When Com Is Dear. Even when corn Is high the rela tive price for pork frequently makes It the cheapest feed for finishing; fifty-cent corn Is not expensive feed for six-cent hogs. Up to the last six weeks of feeding, wheat, rye or other cheaper substitutes may be used with grass, but. In the ordinary course corn will be the nest dependence for the close of tho fattening period. From Coburn's "Swine In America." Rancid flutter. Here Is a good warning or sugges tion about rancid flavor In butter that Is well to consider: "If the merchant who handles your butter In the mar ket complains about a rancid flavor, the chances are thnt you over-ripened the cream. If you didn't hnye a lot of rtnlc stuff thnt day. Now, If you tst fil your fr'r.m for acidity and kept a daily record of It, you could look tip the recordi for the day that butter was made, and chances arc that the records would show the cause of the complaint. If the records doi.'t show the cause, chances are your records are 'off,' either wrong or incomplete." Indiana Farmtr. means of clover and other legume crops. G. O. Creelman, oi Ontario Agricultural College. A DRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON DY REV. J. H. JOWETT, M. A. Theme: The Christian's Resources. The Dairy Type. At a recent fanners' institute one of tho addresses on dairy cows con tained the following strong point: "If a man who raises corn should take from his crib big ears and little ones, with big co!i r--d small cob, long grains and short grains, nubbins and all, would he ever get corn of one lype? Or if. on the other hand, he constantly selected corn of one type, -would he expect corn of another type? Vet this is Just what some dairy (?) .farmers expect In raising cows. "By the word 'type' I do not mean breed. There is a general typo or form In good milkers of all breeds. If we breed for the perfect beef type we necessarily breed out or eliminate the dairy type Just as in corn breeding for one type of corn, wo eliminate all other types." llnndllng Hces. 1,15:" many other things, this Is an art which comes natural and easy to some folks and just the reverse to others. Peps never sting some peo ple, or rarely so, wnile others are stung every tlmg they go about bees. Without full consideration this Eeoms strange and mysterious. Some beekevpers always go about their bee yards in tha most gentle manner and never stir up antagonism la their bees. They make no angular or abrupt motions. When they lift the cover from a hive. It Is done so gently that the bees dca't realize It and remain passive. If you begin to Jerk things around the hive and make disturbing noises you may expect trouble. It seeniB, too, that the odor of some people is repulsive to a bee, but Just how far that may be counted on we cannot tell. Havinga bee sting and then crush ing It makes the matter ten times worse, for the odor from the crushed bee enrages its companions and causes them to be much mora vicious. Always use smoke and give exactly the right amount. Fully protect yourself with gloves and veil and then If a thousand should come at you they could do nothing. Faiiasrs' Home Journal. , The Rrartod Plantain. Inclosed you will flr.d a weed. This variety he3 been giving me much trouble. Will you please give its name and tall how to got rid of them? Vv T. M. The weed which yoi sent us 1 the Rracted Plantain, a '.lose relative of the common Woolly Plantain. Its leaves appearing almost like a tuft of rather thick, dark green grass leaves, spring-from the apex of a thickened root. Its seed-bearing stems, five to ten Inches in height and numbering five to twenty-flve on each' plant are leafless and naked m-.ar thn base. It is a tough annual plant producing on en average of 3 000 seeds to the plant nch year. As the Beeds ripen throughout the season and so are apt tn be harvested with a clover crop, tney are most likely to be found as an Impurity In clover head and the heav ier grass seed. Hand pulling and burning Is per haps one of t'.ie best remedies where the weed Is not too abundant. If the land has become thoroughly seeded U series of hoed or cultivated crops vill probably be necessary to clear It out. In permanent pasture repeated mowing of the plants as tho seed stalks llrst appear will keep them In subjection. If allowed to go un checked they will spread rapidly and become very trou'jlciorjs. Indiana Farmer. Fertility Must lie Maintained. We Insist upon ona absolute and fundamental necessity, namely, that the fertility of the soil must be main tained In Loth ilvo stock and grain farming. These are some foundation facts: 1. We must maintain the supply of organic matter. tiUrogon and phos phorus In toe soil. 2. A ton cf average farm manure contains about 600 pounds of organic natter, 100 pounds of nitrogen and two pounds of phosphorus. 3. A ton of dry clover contalps about 2000 pounds of organic matter, forty pounds of nitrogen (which may hare been taken from the air) and five pounds of phosphorus (taken from the soil); and many grain farm ers caa plow under a two-ton crop of ' clover on forty acres who cannot pro curs 300 tons of manure. 4. A ton of good natural rock phosphate, which can be delivered to moat parts of the corn belt for $8 or $10, cos tains about 260 pounds of phosphorus, or mors than Is contained la 100 tons of averaKs.manurs. 5. Mors than a million tons a year of our best phosphate Is being shipped out of the United Slates, and this con tains the only plant food element In -which our common soils are becom ing deficient, aside from nltrogena, which can always bs secured from tha laexbastlblo supply In the air, by Hemp a a Wortl-IiMcr. The tjnlted States Denartment o! Agriculture, the various State experi mental stations and the collage de partments of agronomy are doing a ; wonderful work In the matter of edit eating tho farmer. One of the latest j announcements is the discovery of an effective method for suppressing j weeds without resorting to the labor- . lous process of hand-pulling. The agricultural department of tho t'nlversity of Wisconsin, while con- ; ducting a series of tests in henn- i growing, found that the crop's gnat- ( est usefulness was In eradicating weeds. Some of the experlnvr-.tul plats this year on land worked by the university were badly infested with quack grn?s. Cannda thistles, wild , mustard and nthor deep-rooted wrp.!s. These plat3 were sown to hemp, which , grew to a height of ten or twt lve feet. It may have been the rank growth of ' the hemp or the deprivation of sun- ' light, but when tho land was broken, Hfter tho crop was removed, It was i found that nearly all of the weed ! roots had been killed. A university bulletin make the announcement of the facts In the ca3p, and adds that weedy ground does not a.Vect the growth of hemp. j But the most important fTt in con- 1 nection with the matter is that it pay to grow hemp at least In Wisconsin, so that the farmer can get a profit from his land at the same time that he is getting rid of one of his worst enemies. On a four-acre field about j 1000 pounds of fiber were secured. The fiber brings seven cents a pound. or $70 an acre, and the labor of pro- ; duclng It costs about $30, leaving a j balance of $40. Buffalo Commercial. ' The Silo a Great Help. I'pon one of our farms we keep a i dairy, using nothing but Holsteln cows. We retail this milk in Emmits- I burg, Md., at six cents per quart and I ton cents a pint for cream. We are ! milking only eighteen cows at this : time. We have been In business for ten years and have had n silo for thn last eight. Before we built our silo we had to buy milk from other farms j to keep up our trade. Since then we j have had plenty of milk and cream, , for our cows yield as v. t-11 in winter as In summer, when grass and pasture aro gooj. We bui'.t our silo a little too small. , It Is twenty-four feet high and twelve feet wide, about the right proportions. But it would have been better had we made It twenty-six fe3t high and four- j teen foot wide for eighteen head of j cows. Wo fead them six months In i the year and we use about six or seven acres of corn, planting it so as to have one Btalk every ten inches. We cultivate the corn four times and i get all the grain that we can from I such a stand. We have found nothing j better for silage than corn. We feed 1 about forty of fifty pounds per day j for each cow and add to this a little ! bran and a little cottonseed meal. My ! cows are In good condition. We have i another silo upon another farm where we feed steers. They do welt upon ! this and the feed costs much less than ! corn chop. When you get your silo ! filled you have your feed all ready for i winter. There is no husking or haul ing corn month after month. We seed our ground that wo take the corn j from with winter wheat. We have ' Just bought another farm and will I put a silo upon this. We can fill it thia coming fall. The question as tc the profitableness of the silo has been I permanently settled. The man who , Is farming and keeps stock cannot do ! without one unless he is working for j his health rather than for profits, j We often look at our neighbors' Btock I at this time of tha vonr tfKon tha I ore antxlpatlng grass, and their con dition 's certainly lamentable. It takes them almost half the pasture season to recover. Patorson Bros., la Kimball's Farmer. laborer and His Hire. The Dukrf of Norfolk was once i traveling from London to Home. At ' ueh station he would get out to : stretch his legs, and on several of I these occasions passengers happened to htop him and ask questions, whicli ' the Duke courteously answered. When Rome was reached a tired i old la.ly who had noticed this, but ' who didn't know his Crace of Norfolk ! from Kelr Hardle or Jack Burns, caught him by bis ducal sleeve and said: "Now, my good man, I've noticed you at all the stations loafing abou'. Just make yourself useful for once 1 your life. Pick up these bags at: rugs and get me a cab." The Duke mildly shouldered t'n bags and rugs, and after the old lady i had got safeiy In her cab with them j she gave Mm sixpence. He bowed , and said: "Thank you, madam. I shall never j rart with this coin. It is the first money i ever earned in my Ufa. New York Times. Kentucky's lllggest CornflelO. The biggest cornfield in the State of Kentucky is outlined by the gigan tic horseshoe sweep of the Ohio Itiver from Henderson round past Rvans vllle to Oreen River. It Is the biggest because it is corn continuously for 0000 or 7000 acres, unbroken by fences, unrelieved by any other crm f no bay, no tobacco, oats or wheat Just corn, corn, corn and then mora corn. It it estimated that over 300,000 bushels ot corn will be raised In thi monster tract this year, and this In spits of the fact that the farmer were scared out of a year's growti) by the high water and for a time wer not quits sure whether tha high water would let them raise any corn. Louisville Courier-Journal. By the will of Mrs. Mary E. Jones, of Knoivllle, III., $250,000 has been left to that city for the erection and maintenance ot a boms for aged wo men. . New York City. Thj Rev. J. II. Jowett, M. A., the most famous minis ter of Carr's Lane Congregational Church, Birmingham, England, who Is on a visit for the first time to this country, preached Sunday in the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church. The sermon was on "The Christian's Re sources." Mr. Jowett's text was Luke 14:31, "Or what king going to make war against another king, sitteth not down first, and consulteth whether he Is able with ten thousand to meet him that cometh against him with twenty thousand?" He said: Our Lord was always seeking to get men to sit down to think. He peeks to win their Judgment, to touch their reason, that they may see the reasonableness of His doings and the reasonableness of His evangel. Ho is continually calling upon men and women to think. "Whnt think ye?" "What king," He says, "about to en gage In a campaign sitteth not down first to estimate the strength of tho foe and the strength of his own re sources, and then ascertain whether there Is legitimate hope of his forces being able to meet and conquer those who oppose him?" My simple purpose to-day Is to ask you to do this little thinking, to medi tate on what kind of enemy we have to meet, and I pray you not to let your thoughts wander away to a far off world, but let us consider what enomles we have to meet In this world where we have to labor and die, and whether we can with our own strength overcome them. And If not, let us torn to those resources which are offered to us in Jesus Christ, our Lord. Now what are these enemies that we have to meet? What are the ene mies in front of us? I repeat our Master's own estimate of the foe which every one of us will have to meet to-day and to-morrow. Jesua Christ calls one "the world." Now what Is the world? We sometimes say a man Is a worldly man. What Is the slgnflcance of the term? Too frequently when we use this term we refer to something a man does or leaves undone. Men may be babltues of tho theatre, or fond of cards, and we say they are worldly; and people who abstain from these things are labeled unworldly. I do not think that covers It In tho slightest degree. Worldiiness Is not Implied in what we do cr do not do. Worldiiness is not In doing this, or not doing tnis. World llnes.i Is In the spirit. It is the at mosphere of the soul. Worldiiness is the spirit of the horizontal. Worldii ness looks on and out, but it never looks up and prays. It is ambition, not aspiration. Its motto Is "for ward," never "upward." Its goal is success, never holiness. Worldiiness is life without the vertical, without the upward calling in Christ Jesus, our Lord. And whenever you find a man or woman, no matter what they do or don't do, who always looks out to the horizontal end, men and wom en who have no Ideal, no aspiration, no heavenly vision, no prayer, those are men and women who would be described by the Master as "of the world, worldly." Everybody here knows what an exceedingly strong gravitation there is toward the hori zontal life. In the church and out of it you feel this tremendous mesmer ism, this worldly fascination, leading us to turn our eyes from the heights, from what Paul calls "the heavenly things in Christ Jesus." We have got that force of gravity to meet tho world. Then there Is the "flesh." Every one knows the power of the flesh; not merely tho carnal power of the body, but of carnal power expressing itself in vanity and pride. The flesh that bows down the soul and rides it, instead of the soul's determining the movements of the flesh. We have the "flesh" to meet, whether in appetite or carnal desire. "The world, tho flesh and the devil." I do not know how I can define the devil, but Paul's phrase always seems to describe my relationship with the devil better than any other: "The prince of the power of the air." He dos not leap upon you like a lion. The devil usually appears as "the prince cf the power of the air:" and he comes into every Ufa and lets dcrwn tho temperature; he changes the moral atmorphere. You were Just praying fervently, and suddenly you experienced a chill. It is "the prince of the power ot the air." You start with great zeal to lead a clean life, and before you know it the temperature is perceptibly chllleC. "The prince of the power of the air" quietly, silently makes that trenen doua change in your moral life by in fluencing and changing tho atmos phere. We have got the devil to meet. Have ycu anything else to meet? Ye3, the fourth enemy Is tho binding power of guilt. In my country there are prominent men who say that man and women have no longer the fjuse of guilt. I cannot regard that as healthful. There are many who can not hear the voice of God who are reverthcless pursued by their guilt. You do cot ueed to hear the thunder and see the lightning t? have proof of the ctorm. The souring of the ml'k In tho dairy proves the storm's presence, and there Is often the proof of tha Lord's presence and of guilt i the souring of the disposition, tho manufacturing of cynics. The man who was once sweat t?mpe:ed be comes a cynic, the optimist becomes a pessimist. The3e things have regis tered themselves as "the binding pres. tnce of guilt " It is the bondage of to-day that comes from yesterday's sin. We have got that to meet. There are men and women who have that paralyzing power of their own yesterday from which they cannot escape. SHU One more enemy wa have ti meet; the tremendous impetus of the the quiet habit. Everybody has cer tain habits which are determining the trend and tendency of their lives.. There is nothing In human lite which is trifling. The most apparent trifle bs Us quota of energy and It em phasizes that energy In the main river of our life and determines Its coarse. Tbs trend of my life to-day Is mads tip ot the accumulated trifles of yes terday. You bavs got that to meet If you are on the right course so far It Is well, but It you are on the wrong course you bave to stop; you hav that enemy to meet, Let me leave the enemies and stats what they achieve In the way ot de struction. First ot all you get an Impaired heart. I use the word "heart" In the scriptural sense. Tbs word means that part of human per sonality which apprehends and holds communion with Ood; and that is ths first thing that suffers when a man become a victim o sin, .... INTERNATIONAL LESSON COM MENTS FOR OCTOBER 17. Subject! Tool m Prisoner Before Felix, Acts 24 Golden Textt Acts 24:16 Commit Yereoa 25, 20 Commentary on tho Lesson. TIME A. D. 68 or 69. PLACE. Caesarea. EXPOSITION. I. r.urs Defense Before Felix, 10-23. Paul was in the best sense a gentleman and a diplo mat (cf. ch. 26:2). By all proper means he sought to gain the favor of those he would win for Christ. One can be faithful without being brusque and boorish. This Splrlt-glven tact and winsomeness Is as much needed by the one who would acceptably serve Christ as Is Spirit-filled boldness of utterance. Paul took up the terms of the Indictment brought ngalnBt him (v. 6) and met them with a flat and unanswerable denial. It is one thing to makeaccusatlons; It is anoth er thing to prove them (v. 13). Paul was a model preacher, he believed "all things which are written In the law and the prophets" (v. 14). Hap py is the man who can say what Paul ksays hero (cf. Luke 24:27, 44; John 10:38; Matt. 6:18; Mark 7:13). His ' enemies accused him ot departing from their ancient Scriptures; he snowed them that, on the contrary, he believed more fully than they did. It is often the case that the real infi dels call the believers heretics. As an athlete keeps himself In rigid phy sical training, so Paul kept himself In rigid spiritual training (v. 16; 1 Cor. 9:24-27). The object of this spiritual discipline was "to have a conscience void of of fense" that is, a conscience that did not stumble or cause others to stumble. He sought diligently and disciplined himself strenuously to have such a conscience, not only to ward God but also toward man. He sought to have it not only most of the time, but all the time. The kind of athletics Paul cultivated are sorely In need of cultivation to-day. It was to bring alms to his nation and not to do wrong to his nation that Paul had come to Jerusalem. II. Felix Terrified, 2t-2fl. The I schemes of the enemies of Paul and ) of Christ had already resulted in glv i ing Paul an opportunity to preach j Christ to persons who would other j wise been beyond his reach (cf. Ps. 76:10). There were few who more sorely needed preaching to than this same man Felix and this same woman Drusilla. How many preachers have received Inspiration and Instruction from Paul's dealing with these two profligates In high society. How many hesitating people havo been brought to an immediate decision for Christ through the study of the folly ! of Felix. Felix had a mere specula tive curiosity In tho matter (v. 24), but Paul gave a very practical and personal turn to his exposition of "the faith In Christ." He showed Felix it was not some faraway thing In the region of metaphysics and speculation, but something close home to his own misconduct. Paul always adapted his preaching to his audience, but not In the way some modern preachers adapt their preach ing to their audience, studying to say nothing to offend. He went right af ter the conscience of the people before bim. Righteousness and self-control were JuBt where FelU and Drusilla were offenders. Paul had an influen tial audience ot high social standing, but he preached the preaching that some would have us believe Is only adapted for the slums. "Felix was terrified." Wei. e might be. He was conducting "himself in Just the way that makes "the judgment of God" a terror. We would do well if we would so preach that we should strike with terror offenders in h,h places. Terrifying preaching is great ly needed to-day. Indeed, just as much in our fashionable churches,' where there is many a modern Felix, as in our mission halls. It Is true the terror of Felix did not do him much good, but It came near saving him; and there are many rich sinner and many poor sinners to-day whose only hope is that they may be so terrified that they will forsake their sins and accept Christ. What a fool Felix was. He had seen the blackness ot his sin; he bad seen the certainty and the aw fulness ot the Judgment to which he was burrylng; be had been terrified and there was but one wise thing to do, turn from sin and accept Christ, and only one time to do it at once. But he waited for a convenient sea son, which never came. It never does for those who wait for it. With many It 1 now or never; repent to-day or be lost eternally. In a few days all that Felix was thinking about was how he could make money out ot thai man who had opened to him the gate ot heaven. OCTOBER SEVENTEEN. Topic Pilgrim's Progress 8erles. X. Doubting Csstle. p. 4i: 1-5; 73: 13-20: 1 Kings 19: 1-18. Job in Doubting Castle. Job 30: 19-31. A prophet In perplexity. Hab. 1: 1-17. Elijah despair. 1 Kings 19: 4, 13, 14. Peter sinking. Matt. 14: 22, 23. The key of promise. 2 Pet 1: 1-4. The way out. Isa. 39: 14-33; 40: 27-30. If we persistently ask, "Why are thou cast down, O my soul?" we may find that it is for no good reason what ever (Ps. 43: 6). The bitterest doubt la doubt of the value of goodness and its rewards, for that doubt gives birth to all other doubts (Ps. 73: 13). Over against every Doubting Castle stands Its answer and remedy, the church (Pa. 73: 17). The essence of doubt and despair Is egotism, Elijah's "I, even I only" (1 Kings 19: 10). We get relief when we look away from ourselves to other men. LHht fr"n Doubting Castle. The true Christian life is always such us to produce Hopefuls. Mr. Anything and his comrades are among the most dangerous of men, because they are so wrong, yet so pleasant. How can we tell whether It is re ligion we care for or only his silver slippers unless we find ourselves in love with religion In rags? Mr. By-ends objects to Christian be cause he will hold to his own Judg ment, forgetting that if a man holds to another's Judgment he is not hold ing to judgment at all, but to policy. Christ loves to bestow the good things of His world upon His follow ers, but not if they follow Him for the good things of this world. The hill called Lucre Is volcanic, all surrounded by treacherous, hollow ground, that breaks under the feet. Christian's severest dangers are not the enemies he meets in the way, but the arduous labors of the way it self, turning him into bypaths. When you get Into Doubting Castle, examine and you will find that first you have been walking in By-path Meadow. Giant Despair and his wife Dlffl dence have no nnwer nvor rhrtation so long as he remains In the highway and steadily pursues his Journey. EPmfiGlTESSONS SUNDAY, OCTOBER 17. A Writing In the Heart. As men and women add year to year ot patient and loving service, there writes Itself in their hearts and in their faces the language ot a di vine and eternal life. To the seeing eye, what beauty is there In the faces that have been lined and wrinkled by troubles bravely borne, by the sor rows of other live shared and light ened, by unconscious heroism and sainthood! George S. Merrlam. The Growth of Seed-Truth (Matt. 13: 31, 32; Mark 5: 1-20. The Theme and the Scripture. Matt. 13: 31, 32. The mustard seed Is not really the smallest of all seeds, but it was so in the popular estima tion In our Lord's time. The rabbis called the smallest possible quantity "the quantity of a mustard seed." The Christian movement had- so small a beginning as that started by a condemned and executed Leader, di rected by twelve obscure and unlnflu ential men. No great enterprise was ever less Impressive at its beginning to the observer. Today a third of the human race has come under the influence of Jesus Christ Not all are His disciples, but all are Indebted to Htm for the things which make their lives endurable and hopeful. But the greatest growth of the mighty tree that came from so small a seed had to wait for the be ginning of the modern missionary movement. The Christian population, of the world, after eighteen centuries was 200,0(10,000; bui after one century during which the Great Commission wth. exalted, the Christian population rose to coo.000,000. Mark 8: 1-20. Jesus and HI dis ciples had yuit come from a storm tossed sea. Our lord's power over physical nature had deeply Impressed His followers. As soon as they left the boat they encountered a man pos sessed by the fierce wlldness of a "brain Btorra." Christ's compassion was at once aroused, for this storm was In a man and God- always con sider a man the supreme unit of value in the world. Jesus ever esti mated the worth of a man, not simply because of what he was, but for what by the grace of God he might become. This unpromising subject was made a conspicuous example of what is pos sible to the wisdom and power of Christ. The Law of Moses. The law ot Moses was, in every part, tinged with mercy; it stood for liberty and It had for Its ultimate goal freedom from Ignorance and despotism. Rev. C. Ross Baker. lint Taken to IPeces. A leading Parisian milliner has Just Invented a hat which may be adapted for various occasions at will. It can be taken to piece. When Its removable brim is packed away, under the brow it becomes a close fitting toque suitable for motoring, railway traveling or for walks in rough weather. It Its owner Cud herself unexpectedly called upon to appear In evening dress shs ha sim ply to readjust bet crown And she Is ready for any function demanding the greatest elegance "London Chronicle. Perfectly Safe. Herbert, aged five, had received a handsome toy borse for Christmas. One day be took It into the street to play. He returned without ths borse. Fearing that ths toy might have been lost or stolen from him, his mother asked him where it wis. 6be was surprised at this reply: "Ob, I left Mm around the corner. He can't get away, I tied bim to a tree." Deliueator. A HORSE IN A MARSH. One night while in the country we were suddenly awakened by the bark ing of our dog. We got up and In vestigated, but could find nothing wrong, so we thought that perhaps he had heard some one passing on the road, and again retired for the night. The following morning we again searched the barnyard and found that the horse was missing. We looked all over the grounds and finally found him stuck in tho swamp. There were four men staying at the house, and they tried to raise the horse, but all their efforts failed, for he sunk deeper and deeper. Tbey then went across the road and asked our neighbor for assistance. He, knowing the danger of the twamp, re sponded immediately, bringing with him his son, a team of horse and two of bis boarder. ' The eight men worked for about three hour, being In great danger themselves of dipping Into the marsh or of being hurt .by the horse, who was fighting all the while for liberty. At last their ef fort were rewarded, for they suc ceeded In getting a rope under hi lags, and with one vigorous pull raised bim enough to put a plank under him. Then, with another pull, he was raised on firm ground. Tbs borse was so weak when be wa taken out of the iwamp that he could hardly stand, but after good treatment for two or three days he was himself again. Every precaution ha been taken to prevent him from evor getting In there again. Mar guerite E. Bender, In the New York Tribune, , , 1 HAD HAD ONE MOVED. Ltowyer "What is your occupa tion?" Witness "I am a piano finisher." Lawyer "Be a little rpore definite. Do you polish them or move them?" rioatou Tranicript. BITTER WAR ON INTEMPERANCE SOLDIERS FIGHTING THIS CCRSB GREATLY CHEERED. Why Do Men Drink? BY JOHif C. CARL. "O Ood, that men should put an enemy into their mouths to steal away their brninsl To be now a sensible man, by and by a fool, and presently a beast!" Shakes, penre. To me there is no more Interesting problem In psychology! Come to think of it this whole question of alcoholism Is one of the most astounding puzzles In moral in consistency and Intellectual perversity that has ever come before the Intel ligent world for solution. Why we should tolerate this ac cursed stuff among us, with the evi dences of its cruelly destructive na ture confronting us at every turn, is a question that should scare us as to our own personal sanltyl In Its initial stages , alcoholism is the birthplace of moral and physical degeneracy, later on the hotbed of dis honor, dishonesty and disloyalty; and, at the last, the sad burial ground of wrecked hopes, of ruined careers, of lost souls and all that might, but for It, have been so beautiful and good and true. Why do men drink? It Is the dew that moistens the roadway to hell! Yet we nurture the germs of our future hopes and fears In Its foul pollution, we suckle it to our innocent babes, and proffer it to one another at the most sacred rites of our re ligious beliefs! Why do we do it? "Wine throws a man out of himself, and infuse qualities into the mind which she is n stranger to in her sober moments." Addison. Why do men drink? Ask the "total abstainer" who smilingly offers It to his guests. Ask the "moderate drunkard," who, sneering at his more involved brothers, wickedly boasts that he can "take it or let It alone." Ask the "conviviallst," who, swear ing love and loyalty for the com panions of his debauch, takes to the tall timber at the first sign of trouble. Ask the "dipsomaniac," who period ically kisses death in a perfect Niag ara of the vile stuff he abominates. Ask the poor "chronic Inebriate," who but "marks time" In the morass of alcoholic bilge till the reaper gath ers him In. "Who hnth woe? Who hath sorrow? They that tary at the wine. It biteth like n serpent ana stingeth like on adder." The Bible. Why do men drink? Of what use Is medical science If this question cannot be answered? We are given countless good and sufficient reasons why men should not drink, but no one seems ever to have sounded the depthB of human perversity for one good and sufficient reason why men do drink! The fact of the matter is that, with few exceptions, everyone who comes within the alcoholic atmosphere falls under Its control they become ob sessed with a moral obliquity, or what may be perhaps more correctly termed an Intellectual strabismus the axis of their mental vision has become deranged by alcoholic hyp nosis, and their logical instinct a non-responsive blur. Nature has supplied an antidote for all her Ills Is there no Immunity from the Infatuation of this mirage? No redemption for those who have fallen? No hope for the lost? "Drunkenness is nothing else than a vol untary marines." Seneca. Let us be truthful we do not want to escape It! Our fathers pledged their friends in it, and our mothers wet our Hps with it on the tips of their rosy fingers. What was good enough for them i3 good enough for us! Our mental process will not, or can not, travel farther. We have been unfairly dealt with by the countless generations who have traveled ahead of us. Even be fore our birth, and during our help less childhood, the fine clockwork of our mental balance has been tam pered with, and thrown awry by alco holic stimulants; and now, we have ears that hear not, and eyes that see not. We welcome bestiality with an Inane smile, and extend the glad band to shame and ruin! "Oh, wad some power the giftie gi'e us, To aee ourael'i as ither see us!" Is there absolutely nothing in all this wide, wide world that can free us of our apses' ears? "Soon ns the potion works, their human countenance, Th' cxrire-m resemblance of the gods is changed, And they, so perfect in their misery. Not once nerceive their foul disfigure ment." Milton. Practical Results of Sobriety. A marvelous change has taken placo in the drink habit in the past cen tury. In tho United State for in stance, it is true that the consump tion of drink has reached n high per capita mark, despite the vigorous temperance work, including educa tion, through the population and tho energy of the liquor traffic are under stood. There Is, nevertheless a tre mendous Increase, universally admit, ted, in the sobriety ot the people as a whole. It may be truthfully said, for ex snmle, that the growing demands of business for sober or completely ab staining employes have followed edu cation of youth In the facta showing bow drink tend to Impair efficiency nd reliability. A generation of eri ployers has been reared who not only bave an Ide-t as had their father that drink make a poor workmen, but taught by the facts of scler.ee, tbey know the definite risk. Alcohol and Pneumoni-. Dr. Moorehead.- a great phvtlclsn of Edinburgh, said of alcohol in pneumonia: "If ! can get a patient who has had no alcohol, I have very seldom any doubt a to the result of that attack ot pneumonia, and find that It i never necessary to glv al cohol in these case at all: in fact, the patients do far better without It" No Constitutional Clonk. Ths alcohol to drink trad is not protected by our National Constitu tion. Michigan Scares Rummies. Cincinnati wholesale liquor dealer announce that their losses from the going dry of Michigan counties will not be less than 12,000,000 per year. The recent going dry of ulnetaen counties ot Michigan starts a cry among the pro-liquor papers of Mich igan for a law which shall require three-fourth vote to carry no-llcense ' Always Wrong. If It was wrong to vote for license when the per capita consumption of liquor was fifteen gallons.' it Is still wrong when ths per capita consump tion is twsnty-thre gallons. 3N ; fathered for rtw 1 lloyierriouRlj "UOPETHOC IX GOD." (Tia. 42:5, 11., "Hope thou in God!" 'Ti. iv word, led And so Iaas it on to you, ' Hiat you may learn likewiae to do Hope thou in ol! ' "Hope thou In Ood I" Thin U. i E'en when Hi. will you can t H, ltn Hi. purpose, of hUZ Zl " Hu mercy .hall for aye endure Itope thou in God! ' "Hope thou in God! " Bo not Hm.i Althoupth unanswered ,"", )ir It ha. ascended to His throne 1 PrW' Thy need to Hun is .full,- ;no,'n Hope thou in Und: , "Hope thou In God!" Thnmrl, tt The power, of dnrW, 'ft "o JT" He re., above, He rlM "No evil .hall to thee rnme " h Hope thou in God: " ' "Hope thou in God:" oi, mav u. A meMage to Himself to tW ' Still chnij to Him. m iirtt Hope thou in God' '' P.. in London Christian. The Holy Spirit and the Word It requires the enlightening 'm. Phaslzlng presence ot the Holv Solrtt to enable us to comprehend and 2 proprlate the teaching of the vnH The following Incident m, In Altoona. Pa., some years neo , man was seeking the Lord. He been at the altar a number of e"en. Ings in succession, and seemed ou r to be getting deener Into sioom. don ! and despair, but he was an honest 1 qulrer. " One evening, right In the middle of the altor exercises, he got up took his hat, and left the house " that there was no Rnlvatlon for him He went home, and on entering hii house his eye caught a Bible lying on the table. He sat down and began to read, thinking that perhaps he could find something there that would re lleve his mind. He happened upon the passage, "This Is a faithful nr. IS! JJ?d, worthy of a" acceptation, that Christ Jesus came Into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief" He was astonished. The Holv Spirit emphasized the truth. His faith took hold, and soon he was happily prals Ing God aloud for salvation. The next evening In the meeting he said to his pastor: "I gave up tic last night, and went home, hut fortu nately my eye caught the Bible ss I went into my house. I Sat down and began to read, and I soon found Serin ture enough to convert all the men in Altoona." The Holy Spirit enlightened hit eyes, because he was nn honest, peni tent inquirer, and It dirt "guide him Into all truth" Into a knowledge of all the truth essential to his salva. tlon. And so it will do for everv hon est inquirer. If the "higher critics" of to-day would study their Bibles on their knees, they would find much more to believe and much less to crit icise than they do. It is the enlight ening Influence of the Holy Snlrlt that Illumines the truth to the mind of the honest reader of God's Word, but upon the minds of those who, trust ing in their own wisdom, read Its sa cred pages only to criticise and fled fault. It sheds no such illumination. Religious Telescope. Cleansing His Conscience. There was once in Boston an old codfish dealer, a very earnest and sincere man, who lived prayerfuilj every day. One of the great Joys of his life was the family worship hour. One year two other merchant per suaded him to go Into a deal with them, by which they could control all the codfish in the market, and greatly Increase the price. The plan was succeeding well when this good old man learned that many poor persons in Boston were suffering because of the great ad vance in the price of codfish. It trou bled him so that he broke down a trying to pray at the family altar, and went straight to the men who had led bim into the plot, and told them he could not go on with It, Said the old man: "I can't sffoid to do anything which interfere! with my family prayers. And this mo.' ing when I got down on my Its' and tried to pray, there was a mow tain of codfish before me.hlgh enou? to shut out the throne of God, and 1 could not pray. I tried my best to get around it, or get over It. o"1 every time I started to pray tna f h loomed up before me and my God. I wouldn't have my famil prayers spoiled for all the codfish the Atlantic Ocean, and I shall na nothing more to do with it, or it sny money made' out of it." Hoaw Herald. "Faith is the Substance of TUinj Hoped For." I hear men praying everywhere for more faith, but when I listen to two carefully and get at the real heart o their prayers, very often It l 801 more faith at all that they are wan ing, but a change from faith to slgnt Faith says not, "I see that It U for me. and so God must bavs It." but "God sent it, and so t bo" be good for me." Faith, walking the dark with God, only prays bim clasp its band more closely doe n even ask bim for the lifting of darkness o that the man roar the way himself. Phillips BrooM- Tho Conquering Cross. The cross of Jesu goe on j querlng. and om day the hoau Satan must bow before It .and r. the word of the leader of the Moo" "Galileean, Thou bast conquerea. Rev, D. D. Greer. Ambition. . Ambition Is right and prop JJJJ necessary when kept within pro bound, but when it brooki w 7. strain It leads to crtms and sham Rv. S. H. Burglou . A Waterless Both. -What do you think, said tbj eurlous, "I cleanod my tact with a vacuum cleaner. It J J tbs skin and pulls It so you can t ly get away. The man who opera one told me that be went over face and clothing every nls fce got through bis work and f fresh as a daisy. Of course, Utw off the thing be u.o. for floor wall. 1 believe I'll start a fad--1' Ing waterless lath." N u Time.