THE PULPIT. A SCHOLARLY SUNDAV SERMON BY DR. CHARLES W M'COKMIC;;. Theme: I'nltri Brooklyn. N. Y. fir. Charles W. McCormlck, raptor of the N'ostrand Avenue M. E. Church, preached Sun day morning the sixth In a series of notable sermons on "The Fruits of the Spirit." The. sporlal subject was "'Faith." The text was from Gain tlans 5:22: "Now the fruit of the Spirit ia faith." fir. McCormlck said: What Is faith? Perhaps no one ran answer. Certainly no one will tie able to give a scientific definition. For faith is one of those ultimate Im pulses of the soul whlrli defies ae. curate metes and bounds Like love. , Jt is fo wrought into the fiber of per sonality that It cannot h separated and viewed apart Yet faith Is one of the most l:lnt;ly of all human quail- i ties. The old question, which Is j frreater. faith or love, may ncvpr find i Its answer. Karh is croat and in or- J tain aspect? supremely so. and each I conditions the oilier. Without faith I there can he no love, and without ! love there can he no faith. Ve. It ' would seem as if faith lias a certain j priority in that It holds up the lisrhc for love to walk by. If love and faith are one In their Iniilal manifestation, they travel but little way hand in hand Soon faith takes a step ahead and becomes the guide of love. thoui;h sometimes faith falls back on love when it is itself menaced. I.Ike wise the question, which Is greater, faith or reason, may be difficult to answer. Reason in its low rauges has to do with facts and phenomena and their arrangement. But reason In its high ranges draws mighty In ferences, makes great generalizations and reaches conclusions that may de fy demonstration for generations, if j not forever. Here reason merges into I faith and faith finds its foothold in reaFon. It seems that faith is after j all hardly other than the highest tit- terance of reason. Especially does ; this seem true when we remember ! that reason in the large meaning al- j ways assumes dome great and inde- i monstrable principle. It seems easy to say that a grain of wheat will pro- , duce Its thirty or sixty fold of wheat ! when planted in congenial soli, but the great assumption underlying this j simple statement is that the laws of nature are uniform in their operation j and this Is demonstrable only to : faith. But what is faith? Can we pet any ' nearer to an understanding of it? At ' any rate, we may clarify our thought j by determining the use we will make . of the word. The term faith Is ap- ; plied either to the act of believing or to the content of belief: that Is, to belief as a function of the soul or to what the Individual believes. The latter meaning is found in tho phrase, "the failh once delivered to the l saints." Here Paul has In mind the I great body of Christian doctrine rc- j c-elved from Christ and generally ac cepted by the church of that day. On ' the other hand, when Paul exhorted the Phlllpplan jailer to believe on ' the Lord Jesus Christ, lie referred to an act on the part of the Jailer though he did not forget that the Christ upon ' whom the jailer was to believe wiia i the Christ of the Gospels, and thert' fore possessed well-known and ac- I cepted characteristics. We have j taken a short step toward under- j landing what faith is when we make ' thin distinction and limit ourselves to i faith as an action of the soul. But ; we need to make clear also that faith j Is not the action of some special soul power. It Is nothing less than the 1 act of the whole spiritual nature, j This conception excludes any definl- ! tion of faith which makes it a mere j Intellectual process. Pure Intellect j Is only a theoretical concept. It. ts . not found In reality. All Intellectual i processes are the outgrowth of the in- dividual soul ns It Is. and no soul can be separated for a single Instant from Its feeling, lm trend and Its accumu lated volitions or habits. Faith, then, can be nothing less than the action ot the whole nature of man. In like manner, a distinction must be drawn between a transient and a permanent activity. Faith In the New Testament sense Is not a single act complete in itself. It is a constant and enduring movement or trend of the soul. In the Interest of further clearness, St may bo noted also that faith as an action may relate either to facts 01 persons. Wo may believe either thai certain statements are true, or we may believe in a person. Faith l:i the Christian sense involves both facts and a person. Here we must speak very guardedly. There is much In the present trend of theological thinking, which finds its echo In jiop ular thought, that tends to looseness, and. It would seem, to vagui-nt's-a. When we are told that faith has to do with God as a person, or with Jesus Christ as a person without regard to any definition or clear historic set ting, wo are asked to do either the lmxsslble or the absurd: perhaps both. It U bard to think of God without giving to Him some definite qualities. If we know I It in at all, we must know Him as we know our fol lows, through His manifestations. That Is, through the display of His qualities. The "unknowable" of Her bert Spencer may bo a fine refuge for intellectual Incompetence when the mind has failed In Its vain endeavor to account for the universe and ex plain Its processes. It U worth some, thing to fall back upon the assertion that there Is an unknown and per haps unknowable power working everywhere and always In nature, which on the whole makes for right eousness. But that conclusion grows out ot the Inability of the human In tellect to go any further In Its search. And this assertion, empty as It Is, Is the assertion ot faith and not ot the intellect. It is a postulate which man must make because he is made as be is. But It ts impossible either to love or to believe In a postulate. Faith must And tor Its full exercise much more than a mere force without qual ity or attribute. The personality ot Ueaus Christ means something If we pecept as substantially true the Gos pel narrative. Illuminated and en forced by the progress of Christian klatory. But It deny the Gospels, 01 with Bchmledel reduce the biography ef Jesus to two or three sentencss of the most ordinary sort, It docs not seem credible that Jesus as a person aaali long nurvlve. Whatever else may be true. It Is true that the Christ Is whom the world believes, and be lieving Bes found a regenerating power from age. to age. Is the Christ of the Gospels. In all our present-day-thlnklng. It Is this Christ whose Image stands before us, whom we iove and i whom we trust. A Christ Who has no history and whose life therefore presents no fact for (re 1 dence would be a vanishing Christ. Nevertheless, the faith of which the r't .Testament rulatvs itlelv to persons. Christianity is not funda mentally a creed, but the manifesta tion of God in Christ Jesus, to which man may respond trustfully and loy nil v, and It Is this response which we call faith. The mission of Christ Is to bring its to Cod, that wc may love Him and believe in Him, and, there fori', serve Him. And I am per suaded that many a man finds God in Christ with whose technical theology I could not agree. If all men had to believe the same creed, salvation would be impossible to many of us who do not find It difficult to believe in the same God and the same Christ with difference of definition. What, then, is faith? Four our purposes to-day as It relates to God It Is the continued and loyal move ment of the entire soul of a man to ward God as the rever.ler of truth and the authoritative Lord of life. We may note also two other mean ings of faiih which crow out of this larger meaning, for faith not only comprises the entire nature of the in dividual, but also the whole field of his activities. Faith in God implies faith in our fcllowmen as the creation of God, or from the Christian point of view, the children of Cod. Hy this we may not mean a foolish disregard of ail distinctions of character, nor the assertion that all men are equally to be relied upon ; but it does mean a recognition ot humanity as in volved in the purpose of a trust worthy God, and therefore, itself worthy of confld'-nce. He who be lieves in God as his Fa! her, believes nlso in man as his brother. Faith in God implies also good faith on the part of the believer. To accept God as the giver of liqht nnd the Lord of life is to acknowledge ourselves bound to be utterly sincere In our re lations to Him. And to acknowledge the brotherhood of man, Including ourselves, is to enthrone the princi ple of good faith among men. In a word, faith is the expression of the soul's love of truth and its loyalty to truth; to God who is truth and whose plans, though not understood by us, are the embodiment of His truth; to man, who, created in the Image of God and redeemed by God's only be gotten Son, preserves yet amid the ruinous results of his sin, some traces of the Father's image and the capac ity for unlimited development; to self as the creature of the true God and as part of the constituied order of things where truth forms the only re liable basis of harmonious action. Faith thus defined bulks large. It (3 seen to be not merely the transient activity of a single, phase ot man's nature, the Intellect, but the contin ued movement of man's entire being, intellect, sensibilities, will, toward truth .and ultimately toward the God of truth. It Is not for a day nor an hour, hut for all time and for all eter nity. It is not limited to a single fac ulty of the human soul, but Involves the whole soul. It has not for its ob ject a limited area of truth, but reaches out toward all truth, even the infinite God of troth. It Is difficult. It not impossible, to draw a clear line of distinction, be tween what is called "natural" and what Is called "religious" faith. To one who believes as I do that man is a religious being through and through, the faith which arises in the ordinary so-called "secular" processes of life and has to do with practical daily affairs is itself a fruit of the spirit. By this I mean that man is a creation of the Almighty, upon whose soul and its consequent activities God has stamped His own nature. Fur thermore, God has Interwoven Him self in tho very fabric of the universe. If, as we have said, faith is necessary to all progress, then the exercise cf faith on the part of man displays something of the divine nature within him. It is because God has gent forth His spirit into the heart of man that man Is able to think God's thoughts after Him in tho nnlverse and to reach forward with those majestic reaches of confident expectation whlrh have wrought the great accom plishments In the material and Intel lectual development of human life in relation to the world outside ot man. Yet It must be conceded that re ligious faith is of a higher order than this general faith because It deaU with a higher order of facts. The moral nature of man Is his crowning possession. The apprehension of God marks the highest reach of his moral intelligence. Fellowship with God is at onco his crowning glory and su preme privilege. To believe In God is the highest attribute to faith and the exercise of this attribute Is condi tioned by personal fellowship with God. As with every one else. God must first be known and then be lieved. When one knows God, es pecially ns a personal friend end Saviour, It Is not difficult to believe what otherwise would be most In comprehensible, nor to trust God where without such knowledge trust would be impossible. This kml edge of Cod Is made possible through tliu Holy Spirit whom God hath sent Into the hearts of those who believe, crying, "Abba, Father." In like manner it is this knowl edge of God which underlies and con ditions faith in our fellowmen ami good faith on the part of ourselves. If God has faith In man, the believer In God must have also, and If God has faith in man, then the individual who realizes that God has faith in him must make a fitting response of good faith. Great heights give wide visions to open eyes. It 1b only when the spirit of God leads men to those exalted ex. perlenree where he knows and feels that God Is, that the very ground about him becomes holy ground and the horizon Is pushed back so that he can behold the Infinite glory beyond. The Sunday School lA'TFItNATIO.N A I, LESION COM MENTS FOIl MARCH 20. au!).(ert: A Paralytic Forgiven nnd llcaletl, Mntt. 0:t-i:i Com. mil Verse 2. MARCH TWENTIETH. Topic Money a Curse or a Blessing, Luke 12: 13-21; Matt. 6: 19-21. I-ot's temptation. Gen. 13: 10-13; 19: 15. Hlest Abraham. Gen. 13: 2, 14-18. Deceltfulness of riches. Matt, 13: I 22. Creed. A creed Is that which a man thinks in bis heart, and what be thinks In ieart he U and does. How Slinkespenrc Spoke. Shakespeare would find his lines cs recited by tho actors of to-day al most unintelligible, according to Dnn Icl Jones, who gave an address be fore the Elizabethan Society. To prove bis contention, Mr. Jones recited "The Seven Ages" as Shakes peare himself would have spoken It. The effect was a hotch-potch of a doion dialects of to-day. The broad "a's" justified the Lancastrian "fey ther" Instead ot father, and the cock ney naisV "!" sounds found full satis faction In words such as maid. Other of Mr. Jones' examples of Elizabethan pronunciation have no parallels in modern dialects. Watch wsi made to rhyme with catch, should with cooled, brew with new. Fifth and sixth, be said, were pro nounced without the flusl "th" sound and the word sea was accorded a final sound equivalent to the French "c." lindon Dally Mall. CIOLDEN TEXT. "The Son of Man hath power on earth to forgive sins." Matt. 9:C. TIMK. May or June. A. D. 28. PLACE. Capernaum. EXPOSITION I. The Healing of n I'lirnljllc, 1 -. Tho full account of this miracle Is found in Mark 2:1-12, and Luke 5:17-26. They brought this man to Jesus because there was no one else who could help, and they were confident that lie could and would. H was because of their faith that Jesus did what they sought. Their faith was a faith that could bo seen (v. 2). True faith can bo seen, it materializes in works (.las. 2:18). Jesus is ready to say to-day to every paralytic and to every soul in distress, "Son, be of good cheer." if the one In distress will only trust Him. Jesus forgave before healing. As always, so in this case, the prnfjssional fault finder was presen:, and as often, he was a high ecclesiastic, a scribe (the ological professor). Tho Scribes were there for the purpose of finding something to criticise (Luke B:17; John 5:16). They found It. They brought a very common charge and very serious charge against Jesus, "this man blasphemes" (John 10:33; Mark 14:64). Their reasoning was right up to a certain point, no .one but God can forgive Bins, nnd-if Jesus was not God, He was n blasphemer. Granted the Unitarian conception of Jesus and the Scribes were right, and His execution justifiable, but If Jesus is God. then it is the Scribes and the Unitarians who are the blasphemers. Jesus demonstrated to His Btartled accusers that He was divine, and had the power to forgive sins by reading their secret thought (v. 4; cf. 2 Chron. 6:30; .Ter. 17:9, 10: Ps. 139: 1. 2). Then He gave another proof. He healed the palsied man. Jesus wishes men to "know that the Son of Man hath power on earth to forgive sins," so He performs an act that we can see, and which demands divine power for Its accomplishment that we may know that He has the power for that which we cannot see and which also demands divine power for its ac complishment. So It Is proven that Jesus has power on earth to forgive sins. We not only hope that It Is so, but we "know" It is so. The palsied man knew that his sins were forgiv en, because Jesus said so. We may know that ours also are forgiven on the same ground (Aats 13:36, 39). II. Jesus Hating With Publicans . nnd Sinners, 10:13. As Jesus passed 1 along His eye fell on a Jew gathering j taxes for Rome, lining bis pockets at the sacrifice of his patriotism. He be longed to the class despised by the Jews, but he was to write the dis tinctively Jewish Gospel. His busi ness fitted him admirably to write the Gospel, as a tat gatherer, he had been trained to accuracy, to judge men and to be proof against impos ture. It was very humiliating and of fensive to the self-righteous religion ists ot the day that Jesus should choose one of His most intimate disci ples from the class they most de spised. He acted in the most direct opposition to the accepted notions ot the ecclesiastical leaders when He made this choice. Matthew was at- j tending faithfully to his business when Jesus called him, while the mul titudes had forsaken their usual avo cations and "resorted" to Jesus (Mark 2:13). This may have been from sturdy fidelity to business or it may have been Indifference to relig ious enthusiasms. The call was very sitdden, very brief and very much to Use point, "Follow Me." There was n world of meaning In It. It Involved the renunciation of self and taking up of the cross and saying farewell to earthly ambitions, possessions and prospects (Matt. 10:24; Luke 9:57, 58; 18:?2), but it would bring re ward and honor and blessing immeas urable (John 8:12; 12:26; Matt. 19: 2 8). Nothing else costs so much as to follow Christ; nothing else pays so well. If Matthew had said "no" to that call of Jesus, he doubtless would have gained by it Jlnancially, but by taylng "yes." he became one of the very few men of that day whose names have survived the storms ot centuries, and also became an heir of God and a joint heir with Jesus Christ. There was r.o hesitation on Matthew's part; he arose at once, for hook all and followed Christ (Luke 5:28, R. V.) It was the voice of Jesus that transformed this keen money-getting publican into a devoted disciple. Matthew made a great feast .it hi3 house (Luke 5:29). Jesus at tended this gay party. Matthew's purpose was evidently not to display Ills wealth, or merely even to honor his new-found Master; he sought to gf t hold of bis old business associates and friends, and succeeded (v. 10). The publicans and sinners were wel come to the companionship of Jesus here on earth. There will be a great multitude who were once publicans and sinners who will sit down with Him In glory. Jesus associated with publicans and sinners In order to save them. We can never save them un less we Imitate tho Master's example. In associating with them, wo must be careful to do it for the same purpose He did, or they will drag us down rather than we lift them up. The Pharisees were around as usual to find fault. Where, then, is the church's true place? Jesus came to call sinners. He has no Invitation ot grace for the righteous man. Before a man can get anything from Jesus' hand he must first take bis proper place, that of a sinner, at Jesus' feet, then he gets all (Luke 18:9-14; 1 Tim. 1:15). Blessed Is the sinner who bears the gracious call ot Christ to repentance (Acts 2:88, 39; 26:18; Luke 15:7-10). A rich man's privilege. Matt. 27: C7-G0. Proceeds of oppression. Jas. B: 10. Gold used for God. Luke 8: 1-3. It is well to lay up enough money to keep want from out dear one3, but not enough to keep the boys from the necessity of work (Ltue 12: 20.) No money harms where It is riches "loward God" (Mike li: 21. Only a little looking forward into the eternal ageo will show us how fcol'sh is our absorption In money getting (Matt, (i: 20.) Know yourself bv asking, not what you do, or what you think, but what you desire (Matt. C: 21.) Thoughts. Your money is a blessing when you bless others with It; It Is a curse when you seek to bless only yourself with it. Money is always the substantia! ex pression of the life of the one that earns It no more, and no less. Money Is not "the root of all evil." but, as the true translation Is, "a root of all kinds of evil." If you do not learn the right use of money while you have little money, you are Utile likely to learn it when you have much money. Illustrations. The power of money Is like that of a storage battery; It is stored human energy. As it Is no kindness to a strong man to go and till his field for him, so tho giving of money is a harm If It Is given when it should be earned. As grain, heaped up beyond what can be used, moulders away, so does gold. "Money makes the mare go," but that Is a very poor sore of mare, and that Is a very pood sore of mare, and 'ts going is toward no worthy goal. EPWORTH LEAGUE LESSONS 8UNDAY, MARCH 20. The Dreamy Theorist. If the man of fattn dreams dreams and sees visions, what is to save him from being, a dreamy, visionary theo rist T How to Flflht the Good Fflht (Eph. 6. 10-18; 1 Tim. 6. 11, 12.) The apostolic texlvortatlon to "be strong la the Lord" Is quickly follow ed by a full equipment of armor for tho conflict. The girdle is no elegant silken sword-sash, such as an officer in modern war folds around himself, but one of toughest leather armed with Iron. It was secured about the waist with the utmost care, keeping the armor firmly In place. Thus truth should surround the Christian with something worth living for and. If need be, dying for. "The breastplate of righteousness" should defend the truth, and keep life's daily conduct In harmony with the Christian program. The very sandals of the feet should protect the Christian soldier by their readiness for duty. "The shield (from dura, "a door") of faith" should protect the entire person like a strong door from tho "darts" lighted with fiery and flaming tow, which sin hurls nt the soldiers of Christ. To let one flaming dart pierce our armor leads on to conflict, but faith, neutralizing Us po'son. leads on to God. "The hel met of salvation," protecting the thought of the Christian soldier against the depressing and miserable thought of sin and failure, kindles the light of hope in the confidence of vic tory. With this panoply of God the Chris tian soldier grasps his weapon both of offense and defense "the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God." It is sharper than any two edged sword of Roman soldier. With this he enters Into conflict with hu man and superhuman foes, not trust Ing in his own strength, but in the majesty and might of God. "watching thereunto with si! perseverance." FEMININE NEWS NOTES. , The source of the world's clove fjpplr to Zantlbar and (be neighbor Ing inland ot Peruba. ( The Milk Standard. The clubwomen ot Massachusetts are fighting against the movement to lower the milk standard In that State. This fight la said to be winning more recruits to the cause ot woman suf frage than anything that has come up In the last ten year. Mothers have come to agree with Mrs. Charlotte Perkins Gllmsn In asserting that poll tics which affects the purity of milk j and water Is "not ontsido the home. J but Inside the baby." Geraldine Farrar, prima donna, Is twenty-seven. Judge Mills signed the deer?" di vorcing Mr. and Mrs. John Jacob Astor. Sixteen girls, prize winners In an Ontario popularity contest, visited Florida. Miss Traphagen, of Flushing. L. I., fought a highwayman who shot and wounded her escort. Mrs. Morris K. Jesup. rf New York City, has given Yale Corporation $50,000 for the School of forestry. Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont, who had a nervous collapse, was ordered by lrr physicians to take absolute rest, so she arranged for a trip to Europe. . Damages were paid and an apology written to Miss Edith M. Burton bv Theodore B. Heller, of New York City, who had assailed her character. Mrs. M. E. Read has celebrated the twenty-fifth anniversary of her ser vice as passenger arrent at AH more station on the Pennsylvania Railroad. Mrs. Ehrlieh, of New Vork City, caused the arrest of a driver for cru elty to animals, and the policeman paid a high tribute In court to her courage. Miss Annie Curran, a public school teacher in EaBt New York, was cau tioned In court on a boy pupil's ac cusation that she struck him on the head with the sharp edge ot a ruler. Mme. Anna Rogstad. the first wom an member of the Storthing, the low er house in the Norwegian Parlia ment, waa a teacher In one of the primary grades of the public schools In Cbrlstlanla when elected. The Iowa State Capitol Js to have a portrait of Lillian Russell, the State Commissioners asking her to give It as one of "its noted sons and daugh ters," and she Is having a $5000 por trait painted by Carol us Duran for the purpose. THAT WILL HOLD HIM A WHILE. Mr. Hubby -My wife thinks there Is no one like me on the face ot the earth." Miss Keen "She hasn't traveled much, I guess. There are some home. ly men in Pittsburg, where I lire." Boston Transcript. Red glass hastens vegetation, wuue blue glass suppresses It. Sensitive plants, like the mimosa, grow fUtucn times higher under red glass tb.au un der blue, ( My range II rr fields Ji niphf drjpoir.t'W III '.ftrO for "y dally ranee l,(mono the beaant fields P I .,1 . . . -. .. T . . - ., 'Pj noiy wnr i mtgnr "THY KINGDOM COME. "Thy Kftigdom Come!" Into the ways of human woe Where rnoant snd heartaches come And go: Where the wild rnrm of sorrow sweep, Where anxious souls lone vigils keep, Where eyes with weeping ache and burn. Where lonijiiiji lieHrt for day-break yenrn, Shine with the brightm-M of Thy face, Glcum Willi the henuty of Thy grace "Thy Kingdom Come!" "Thy Kingdom Cornel" O'jr V.ir' red fields rough plowed bv fire In live weed-grown with foul desire; In souls ot men ice-hnrd and cold. Chilled I y the drnth-like greed of gold; Into bne lives of liistfiilnesH, Dry-rotted liciirls of eltishnes. Into the plensures. vain nnd light. Info the shaiiie-tr.ii ki-d ways of night, Shine with the snlcndnr from above. Th pure white light of Saving Love- "Thv Kingdom t'onie!" -Robert J. liurdittt. in Pacific Baptist. THE TEMPERANCE PROPAGADNA ! CONCERTED ATTACK ON DRINK WINNING ALL ALONG LINE. Wli-n Christianity is I'mler Fire. - The enemies of God have been as sailing Him since the world began, but His throne is unmoved. Demons by the legion glared at Jesus and sought to overthrow Him, but His Kingdom ts more secure than ever. The Word of God has been scissored and burned, but every jot and tittle of it remains, and will remain till earth and tho heavens pass away. The saints have been sneered at. scourged, and slain, but they have multiplied till for multitude they are as the sands of the sea and the stars or the Bky. And till the end of time the foes of right will do their work and go their way, leaving the church triumphant, the Flble undestroyed, and God forever upon His throne. Therefore when Chrlstlnity Is un der fire, as it is to-day, be not nerv ous, trembling for the ark of God or fearful that the Kingdom of God can now or ever be destroyed. And do not "fight fire with fire." Abuse and sarcasm, chicanery and falsehood are in the hands of your foes, but to bring down the giant j navia must not wear the armor of Saul. Nor rely altogether upon Intellect ual weapons. Argument for the sake of argument Is seldom convincing. Be spiritual, first of all; for a spir itual life is the best possible answer to the critics of the cross. In wordy argumentation men may muddle your brain, but they cannot pump the life blood out of your heart. Be loyal to God and His Word. Allegiance to His sovereignty and un wavering confidence In His Word are torts of strength In time of war. Be aggressive, evangelistic, mis sionary. Instead of stopping to shiver with fear, or parley with foe, herald the good news of salvation fer vently, faithfully, persistently. Do not wait to even contend that the Word Is the Word: proclaim it and see It win Its own way! And in all, be courageous, wise, hopeful, persevering. For they who are "blasting at the Rock of Ages" can do nothing more than remove hits of the moss that have gathered there. And they who would dissect the Bible are unable to insert the scalpel deeper than the cuticle of a creed or the wart of a theological sys tem. And they who by dispute and denial would destroy the deity of Jesus might as well attempt to warm Greenland with a candle or overpalnt the sun with an Ink-drop. "Our God is marching on!" Bib lical Recorder. Service. "An angel of tho Lord spake unto Philip and he arose, and went." , The Lord of Angels paused one day to hear a report from His messengers upon the earth. With Joy or sorrow each told what he had seen. The youngest, Amslel, stood alone In ear nest thought. When his turn came to speak be said: "Lord, In the city of Lupton I found three of Thy servants renowned above th rest. One ts very wise, one has the gift of golden jpeech, the third has no rare gift or grace, but he wins the people's hearts by doing good. Lord, I would know which loves Thee beBt." The Lord ot Angels answered: "All men's hearts are open to Me, and I well know which loves Me best, but that you may know, go to each and say: 'Thy Master bids thee go to Spl ran's huts across the snow; there you shall find a task to do for Him.' The one who answers best thou shalt crown for Me." The youngest angel passed that same hour through the gate of the city. He came to the temple where the people thronged to hear the gifted preacher. He, Bernol, knelt at the altar; the angel touched him and gave the message. His face went white, and he answered, "Why?" He faltered. The angel turned away. To the wise man intent on holy thought the message was given. He saw the perils, and answered, "How?" The angel was gone. The third was hur rying down the street on service bent; the angel stopped him with the mes sage. Quick came the eager answer: "When?" The angel answered, "Now," and crowned him with the golden circle from his brow, saying, "Not ours to answer how or why. The Master knows the cause; His ways are wise and just. Who serves the King must serve with perfect trust." Rev. Henry Van Dyke, in "A Legend of Service." Imagination. Imagination Is the most essential element In any great invention, knowledge, business enterprise and religion, If it was not for the powers ot Imagination, the nations would be stranded long before this. Right Feeling. A man is right when right feeling stimulates right thought, in a disci plined and finished manner, and turns upon the feelings and becomes their master, directing them with right pur pose. Any one who waa familiar with the Appearance ot the Niagara, Falls be fore the present power Installations were built and opened can settle the question as to whether the appearance ot the falls has been affected by going to see for himself. Small though the total amount ot water taken for pow er purposes, in proportion to the total amount passing over the falls, may be, It has been sufficient to cause the shallower portions of the overflow at the edges of the falls to become en tirely dry, thereby greatly1 reducing the total length of the crest line. . Atcoiiol HurU Race, Alcohol and alroluiiBtn are two of the real an.i substtctlnl enemies of moral, artistic anf commercial pro-1 gress of the Lunv.n race, according to the report o;' the United States delegates to the twelfth International Congress on Alcoholism, made publlo by the State Department, Washing ton. The delegates were appointed, by Secretary Knox as one of his first official acts. The congress was held last July In London, and twenty-five governments were represented, the delegates of each concurring In the general finding that alcohol not only was unnecessary to human life and comfort, but was Inimical to both. Three departments of the Govern ment were represented the State, Navy and Treasury. Twelve repre sentatives went abroad, and all of them signed the unanimous report made public, the finding of which Is to condemn the drinking habit as dangerous to public health and morals and subversive of national, moral, commercial and military greatness. While the congress urged the neces sity of Imposing the most rigorous re strictions on the sale and traffic in alcoholic liquors, it regarded as equal ly important the need of educating the younger generation to a true knowledge of what alcohol Is and w-hat its effects upon the human sys tem are. The delegates believe that the numerous recent discoveries as to the harmfulness of drunkenness and even ot "moderate" drinking also should be set before children In order that they may see the danger of the practice. The American dele gates sum up this phase of their re port by saying: "Increased teaching as to its char acter and influence should be pro vided, to conserve industrial efficiency In the commercial competition of na tions, as well as to promote two of the' chief objects of government the public health and morals." The value ot this method of com bating the growth of the liquor habit is emphasized in the report. While acknowledgment Is made that the or ganization of associations of juvenile abstainers is useful. It is asserted the chief reliance should be placed on sci entific temperance education in the public schools as a means of ridding the public mind ot errors about the effects of alcohol and substituting the facta that science is believed to have evolved about the use of the bever age, even when taken in small doses. Miss Cora F. Stoddard, of Boston, another American delegate and sec retary of the Scientific Temeperance Federation, also devoted to the same subject her address, which was the first paper of tho congress. In It she put forward the benefits derived by a number of countries through the adoption ot such a plan as proof that it should become universal. The United States, the report says, made an unusually good showing in its exhibits. Germany also was to the fore with a particularly fine col lection of colored charts showing the effect of alcohol on the body, the fam ily and upon society. Especially effective,-It is said, were the stereoptl con slides of the National Temper ance League of Great Britain. These stereopticon pictures, the re port goes on to show, were largely reproductions of municipal posters that are being Issued by the City Councils of about 100 British bor oughs. The posters deal In a popular way with the deleterious effects of alcohol on the human system, and ana. posted by order of the regular officials of towns In which the sale ot Intoxicants is licensed. This fact, however, does not prevent the offi cials from warning the public against the use of alcohol. . Following the example ot Great Britain the city and district officials of France and Australia likewise have adopted the "public warning" method ot advising the people against indul gence. The report deplores the fact that the same method has not yet found a foothold In the United States, although such a plan has been noted In certain cities, where posters In veighing against the use of alcohol have been Issued by authority of the Mayors. The Chief Justice of England, Lord Alverstone, announced that In his be lief ninety per cent, of the crimes passing under his observation were due to drink. Judge W. F. Pollard, of St. Louis, who presides at the Second DlBtrlct Police Court in that city, said that ot the cases passed upon by him fully eighty-five per cent, of those convict ed could charge their degradation to the use of alcohol. Lieutenant-Colonel McHardy, ot Edinburgh, Scotland, coincided with Judge Pollard as to the percentage of crimes occurring In the former Scotch capital. Judge Pollard won the support ot the delegates from twenty-three coun tries for the adoption of his plan to suspend sentence in the case of every first offender who Is brought into court charged with drunkenness. This involves such first offenders signing a pledge to abstain for one year. It the probationers fail to live up to their pledge they may be arrested and summarily sentenced. The knowledge that one drink may mean a prison sentence. Judge Pollard ar gued, kept many a man straight until he had time to collect himself. The penalty for failure to keep faith with tne court was not settled, several of the delegates arguing In favor ot va rious degrees ot punishment. The principle, however, was regarded as admirable, and 400 delegates urged its adoption by the various govern ments ot the world. Effective truyers. A number of school children, be tween ten and fourteen years ot age, held a prayer meeting outside a pub lic bouse at Newport, Wales, some of tbem praying for their fathers, who were Inside. The scene so affected the landlord that he put out the gas lamp around which the young Chris tians were congregated. "Never mind," said one of them, "we'll pray to the Lord to send His light upon all,' and they continued to pray until the men left the public house. What One States Does for Roads, Just before his departure for Parli to attend the International Confer ence' ot Road Builders, Samuel Hill, of Seattle, Wash., president ot th Washington Good Roads Association, told an interviewer In New York: "The building of good roads Is the most Important question that can. fronts the American people to-day. Every man, woman and child must use the highways at some time, whether afoot, on horseback, la t road wagon or In automobiles." Mr. Hill, who has spent much ot his time end money in the work of public road Improvement, Is one ot three delegates the State ot Washing ton has sent to this International roads conference to get Information and Ideas that will prove of value in the important work which the State Is doing. Not only has Washington put her convicts on the roads and had them ithere for some years now, but she hat established a chair ot good roads in her State university, the first Institu tion In the country to provide such a course, and Samuel C. Lancester, pro fessor of goods roads In the Washing ton University, is one of the three delegates to the Paris conference. The other is R. H. Thompson, City Engi neer of Seattle. With 125 students last year and 200 at the beginning of the present term, the good roads department ot the Washington University Is one of the most popular In the Institution. It not only educates young men in this important work, but serves a i bureau for the dissemination of valu able information relating to constric tion and maintenance ot public highways. Some of the things Mr. HU1 In his interview, published In New York Herald, will be ot part lar Interest and value In Georgia at this time, when the State is a to enter upon the era ot substantial progress which good road building la volves. DtscusBlng the tremendons aggre gate cost ot bad roads to the farmers and, in a general way, the work &' being done in his State, Mr. Hill said: "When I became interested active ly In the subject about four years ago I made up my mind that I would as certain JuBt what it cost one of eur farmers to haul along the roads lor one milo garden truck and other ma terial weighing one ton. Fox on the farmer principally falls the burden of our bad roads. I learned that be cause of the poor roads the United States lost, with the setting of the sun every day, nearly $3,000,000, which might be saved were the rotds in proper condition. Just think that! And yet not a cent has come from the federal administration for the betterment of these roads. Soine States, as Washington and a few others, have appropriations, but hot in proportion to the calling necessity. Then we began to get busy in bur State ot Washington. "We put the convicts at work and we found the process was a gieat success. Each convict netted to the State t4.03 for each day of work, which amounted to something. And not one convict turned out .to this task tried to escape. North Carolina led in this system of convict labor, and that was fifteen years ago, and now it has eighteen hundred miles of macadamized roads built by contict labor, and only two per cent, of he men employed in this way tried. to escape. In Washington the majority ot our roads are constructed over mountains and at a maximum grade of five per cent. This convict labor did not Interfere with union labor, either, for with the construction -of the roads there was more work tor the union men in other branches of the task. "Let me tell you ot our method In Washington. We build our roads usually about one hundred feet wide. First, we have in the middle a strip about sixteen feet wide. On the bot tom we take from the screen cube of rock about two and a half inches. This rock is put down wet, and a ten ton steam roller goes over it from the Bides, to make it cement and rise high In the middle. Then comes rock one-halt the size of the other, and then the rock - three-quarter inch cubes. Over this is poured tar, malt ed to about 180 to 200 degrees Fah renheit, and over all this is thrown the fine pebbles. Then the Bteam rol ler gats to work again. Parallel to this strip we make a path ot light material, designed for horses and ve hicles; alongside that comes a bridle path, for equestrians only, and then comes another strip of grassy lawn, with flowers and trees. Wo maintain that strip in all strictness." There are suggestions and informa tion bese worth considering. "Ther come from a man who is well quali fied to speak and who has seen and actively participated in the work Ik his own State similar to that which Georgia now has to do. Atlanta Cos stitution. . - ' Temperance Notes. Studies ot pauperism and its causes and dtseases which follow from the peglect of hygienic living show that alcohol Is both an active and predis posing cause to an extent practically unknown, and at least beyond any preseut estimation oi us innuence. . Mr. M. T. Stead, writing to Mr. Hugh Edwards, Liverpool, says In the course of his communication: "I was much struck laBt Sunday when I waa in Pontypridd by the fact that it is everywhere becoming manifest that; for all practical purposes, drink is the devil la South Wale." The Eternal Feminine, Queen Elizabeth, In a character! tic rage, had proclaimed the doom ol the courtier. "Off with bis head!" The culprit courtier was beard to mutter something to himself. "What said the caitiff?" demanded Elizabeth. "May It please Your Majesty," falt ered one of the guards, "his words were: 'Pretty rough. It is becom ing ' " I The virgin Queen plumed herself; her eyes sought her mirror. "Ha! Pretty ruff! Truly, tho fal low hath good taste, and it were pity Let sentence be suspended. We have need of men of good jud raent and sound discretion about u I will hear further what he may b' to-say." Harper's Monthly. The wife of a farm laborer nef Exeter has given birth to her tweuty second child. All the family art ali tMi well.