THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURO. PA The Daughter of David Kerr SYNOPSIS. rjiorla Kerr, a niotherles Klrl, who has diii ni rnnnt of her life In school, arrives I her father's home In Delinont. David Kerr If lha political bom of the town, and l anxious to prevunt his dauber learning of hla real character. Kendall, rrr.-mntlnir the ChlruKo puckers. In n"-t-.it riilna with Judice illlTt. Kerr a rhluf nUwi-r for a vulunhle fritnclilnB. They fi-.-ir iiio g)!tlon nf Je Wrlaht, editor of i In reform iiipT. Kerr asks the a-it-inr'i of JuiIkh (lllhi-rt In Introducing ( ;i, rhi to Itclinnnt wulfty. unci promise" to help him put tliroiiuli me picm-in , finm-liise mid let lilin have nil the iiriirt. V,x rla meeM Joe Wright nt the tilllx rli. It apM-nra thoy lire on Intimate terms, linlnn ini't previously In a touring piriyi In Kurope. The illlfrl Invite Ulnria 10 lev with them pending the refurnishing of the Kerr home. Wright ImBTtiiH Ms IIkM agJilnut the proposed franchise In the col umns of hla pnpi-r. the Helmont Sewn. l.-.. l.r.n.rrli l.lu liAfwhnien. pxerlfl ev- r-ry Influence to hamper Wright In the iiihllrullnn of his papur. Uloria realize lm ! not lielng received hy the boat sn- rleiy and In uuhnppy. She take up set tlemtnt work. Kerr mid his lleut'-nants ilc.-lrte. to hiiv Kerr'a paper and nek the editor to ne-t them at Ollhert'e office. Calllnir nt fllllierfu office to millrlt a do nation Gloria moots Wright. He proposes and Is accepted while wiiltlng to ho called Into the conference. Wright refuse to sell his paper find d.-clnrea he will Oglit to H finish. The Helmont News nppears with a hitter attack on Kerr. Gloria rnlls Wright n coward and refuses to listen to any explanation from him. Urokan-henrt-ed, Gloria decides to plunge more deeply Into settlement work. She calls on a Hick clil of the underworld, named Kiln. She learns for tho first time that her father Is the head of a notorious gong of political traffers. Hounds of a conflict are heard In the room over Klla's. CHAPTER XIX. Continued. "I must know what's going on," Glo ria cried. She rushed across the room and wrenched open the door. At the foot of tho stairway just before her was tho body of a man, limp and motion less. "It's a man. He's hurt," she called back to the sick woman as she knelt to examine him. He had fallen so that she could not get a good look at him in the dark hallway, and she rolled him toward the door to get him on his back and see his face. As she gazed upon his countenance the fingers of death Itself seemed to seize her by the throat. Her heart gave one great leap and then stood still. On tho floor before her lay tho body of the man she loved. "Joe!" she screamed. "What are you doing here? Joe, Joe, speak to me!" But there wus no answer. His eyes wore closed, and the pallor of death seemed to be upon his face. With strength beyond what she had ever known herself to possess, Gloria seized the motionless form and dragged and rolled the man into Little Ella's room. Before she turned to him itRaiii she closed and bolted the door. Then she bent over him and begged him to spenk to her, to open his eycB and know that she was with him. "Joe, don't- you know me?" she pleaded. Thtn to Utile Klla, "He's dead, he's deed. Eie, ho dor.sli't move." "Yes, ho does," answered the other woman. She had been sitting up in bed, an excited spectator of all that Gloria Felt for Hi Heart. had transpired. "He's breathin'. Tear open his slii it and feci his heart bent." Wright was a pitiable object as he lay on the floor like one dead. His coat and waistcoat were gone, and his collar and cravat had been torn away. On his white shirt were bloody stains, Gloria felt his heart and was rewarded by Its feeble beat. She next dashed water from the pitcher over his face, tout without avail He showed no sign's of roturnlng consciousness. From a wound Just above his temple on the right side of his head the blood began to trickle down over hla face, making lis pallor all the more ghastly. She FOUND A USE FOR THE STOVE French Physician Probably Made Pres ent of "Pernicious Object" to Hit Mother-ln-Law. A French physician called on one of his patients a lady who was com plaining of headache and general prostration. "I'll tell you what's the matter with you. madam," he said, promptly; us that stove you have over tuere, BETTER THAN ANY LECTURE Colonel's Method of Rebuking Young Officers Probably More Effective Than Severity Would Be. t Thi colonel of a German regiment on garrison duty near a lively city "as very much annoyed by the way his young officers went about town in civilian clothes contrary to the regu lations of the service, the articles of ar, and the spirit of Prussian mill tail ppoke verv ' ' 'bout - I 1 M.fMw W a Ml By Harry King Tooth Illustrations by Ray Walters Cojrrlfbt by A. C lCeClurg a Co., 1911 had no means of knowing how serious this was, and naturally came to the conclusion that It was a death-wound. There was only one thing to do: get a physician. , As she started to her feet sho heard two men running down the stairs and making a search from room to' room on her floor. These must be the men who had attacked him. Sho rould not let hii.i full Into their hnnds, ard there fore she could not leavo him to go for aid. Tho Impotence of her position made her feel like screaming to relieve the nervosa strain. "What do you know about this? How did he come here? What has happened to him?" "I duiino," answered the woitnn. "There's soniethln' doln' all the time in this dump." A eudiien knock at the bolted door chilled Gloria with terror. "What's that?" she whispered "Somebody's at the door," replied Little 1 ' 11a, in the same low tone. This fact was obvious. "They can't come' In," Clorla contin ued. Again came the knocking, louder and more insistent. "I can't let anything happen to him," murmured the unhappy girl in agony, remembering how the day before she had demanded that he bo punished. "Joe, Joe, what does It all mean?" Hut Wright nuido no answer. He lay like n log as the girl he had loved bent over him, wiped the blood from his face, and brushed back his disheveled hair. With the next knock came the voice of a man demanding entrance. "Klla, Ella, open this door." Gloria rushed over to the bed. "Tell him you can't get out of bed," she Implored In a whisper. "Tell him there's nobody here." "I can't git out o' bed. There's no body here," Little Klla called. This answer did not pacify the man. "That's a lie," he shouted. "There's somebody in there or the door wouldn't be locked. Open this door, do you hear me, or I'll bust It down." The tone of his voice made Gloria feel that he would make good hl threat. There In the center of the room In full view lay the man whom they were seeking. Once they burst the single barrier they would be ii)on him, to do what further harm she knew not. It might be that he was now already beyond all human aid. He still breathed, however, and Gloria was willing to fight if there was even only one chance In his favor. Hence it would not do for them to And him the minute they broke down the door Sho must hide him somewhere to give her time to parley with his assailants. .She looked vainly about for some place to put him. "For God's sake, help me hide him," she beseeched. "I can't give him up. Where does that door lead to?'' She pointed to the door close by the one which led Into the hull. "That's only a closet under the stairway," was Little Klla's whispered explanation. "They'd find him tnere in a minute." "You wouldn't let them kill him, would you?" "I can't help you. I'm so weak I can hardly turn over In bed." "Open this door, I say," came from tho man without as he pounded on the door ominously, "or I'll crack you over the head." Gloria understood that there was no time to temporize. She must do something and that quickly. Close by where she stood next the bed, and on the side away from the door, was Little Ktlu's trunk. Behind it on hooks hung a number of garments, and on a chair were more clothes. It was the only chance and Gloria took it. How she ever managed to get him, a dead weight, across the Intervening space and safely stowed behind the trunk she never knew. She dragged, she hauled, she pulled, she rolled, and the forlorn hope that she would save him yet gi.ve her strength. As she snatched skirts from the hooks and all tho clothing from the chair to pile upon him, the pounding upon the door became more and more vindictive. The girl was out of breath, but as she bent over the prostrate form of the man she loved, she managed to gasp: "Joe, listen to me. If you can hear me, dear, listen. Don't stir, don't you hear me,. Joe?" Hut he was deaf to all entreaties. Seeing this wus so she turned to Little Klla: "Get him to go away. Offer him anything, prom ise him anything. I'll do It; only keep that mau on the other side of that door." "There's at least two of 'em." "That doesn't 11181101' a thousand volrs of poison the deadliest things lu the world." "Hut that stove cost me one hun dred fraucs!" protested tho lady. "Never mind that. Hetter lose any amount of money than your life. I'll toll you what I'l do; I'll give you twenty five francs for It, and find some way of getting rid of the perni cious object" Tho lady consented, and the doctor removed the stove. . A few days later, the patient, who thoucht of changing he.r residence. it and threatened the extremest pen alties If anybody were caught doing It again. The warning served for a time at least the offenders were more careful. Presently, however, two young lieu tenants took a chance. Thoy slipped away Into town In modish afternoon clotheB of the latest English cut, with top hata on and the rest. Suddenly they ran Into the colonel. The next minute they had vanished Into a gro cer's shop. One minute more and the door of the shop opened. It's all the same. Get them to go away." This was easier said than done, but Little Ella was willing to make the effort. "You git away from that door, an' leave me alone." "Open this door, you she-devil," threatened the besieger, "or I'll" And then Interrupted another voice with a suggestion that made Gloria grow faint. "Aw! Let's bust It In. He's In there all right." "Let 'er go," answered the first one. Then ciime the heavy thuds us the men threw themselves against the door. The knocking at tho gate in "Macbeth" had no more portentious sound In (lie play than had tins at tack upon her stronghold to Gloria. She felt all the nervousness of troop? under fire that must remain Inactive awaiting orders. There was no'hiug she could do but wait until the door was buttered down. This was not long In happening. As she stood In front of the trunk uer voutiy twisting her handkerchief In her hands, at one last mighty fieri the holt yielded, tho door Mew open and two men stumbled Into the room. Lltllo Kiln recognized them both In stantly. Thoy were Huck Kelly and Turkey Hyan, notorious denizens of tho underworld. If ever there were two vicious-looking cutthroats, these men answered their descriptions. To make their rulllaiily appearance worse they bore the marks of their recent encounter. Kelly's left eyo had swelled ultnost closed, and Ryan had a long cut across his cheek where Wright's ring had left Its mark with a slashing blow. He had done even more damage than this, hut these showed the plainest. Needless to say, their tempers had not been sweetened by the episode. "Now, damn you" Ryan began savagely. "Stop!" Gloria commanded. "What are you doing here?" Until she spoke they hnd not seen her, and boih men were taken much aback. To find a lady there was something they had not expected. "What the " Ryan gasped, but checked himself and then continued In a slightly moro respectful tone. "I begs yer pardon, miss, hut what aro you doln' here?" "That's none of your business. You clear out, both of you." This encouraged Little Klla to take her part In the discussion, which she did with her most strident tones. "What do youse mean, huttln' into here? Heat It, you two. I'm a lady, an" when I have a lady frU-n avisitin' me they ain't no place for bums. On yer way." it was not this tirade which had til" most effect upon tliwn. lloth quailed before Gloria, who stood eyeing them sternly. Then they looked at each other, utid without a word of apology shambled out into the hull. CHAPTER XX. If Gloria believed that she had pit to flight, for all time such gentlemanly assassins as Mr. Kelly and Mr. Hynn. her feeling of triumph did not hist long. As the door Into the hall was still open she did not dare make a move in Wright's direction. Sin1 d termlned to close the door and pull the withstand in front of It, wciIkIiiv It under the knob, before trying fur ther to succor the Injured man. When she walked toward the door, It again framed the forms of Ryan nnd Kelly. As a result of a short conference pint out of earshot, they had decided to return and get their man. "What do you want?" Her heart sank. "We're lookln' fir a man," Kelly snarled. "And he come Into this room, too," Ryan added doggedly. "We dm)'' want to make you uneomf'lable, lady, but we gotta git that man." Tho wuy he said it made Gloria feel that he meant business. All slut could do was play for time and pray for Mrs. Hayes to return. "There's no man here," she ex plained lu her most winning manner. "You can see that plainly for yourself. I came over from the mission to take care of Mils sick woman. You are only making her worse by bursting into her room In such a rude fashion. I'leaso go out gently; she must have it perfectly quiet." Turkey Ryan so far forgot himself in the presence of his betters as to grin at this explanation. "We don't want to have to make you give 'lm up." wen out to Inspect a suite of rootiu, and the first thing that met her gaze wus tlio stove. "Who lives here?" she a'sked of the servant who was showing her over the rooms. "Madame A., madame," said the ser vant respectfully "Doctor U.'s moth-er-In-law!" Gentle Hint Doctor Johnson to the contrary not withstanding, puns are occasionally excusable. This one. attributed by "Good afternoon, gentlemen," said the colonel. The pair stood before their suparlor silent and dismayed while a grim smile spread over the soldier's face. "Young lady,1' said tho colonel, ad dressing the shopgirl, "give me two flvo-cent cakes of soap and wrap them separately." The girl obeyed and the colonel gravely gave her ten cents. Then he turned to the young officers and banded each of them a cake. "Here, gentlemen," he said wltb a This threat had an unpleasant sound. Hitherto the girl had not feared for her own safety, but hit surly remark frightened her. The one thing that kept her steadfast was the thought that she was protecting the man she had loved; yea, the man she j now loved more than she ever had. She did not know how he happened to be there; she did not know how he regarded her; she only knew that she loved him, that she would give her life a sacrifice to save him. Ryan next appealed to Little Ella. "Ella, that guy come In here. Where Is he? We ain't goln' to be scared by any fool girl. She don't know who wants him. Now give 'lm up." "Don't say a word," Gloria told her. "You gotta Btlck by us, Ella. This ain't no ordinary Job." At Ryan's Injunction to stick by htm. Little Ella seemed to waver. "Don't you ferglt who yer friends are. Who keepn you from beln' Jugged? Mike Noonan. Who lets you stay here when you can't Jay,vn' feeds you? Mike Noonan." "That's so. He has been good to me." Gloria was quick to catch tho note of Indecision. "Hut now I'm going to take care of you." ' Yes, goln' to. goln' to," sneered Kelly. "You know what church prom ises .Is. Don' you ft rglt we gotta sl.m' together down here, all of us." It was the old, old appeal of class to serve a Hellish end. "Yes, that's true. I don' want to nay anything, but " l!an Immediately pressed the ad vantage ho thought he had gained. "This Is yer chiinct, Klla. You know what the'd say to you If you was in In r house. Are you with us? I'll see you git yours." It was a moment when a man's lifo was at stake. Gloria believed that if the woman told and thoy tore Wright from her she might nevur see "You Can't Fool Vt With That Soft Soap Talk." him alivo again. She had prayed si lently for help to come, but she was still alone. Already she was giving up hope Trom that quarter and was conscious that upon her own efforts in all piobahility the very life of the man sho loved would depend. To add to her anguish was the fear that he miplil regain consciousness and be tray himself hy a moan. Now It all depended upon Little Klla. It had been a clever stroke, that of Ryan's, asking her hov xhe would bo treated In this woman's homo. Against this appeal to class prejudice Gloria hud not scored. "I'll tell," said the woman. The two nu n looked at each other and smiled. "Stop!" cried Gloria, looking not at the men, lmt at the girl who lay pale and trembling upon the bed. "Do you remember what you said a while ago? What you accused mo of? You swore that I hadn't loved. Kven to my sorrow you shull have proof cf it now that I do. The very man whom I'm defending from these bullies Is the one man on earth 1 love." Ryan and Kelly looked at each other In am.tzciiif nt. "You shall see If you loved more than .1. You've gone through fire nnd storm for a man? I'll do no less. If need he. I'll dii) for Mils man here and now because 1 love him." The fire died out of her eyes. Sho stretched out her hands lo Klla pathetically and begged hum bly, "My whole heart s happiness Is hero. Aie you Eolng to help tn.-m try to take him from me?" The woman, a creature of Impulse, wns moved. "You'd better glvp It up, Turkey. I ain't goin' to let you touch that man." "Ah, you're a woman," sighed Glo ria. "You know a woman's heart." "Nix on that love spiel, Klla." com manded Ryan. "This ain't no valen tine party, lady. You can't fool us with that soft-soap talk. We gotta carry cut the bosB' orders. Huck, look in that closet." (TO 11 K. COXTINt.'KD.) It He Sure? Cairo tells us that one of the khe dive's wives Is missing. How long since he took a coiisub of tho ladies? From the New York Herald. ti,o nrroklvn Times to a boarding- house keeper of that city, is good enough to pass muster. uuu of tho young men who lived In the boarding house had tho double tank of slowness in paying his bill and fusiness about the table service. One morning ho said peevishly to the land lady: "Mrs. Jones, will you tell me why my napkin is so damp?" "Yes, Mr Wicks." replied the land lady, promptly. "It's because there li bo much due ou your hoard' H grin, "Just bo you sha'ti't bu put to any expense on my account. Good day." And he turned and Btrode out of the shop. New York Evening Post His Way. "I wish that tiresome old Judge would not carry court practice Into the streets with him." "What rV you mean?" "Why, when he meets an acquaint ance, first he arrests his progress and then he tries his patience. zip I (. j Si, ' r V f.lCT'l God Covering Adam Br REV. JAMES M. CRAY. 0. D. Dm of Mood? Bibb lM CUm I TKXT-And unto Adam itlno and to his wife did the Lord Clod make roati of sklna, and clothed them. (Jen. S:2L It Is written In Scripture that God "covereth him self with light as wilh a garment" (Psalm 104:2). and thero are some who think we have a sug gestion, here of way In which our first parents were covered before the fall. Hut If so, they lost their outer glory with the Inner, for no sooner did they commit sin, than "the eyes of them both were opened, and they kuew that they were naked" (Gen. 3:7). At oneo they took steps to conceal their shame by making for themselves aprons of fig leaves. How Inadequate was the, provision! And o we read that, later on, after their trlul had been held, the penalty pro nounced, and, blessed be God, the hope of a Savior held out to them, their noed In the particular was also met. The text suggests the plan. A lamb was slain, Its blood was shed, and its covering appropriated for the guilty pair. The whole circumstance is not only a beautiful, but a most Important symbol of God's dealings with the sin ner In the spiritual realm. 1. Sin Is an eye-openor. And this may be said even though it Is equally true that tho sinner Is blind. How oft en he starts on a new career of In Inquity, expecting satisfaction and pleasure, only to discover himself woefully disappointed and deceived. Happy la be, If at such a time, the power of the Iljly Spirit works with in him that deeper conviction of what sin really Is and does, that may lead hi in to seek eternal salvation from It. 2. The awakened sinner not Infre quently attempts by his own revising to rid himself of tho consequences of sin. The fig leaves he employes are good resolutions, the temporary re linquishment of some bad habit, tho giving up of some form of vice, stay ing at homo nights, doing some deed of charity, attending church, perhaps "professing religion," as It is some times called. Hut the frultlessness of all these things suon appears as the stress of temptation comes again. 3. God only can cover tho sinner's sin. "Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the wash ing of regeneration, nd renewing of the Holy Ghost, which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Savior." This Is Paul's testimony to Titus, and it Is the experience of every soul that Is really saved (Titus 3: 6. 6). 4. God covers our sin by a method of his own. As the prophet Isaiah sings: "I will greatly rejoice In tho Lord, my soul shall bo Joyful In my God for he hath clothed me with the garments of salvation, he hath cover ed me with the robo of righteous ness" (Isaiah 01:10). And Paul speaks In the same way In his epistle to the Romuns, saying: "Hy tho deeds of the law shall no flesh bo instilled In his sight; . . . but now the righteous ness without tho law Is manifested. . . . even the righteousness of God which Is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe" (Romans 3:20-22). e. God obtains this covering of righteousness for us by the offering up of tho life of the Innocent for the guilty. "He spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all" (Ro matis 8:32). "He mado him to be sin for us who knew no sin, that we might be mado the righteousness of God In him" (2 Corinthians 6: 21). "Whom God hath set forth to bo a propitia tion through faith In hlB blood" (Ro mans 3:25). Do we not see how purposely God's covering of Adam symbolizes what he Is ready to do In the case of any fallen sinner who realizes hlB need? Do you realize yours? Are you trying vainly to help yourself, to cover your own splrltunl nakedness? Why not accept God's covering? Why not take Jbbus Christ as your Savior by faith? Why not come to him today, and thus know "the blessedness of the man whoBe transgression is forgiven, whose Bin Is covered" (Pslam 32:1). It Is so easy to do this. As an un known author has Bald so beautifully: You ask me how I ever rime lo Christ? 1 do not know; Thero enme n Innnlng for Htm In my soul Bo long OKO. I found enrth't fnlrent flowerii would fade and die, I yearned for something that would aat lefy: And then at lat somehow I neoinea to dnro To lift my broken heart to Him In prayer. ' l do noi Know, I T ran not tMl VOII llOW! I only know Ha Is my Bavlor now. Toil auk me why I ever mme to ChrlstT I enn reply: . - ........... .Inru tluton n.1,11 II IB A wiuiiwo I tell you why My heart wus drawn at length to seek Hla face. ' t woa alone. T had no resting place; I heard of how Ho loved me, with a lov Of depth o great of height so far abov All human ken, I longed such love to share. And sought It then 1'pon my knees In prayer. Tou aek me why 1 thought this loving I Chrlet Would hoed my prayer? 1 knew He died upon the cross for me, I nailed lilin there. I heard Ills dying cry, "Father, forglvs! I saw Illm drink death's cup that I might llva; My head wns bowed upon tny breast la shame, He called me, and In penitence I cam. ' :.. ; I'm jp Ha heard' my prayer I cannot tell you how, Or when, or where; Only I love Ulra now. LmWIONAL SWSOIOOL Lesson (By E. O. SELLERS, Director of Evsnlng Department, llie aioouy uiuie oniuui", LESSON FOR JANUARY 11. THE MI8SION OF THE SEVENTY. I. EPSON TEXT. Luke 10:1-1. t . at 11. i ii.: v tii-xt 'It Is not ye that spenk. but the spirit of your Kalher that poakotli In you. '-Malt. 1U::0. Jesus "came unto bla own and hie own received blm not" Rejected In Judea, he turned to Galilee, making bis headquarters at Capernaum only to bo rejected there also. "After these thlnga" (v. 1.) e. g., after his final de parture from Galilee, and as be was about to perforin his Poreau ministry. The ministry of Jesus Is rapidly has tening to a close, still there Is much work to do, hence the selection of those who shull go before him to pre pare for what proved to be In each city and town ills last visit. I. Tho Seventy Sent tvv. 19). Verse one tells ub of the character of the work they were to undertake, viz., to bn heralds; to preparo the people against his coming, 2 Cor. 6:20. There Is a plentltudn of work, but, "the la borers are few." They were sent to a particular people "whither he him self would come," 2 Tim. 4:8; Titus 2:13. No matter what may have been their limitations, the "coming one" would supply all deficiencies. Jesus commanded prayer, but also sent forth those same praying ones (vv. 2, 3). Prayer and work go hand In hand In a sane Christian experience. Kvery Impression demands sufficient expres sion, If It is to make any lasting con tribution to our chasacters. The largo harvest demands attention. We are sent into that harvest by the King himself, "Heboid I send you;" and those whom he sends are not com pelled to labor alone. Matt. 28:20; John 14:16. Jesus mentions tour things about those whom ho sends: Like Lambs. (1) Their character. They are to be (Ike "lambs." We have Just had the figure of "laborers" presented, labor ers who were sent. Ib this then a mixed simile? We think not. We are to go forth to tho harvesting work as laborers, that Is our work, but, In our characters, we are to be lamb like. (2) Their environment, "among wolves." That Is to say, surcoundlng each harvest Held, and frequently en croaching as far as they dare, are the wolves, a type of the evil one and of his agents. Those who go thus Into, or by the way of, danger will not carry any excess of baggage, 2 Tim. 2:4. (.1) In the third place, they are to go forth with complete dependence upon God's providing care (v. 4). rIlie exact letter of these Instructions Is not always Incumbent upon his ambas sadors, chapter 22:35, 30, but tho spir it of absolute faith In a Father who will provide, must always possess bis representatives. 4. Ab to their bearing, It must be that of dignity and self-respect (v. C). Social demands consume n great deal ot energy lu diplomatic circles, and it is here that many ChrUtians waste precious energy, as well ns becoming involved in worldly practices. Their first thought upon entering a house must be for tho good of the home (v. 6). not for their personal comfort. If a "Bon of peace," (v. 6), dwelt there, one to whom pence rightfully be longed, their benediction would bring to that home a blessing. Hut If he be not thero their peare was not to be lost, for It would return to the giver. (5) Their mission was to offer, not to force acceptance. Tbey were not beggars, going from house lo house (v. 7), they hud something worth whllo and were worthy of their hire. Tho fawning, cringing sycophnnts that pass for Christian worker Btand re buked before thU teaching. However, this does not sanction tho dogmatic, domineering methods of some. They are to accept whnt Is offered (v. 8), not demanding, "a worthy compensa tion.'' Tho church of Christ stands condemned for the meager salaries given' Its representatives, yet It Is also true that a man usually, and in the long run, getB about what ho Is worth. God'e Truth. To build up character brings a far richer compensation, and more last ing results, than to obtain earthly prestige, ease or wealth. Therefore the ambassador of Christ can afford to wait with glad certainty the final casting up of accounts, accepting In the meantime the lowlier seats among men, Luke 14:7-14. illowever. these ambassador do have an exalted work to perforin. They had a commission for both body nnd soul. Tho Gospel of Christ is for the whole man (v. 9). To minister to the bodies of men must however be accompanied by the her alding of tho coming klndom. That kingdom which Is everlastingly to be vlslhle upon earth, Dan. 2:44. II. The Seventy Received (vv. 10 16.) These heralds were to proclaim that the kingdom was "nigh unto you." In this section we have set before us not only the probablo manner whereby the ambassadors may be re ceived, but also their attitude towards those who shall reject them. Jesus, by his anathemas pronounced upon Chor azln and llethsalda (vv. 12-15), Inti mates what shall bo the fate ot those who reject the ambassadors of the King. Ho emphasizes this by saying (v. 16) Hint he Is heard and despised when these, his repreientatlves, are heard or despised. This shaking off Of the dust Is a testimony of God's abhorrence of their deeds, Luke 9:6. If men will not receive the Gospel, we are to pasa on (Acts 15:61; 18:6). This does not, however, In any sense set aside, nor Invalidate, God's truth, Rom. 1:16. The words of that para graph contained In verses 12-16, are among the most terrific ever used by Jesus, perhaps the most severe It we except his denunciation of the Phari sees. Exalted because of great oppor tunities, these cities Buffer a worse fate than those of the plain. Can the boasted civilization of this century es cape an equal fate. If It neglecti this, the day of Its visitation? (Conducted by the National Woman's Christian Temperancs Union.) SUFFERING TRADES. (BTllONtf WO ROD BY TtJNTON H. HOWARD TO WORKINO HEN.) What la it that keeps labor em ployed, factories busy, wages high? Orders. That Is what 150,000 commercial travelers are out for orders. Tbey represent manufacturers. On what does the manufacturer de pend? On the retailer. On what does the retailer depend? On the customer with needs to sup ply and money to buy. It Is the home market and the for eign markets that keep the wheels of Industry going round. In what way does the saloon affect the name murket? I-t lMt Jones, tho English member of parliament, answer that question: "I met the finished product of the saloon, lie was lying In the gutter, lie had no bat, the bat trade was suf fering; bis coat was full of holes, the clothing trade was suffering; he had on tho remnant of a shirt, the woolen trm'.e was suffering; he had on no sttlts, the hosiery trade was suffer Lig; he was dirty, the soap trade was suffering; I can hardly mention a use ful Industry la the country' that was not affected by that man's Insobriety." Follow this man home and you would find by an Inventory of his wife and children that the millinery trade, underwear traclo, the dress goods trade, the ribbon trade, and a hundred other trades were suffering. Look) about his home, and you would find that the furniture trade, the carpet trade, the picture trade, the dinner ware and cooking utensil trade, and a hundred more were suffering. Sp with the toy trade and the Christinas tree trade; all suffering because of one man's Insobriety. A round million men were arrested for drunkenness and disorderly con duct In this cuuntry last year. A mil lion more eluded the watchful eye of our vigilant police, were sobered up In the back room of the saloon, or stag gered unmolested "borne." Two million makers of the home market knocked -out ot the market by the saloon! They have needs to sup ply, but no money to buy. Add their wives and children, the usual average of four with mother, and you have 10, 000,000 consumers In the home mar ket Impoverished by the American saloon! lt labor close that tremendous leak, lift his brother from the gutter, send him home to his family Bober, and with his pay envelope unbroken by the robber liquor trafllc that gives its customers only sorrow, disease and shame in exchange for labor's wealth, and It would give up a new home mar ket for Amcrlcnn-mado gooda every year equal to our present foreign mar ket around the world! What could be dono with that vast turn of money now poured Into the lap of the saloon?,. M We could build 300,000 homes at 2,000 each, put $1,000 worth of fur niture and carpets Into every one of the 300,000 homes, $1,000 worth of clothing and wearlug apparel in the closets of every one of the 300,000 homes, 100 tons of hard coal In every cellar, and deposit In the savings bank $1,000 to the credit of every one ot those 300,000 homes; do all of this, next year, and every succeeding year that those saloons were kept closed! A GREAT COMPARATIVE LES90N. Dr. J. II. Kellogg of Ilattle Creek sanatorium. In a stercoptlcan lecture, pictures the decay of nations by a se ries of bIx trees dying at the top. Bul garia has the lenst dead wood, repre senting the fact that one person In every thousand In that country live to pass the 100-year mark, and not a few live for half a century longer. The United States comeB next, but with only one centenarian In 25,000. Then the record grows worse and wrose: Spain 44,000, France 190.000, England 200,000, Germany 700,000. it Is not mere accident thnt the nation whose favorite drluk Is buttermilk stands nt tho head, whilo the nation which of all these countries Is most given to beer drinking Is lowest In the group. DRINK AND DEATH RATE. English Insurance companies Inves tigating the death rate of various classes of people, have Bnounced that of 61.215 average people, 1.000 die annually; of 61,215 total abstain ers, 660 die annually; of 61,215 liquor drinkers. 1.642 die annually, and In other words, the death rate for the three classes Is as follow: Average death rate, 16.33 to the 1,000; total ab stainers. 914 to the 1,000; liquor drinkers, 26.82 to the 1,000. Kansas Is conceded to be the dryest state In the Union. The death rate there be fore the advent of total abstainers was 17 to the 1,000. Now it Is 7.6 to the 1,000 the lowest In the world. GOOD FOR GERMAN ARMY. There Is good news from the Ger man army. At the emperor's order a manual on "Alcohol and Tobacco" has been prepared for the service by Dr. Buchlnger, one of the leading physi cians of tho marine. VITAL QUESTION. It Is not a question of the saloon OR the blind pig, but of the saloon AND the blind pig. Chicago, with 7,200 saloons, has more blind pigs than Maine, Kansas and Oklahoma combined. HUSBAND TOOK THEM. "I)o you take any periodicals?" asked the clergyman on bis first round of parish vIbUs. "Well, I don't," replied tho woman, "but my husband takes 'em frequent I do wish you'd try to get hlui to sign the pledge." Judge. ALCOHOL QUESTION. The alcohol question presents It self at every corner to every man and woman desirous of solving the great social problems that await solution.; Sir Versey Strong.