THE PULPIT. IN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. WALDO ADAMS AMOS. Subject! Angels. The Sunday School IXTKHXATlOXAti LKSSOX COM. MIS NTS FOB SEPTEMIIKR 20. f Brooklyn, N. Y. Sunday evening m the Church of the Holy Trinity the issoclate rector, the Rev. Waldo Adams Amos, preached on "Angels." The text was from Matthew 4:6: "He ihall Rive His angels charge concern ing thee and In their hands they shall bear thee up lest at any time thou dash thy foot agalnBt a atone." Mr. Amos said: One evening when the poet Shelley i At l'nlvfTBltv Collnep. Oxford, he and a fellow student named Hokk no. i Ing came enpiged In a wnrm dlscussioa at the dinner tnble as to tho compara tive merits of German and Italian lit erature. The dlRcusslon was carried on with preat ardor for an hmir or more, Shelley defnillns the Italian writers, and Hoc? hldlw; with the Germans. Then It w.-.s proposed that the disputants should ronttnuo their clebatn In SholliT'" rooms. On reach ins his study tho poet turned to Hoe? and rM: "To tell you the truth. 1 have no knowledge of tlio Italian lnrii i-nnd I know abso lutely not!U:;i; about Italian litera ture." llu-'i; ronfe3sed a like Ig norance of tho German lanensso atnl literature, a;id there the discussion end' d. Let v begin, then, by savins frankly that you don't know anything about ansels, and neither do I. There have been times during the course of history when people thought that they knew a great deal about them. The medieval scholiasts, for example, eeem to have had Inside information Subject! Temperance, 1 Cor. 10:23. 82 Golden Text: Horn. 13:2 Commit Verse 24 Commentary on the Day's Lesson. TIME 57 A. D. PLACE. Ephesua. EXPOSITION. I. Let no nuin seek his own, but each Ms neighbor's good, 23-30. Some of the Corin thians whose thoughts were entirely occupied with themselves and their own ngnta ami privileges were SaV-Ino-- "All .1.1...... n.A 1 . .. Paul, who was governed by the Chris tian principle of love, and therefore thinking of the effect of his actions not only upon himself, answers: "Yes. all things are lawful; but all things are not expedient (or helpful, or profitable)." A true Christian does not ask what Is permissible, but what is profitable. He aSks, not what I Nivn a right to do, but what will "edify." what will build up the Church of Christ, others as well as myself. "Is it permissible for a Christian to attend the theatre?" one asks. Retter ask. Is It profitable, will It edify? "Is It permissible for a Christian to use the Lord's Day as ho does other days?" Hotter a?k, Is it profitable, will It edify? In all things "Let no man seek his own but each his neighbor's pood." The be liever should not be troubled with a morbid conscience, he should not fear to eat anything sold In the markets because of a suspicion It might have been offered to an Idol and thus tainted. Ho need ask no question CHRISTIAN EE SEPTEMBER TWENTY-SIXTH for 19: ;whlch enabled them to give the most about that; for even If It had been of 'detailed account of the nature and habits of angels. Kven ns recently as 1875 a Mr. Duke, of London, pub lished a book on "The Nature nnd Employments of the Holy Angels." Several years ago one of tho scluptors engaged in decorating the new cathe dral la New York was brought to book when his chisel produced a dromon angel, for any one who knows anything at all knows that all nngels ere of the male persuasion, t Appar ently, conditions In Heaven are some what different from what they are in this world, for among the "angels I have known" several have been of tho gentler Fex. Tho whole attitude, however, which prompts a man to writs a book on the nature and em ployment of tho angels, or seriously to discuss the question of their sex. finds scant sympathy at the present fered to an Idol it really belonged to the Lord; "for the earth la the Lord's, and the fulness thereof" (Ps. 24:1: f0:12; 1 Tim.. 4:4). A glorious truth that, with many practical ap plications. If the earth is the Lord's It is ours also If we are His children. There are some to-day afraid to sit down to the Lord's table unless they have first carefully examined every one there and found that they are perfectly sound in doctrine and In life, lest they themselves he defiled. That Is sadly confounding the O. T. laws with N. T. liberty. One can never know perfectly, and could therefore never have a conscience perfectly at rest. Christianity Is not morbidness (2 Tim. 1:7; Rom. 8:15). The Christian might even go to a feast made by an unbeliever, and In How Missionaries Win Souls Christ 1 Cor. 9: 19-23. The Bible as soul-winner. Ps. 7-14. Preaching the word. Rom. 10: 8-21. Purity wins souIb. 1 Tim. 4: 6-16. Kindness wins souls. Horn. 12: 17 21. Going to the lost. Matt. 22 1 9; 2S: 18-20. Praying for the lost. Neh. li 411. Tho central Idea of missionary work Is service, and whatever the mission ary sees that needs to be done he adopts as his work (v. 19.) The true missionary will fall In with all Innocent customs, prejudices, nnd beliefs of those whom he Is try ing to lead to the one essential truth (v. 20.) The missionary finds In every man n different problem, to be solved In a new fashion. There can be no cut-nnd-drled methods In missionary work (v. 2.'.) The appeals of ambition nnd pride that other men hear mean nothing to the missionary. He is a missionary because his one ambition la for the spread of the gospel (v. 23.) Micsionary Methods. Tho medical m;sslon2ry In his dis pensary meets all men soon or late, because all men are at times sick; and he meets them when they are humbled by a sense of their own weakness and In a teachable mood. The missionary surgeon has a skill that Is really ono of the miracles of these Christian centuries, nnd as ho exercises his wonderful calling ho 1b of necessity preaching the power of the healing Christ. The woman missionary doctor can go even Into the harem and zenana where no man would be permitted, and brings life for the r.oul while min istering life to tho body. The magic lantern Is a strong ally THE WARFARE AGAINST DRINK TEMPEUAXCE KATTLE OATfTEIt9 STllEXtiTU EVERY DAY. . The Personal Liberty Fake. The supremest source of human law, the Supreme Court of the United States, for years hag sustained pro hibltlon as a right of the people. It has said, the people can go to the ex tent of "entire prohibition." It has decided that "the liquor traffic Ir not useful occupation, but one harmful and pernicious." According to the rulings of the Supreme Court, prohi bition Is not a violation of either civil rights or individual liberty. Is the 8tipreme Court a "riff-raff of mor al Idiots," are these decisions born of Intolerance, and are Its members Intermeddlers? The personal llborty cry belongs to a barbarian past, and not to this age, when one cannot build himself a frame house within fire limits of a city, or set up a Binughter house within city borders, or drive his own horse faster than a walk across a bridge, or smoke a clgnr In a rallrond car where ladles are, nnd where la dles themselves cannot wear merry widow hats In opera houses. Bob Hurdette said: "The Declara tion of Independence was not written In a beer garden on a Sunday after noon, not by a Jug full." The barrier line of personal liberty lies between the help nnd the hurt of another; aver this line we have no right to Btep to the injury of our neighbor. Mr. Wntterson bitterly denounces as tyrannical, the sumptuary law that "denleg to a citizen the right to order his life, his home, hl3 meat, his drink, his clothing according to hlg conveni ence." Will not Mr. Watterson apply this test to the sumptuary law of the saloon? Every woman In our country who fills the holy oflV.e of wife or mother, has a right to a home. The sumptu ary law of the saloon says to hun dreds of thousands: "You shall not of missionary work, and the modern i have a home, you shall live In a missionary appeals to 'Eyegate as well as Kargate. The "baby" or gan Is a powerful missionary auxiliary, and the gospel is Bung Into men's hearts quite ns oft en as It 1.4 preached Into them. Missionaries use tracts skilfully, for a tract may become n continuous mis sionary, doing Its silent work for years after the missionary has passed to oiher fields. I case he riiit ho nhnnlrl pnt whatever day. Nowadays we regard the angels i was get nefore nm ana- not De haunt of Scripture as part of the poetry of j ed by tne torturing suspicion, "Per rellglon: we regard them as products j hap(, tn wag oftereA to an Idol." He of the poetic Imagination, who give 1 need asl no nnestinn about this. But expression to their hopes and fears In song and verse; we associate them with shepherds and starlit nights and with "the storied land across the Syrian Sea." Consequently, we resent any attempt on tho part of tho theo logian to reduce tho angels to terms f dull prose; we resent any attempt euch as that of Father Rackham to determine what speech Is current in tho world beyond, for we know that the speech of the angels is poetry, the language of the heart, and that that language Is universal, knowing naught of accent, gender, mood or tense. While tho angels are the peculiar province of the poet, we prosnlo folk may, however, apply our sclentlflo method to what the world has thought about angels. We must study his torically tho gradual development of the Idea of angels without feeling that we are rushing In where poets fear to tread. Our word angel Is de rived from tho Creek word meaning if some one should say, "This hath been offered In sacrifice," then he should not eat, not because he would himself be hurt, but for the sake of the one who said It, that he might not be hurt. His liberty could not bo judged by another's conscience, and he would still have liberty to eat aa far as bis own conscience was con cerned, but his liberty would give place to love. Here are two great principles: (1) Every man's liberty must be determined by his own con science, not another's (cf. Rom. 14: 2-10). (2) Liberty must give way before love. The question Is not what have I liberty to do, but what does love prompt me to do. If I do par take In grace, no one else whose opin ion may differ about what Is permis sible has a right to speak evil of me concerning that for which I return thanks to God. But If I am a real Christian (cf. Jno. 13:35), I will do nothing that will cause another to stumblo Just becauso I have a right a messenger. In the earner books oc i to and no one else has a right to con tho Old Testament tho Aneol of the demn me for doing. Lord is the messenger who conveys : u, WliatHoever ye do, do nil to Gori'a word to men. In the later i tile Kiory of God, 31-s:i. Paul lays boo!:s of the Old Testament and In down a very simple but very great the New iestameni we una mo in-j prlnclnle for deciding what we may cuence ot i.io j-iTHian rmimuii, wim do and how to do it, "Whether there fore ye eat or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God." That principle will settle all our ques tions. Do nothing that you cannot do to God's glory, and whatever you de ride to do, do It to His glory. Then we can put away all troublings of our conscience and be free from all sense of condemnation. But how many things professed Christians are doing which if they stopped and though! they would soon see that they could not do to God's glory. If you have any doubt about anything you are doing, ask yourself, can I do this to God' plory? If you are not absolutely sure that you can then don't do it. And glad to give up our liberty or any right if some one thereby may be saved (cf. rh. 9:12, 22). How in tensely Paul was occupied with one tiling, tho salvation of others (cf. Jtoro. 10:1; 9:1-3; 11:14; 1 Cor. 9: 22). This Is the Christian principle cf total abstinence, abstinence for the purpose of saving others. which the Jews had come Into contact for several hundred years, we find nrchamels, Michael, Gabriel and Raphael, with Persian namc3. The background of the Bible, the back ground of the Master's mind. Is the popular thinking of the day, and con ipnupntlv wn find In our Scrloturej this celestial company adapted by the Jews from the poetry and religion oi Persia. Included In this heavenly hierarchy were guardian angels, and recording angels, and angels who car ried to and from the messages of God. Eut all these, guardian angels, recording angels, angelic messengers, In ancient times, as in our own time, were the products of the poetic Im agination. When I say that the angels ars part of the poetry of religion, I do not mean that they are unreal. The things of poetry are more real man 0ur own pleMure ghould never be ; the things of prose. The angclo are , our rul() of ai.tloni but the pleasure i the products of the Imagination, but l pn, flt o other9 even B)1 mlsn, I wo must remember that, the Imaglna- , 0nr f)Wn flt should he utterly lg- j tlon Is no airy and playful thing. It j )(,f Pniu 2:4). and we should Is mat Utep ana essential laciiiij , ,v0 for fhl, flt of olnprg e.. that which in a Newton leap from ths u be gaved- We Bhould be stars in their courses; It Is that ! Idealizing faculty which In a Darwin, wings its daring flight from a few : observed phenomena to a universal process of evolution. There are j angels, then, guardian angels, record- ! ing angels, and angels who carry to and fro the meucagei of God. Sweden- j borg, the philosopher, believed 111 I them eo thoroughly that he used to gu Into his church all alone In tho early , morning and preach to them, and il , the sermons were expressions of his i own deep and earnest conviction, l'vf no doubt the angels heard blm. I There are guardian anguls. OI their nature and employments w j know nothing. But they are the spiritual forces that are above and around and all about us. And muybe just as we In sleep, that counterfeit of death, fare forth Into the dream country, so they Jar forth and take upon themselves the unknown nature and the unknown tasks of the holy angels. Around, above and all about our ways tbey minister, and God has given them charge concerning ns that In their hsads they should bear us up, lost at any time we dash our foot against a stone. In the ear of the prodigal they whisper words of borne and loved ones; at the bedside of the suf ferer they sing, tbey check the dar ling as he wanders near danger, Hover way, restraining our weak and sinful Impulses, cariiiif, waicnm, oyiuB, are the guardian angels of the God of Love. And sometimes they filers for us, but moro often tliey smile, for theso angel have a seuse of humor. Else would they have died long since oi broken hearts when they saw all the pettiness and all tho narrowness and all the inlezuldcd teal of us humans. ' Hut they look beneath the surface; EPWORTH LEAGUE LESSONS SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26. Faith Paralyzed By Fear (Matt. 14. 22-33.) Matt 14. 22-33. The passage Is full of the dramatic. Not often did Jesus constrain his disciples to leave him. Not often did he send the mul titude away. Usually to both dis ciples and to multitudes the word was, "Come unto me." Here he eeems to suggest that it was expedient for him that they go away and It was. Remember the situation. The mul titudes, tremendously stirred by the miraculously provided loaves and fish es ( saw In Jesus their sort of a king, and proposed, by overwhelming popu lar pressure, to make him king. As In the desert of temptation, so now tie suggestion comes: "Establish tho kingdom by nhort-cut method." The presence of the disciples, who were more or less sympathetic with the crowd's view, the presence of the Insistent crowd Itself made Impossi ble that prayerful solitude which Jesus often sought and which even he was afraid not to have. Hence the expediency for him of their de parture. Hardly less expedient for the disciples was It that they go away. True tbey soon came Into physical danger; but in the outcome they en tered Into a more sympathetic under standing of Jesus, who was, as they were now taught, something vastly more than , a political provider of bread was Indeed "worthy of wor ship" and truly, "the Son of God" (verse 33.) Knowing Peter's characteristic im petuslty and self-confidence, It Is not surprising, Is It, that In the more than dramatic experience In which they learn this lesson Peter is most prom inent? Neither are we surprised that Peter's doubt with Its small ad mixture of faith (verse 31) speedily led to the collapse of his daring ad venture on the water. Peter saw and heard too much 'to succeed. He eaw Jesus and heard bis word hovel, you shall not order your home, nor food, nor drink, nor clothing to suit ypnr convenience, but these things shnll be ordered to suit the saloon. You shnll toll all day In the harness of oppression, nnd when night comes you shall not even order religious Truth s From the Writingt of Great Preachers. A BONO OF. THANKFULNESS. I thank Thee, Lord, for the blue of Thy sky, For the green of Thy woods and fields: For the river that ripples and spnrklen br, And the harvext the brown earth yields. For the birds that sing and tht flowers that bloom, , And the breath of the cooling hrees Thou hunt made them all so beautiful, I tbank Thee, Lord, for theae! I ttinnk Thee, Lord, for a brain to think, And will to dnre and do; For n heart which may give my fellow man A love that is strong nnd true: For n spirit thnt is hut the breath of God, And ia new when the world is old 1 yield them nil to Thyself, dear Lord, They are Thine to have and hold. Only use thorn. Lord, in Thy shaping hand For an end Hint Thine eye enn see, A 'Iny by day Thou art fashioning Tliv child to be more like Thee. Let Thine image shine from my faithful henrt As u liirlit over life's rough wny, Tlint others may lind it nn easier path. And he led to n perfect day. E. W. Hawkins, in Fittsburg Christian Advocate. A Growing Social Peril. No apology is needed for a protest against the foolish talk that may be henrd In some quarters about a new relation in the domestic circle, who is commonly referred to as the "affin ity." She Is not mother, sister or wife, but occupies a vague position as nn Interloper in the social order, whose claims are coming to be recog nised as pnramount. Some of the talk Is inadequately characterized as foolish, for it Is wicked; but for the greater part it does not proceed to action and is mere silliness and gush. In one conspicuous instance, however, it has developed into a dissolution of the family and a scandal, consequent on tho complacence of the parties concerned. There is always a possi bility of an example of that kind commending Itself to men. of erratic character, who hope that an Indul gence of their vagrant fancy may be regarded by the public as excusable. It cannot be too soon or too clearly vour restful sleen. but wntch lha iron i shown that the American neonle. for the return of drunken husbands especially the Christian public, will and sons." What about this inhu- not condone nny nonsense of that man denial of the right to order meat. kind. It has too high a regard for drink, clothing and home life? purity In domestic life, and will not Every child in this country has a I tolerate offenses that impair it. The I right to an education and a chance ! war tnat has beBn waged against the j In the world. i Mormons, who boldly added the affin- The liquor traffic says to a great I lty 10 tne household, proved that army of children, "You shall have 1 Polygamy was regarded as an offense neither: to the streets and sweat- I against public decency and against shops you shall co to earn bread. , the national conscience. This at- and by evil environment you shall be handicapped throught your youth." I one or the most Inhuman facts the . . . i . . j it . r. U you uo u U8 sure you uu n i ..Come and that w d unrt thnt f,n7" ,n .' nOU'V f the three was enou8h- For while he saw Jeus to stumbling to any one ol I the three i only and whl,9 he neard Jegllg onl classes nto which God divide, men. , h(J unafraid and succcsafully. to rushing wave, and when boisterous wind shut out the "Come" of Jesus, the very paralysis of fear stopped blm and he began to sink. But while sink ing, again he saw Jesus only, and then that latent something in him which Jesus recognized as rocklike, and which, when developed, made Peter the penteoostal preacher, found voice, and In answer the Master of wind and wave and the Saviour of nlnlUng men tmmodtately stretched forth his hand and caught him. sun has shone on since It hid its face from thnt awful crime on Calvary's summit, is seen In multitudes of wo men and children denied the right to order their food, clothing, education and home life, by the tryannlcal sumptuary law of the liquor traffic. Are these to suffer on In silence that men may order for their drink what, to say the least, they do not. need, and what the Supreme Court says Is the source of more misery and crime than any other? When on election days these women and children gath er near the polls nnd out of the ashes of smitten home life, plead with men to remove what denies them the right to order their life comforts and Joys, are they to have no more respectful reference in the Courier-Journal than that their presence Is "an Indecent spectacle?" Cardinal Richelieu, when his niece was demanded by a licentious king, said: "Around her form I draw the awful circle of our kinely church; Step a foot within, nnd on thy head aye! mnugn it wear a crown, I'll lay the curse of Rome." Shall the crown of gold on the dis tillers' and brewers' brow In Ken tucky hush Into silence the lion hearted manhood of our State, when tbe sons and daughters of Columbia Rre demanded to feed the maw of the liquor traffic? Colonel Geo. W. Bain. Social PoKitlon. What satisfaction Is it to have so cial position anil political preferment If our conscience Is dulled? Rev. John Hale Larry. few-red Truths. The truth of affection is more sa cred than the truth of science. Rev. Lyman Abbott, King Menellk and the Cannon. While we are hearing such contra? dlctory reports of the health of Men ellk It is a variation to read an anec dote of tbe Negus, even if it shows blm in an unlovable light. A Paris contemporary recoils the story that some years ago Baron Myllus visited the , Negus, taking with him among other presents two small mountain cannon. Tbe Negus was delighted. Hoar miinr ' enemies would they kill? Ing about all our paV. guld- j Pointing to a tree, the potentate said, steps along the King's high- "Fire by the side of the tree." The iiaron usoa nis bihbm iuu yumieu vuw that a whole family seamed to be taking the shade at the spoL "Yes, replied Menellk, "It was the tree I was thinking about," and It was only with the greatest difficulty tbat his Majesty was prevailed upon to choose another target. However, all's wU tbat ends well. The Negus was de lighted with bis present, and so was K. Tlurnrt fnr Via rflm awaV the they look at our real selves, and In owner of a one coffee plantation. ' our hearts they see all the glorious . d Q, b tiouibiiitlea of our nature; tbey see w the ct In WvT.yq, a.dJS-ttttX JlhH The Ilest Jail. Thomas Nelson Page was talking In the smoking room of the Amerlka about the old-fashioned bad men of the West. "They are extinct now," said Mr. Page, "and I am sorry. They were, you know, so picturesque. I remem ber a Western trip " He laughed heartily. "We were all seated In th bar room of Tin Can or Dead Cur som such town. I was the only tenderfoot present. Every man about me bristled with guns and knives like an enraged porcupine. If I refused to drink, 1 was given to understand I would b turned Into a- human pin cushion ot worse. "Well, as I sipped a friendly glasi or something resembling wood al cohol, a very bad man. Indeed, rodi on a prancing mustang right into tht barroom. He drew up and had drink. Then, spying me, he said: " 'Whar ye from, stranger?' 'Richmond,' said I. "'Not good old Richmond, Va.t' be exclaimed. " 'Yes,' said I; Mo you know It?' " 'Know It?' he shouted. 'Know It? Best Jail I ever was In.' Washington Star. ROUGH ON RATS. "Yes. the dye In her false hair caused her to have blood poisoning." "8ick frem rat poisoning, eh!" Houston Post. I'roductlvlty. What modern civilization might be able to accomplish In the wise use of its productive powers If these were not wasted or diverted from their proper channels by the use of drink, we have never yet been able to prove on s large stale. Experience In limit ed sections, however, seems to indi cate that If the money spent In drink, which enricher a few and returns to labor a relatively smaller amount than other products of toll, were ex pended Instead for the necessities and simple luxuries ot life, the wheels ot industry would not as now lose pow er at every turn becauso of the stu pendous waste of a nation's resources in drink and Its attendant evils. Hence every man who Is trained to sobriety lr doubly valuable to the na tion, since he Is likely to become not only an efficient user and developer of national resources, but at the same time he lessens by so much a waste ful loss In national productivity. Calls New Jersey Rum-Ridden. J. Frank Burke, State superin tendent of the Anti-Saloon League, who occupied the pulpit of tbe M. E. Church at Nutloy, N. J., on a recent Sunday, said: "New Jersey Is one of the most rum-ridden States In this countrq, If not the worst. A vigorous temper ance campaign will be waged this fall, and I ask the church workers to be active on election day." Tem perance Notes. Mon In all pursuits ot active life, almost Invariably name sobriety as one of the essentials of highest suc cess. An Evansvllle brewery failed the other day, the failure being caused, it is said, by tho going dry of Indiana counties. The Washlngtonlan Movement of 1840 to 184S did much good, and some barm that might have been averted It the church had been as In telligent on the alcoholic drink ques tion as It U to-day. The people of Nashville, Tenn., are building a new Y. M. C. A. building at the cost of 1200,000 as a substi tute for the saloons which tbey got rid of. The choapost way for those brew ers to prove that I -ore beer Is sold under prohibition than elsewhere Is to organize a little boom for prohi bition themselves. Then folks would tcllove. When one reads the statements of tho brewers as to the amounts of pood grain, bops, etc., they use In their manufacturing processes, the most striking suggestion Is tbat In making nothing out ot something the brewers do beat an creation. tempt to Introduce successive polygamy is still- more odious, be cause it involves greater suffering and open shame. That there are cases in W'hlch divorce Is Justifiable cannot be denied, but only extreme wrongdoing or Intolerable misery can be accepted as valid ground for recourse to the remedy. The mere desire to get rid of a partner who has loBt her youth and charms, and to replace her with one who has both. Is no such ground. The evil, however, does not In many Instances proceed so far. It may consist In nothing more than the preference for the society of a person other than the legitimate part ner. It Is In such preference, and the Indulgence In It, that the danger lies. No one realizes at the beginning of such an association how rapidly the passions may develop. The nox ious weed grows with amazing speed, and it has the tendency to Intoxicate the mind and becloud the reason. The warning of approaching disaster causes the victim to exclaim: "Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this thing?" Yet he may drift on the seductive stream until he is unable to avoid doing it. The time comes when the struggle to do right involves such a struggle as Christ described as cut ting off the right hand, or sacrificing the right eye; when to give up is like rending the very heart. Many have lost life and the soul Itself In Ignobly yielding rather than taking the firm but painful course. The crisis be comes worse than one of life and death, and it is of such a crisis, In its Incipient stage, that people in society talk so lightly and frivolously, when they discuss the subject of the "affin ity." Christian Herald. Winning the Kingdom. "Through many tribulations," said the apostle missionaries to-their Gal atlan converts, "we must enter into the kingdom of God." It was at tbe cost of bitter persecution tbat these Christians, won from amongst the heathen in those days of beginnings, held fast to their new faith. But how glorious was the result of such suf fering bravely endured, in the lives strong nnd noble which came out of It. We live In times as different from that early period as tho modern threshing machine is from the rude trlhulum. People do not, in our land, suffer for their religion in the same way as did the first followers ot Christ. But It is still true that, only through discipline, sometimes sharp and severe, do human lives become worthy of the kingdom of God. There may be much In our present lot that Is hard to bear, but a blessed outcome Is certain to all God's children. RELIEVED PRICK 25 Cts. Mailed postpaid on re ceipt of price. You can't have a beautiful complexion if your blood is impure u or if rou suffer with Indigestion or say stomach or liver ailment. Munyon's Paw-Paw Pills regulate the bowtli, correct Indigestion, constipation, biliousness, torpid lrr,jaundic, sallow and dull complexions. '. ,-Tney purify the blood and clear the skin ot pimples, sores and most eruptions. One pill is a gentle laxative; two'pllls t thorough physio. They do not gripe, they io not weaken. Price SS cents. MUNYON'S REMEDY CO., 63d and Jefferson SU.. Phila.. Pa. Christ Within. The lust and greatest wonder ot the Gospel Is that Christ, the great Model, does not leave us to copy Him at a distance, but actually enters our soul and remodels us. And faith is only the closing of soul with Christ, by which this living Redeemer, with His self-sacrificing and yet His vic torious spirit, becomes ours. Maklnar a Life. There Is a vast difference in mak ing a lire and making a living. With but little effort anybody can make ai living; but it requires the strenuous enaeavor of a manly soul to make a lire. Rev. Weston Bruner. Consul J. H. Dunlay, of Cologne, reports that all fruit tree crops, ex cept peaches, in Rhenish Prussia are poor this season. Small fruits, how ever, are abundant and cheap, .'or UttADAr ilK IIlrk':A HUniNK Whether from Coldi. Hest. Stomach or Mrvuii TrouMes. Capudlnn will relieve you. Ii'a liyuid pleasant to take sou lmmcril , i -1 v Try IV. luc., 26c. and 00c at drut -turva Reuben In Town. He was a long, lean, lanky fenow wlth a complexion as brown a, . berry and an eye as blue a. ,h! summer skies. Anyone lookin. .! him for the first time could h.'rdh have failed to guess that he Vl from that section of the 0S and, therefore as popular, naZ ever were, and as he entered hotel and planked his carpet-ba, 11 the counter the roomclerk wiSkl! at the fellows about the offlc, n rbeChreu'b0 "W8tCh ,lltely?d morn,n' he said, "MornlnV aaM ti .. here?'-6 fe"W ca,i 8 Whooping cough kills more chil dren under five years of age than scarlet fever. The Way to Heaven. If we would live the life which leads to heaven, we need only Intend to do right voluntarily in preference to doing it by compulsion of circum stances against our will. Rev. Hiram yrooman. PRACTICAL DEVICE. "Why don't you mend that large bole In your umbrella?" "I keep It to put my hand through to see if It Is still raining." Meggen dorter Blaetter.' CLIMBING THE MOUNTAINS. ' Vera "Oh, Jack, let's stop don't want to go any higher." Jack "But you won't be able to say you've been to the top." Vera "Oh, yes, I shall. 'V Pathfinder. COVERED WITH HIVES. Child a Mass of Dreadful Sore, Itch ing, Irritating Humor for 2 Months In Terrible Plight Disease Cured by t'uticura. "My six year old daughter had the dread ful diseuae called hives for two months, fcho became afflicted by playing with chil dren who had it. By scratching she caused largo sores which wore irritating. Her body was a complete sore but it was worse on her arms and back. We employed a physician who left medicine but it did not help her and I tried several remedies but without avail. Seeing the Cuticura Reme dies advertised, I thought I would trv them. I gavo her a hot bath daily with. Cuticura soap and anointed her body with Cuticura Ointment. The first treatment relieved the itahing a' 1 in a short time the disease disappeared. Mrs. G. L. Fridhnff, Warren, Mich., June 3') nnd July 13, '08." Potter Drug & (. hem. Corp., Solo Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. ' The Worst Sandwich. "Give me a ham sandwich!" shout ed the traveler at the bar of the re freshment room. Two seconds later he complained to the attendant, "That was the worst sandwich I ever had. No more taste than saw dust, and not big enough to see." "You've et yer ticket," returned the attendant contemptuously; "this here's yer ham sandwich." Tit-Bits. Meddlesome Neighbors. A girl In a small Kansas town has been engaged seven times. Her neighbors have adopted this slogan for her; "Present company always accepted." Kansas City Journal. MUST BELIEVE IT. Every Reader Will Concedetlie Truth of This Statement. One wbo suffers with backache or any form of kidney trouble wants a cure, not merely temporary benefit. Rev. Maxwell S. Rowland, of Tom's River, N. J., makes a statement In this con nection that Is worth attention. Says he: "I was suddenly tak en with an attack of kidney trouble, had severe pains in my back and loins and was generally run down. Doctors wers not helping me, so I began using Doan's Kidney Pills. They brought me prompt relief, and as I con- tlnnnrt tnlrlniF tham tne pains in my back disappeared and the kidneys were restored to normal condition." Remember tbe name Doan's. Sold by all dealers. 50 -cents a box. Fos ter-MIlburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The Musical Touch. A baseball player had two fingers of his right hand pretty badly bungled up in practice, and on his way home from the grounds he dropped into a doctor's office to have them attended to. "Doctor," he asked, anxiously, as he was leaving, "when this paw ot mine heals will I be able to play the piano?" "Certainly you will," the doctor assured him. "Well, then, you're a wonder, Doe. I never could before." Everybody's Magazine. The British and Foreign Bible So cloty last year distributed 5,934,711 Bibles. Juf COM)S and OKI P. hick's Caffdihs la th brat remdr rellevra tha aching- and feverish neaa cures thCold and restores normal conoiuona. It's lUjulil-rirecU lutinediau ly. luc Ua. snd toe., atdruir atortv. Zion City Is to have a physician and drug store. Rumlius Wizard Oil in over fifty years old and, like an old friend, it can be de- S ended upon just as surely ns the family ocUir wbo may be miles away. The. trade name at a certain Aus tralian brandy Is the "Boomerang." Mrs. Winalow's Sootblnf Bynip forChildm teething, softens theguuia, reduces intlauiioa tiou. allays pun. cures wind colic. tteabelUe. The Russian czar rules over 160, 000,000 persons. B. N. U.. 80. Bad Breath "For months I had great trouble with my stomach and used, all kinds of medicines. My tongue baa beau actually as green at grass, aiy breath having a bad odor. Two weeksagoa friend recommended Caacsrets and after using them I can willingly and cheerfully say tbat they have entirely cured tne. I therefore let yoa know that I shall recommend them to any one suffer ing from such troubles." Cbaa. H. Hal. pern, 114 U. 7th St., New York, N. Y. Ptaaiant, Palatabla, Potent, Taate Good, -Do Good. Nivir alckan. WiAkcnarflri,. 10c. iSc. 50c. Never old la bulk. Tbe eea ina tablet atamned C C C. linirantaed to sure of sour mosey baUu ft 1 "Yes, I guess so," said the clerk "Do you want a room with a ba ht er, n an oepenas. If your rnnm. s .0 all-flred dirty they need a TaS I reckon I do." harper's Week"" ' SUFFERING TEN YEARS Cured by Lydia E. Pink ham's VegetableCompound Marlton, N.J. I feel thatLydiaE. Plnkham's Vejretablo Compound has 1 Riven nie new life, I suffered for ten years with serious female troubles, In. nanitnation, ulcer. ation, indigestion, nervousness, and could not sleep. Doctors gave me up, as they said my troubles were chronic. I was in despair, nnd did not care whetherl lived or died, when 1 rend about Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound; sol bepan to take it, and am well again and relieved of all my suffering. Mrs. Gkoroe Johdy, Box 40, Marlton, NJ, Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Com. pound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotics or harm ful drugs, and to-dav holds the record for the largest number of actual cures of female diseases we know of, and thousandsof voluntary testinionlalsare on file in the Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, Mass., from women who have been cured from almost every form of female complaints, inflammation, ul ceration, displacements.Ilbroid tumors, Irregularities, periodic pains, backache, Indigestion and nervous prostration. Every sufferinir woman owes it to her self to Rive Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound a trial. If you would like special advice about your case write a confiden tial letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free, and always helpful. Just Her Size. MIstah Bones Say, Sam, who got de fust prize at de cull'd mas querade ball las' night? MIstah Jones De woman's prize dun went to Miss Pealle Washing ton. She wuz dere as "Faith, Hope an' Charity." MIstah Bones Why, she couldn't dun go as three people all at once. MUtah Jones Huh! Doan" dat gal weigh ober three hundred pounds? The most spectacular fire ever wit nessed in the oil industry was at one of the Dos Bocas wells in Mex ico. About 60,000 barrels of oil burned up dally for nearly two months. The flames rose to heights of 800 to 1,400 feet. ' A blind and rich farmer is la Pittsburg seeking a wife, who, be insists, "must be pretty." Safe, Sound and Profitable; Not A Speculation Would you like to io vest $500.00, in five equal monthly install ments, tbat will, in our opinion, make you inde pendent for life? For assistance in driv ing our big tunnel, we offer au interest ia twelve rich, proven mines, which have pro duced $2,000,000.00 in a camp that is producing $1,000,000.00 a month. Subscriptions $50.00 to $1,000.00 on installment WRITE NATIONAL MINING & TUNNELCO LYNCIIBURQ, VA, WANTED. StccnJ Hand Beg$ and Burlap, Id) Una. Any Quantity, Ac) there. RICHMOND BAD CO., Richmond, t Virginia' WIMTT niWlRSHT FOOR OOI)BSDTISWj' H Trk. i-our Ulead I All iUn to-ke4 tlro-ota. HeeuUfui novelty. e-el 9V7 EuvtTki Kejral llll lllit-J DROPSY SEfS Im a. a. imsM'e u,is m mum 1 11 ii ii iii.. ii 1 Lu JArdli y lLa-AUvJ L-3 - urn mm wwee U ZJiLn, Merle uU'.dr.lici. . .Jiupjj 1 im enld b fiwwe. - r ad neiye Uwe. GUMSM BUS. "" 1