The Bridge Party By JANE LUDLUM LEE (Cufyiivlit, I'jn, ly AitucUtJ Liiaitry Proit.) . OME along, Emily, we prom ised to go over early and help Kate fix the tablet for the club meeting this after noon, and you know bow be always leaves every thing for the last minute. "I'll te down In a Jiffy, Flora, but uch luck as I am having. One Bide tif my hair Is as straight as a poker niid the other I have burned off with Che curling Irons. This talk about ltg being a woman's duty to make borself M beautiful as possible don't go In the summer time." Kmlly appeared In a few minutes, adding the finishing touches to her tulk't. "You see this skirt? Well, It don't meet by four Inches. I have been taking that obesity cure for the past month and I'll wager I've gained a round a day that's why I have tied tlilx pink ribbon around my 35-Inch-malHtllne. Hut what do I care for that crowd? Come, let's hurry along." They hurried down the duply coun fry road until they reachod the out Skirts of the vlllago and soon caino to h Hi I In cottage with rose bushes ram lillng over every shutter on the lower poor. They turned Into the path that od to the house, but no sign of life Hvaa seen or heard. It was one of Ibose still, sultry afternoons In Au giiut when even the singing of the Robins seems to Jar on the quiet of the atmosphere. "Looks more like a funeral to me Ihan a party," remarked Kmlly. "Where do you suppose Kate Is?" They rang the bell, rang It again, and still no answer. Tbey looked at act) other and then rang again a lulrd time. "I'll go round to the back door," paid Flora; "they roust all be In the kitchen." And then In a few moments Flora's (voice could be beard calling. "Emily Emily, come on around fcere she Is." "Ob, girls," exclaimed Kate, "I'm so glad you came. I'm fussed to death, pother's gone to the missionary pneetlng, and the hired man cut bis "Kate. I Have Finished the Punch, but I Can't Find Any Glasses." mo off last night and has not been klil to do a single chore for me. Here, Flora, you take this duster and In up the parlor, and Emily, turn up hat dross of yours and get busy squeezing lemons for the punch. "Kate Price, you are the worst girl I "vr knew. Don't you know the K'rls will bo here In a few minutes nnd you have not a thing ready?" With this, off came the pink sash rib bon. "What have you been doing all morning?" With this she loosened her collar. "Just supposing we hadn't come around." Up went the skirt and big pin held It well above all dan ger. "Oh. Kmlly. you wouldn't be so tuenn. Mko a good girl, go ahead and do what you can, and I'll run upstairs snd dross. I'll be done In time to Hiako the sandwiches." Emily proceeded to squeeze one lenion with her hands while she rolled notour with her foot, while Flora lusted like a machine. For a few mo moms no sound was heard in the bona.!. Presently Emily appeared In tB" hall and called up to Kate: "Kate, have finished the punch, but I cannot find any glasses. Tell me whore they are and 1 11 set thorn on 'he table." "Mercy mo whatever shall I do?" responded Kate from upstairs. "I loaned thorn all last night for the min ister's donation party and they have n"t sent them back. Please go ask Samuel If his toe Is not well enough f(r hltn to step over and get thorn." "I'll do no'.hlng of the kind, Kate P,lce," said Emily as she flounced l'ck to the kitchen. "Kate- Kate." walled Flora. "I've dusted the room and fixed the tables, tut I can't find the cards where are they?" "brother Tom was going to get towe on the two o'clock train and '"Ing some new ones, but he hasn't ome yet oh dear, whRt shall I do?" "Where are the old ones?" Buggest i Flora. "Why, I brought one of Rover's lit tle pups In the house last night and hlle I was not looking It chewed the hole pack up in tiny bits." Before Flora bad time to express "r inward feelings, the front door Colors Qlve Uo Their Secrets. The famous blue color given to the Porcelain manufactured at Sevres has 'ong been belleved"tobe the result of secret process, and many legends t about It. It has, however, been gently ahown that It Is a mistake suppose that Sevres blue cannot be Produced elsewhere. As a matter of CJ. it is produced In many French Werles, where sufficient care Is ta- en and where pure oxld of cobalt la M. Formerly It was difficult to crwurs this article without Impurt- bell rang. Each girl waited for tbo other to make the move, but no one cured to take the initiative. Flora and Emily met In the ball and gasped to bear Kate't voice calling out of the up per window: "Please ring again. I don't think the girls beard you." Flora dropped hor apron and start ed for the door. She turned the catchi she pulled, she put ber knee agalust It and pulled some more, "Oh, Emily, do come help me. We simply must let them In." So together they pulled, then the, girls on the outside began to help by putting their combined weight iigalnsl It and pushing. All to no avail. "Kate Price, oome down here thli) minute tnd let the girls In we can'1 budge this door." Kate appeared as fresh as you, please In a dainty white dress, and at she came down the stairs her fac plainly showed a whole expression ol contentment. "Ob, we had that door painted yes terday and I suppose It bus all stuck fast." Iler pretty brown head api peared at the front window as she called, "You will have to come In the back way, girls, the door Is stuck." Tbey all turned and came around to the back door, where Kate let them In with the air of a well trained hostess. "Just look at my dress, all . green paint I won't have a thing to wear to the bop." "Dear me this orgaudl 1b ruined It won't wash," were Just a few of the greetings she received. Kute rose supreme, however, to all such trifles, and she had soon man agod to pacify all of the girls, and tbey were seated around the tablos, when the bell rang again. Out of tha window went Kate's bead, and the minister's voice was beard to say: "My dear Miss Price, I've run over with the glasses that you sent last night, and Mrs. Perkins asks you please to accept these few goodies that were left over from the dona tion." A large, substantial-looking basket was handed In the window. "Oh, Mr. Perkins, do come In and meet the girls, and have some lemon ado. Will you climb In the window or come around the back way?" "I'm coming In, Miss Price, JuBt long enough to preach a sormon to one of your party. I met Tom down the road sitting on a rail fence In a most de jected frame of mind, and, by the way, here Is a package be gave me to de liver. Now a rail fence on a hot af ternoon Is no place for a young man to be sitting with a broken heart, and I propose to send Miss Emily down to tell him so." ' lie can sit there till the fence gives way," snapped Miss Emily. "I'm not going." "Oh yes you are. Miss Emily. Tom told me all about It, and It's quite your own fault. Sam did cut his toe. You are wholly to blame, so go tell ihim so before he succumbs to a sun stroke." It took the combined pleadings of Mr. Perkins and the club members, but after much persuasion, and even threats, Emily started for the rail fence that ran around the orchard. She diplomatically approached from the rear. There Tom sat, hunched up like a blackbird In the rain. "Tom!" called a rather weak voice. "Emily, darling!" and with a bound be was at her side. "I'm sorry I didn't let you In last night, Tom, but you see I thought you stopped In to see Lucy Wright and that made you late." "No, dear, I told the truth. Sam did cut his toe off with the wood cut ter, and I had to go for the doctor." "I know It now," admitted Emily. "Mr. Perkins told me, and then, be sides, I've seen Sam." Then with a shy little glance she stole up to Tom and said: 'I know where Mr. Perkins Is now, Tom." 'Emily, can It be? Will you really be mine today?" "Yes, Tom, today, If Mr. Perkins thinks I've atoned sufficiently for my sin." Tom took her In bis arms for Just a moment, and then together they start ed for the house. They found Mr. Per kins prying open the front door in order that the club members might at least make a proper exit, and the two toiu everybody of their plans. There wns a quiet little wedding In town that uight, and the club attend ed In a body. Sam recovered suffi ciently to drive the bride and groom to the station, aud to this day the members of the Ilrldge club have al ways contended that Emily won the prize at their last meeting. While They Detect. "Every criminal 1b sure to leave a number of clews behind him." "Yes," replied the old police officer. "I suspect that Bonie of thorn leave as many as possible so as to keen the detectives theorizing while they catch a steamboat." Would Be Sensible. "Yonder Is an early robin. See hi red breast?" "Yes; and It gave me quite a start at first. I thought the Intelligent bird was wearing a chest protector." Safe and Sure. "What Is the best way to Induce chest expansion?" 'Medals." ties, which Injured the color; but chemical science has overcome all th difficulties. The same Is true of th Chinese green known as celadon. I, was Invented In Chlnak but It can b perfectly reproduced elsewhere. Har per's Weekly. Could Use t. "Here 1$ an advertisement whlcl offers a reuipe for removing superflu oua hair without pain." "Send for It. I'll give It to my bat ber." HOME NURSING THE HOME NURSE. "What Is everybody's business Is no Body's business." This . Is cspeclnlly true In cases of sickness In the homes where the nursing, or rare of the pa :lent, devolves upon tho mombers of :ho family. In such cases, where sev eral try to carry out the physician's orders, It often huppens that some or lers are neglected, each member of :he family believing that these things 4ad been attended to by somo other person. Whenever thoto Is Illness In a home ind It does not seem advisable, for rarlous rensons, to employ a trained aurse, one person should e selected to tnko charge of the patient, and this person should receive nil orders Irom the physician and bo responsible for ;bolr fulfilment. The chief requirements for ono who is to take the part of the nurse In a Dome are neatness, quietness nnd an bllity to carry out the physician's jrders exactly. In her personal appearance, a nurse must be scrupulously clean und nent. Hor hair should be tastefully dressed nd free from ornaments. Her hands should be clean and well cared for. A roughened hand Is very annoying to the pntlcnt. The nnlls should receive especial attention nnd should be filed rather short. A nurse should not wear any rings for they are liable to catch on the clothing or the patient's hair and be annoying. The nurse's dress ihould be of somo washable, cotton material, soft enough not to rustlo when she walks. White aprons glvo a neat and tidy appearance. Her shoes should not bo too heavy, permitting her to step noiselessly about the room. During the twenty-four hours some provisions should be made for sufll :lent sleep nnd outdoor exercise for :he nu.-se. She seeds seven or eight aours' sleep and oae or two hours for exercise, besides time In which to Iress, attend to her tollot require ments and eat her meals without hur rying. A nurse who does not have suf ficient time for sleep and rest becomes not only physically tired, but mentally 10 exhausted that she Is Incapable of (ivlng proper rare to the patient or of abservlng symptoms. For the Bake of :he patient, bo sure that the nurse Is jot overworked. She can be relieved sf her duties by some other person. At such times as sho Is away from her patient, written orders for the substi tute should be left and she should make sure that the.one left In charge jnderstamls the directions. The nurse always should speak In a low, well-modulated voice that can be understood by tho patient without any effort. She should never speak In whispers or a low tone to a third per son so the patient can hear the voices but cannot understand what Is being laid. A slek person Is very sensitive Pretty Nightdresses The stuge too, In a modified form, Is to bo seen on the finer grade of slippers. Toques of bracade, with puffed crowns of plain satin, are good for the early spring days. They are trim med wl.h small aigrettes at one side . Peanut straw L a name given to a new coarse mesh straw which has the effect of woven grass. There are all sorts of smart little hats In It. Dresden gold and silver ribbon edged with a narrow line of plain col ored satin make a most attractive .trimming for the frock veiled with chiffon. Many blouses are showing designs In beads or In a beaded effect, secured by French knots. These latest are very new and are worked In silk or heavy cotton and In contrasting colors. Straw Jack Tar hats are already In the shops for boys, intended probably for the little tourists going south. Hy EDITH D. LOWRY tfacticlor of Science, Graduate Nuraa, I'hyiiciau and Suiiaon. Formerly Superintendent of Jeffwrvin Park and South Chicago lioapttala and Tialnlnc bcltoolt for Niirat-ft. Anthur of "Conbdencai A book for Yuuui Cilia." and whispering Is annoying. The na ture of the Illness should not be dis cussed nnd nothing but tbo kindest things said before the patient. A per son who Is very 111 Is lncapablo of carrying on, or even listening to, a sustained conversation. In such a caso, there should be as little con versation as possible In the room. As the patient becomes convalescent, ho requires to bo entertained. A nurs who ran read or tell light, happy stories in an entertaining manner Invaluable at such times. Gossip ol tales of sadness or unklndness should not be retailed to any patient. A pa (lent who Is kept fn an optimistic frame of mind stands a better chimes of recovery than ono who Is melan choly. Tho patient should bo made tc feel that the nurse Is Interested In till recovery and that everything Is being done to hasten It. When the physician makes bis dallj visit, it Is considered a mnrk of ro spect for the nurse to arise when lu enters the room and remain standlm unlcbs asked to bo seated; sho should hand blm her written report (whlct will bo explained later), answer anj questions ho may ask and then qulotlj leave tho room, and wait outside untl ho leaves tho sickroom. This glvet the patient an opportunity to talk prl vately with the physician about any thing he wishes. Often a patient doei not talk freely with tho physician not tell blm essential things, becauso d an Inability to confide In blm in tlx presence of a third party even If tha' person Is an Intimate relutlve. Then too, the nurso Is thus given an oppor tunlty of speaking with tbo doc tot about anything she wishes to knov and of reporting to him anything sin' does not deem It wise to say be fori the patient. (Copyright, by W. Q. Chapman.) RENOVATOR FOR OLD OA, Nothing Has Been Discovered Bette Than Mixture Our Grand mothers Used. Every lxdy nowadays knows that t secure a bright polish on an old oa? chest or table there Is nothing t equal "elbow grease." In our grandmothers' days, howevet It was elbow grease plus one of thel wonderful and efficacious homomad mixtures. Half a pint each of mal vinegar atnl raw linseed oil wor mixed with a couple of drams of bul ter of antimony. This formed a polls", which, after a good shaking, could b rubbed on the old wood without fea of spoiling the color, while It brough about a bright ami glistening result far less smeury than the warm boo which was the old fashioned farnihous. renovator for old ouk. Sometimes the brims are different In color from the square crowns. The New Parasols. A noticeable feature In some of the new parasols Is the fancy form in which the ferrule end of tho stick Is cut. This end Is somewhat prolonged aud Is shaped like an elongated bulb at tho base. It tapers away for about two Inches and ends with a tiny ball at the Up. Materials for Spring. Serges aud cashmeres In plain col ors, fancy mixtures, checks, stripes and plaids, ulso worsteds, are now be Ing featured for rprlng wear. These are shown made up lu tailor effects, Peter Thomsons, Russian, bretelle anil Juniper styles for young girls. New .Flowers. One of the prettiest of artlllelu' (lowers w hich the summer stylos have produced Is tho big cleiuutls. This If shaped true to nature and comes la ail colors, although the natural pur uie und white are perhaps the pret Host. God Uttered His Voice; the Earth Melted By PASTOR RUSSELL of Brooklyn Tabernacle 6 TEXT We will not foar thouirh tht diountulnn be carried Into the ryldat oi iiiw ara. rinim it:. , ri , . . i uuvo cnosen tor my text a sea .topic, a symbolical prophecy which, I believe, Is rapidly nearing fulfillment. All lllblo students recognize the fact that muny of the Psalms are Mes slnnlo; that Is to say, they apply to 'the time of the Inauguration of Mes siah's Millennial Kingdom. Some ol ithem detail the peace and Joy and blessings which will then prevail ,nmong men, when the great leveling processes of that time will raise al ,'the worthy poor and degraded nnd ,will bumble all the proud, establish. lng society under such new conditions that the new order of things is sym bollcally styled In the scriptures "a new heavens and a new earth, where in dwelleth righteousness" (II. Peter Hi, 13). Others of the Psalms descrlbo In highly figurative terms tho work of the Millennial Age. For Instance, we read : "Thereforo will not we fear, though tho earth bo removed, and though the mountains be carried Into the midst of the sea." Fear la the great tor ruent of the majority of our race. It Is the lash which the adversary fre quontly uses to drive away from Ood those who need his sympathy and love and succor. To such the Lord speaks tendorly saying, "Come unto 'me, all yo that labor and are heavy 'laden, and I will give you rest." And 'again, God declares his name to be Love and Bays, 'Their fear toward me Is taught by the precepts of men" not by his word (Isaiah xxlx, 13). He would buve us trust him as a great, loving, generous fathor, saying, "Like as a father pitleth his children, so the Lord compasslonoth those who rever ence him" (Psalm clll, 13). As love, more love, perfect love, comes Into our hearts It more and more casts out the fear which the adversary would Inculcate and which has burned Into men's minds nnd consciences the "doc trines of devils," to which the apostle refers (I Timothy If, 1). The fact that tho scriptures prophet ically describe the overwhelming of the social order and the great govern ments of the earth must not be un derstood to signify that the Hlble counsels revolution or anarchy. On the contrary, all of God's people throughout the scriptures are coun seled to live peaceably with all men. so far as possible. They are coun seled not to use carnal weapons, not to take to the sword for the settle ment of disputes, but rather to suf fer Injury. They are counseled that Ood Is the great Over-Lord, and that although be Is not now ruling direct ly amongst men he Is fully the mas ter of the bltuutiou In that he could at nny time overthrow all opponents. He does not acknowledge that his will Is now done In tbo earth, but tells us that It will be done by and by and encourages us to pray and to hope and to wait for it. He tells us that Satan U now tbo "Prince of this world" by virtue of the fact that he deceives the minds and hearts of the majority. Ood would have his people understand something of his great program, but be would keep this hidden from all others; hence the Impossibility of ex plaining Kirltual things to a carnal mind (I Corinthians il, 14). "Noue of the wicked shall understand." (Daniel ill. 10). Tho great creator has contented himself w ith such a supervision of hu man affairs as leaves much respon sibility In human hands. He merely Interferes to raise up or to cast down on occasions when the Interest of bis cause and program may demand. For Instance, the ense of the Pharaoh, raised to the throne of Egypt, In Moses' day. Ood there raised to the throne a man of great determination, and hindered from reaching the throne other men not so favorable to the car rying out of the divine purposes. Thus, without. Interfering with the free moral agency of the king, Ood used the wrath of man to praise him and the remainder be restrained. Sim ilarly, (lod previously raised Joseph to the governorship of Egypt for his own purposes. We are not of those who would harass the minds of our fellows with fear. Hat her we w ould point them to the fact that heblnd this cloud of trouble there Is a glorious silver lin ing of millennial Joy and blessing for nil the families of (h earth. Itathar we would encourage all who have the bearing ear to zeal and faithfulness In their consecration, that they may "make their calling and their election ure" to a share In the kingdom glo ries and "escape those things coming upon the eurth" (Luke xxl. 36). In a word, tho gospel of Christ Is not a message of damnation nnd fear and torture, but, as the angels declared. "Good things of great Joy w hich shall be unto all people" (Luke 11. 10). Peglnnlng with the sixth verse the Prophet gives a brief synoptical pic ture of the time of trouble and Its consummation and the Inauguration of universal peace. "The heathen (Gentile peoples) raged!" These words describe the tumult which will prevail amongst humanity In the great time of trouble before the climax Is reached. "Raging." augry voices arise from public meetings, and In the mors private meetings of the lodjes of labor nnd cnpltal, and through t:.e coliiMins of the press to the extent permitted. In Germany the "raging" press for some time has been muzzled Prefer loss before unjust gain; for that brings grief hut once, this for ever. Chilon. To euffer and be Btrong Is not easy, but courage grows with us. Edltb Vernon. We have only to refuse to yield, and temptation ha no power to harm us Miller. Provide for the worst; the best wll! take care of lUelf. S. Armstrong Nel on. EMPEROR WILLIAM ON DRINK Temperance Speech Maoe by th Kaiser to Naval Students at Mur wlk Makes Prediction. '"The nation which takes the small est quantity of nleohol will win the battles of the future." This prediction, made, by Emperor AVIllliim to the Gorman naval cadets In Murwik a few days ngo, has given tho temperance, advocates a new text. In the course of his address tho kaiser said: "One more piece of advice I will give you on a question the Importance of which for my people Hog very close to my heart. It Is the question of al cohol and drinking. I know quite well that pleasure In drinking Is an old In heritance of the Germanic peoples. Nevertheless, we must by self-discipline freo ourselves In every respect from this evil. "I can assure you that In my twenty two years of government It has been my experience that a great number of the crimes which were laid before me for decision were to be nine-tenths ascribed to the consequences of al cohol. In former days It was reckoned anion;; young men particularly smart to be ablo to drink and curry a largo quantity. "Those were obsoleto views which were all very well for the Thirty Years' War, but don't do today. As you will notlco yourselves In the courso of your term on board, service In my fleet has attained a degree of Intensity which can hardly be exceed ed. It Is your task to go through those prodigious efforts In time of peace without being used up, In order that you may be fresh In case of seri ous events. The next war and the next battle will demand sound nerves on your part. They will be decided by nerves. Hut these are undermined and endangered from youth upwards by Indulgence In alcohol. "It Is one of the questions of the fu ture for our navy and for our nation. It you educate the people to do with out alcohol I shall have healthy and sensible subjects. It is a great ques tion of the future, for by the time-expired men the idea will ba carried Into the country. If you promote these principles my people will be morally elevated. That Is a work In which I should like to ask you to take a share." DRINKS AND SMOKES COSTLY Report of International Revenue Bu reau Show Vastly Increased Re ceipts for Twelve Months. The United States has just passed a banner year for drinks and smokes. Here Is the nation's record for the twelve months ended on June 20 aB It shows In the figures of the internal revenue bureau. Distilled spirits, 16.1,000,000 gallons 30,000,000 gallons more than the year before. Fermented liquors, fi9.485.117 bar rels an Increase of 3.000,000. Cigars, 7,600,000,000 160.000,000 more than 1909. Cigarettes, 6,830,000,000 an In crease of a solid 1,000,000,000. Plug, fine cut, cube cut, granulated or sllcod smoking or Chewing tobacco or snuff, 402,000,000 pounds 4,000,000 pounds more than the year bofore. The Internal revenue receipts on all these things and certain other things, such as playing cards and mixed flour amounted to more than (289,000,000 and Commissioner Cabell's organize Hon collected It all at a cost of about 15,000,000. It cost a cent and a little more than seven mills to collect each dollar. Whon the present year Is ended, next June 30, Commissioner Cabell 6s tlmates his men will have collected at least $308,000,000 at practically tbo same cost. Only three other years have sur passed the year 1910 as an Internal revenue producer slnco the bureau was established In 1863. In 1866 while Civil war taxes were still heavy, re celpts mounted up to $:!10,000,000 and following the Spanish war In 1900 and 1901 they were $295,000,000 and $396, 000.000, respectively. Hut for times of peace and normal prosperity, 1910 heads the roll, with the prospect of being eclipsed by 1911. The War en Alcohol. The celebrated Italian writer and anti aloohollst. Dr. Fraucesco Ferrari, writing In ono of the great Journals of his country, says: "To fight a prejudice of any sort Is always to give good battle, but to fight a belief (e.g. the superstition as to the value of wine) In the name of which humanity 1h being polBoned by the wholesale, degenerated and given over to crime, Is a work w hlch should ho tnken up by everyone with social spirit and love for his fellows. For this reason we believe that no war should strr such noble energies nnd gather about our flag so many serious men as that on alcohol." Name for Her Lamp. Recently a Rradford man gave his wife a mammoth parlor lamp for a birthday present. Sho gave It his name, and when ho asked why, she replied: "Well, you know, dear. It Is handsome to look at, requires a good deal of attention, Is sometimes un steady on its legs, Is liable to explode when half full, flares up occasionally, Is always out at bedtime, and Is bound to smoke." Aostalner Was Wise. Two men had a sharp discussion. One was an abstainer; the other was not. Said the latter: "Depend upon It, there Is nothing like beer. Why, when I get home at night, and have drunk a quart or two, I feel as If I could knock a house down." "Ah," replied the other quietly, "but since I have been a teototaler, I have put two bouses up, and that suits me bet ter." GOD'S PITY FOR THE HEATHEN SuiJir School Uuoa for April 30, 1911 Specially Arranged tor Thit Papor I.KSBON TKXT-Jonah 1.1 -4.il. Mem ory Vernfl 11. COMMON TEXT "Oo ye therefore, and loarli oil nuttona." Matt. 2S :19. TIMI2 Jernhniitii n. kltiK nf Israel, li whnne tim j,,nni prophesied, p-lifne (Btw-hor) 1! C. (IIjmiIiiks) 11. C M-TtSl. Aiims and ilnaeu were rontein-porni-y prophets. Ii,A('K lintli-hepher. north of Naztv rih In (Jnlll.w, tlm Mediterranean Sen, Ji-I'pa, an.l Nineveh. KINOS -JerohoHiri H Httalned mizn rulnty ever nil the peoples from the Me.ll, terrain-mi to the Kiiphrntea. "The writer nf the hook cf Joimh hn.i preaented nreii rntely tlm values of (he hlstorlenl alunw Ion. it win the unknown dhmtern In Ah eyrla, Just after lUiiimun-nlr.irl hud bro ken the power nf 1 ihih.-ini-iih, that ren dered the eucoissea of Jerohoain rsli bla." Jonah wns unquestionably n his-, torlcal personage. Mo lived In tho, reign of Jeroboam II., king of Israeli In whose time Amos's work was nc cnnipllsbed. According to 2 Kings 14:' 25, he prophesied the recovery from, Syria of the lost border possessions of Israel. Ho Is Raid to have belonged to (lath hophcr, a town of Zebulon, and his grave Is Mill shown in the vicinity of Nazareth. Galhhepher was about an hour's walk norlh of Nazareth. Jonah was therefore a prophet of (ialileo. Jpwi.h legend sold that ho was the son of the w idow of Sarepta, whom Klljah had restored to life; and also that ho was the youth, whom Klisha had sent to anoint Jehu, king of Israel, This little biography begins wlt(i tho announcement that Cod asked a man to do something for him. It Is significant that other lllble writers (N'ehemlah, Jeremiah, Zepbanliih. Hnggal, Mlcnh) begin tho story of their lives at tho same point. Our ac quaintance with Paul begins with bla summons to duty, nnd the apostles wero not known until Christ bade them follow hltn. Jonah's call was to go to Nineveh, the greatest nnd wick edest city In thn world, and threaten It with doom from Jehovuh. How did Jonah answer his mission ary call? Hy running away. He fled from the presence of tho Iord, as If Ood were, In his mind, only a local divinity, ruling over Israel, hut unahlo to see the fugitive if he fled far enough beyond his territory. Jonah should have asked himself, "If tho fiod of Israel sees what Is going on at distant Nineveh, nnd Is concerned about It, la It to be supposed that his unfaithful servant will escape his notice, like some defaulting apprentice lad, who hopes to eludo his master's notice by running away to sea?" Jonah Jumps on bonrd a vessel bound for the most remote place known to the amient world, Tarsus, that Is Tnrtessus, on the Guadalquivir In Spain, (lod Interfered with Jonah's plans by sending one of those sudden, treacherous storms so frequent on the Mediterranean, a storm so tierce that even the skilful Phoenician sailors were compelled to throw out their cargo, and were filled with terror. Jonah calls upon tho sailors to throw him Into the sea to purchase their pence by his sacrifice. That call Is the finest thing In tho picture. It Is the real miracle. It marks the en largement of the man. Hut the honest fellows were loath to tnko him at bJs word, and tho poor rowers plied tns long sweeps more earnestly than ever. Even when obliged at last to throw Jonah overboard, they did It with a prayer to Jehovah. And at once tho sea was calm. How long wns Jonah In tho great fish? Threo days and tbreo nights, which, according to tho Jewish mode of reckoning, might, as In the caso of our Lord's stay In tbo tomb, have been only one em ire day nnd parts of the day preceding and tho day following. It Is striking to notice tho change In Jonah as soon as he ceased to run away from his duty and became obe dient to Ood's command. What was the command? The first repeated: "Go to Nineveh, that great city, and proclaim what I bade you proclaim, the doom of their sins." Then Ood prepared a gourd. This book Is full of this word prepared. We are told that the Lord prepared a groat fish, a gourd, a worm, and a sul try east wind. This gourd was most likely 'the bottle-gourd, often planted to grow over trellla-work. It Is thought by soma to havo been the palma chrlstl, or castor-oil plant, which still grows to a greut si.o in tho Jordan valley. It Is so called becauso It is a five-leaved plant, ono leaf of which outspread was thought to represent the hand of Christ. Next In the acted parable came a worm, destroying the gourd, and the sirocco, driving Its hot blast down upon the sweltering prophet. Then, by a wonderfully truo touch of human nature, Jonah transfers his pity for himself, as an Ill-used prophet, to the gourd which likewise had been hard ly treated. Tho divine question, "Shquld not I have pity?" remains unanswered. Above the stir and din and wickedness the divine compassion is still brooding. The argument Is very flno. On the gourd Jonah had spent neither labor nor strength. How much more should Ood, of whose goodness man's highest virtue la but the faintest shadow, pity and sparo the helpless aud Ignorant works of his own hands who now fill the streets of Nineveh with pathetlo appeals for forgiveness! God's pity extends to the little children, that can not discern between their right hand and their left hand, and even to tin cattle. There Is no finer close lu the whole realm of literature than this ending. God's love Is broader than the measures of mankind. Faith. Faith Is a fundamental fact In ex perience. It Is one of the most com prehensive and expressive words la the Inngunge. It la an extensive form of belief and grows up on passive confidence and expectant affection lnt a complete reliance and entire surren der of self. Hlshop Samuel Fallows, Episcopalian, Chicago. One doth not know how muoh a a 111 word may empoison liking -Shake scare.