THE PULPIT. BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. E. M. M'GUFFEY. Theme: The End of Things. Elmhurst, L. I. In St. .Tamps' P. T. Church, thft rector, the Rev. K. St.. McGuffpy. preached Sundfiy mnrnlnr;! on the "End of Things. " He took Ills tett from St. Luke 21: "Kor the powers of heaven shall be shaken." Mr. McGuffey said : .Toy Is nhvays more Joyous when) underneath It is a foundation of thntivht fulness. Thoughtful people have everywhere and always the od vsntagn over thoughtless people. With the latter class joy if) too often lilt? the "rrarkling of thorns under a pot." Hero joy Is likely to he like the pleasure children; llqht hearted, temporary, evanescent and meaning-Jrs.-; ni'.io rnlinal spontaneity, unre flecMve. On the other hand, i.lso, half di F?v.led tensideratlons of the solem nity an' '!rlou.:ni ?s of life, considera tions of It not thought thoroughly to a eoreliision, are too opt to nlarm nnd roVr us unduly, and produce that th-tld and melancholy frame of mind t:at refrains as far as possible from thinking at all on tho great and rerinus problems of human life. Lord En con once said: "A little philos nhv Ir.rllneth men to atheism. " He might have said nlso that a large sur vey nf the laws governing the world nnd the human mind establish a be li'f in the absolute and benevolent eov! ;v!gnty of Cod over human life. I shall be pleased, therefore, to have on do two things: First, to make all the Joyous days of the Christian year and all the Joy fins occnslons of your personal life more Intelligently Joyful by careful; consideration of tho truths and facts, which underlie them. If a few months aso we reflected on the true thought of Christmas Day, the Incarnation, the gift to the world from the skies of a Divine Saviour, assuring us of the rare and love of the great Heaven-, ly Father, I am sure we experienced a happiness that was contagious, be-' cause it was deep rooted. If we ex plained lucidly to the dear children, in our homes why and how Christmas became Christmas, I am Burn wo sowed precious seed In the rich soil of their young hearts. With these considerations I pass to our second thought, viz.: The ending of this planet as the thcatro and home of human life. Dramatic and terrible as Is this thought In contemplation, let us seek to entertain It that It may be reas suring rather than demoralizing. If the ending of the. career of this world as a planet Is to me a tremendous physical catastrophe, a probable re absorption Into the sun by an Impact of collision which will Instantly va porize it by the enormous hent gen erated by collision, this apparently tragic nnd utter ending of the earth Is an ending ordained by God, along the lines of infiuite wisdom and love. It, will b? no more remarkable, when viewed In this light, flian tho drop ping of an autumn leaf, that, having served Its function, la bidden to sub serve other uses. It is worthy of remark that the statement of our Saviour that this plar.et would come finally :o fiery ex tinction, anticipated by near 2000 years the deductions and conclusions of astronomical science. For a gen eration at least, astronomers have known that tho earth was slowly drawing nearer to the sun. As this approach Is by very easy stages, al though positive and actual. It will be many hundreds of thousands of years before the final catastrophe occurs. And so, just now, we need be under no immediate apprehension, in spite of the periodic alarms of our friends, the Second Adventists. Before this happens, the education of the human race will have been finished. Utfore this happens, all ferns'-, ial heat will probably have left the body of this planet. "With liie cooling cT the earth, all water on tiie surface of the globe, and all atmosphere will have been drawn In to the core ol tho earth, and the earth will have become a dead planet like the rncon. With tho cooling of the earth, and the disappearance of water and air, all organic lite, vegetable and animal, will havo ceased, and the earth become n d-ad planet. Gradu ally tho centrifugal motion which keeps the earth away from the sun, as It whirls around it, will bo over tome by tho centripetal attraction which Is drawing the earth toward the sun. Let me explain by a simple Illustration: A boy ties a stone on the end of a string, after the manner of a sling. He swings It round p.nd round. Should he let go tho string, the stone would fly off Into space. Hut holding tightly to the Btrin, ho Kmdunlly shortens it, and in the meantime keens the stone whirling, the stone will presently strike his Land when the string is short enough. And the Btone will strike hard. As tronomy tells us that the earth Is the lone, and the sun Is the boy. The string Is the invisible cord which we call gravity. The sun Is gradually shortening this cord. AVhen it Is short, enough, this power of gravity will pull the earth Into the sun. Tho earth will etike the sun to hard that Its entire mass will be vaporized in an Instant and all Its constituent ele ments resolved Into Its original con dition. So vast U the sun that any one of Its great chasms, which we call tpotB, In large enough to swallow the earth without touching its sides. So rust is the sun that the addition to It of this whole planet would bo as if we threw a thijle lurap of c;,ul Into a great f urn.-.:".-. Although all life w::i iicvc ceassd refore this cataclysm, when vu reflect upon the destruction of the triumphs of art, science and civilization, the numberless marvellous things which men have made and built and deemed of priceless value, all to go In one fiery holocaust, soma considerations present themselves to thoughtful minds. And first, perhaps, to the pious thinker, comes the thought that, bowsver God may have assigned to man tha duty to subdue nature and develop civilization, it was only that nature's forces might be harnessed in tha service ot man, and that civil-1 tiatlon, blossoming Into morality and lulture. might be fore taste of and preparation for our Ufa as It will be lived In higher spheres. Entirely apart from considerations l the coarseness and crassncss of barbarous and semi-barbarous peo ples, and tha lowest classes of civili sation, several hundreds of thousands it years will be necessary before the moral, spiritual and social training at our rca approaches satisfactory conditions. The conviction therefore 'is forced upon us, that in the thought f Ood, moral and spiritual educa tion ia ot paramount lranortnce, ml that nil things earthly suiiserve this end by the appointment of dl vlno providence. Hence man must ilvays be regarded as infinitely great er than the world Itself, and all the :rlnmnhs of civilization. God's dealings with human life are jot so Inscrutable after all. To the jbrdlent, affectionate and rlght-mtnd-d child in our homes, the Inws of the household and tho will of the pa rents are never subjerts of mystery. 3tteh child knows by the instinct of Mglit perception that they ore for Its well-being and ultimate advantage. And bo It comes that the flnnl fiery les-liiatlon of the world, after It has lerved Its purpose, fills us with no dis mr.y. It will have served Its use as :he srhoolroom In which we were all .ra'ned. We, I take It, shall be elsewhere, ind not greatly concerned that tho un has devoured our old home. We mnv therefore contemplate the fiery .tiding of this world with entire cqun ilniity. And yet herein is a marvel lous thing. Science assures us that sven after millions of years of use of this world by nnlmala nnd men. its lements will be just ns fresh nnd un diminished as when the world began. Nothing will have been worn out. Everything in use only changes. It7 apparent wear and tear is only n passing from ono form to another form. A bundle of wood Is placed in our Kitchen stove to Kindle the fire. It Is consumed. It ashes repre ent what the tree took from the soil. Its carbon goes up the chimney, re storing to tho air what some tree took from tho air. Nothing was lost. The ?arth received again what it originally gave. To the air was rertorcd Its original contribution of carbonic ncld gas, which tho leaf manufactured In to wood. And so God has made a universe of perennial youth, where nothing is lost or can bo lost. It is tho law of God that the end ings of all things are tho beginning of new things. When night ends, day begins. When summer ceases, win ter Is upon us. The old year ends, only to project Its power or weakness Into the new. Nothing is stationary. All things are fluid and progressive. The sure and final ending of this planet suggests that It was but the home and school room of human life la its initial stages. When we leave It for a larger and greater world, or when It finally ceases to be there need be no regret nor undue alarm. Our considerations, in looking for ward, cause us to read into life as it la the groat truth that all things are by divine "..'Jpolntment working tow ard a great "ethical and dramatic con clusion. In spite of the present popular tendency against church attendance, I believe that more people are truly and thoughtfully religious than ever before. It Is bound to be po when people become thoughtful. Kor then they must see that "Now we have no continuing city, but we seek ono to, come." But all this is the story of the gospel. Our Saviour taught dis tinctly that this life is but the prep aration for higher life. He incited us to prepare for It carefully. He promised that no one who set his face towards the skies should want grace and strength for the difficult upward climb. The beautiful Church of God stand3 pledged for this as sistance. It exists to help men up ward and onward. It exists to help men not only In all social ways along the hard lines of life, but to give them a strong hand as they struggle out of the natural into the spiritual and eternal. The natural being loft well bohind. It need not greatly concern us what becomes of It. The SundaySchool INTERNATIONAL lesson com. MEXTS VOn APRIL 17. Subject: The Question of John the Baptist, Mutt. 11:1-10 Com tnlt Verses 4, S. . Defends Generous Diet. ny DR. JEAN WILLIAMS. Shake from your memory, If possi ble, all that you have learned concern ing restricted diets, whether un cooked, unbeefed, unstarched, un sweetened or otherwise made gener ally disagreeable to a normal palate and civilized palate and civilized stomach. Every one should under stand that such restrictions and modi fications of dlot, with others too numerous to mention here, are often absolutely necessary In fact, they a. i often the beat weapons with which to fight disease when prescribed by a competent physician, familiar with the case In question. Indiscriminately applied, '. icy have done untold harm, and many a serious break in health has been traceable to an ill advised experiment in nutrition. For the average healthy Individual, especially during youth and middle age, a mixed diet, and a generous one at that, has proved most satisfactory. We must never lose sight of tha fact that we are converters of energy. We should try to so manage our lives that the best possible balance is pre served between the consumption of food and the output of energy, with no undue wear and tear on the mech anism of the body. If we succeed In maintaining this balance we shall hnve the best chance of retaining health and efficiency for the greatest number of years. Of late we have grown accustomed to the oft repeated suggestion that we all eat too much, far exceeding the demands of the bodv. This la an ex cellent example of the kind of advice that causes untold trouble. The few who really need It and might profit thereby rarely .find themselves in a mood for tho perusal of such distaste ful reading and those who take it seriously are usually already below par physically and need advice of a very different so:-t. My observation rnd experience had a: to the bnl!:f that the major ily fit v.o.nen, esnec-la'.ly the self-supporting, eat too little and eat poorly balanced meals. Occasionally there may be too much bulk and at tha same time too little nourishment. Woman's Home Companion. How a Juror Was Lost. In a southern county ut Missouri years ago, whan tha form of question ing was slightly different than now, much trouble was experienced in get ting a Jury In a murder trial. Finally an old fellow answered every question satisfactorily; he had no prejudices, was not opposed to capital punish ment and was generally a' valuable find. Then the prosecutor said sol emnly: "Juror, look upon the prisoner; prisoner, look upon the Juror." The old man adjusted bis spec tacles and peered at the prisoner for a fall half minute. The turning to the court be said; . , "Judge, dura if I don't believe he'a guilty." Kansas City Star. . GOLDEN TEXT. "But the witness which I have la greater than that of John; for the works of which the Father hath given Me to accomplish, the very works that I do bear witness of Ste, that the Father hath seut Sle." John 5:36, R. V. TIME. Midsunjnier. A. D. 2S. PLACE. Capernaum. EXPOSITION. I. John's Doubt Concerning: Josus, I .A. John was in prison In Mncherus. but, tho news of Jesus' mighty deeds penetrates even to his dungeon. John's disciples have access to him In his Imprisonment, and they tell him the strange reports that fill the Mr (Luke 7:18). John had had a divino revelation that Jesus was the baptizer with the Holy Spirit nnd a clear, positive faith in Him as the Lamb of God, and Son of God (John 1:33. 29, 34). Cut John was not perfect, he was human; and when his active spirit was shut up in prison doubts began to come, as they are so likely to come to the man of intenso activity when ho is obliged to sit still and wait (cf. 1 Kings 19:3. 4). Many find difficulty In reconciling John's present questioning with his former clear faith; but those who know men, even the mightiest men of God, and especially those who know their own hearts, with their moments of clear vision and unquestioning faith, and other moments of conflict and uncer tainty, will find this story most nat ural. Indeed It would never have been fabricated In this way, but it bears the evidence of Its genuineness -m Its face. John, In his doubt, did the wisest thing any man can do In his doubt: he went right to Jesus Himself with it. He was not clear for tho time being that Jesus was "the Coming One," but he was clear that Jesus' testimony about Himself should bo accepted. Such a doubter will not remain a doubter. If those who to-day doubt that Jesus is the Messiah and the Son of God would only go right to Him and ask Him. He would soon tell them. John's q"estlon was right to the point, "Art Thou the Coming One?" (the one whom all the prophets from Moses to Malachl foretold was to come as tha fulflller of God's promises to and glo rious plans for His people) or look we for another? The thought very likely had come to John, "If Ho is the Coming One, why does He delay to manifest Himself as King and to dethrone Herod and set me free?" At the very hour John's messengers ar rived Jesus was giving ocular demon titration that He was "the Coming One" by curing diseases and plagues, opening tho eyes of the blind, and casting out evil spirits (cf. Luke 8: 21). For an answer to John, He simply points John's two messengers to what they see going on before their very eyes and the glad testimonies that they hear. "Go tell John tho things which ye do hear and see." Then folic ws a catalogue of divine works accomplished before their eyes or testified to in their astonished ears. These were the very things predicted of the Messiah (Is. 35:5, 6; 42:6, 7; 61:1-3). Jesus constantly appealed to His miracles as proof that He was Messiah and the Son of Cod (John 5:36; 14:11; 15:24). In the present instance the things John's disciples heard reached even to the raising of the dead, for the son of the widow of Naln had been recently raised (cf. Luke 7:11-21) and quite likely was among those about Jesus on this- day Jesus added a gentlj word of reproof a::d warning for John, "Blessed Is he whosoever shall find none occasion of stumbling in Me." This wr.s a re:e.-ence to Old Testament prediction coaee;-niug the Messiah (Is. 8:14. 15). II. Jesus' Testimony to John tho naiitist, 7-11. Jesus had sent to Joju a word ol cheer and a word of re proof, but, when the messengers were out of hearing, Jesus gave the multi tudes a glowing tastlmcny to John's worth and greatness. As he had been shaken for a moment In his faith, It might seem to them that he was a "reed shaken with the wind," but he was not. Neither was he a man seek ing his own glory and comfort, gor geously apparelled and llvinx deli cately (cf. Luke 7:25). He was a prophet, that is, d man directly com missioned, sent and inspired of God, authoritatively declaring God's mind to mea (cf. Luke 1:76 and 26). But he was more than that, he was him self the tuhject of Oid Testament pro phecy, one of whom the g.-:at pro phets of olden times had s-)o.:on (Mai. 3:1; 4:5, 6; Is. 40:3; cf. Luke 1:16-17, 76; John 1:2, 3). He was c.ioron from the who'.o human race to be Cod's own messenger tJ go before the face of God Incarnate to prepare the way befora Him. John the Bap tist filled ono of the loftelst offices ever tilled by man. Amongst purely human beings, there Is none greater than Joha the Baptist. And yet Jesus, tha Son of God, was so much greater than John the Eaotlst. that the latter was not wo:-;hy to wear His shoes (ch. 3:11; John 1:27). Great as John was as the forerunner of Christ and preparing the way for tlm kingdom, he was uot yet in the king dom, and the one who is "but little" In the kJngdom, but really In ths kingdom, is greater than even John. We who to-day are in the klngc'.om. sea and hear things which prophets desired to see and bear but did not (Luke 10:23, 24). Things are now Clearly revealed to us which bad been bidden f.-om the beginning of the world (Eph. 3:8, 8; Col, 1:25-27; 1 Pet. 1:10-12). The one who In this dispensation Is actually in the king dom enjeys privileges Immeasurably beyond what any before the kingdom was established ever knew, and yet ha full establishment qf that king flora upon earth, is still ahead of us. Who can measure, or even imagine, what Its privileges shall beT THE CRUSADE AGAINST DKINX PROGRESS MADE BY CHAMPIONS FIGHTINQ THE HUM DEMON. The Potential Drop. A little drop of drink May mnke bright even grow dim. A little drop of drink Takes the manhood out of him, A little drop of drink Bringi "the wolf" to ninny a door, A little drop of drink Mnke bare the cottage door A little drop of drink T.ike the money from the bank. 'A little drop of drink Brings down the higher rank. A little drop of drink Sinks the man below the brutu A litMo drop of dnnk Brings forth but sorry fru;s. A little drop of drink Ponder it, neighbor, well A little drop of drink Can bring a soul to hfii! Drink Got Him, William Blnnlng3, known In Bow ery lodging houses as the "Duke of Montreal," a tall, handsome man of commanding presence, although showing unmistakably the marks of years of dissipation, was found dead In his bed In the Vigilant Hotel, a lodging house et No. 119 Bowery. . His death was undoubtedly the re sult of hard drinking, just as bis downfall from a gentleman's estate came from the same cause, for that the "Duko of Slontreal" was a gen tleman there can be no question. It was because of his manner and evi dent education that Bowery lodging bouse habitues gave him a title. From friends who had known him in better days, when he was a man among men. a little history of his life was obtained yesterday. He was born in Stirling, Scotland, sixty-one years ago. His family was a good one and he received a first class edu cation, finally being graduated with honors from Edlnburg University. After leaving the university he went to Canada and obtained a junior clerkship In the Bank of Montreal, of which institution his cousin, Rich ard B. Angus, was then the general manager. Blnnlngs rose rapidly and finally was promoted to a high place In the bank and commanded a large salary. But he had formed drinking habits and at last lost Ms position. His dis charge from the bank, where he had worked several years, brought him to a realization of what his habits would lead to and he stopped drink ing. He obtained n good position with the St. Paul and Manitoba Railroad through the Influence of some of his relatives, who were large stockhold ers In the road, but after a little he began drinking again and lost his place once more. He drifted to St. Louis and became a clerk in a packing house, but lost the job through drink. Then he found what work he could at odd Jobs and finally reached this city, where he had many friends. Some of them persuaded him to brace up again and he did so and became an accountant with a Wall street firm. He did not hold tho place long, for the appetite for strong drink was such that he tad not the will power to resist It. Then he cut looso from his old friends and sank lower and lower In the social scale, at last becoming a regular hanger-on in Bowery salooirs and sleeping, when he had the price, in a fifteen-cent lodging-house bed. Now and then he would brace up for a few days and then would address envelopes for the Business Address ing Company, No. 9 Barclay street. ! the president of which, W. H. Par sons, had known Binnlngs for more than forty years. Mr. Parsons was shocked to hear of his death yesterday and said he had telegraphed to the dead man's relatives in Canada to nsk what dis position 'ney wanted made of the body. "Blnnlngs came of an excellent family," said Mr. Parsons. "They were prominent In the East India service. He was a gentleman, eharm Ing in his manners at all times. His case Is the saddest that ever came' under my notice." New York World. v "NO, XEVF.R ALONE." (Written on the pannage, Hebrews 13:5: "I will never leave thee nor forsake thee.") I've seen the lightning flashing. And heard the thunder roll; I've felt sin's breaker dashing, Almost they whelmed my aoul. I've heard the voire of Jesus, He bade me still go on; He promised never to leave me, Never to leave Ait alone. The world's fierce winds are blowing, Temptations sharp nnd keen, I feel a peace in knowing My Saviour stands between. He is my shield in danger. When other friends are gone; He promised never to leave me. Never to leave me alone. When in affliction's valley I tread the road of care. Mv Saviour helps me carry My cross when hard to boar. JIv feet, when torn and Ideeding, Sly body tired nnd worn. Then Jesus whispers His promise Never to leave me alone. He died on Cnlv'ry's mountain, And there they pieced His side. And there He opened that fountain, The crimson, cleansing tide. For me He wails in glory, Now seated on His throne; He promised never to leave me, iSevcr to leave me alon' ctionvs. No. never alone! No, never alone! lie promised never to leave me; Never to leave me alone. Cumberland Songs, No. 75. Sir Ernest H. Bhackleton, the Ant arctic explorer, who Is to lecture la this country, will arrive on the Lusl tanla on March 25. Before the explo rer leaves Washington, where be will be the guest of Ambassador Bryce, be will receive from President Taft the gold medal of the National Geogra phic Society. While In New Yorjt be will be presented with the gold medal of the American Geographical Society of New York. Scientific American. Effects on Circulation and Nervous System. With regard to the circulation, al cohol produces an incrensed heart beat, a fuller pulse, and a redder skin. It calls upon the reserve pow er of the organ, but the moment the effect has passed off, the action of the heart Is actually weakened. Con sequently, the temporary effect Is produced at an unfortunate cost. Then there Is Its action on the cen tral nervous system. Here, writes an authority, "It acts directly on the nerve cells as a functional poison." It first stimulates the nervous sys tem and then depresses It, and, as with other poisonn which act upon this part of the body, the higher cen tres are affected first. They become a little dull a little lesB quick and acute. It may be very trifling, but there It is; so that the man wbo does his work on alcohol even on a mod erate amount is not at his best. Multitudes and Manliness, Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do evil. Exodus, 22:2. This ordinance in the book of Ex odus is an evidence of that wisdom which marks Moses as the greatest statesman of ancient days. The warn ing of this old command is simply. Don't follow the crowd. The peril of the city Is the ex cess of the instinct for association. Civilization, progress, is the growth and development of the associate life of man, but the peril of city life is that this instinct Is overdone. People hate to be alone. What proportion of the ten thousand wit nesses of a football match would stand for an hour or more In the wind and rain if each man were iso lated from the rest of the crowd and saw only the players? In spite of dirt and disease, con gestion and high rents the cities are growing at an enormous rate, while the towns and villages are diminish ing. This instinct to be in a crowd Is one of the most serious developments in modern civilization. "New York Is not a civilization; it Is a great rail way station." The Inevitable result of association in a crowd Is to do as the crowd does. The temper of Broadway, which Is damning thou sands of careless lives, Is the subtle cry which calls, "Do as the crowd does." All about us are people who lower their standard to suit the crowd. It 1b astonishing how far we are Influ enced by the practice and opinion of our fellows. Fear of unpopularity, a desire to be one with the rest, has led many a prodigal into the far coun try. The history of the sinning world In a nutshell is simply doing as others do, going the way the crowd goes. Obviously, those who follow others come to have no autonomy of their own. They lose the power of independent judgment, the strength and disposition for personal initia tive and finally the sense of personal obligation. That Is the kind of atmosphere in which many of us are living to day eager, restless to be In the cur rent of things, where Is the ceaseless fret and foam of the sea, the man's identity Is lost and his personality merged In the great composite. Moses, speaking to ancient Israel, ut. tered a warning and command which was never more pote'nt than to-day: "Thou Bhalt not follow a multitude to do evil." Resistance Is power. Life has been defined as the sum total of the forces that resist death. Resistance is life. In the centripetal force which keeps the planet from flying off Into space there operates the law of resistance, whose might is tha secret of creation. In the moral and spiritual world the secret of life is the might of one's resistance. j When one's sense of personal re- Bponsiniiuy ana ouugauou is lost his resistance is gone, and when bis resisting power Is gone the man is gone. Follow not the crowd, but the challenge of thine own soul. Ba a whole man to the whole life and veri tably thy feet shall be established, thou having done all to stand. J. Lewis Hartsock, In the New York Herald. High Testimony. ArchblBhop Ireland, in an address In Chicago some years ago, said: "Three-fourths of the crime, three- fourths of the Inmates of poorhouses and asylums, three-fourths of those who are recipients in any way of pub lic or private charity have been re duced to poverty through their own intemperance or through the Intem perance of their natural protector." Temperance Xotes. The alcoholic has lowered vitality, greater metabolic derangements and feebler power of repair. Comparison of the mortality of diseases both med ical and surgical bring out this fact very clearly. Every man In the United States should be an advocate of temperance. The man in the United States who lets whisky and all ardent spirits alone is a fortunate man. He is the man that succeeds, he is tha man to ba trusted, be Is tha man that is wanted. Blows on the head and concussions are followed by a greater variety and more serious symptoms out of all proportion to the injuries received In the alcoholic. The churches have never been so deeply moved on the drink question as now. They have learned beyond any possible dispute that the drink has been the slaveholder of the masses of the people. The Governor of Oklahoma recent, ly said: "It will coat to enforce pro hibition Sve per cent, of what It will cost to punish crimes, keep orphans, paupers and criminals that the whisky traffic- cr sates." The Loftiest Service. We are always wanting wings to fly with In God's service, and we have anly hands and feet. The Lord Jesus Christ comes into the world to teach us, by those thirty years of Ufa as the carnenter, that the loftiest service of God can be lived out In the lowliest conditions that to do one's work honestly and thoroughly and cheer fully Is as much the service of God as the life of the angels before His throne. Rev. Mark Gray Pearse. Theology nnd Christ. A knowledge of theology does not bring a knowledge of Christ. EPWQRTH LEAGUE LESSONS SUNDAY, APRIL 17 The rlstlan'a Sacrifice Service Ron!. 12: 1, 2; Hos. 6: e. "I beseech you." This Is invitation, request and entreaty plus personality, A great Issue Is at stake. Hence the adjuration. "By tho mercies of God." As if Paul's personal Interest and con cern were not enough, appeal Is made to God's concern as shown in his mer ciee, "Present your bodies." The phy sical body Is the organ of personal ex pression. God being without body ot parts, and Jesus being enthroned in the heavens, It must follow that our Bodies as humans are the only organs or Instruments through which God may express himself In human activity. It Is plain that if God's Intention and con cern are to be seen in that part of do mestic, social, Industrial or profession al life where you or I hold sway, and In all of that life, he must have the constant use of our bodies. "But," My body Is mine, I control it personally or by giving It over tempor arily to other control; that Is, I say what shall be done with It. Hence Paul's entreaty to' present It to God. A "a living sacrifice" a living sur render for use. The body of an ani mal is used by consuming it, as food, or commodity, or offering. A human body can be used only among men in service, in normal activity. God's service means simply the normal de velopment and use of every physical function. "Not fashioned to this age." Fash ions are not usually normal, nor wholesome, nor beautiful, nor con stant. See all the advertisements of I clothes, tools, medicines, sports and icucnuuiia uuu euucuuuuui meiuuus, For the variations look up the back numbers, and the old family photo graphs. Use your sense of humor meanwhile to get perspective. Humor Is a great factor In salvation as well as service. Madame Frenchy's beau tlflers and Dr. Gull-Deceiver's favorite remedies and patent appliances are poor makeshifts for God's children. "Be transformed." That's better. Formed over or formed anew; formed from within. God Is the supreme Lov er of beautiful human forms and faces. He paints faces by illumina tion. He builds forms with sunshine, pure food, wholesome activities, and natural rest, with peace of soul and conscience. He wants his children (domed, but he adorns with spirit "That ye may prove the will of God, even the thlni; that Is good and accept able and perfect;" that Is, prove by exemplifying, by living It out. flOOD PROFITS IN TRAPPING- MlTSKRATiS. Traffle In Fur and Mast an r portant Industry en East,, . Shore of Maryland. Trapping the little musk-rat ,. selling his fur and meat form a thr ing Industry on the eastern shore Maryland. The trappers will rew about 1500,000 this year for th. eaten or tne rurry denizens of t;, swamps, says tne fur Nows. In Dorchester County alone fivv.uuu ior tnis season's pelts say nothing of what they recei from the sale of the meat, this a!J more than paying tho rentaj of u, marshes, the cost of the traps and th expense or looking after them. ti. prices offered by buyers this seasc ranged from thirty to seventy-ji cents a hide, the hide from the klttc or young rat, which had been cons ered almost worthless, bringing u former price. The big black rat commanded tb top of the market always, the blar fur being considered the finest as as the most durable. The fur of tt. brown rat is less valiiablo became c: the color and coarseness of tho hji: It generally brings from fifteen k twenty-five cents less than tho fur c the black rat. There are few sections of the Un:. ted States where the meat of tit muskrat Is used as food as It Is o the eastern Bhore of Maryland, i sections ot the country the little ro dent is looked upon with disdain b those who claim to know a good thin? when they see It, but when they talk of it as being an unclean animal and unfit for the table, it shows how little they know of this, the clemest of i: animals that live. The great majority of people are prejudiced against tho muskrat be cause it bear the name of rat. B; any other name it would be eagerl sought after by epicures. The root! and herbs of the marshes, on which alone it subsists, are thoroughly scrubbed by the little animal before it will allow them to come on Its "uu ble." APRIL SEVENTEENTH Active Service. No life is rich which is not mani festing itself in active service. Lite In every sphere will Involve the priv ilege and opportunity of toll. . Social Position. What satisfaction Is it to have so cial position and political preferment It our conscience is dulled? ' Spirit of Brotherhood. The spirit ot brotherhood Is the un derlying motive tor philanthropists and humanities. Knud Rasmussen, the explorer, will tall In June for Greenland on an ex pedition which will consume four years. The ethnographic study ot the Eskimos is the purpose of this expe dition. One year will be spent at Cape York and a year each at Hud. son's and the Crown Bays. After tbe navigation ot Baffin's Bay Rasmussen expects to circumnavigate Alaska and to sail to the Aloutian Islands and re turn via San Francisco. Sclenting American. Topic Good Cheer In Dark Days. Acts 27 : 20-36. Consoling love. Isa. CI: 1-7. God watches you. Ex. 3: 7 9. Comfort ye. Isa. 40: 1-11. To troubled hearts. John 14: 1-13. The tempest-tossed. Isa. 54. 7-17. Victors today. Rev. 7: 9-17. You would not let one of your pos sessions be harmed If you could help it, and God can help it. Are you one of His posesslons? (v. 23.) Whoever believes God must be of good cheer. ''Let not your heart be troubled ye believe in God" (v. 25). Give thanks not only for what you have of good, but also, as If you al ready had It, for what you are going to have (v. 35). Good cheer is contagious; no man can be cheerful to himself (v. 36). Suggestions. Darkness Is from within, not from without. The cheerful heart is the true sun of life; but it Bhines only as it reflects the Sun of Righteousness. If you are gloomy, at any rate hide it. A brave pretence of cheer soon makes cheer. You will cheer up yourself best by cheering up some one else. "Be of good cheer" with both Paul and Christ It is In the imperative. There is a duty of Joy as well as a joy of duty. Illustrations. Mark Tapley was never so happy as when trouble came, because then it was "some credit to be Jolly."- One way to put out the sun the only way is to shut your eyes. You can always make a dark day in your life by refusing to see your blessings. A mirror may reflect the eun for years and be no brighter itself; but no heart can reflect the Sun of Right eousness without becoming brighter permanently. Once the people of the United States bad the fad of filling their win dows with blue glass. As to spirit windows we are still in that habit. Mysteries of the Dining Car. The kitchen of a dining car is most exaggerated example of tbe economy of space. - Every inch li used. Water tanksare suspended from the celling. One wall is lined with the big range and heating ovens, re ceptacles for pans, pots and otbet utensils, and a row of cupboards up under the ceiling. At one end. be tween the kitchen and the dining car proper, Is a little pantry, which serves as a sort of vestibyle. That is where the waiters place their orders and receive dishes. . Every separate article of food and equipment has its place. Every cor ner and nook in the car has a particu lar function. The stiver is In one place, the milk and cheese in another the meat in another, and so on through the list. Everything perish- able is kept in a refrigerator. While the car la "in action" the conductor from his position between dining room and kitchen, keeps bit eyes upon the ten tables, and endeav ors to see that none of the diners it neglected. For all the supplies on the car he is held to strict account. On his "trip sheet," as it is called, is put a list of everything taken on the car when It starts out. A record of all articles sold is en tered upon tbe sheet, and when the car comes ''home" again all that hat not been sold must be on band. Tbe equipment of a dining car con forms to standards just as do loco motives, trucks, rails and ties. Disliei I are made according to established patterns, each piece of china having the company's monogram upon it. Tbe same Is true of the linen, silver, menu holders everything. Thus a loss can be easily traced. Tho wait ers are allowed $20 a month for breakage. All. damage in excess ot that, though, they have to pay for, J and. the-cost is divided among them equauy. woman's Home Companion. WISE WORDS. !- It Is a microbe that causes the suf fragettes, and that microbe Is man. It Is as bard to make a freakish person understand a normal position as it is to make a colt eat codfish. Will power Is strong In some peo ple, and won't power Is Just as re markable In others. To a woman In love little things seem big, and to a man In lova big things seem little. ' It Is truly remarkable how pretty moat any woman is when she isn't ugly. A good guess Is a sure winner If there is none better and guessing goes. The only way we can get back at other people Is by talking about them. That's wby we do It. The man who never goes wrong, doesn't go very far ner sbow very great consequences arising from bis going. , Tbe ordinary successful man doesn't owe so much to bis friends at be does to tbe easy marks that glad dened his path. When we meet a long time friend we sometime feel like commiserating him tor bis lost youth and would do so only be annoys us by being sur prised at tbe marks ot time we are carrying. , if we could arrange to have rich relations-ln-law call about tha time that the bill collector gets te our door perhaps the word play but up by that individual might move them to his satisfaction and our gain. From "Pert Paragraphs," la the Trenton American. ' Rose Maysival. Defying the warnings of doctors, Rose Maysival worked tor eight yean In sweatshops to support her widowed mother and two younger sisters, and yesterday died a victim ot consump tion. She had been told repeatedly to go into the country, but she will ingly sacrificed ber health to buy food and shelter for the family. When she began work in tbe shops where ready made clothing is manufactured she was only thirteen years old. When she died she was twenty-one. No fine phrases can gild this story- Out of the soil ot tbe common life it springs, the eternal mystery ot sell less love. If we could see Into the heart ot that mystery we could meas ure tbe Infinite, and the mighty put sle ot the universe, which the wisest ot men. have questioned since human thought began, would He before us a plain as a child's toy. - Pain, weariness, tbe long days creeping to their end, their inevitable dark end these this simple girl plied high on the altar of her devotion. And upon this sacrifice she laid even tbe last full measure, the priceless gift ot conscious existence. Now there 1 a nameless mound over ber and a ' lence where she was. Chicago Tribune. The Most Probable. Harrington Putnam, Judge CsV nor's successor on the New York bench. Is noted for Tils logical mind Once at a dinner at Red Lodge, bit country bouse near DennlngMr. Pu'" nam gave an admirable instance this mental quality. The convene-: tion bad turned to non-marrying wid ows, and Mr. Putnam disposed of tbe question thus; "When a beautiful widow says n will not marry again on any condi tion. It may be, first, ber husband a ao good that she could never care tot another man again; or, it may be, J ocd, that her experience ot marrlfdl life wae such as to make her dealr no more ot It; or It may be, thlrdj that she Is telling a falsehood."- Minneapolis Journal.