansas. A table giving the statistics of the medical, law and theological schools for the United States shows that the Investments on ground, buildings and endowments are far heavier for theo logical schools than for lay, medi cine, dentistry, pharmacy and veter inary medicine combined. , The liquor men, to bead off the growing sentiment against their busi ness In Michigan, have secured the passage of a law providing for high license, no saloon within 4 04' feet of a church, abolishing liquor advertis ing outside the saloons and limiting the number of licenses to one tor sen 600 of population. ,. Ruslness nnd the Cross. I The law of the cross, by the sweet j and strong compulsion of love, will compel captains of Industry to con duct business, not simply for gain, but for the good of those who practi cally are their partners In the labor of life. The talent for organization and for the conduct of a great busi ness will be regarded as a talent to be used in human service quite at much as the talent for teaching or for the practice of medicine Is now re garded. Hitherto In the sphere of business the talent necessary for eminent suc cess therein bas been regarded as en tirely free to be used wholly for the gain of its possessor; henceforth the talent for business leadership must be regarded as a natural qualification for serving other men by combining and directing them to do what they could not do for themselves. And the man Inspired by the heart of love and dominated by the law of the cross, will take as much Interest In his busi ness and In Its success when be feell himself to be the leader of men for their good as ever the man who worked wholly for himself has done. Homlletlc Review. The Source of Spiritual Tower. The sympathy which opens op fountains of penitent tears, the burn ing love which wtns andvconstralnf the soul, the unwearying patience with the slow of heart to believe, un tiring diligence in seeking the lost and ruined of the world, constant hopefulness In the face of sin and despair, unflinching -courage In tb presence of arrogant opposition a" these are found in Jesus, the highest revelation of gift as weU as of graca v-Rev. J. D. Robertson. OUR FUNNY'LANQUAGB. Teacher "What are antonymf" Pupil "Word which ar dlrectl opposite In meaning." Teacher "Give an example." Pupil" 'Up' and 'down. " Teacher "That Is correct. No compose a sentence making use ol them." ' Pupil "Being the light ahead, th engineer was sorely pusxled wbetbet to slow np or alow, dof a."-St. Lout poit-DUpatch. J "