IN HIS STEPS. "What Would Jesus Do?" By CHARLES M. 8HELD05. Copyrighted and published In book form by the Advance Publiahlng Co. of Chicago. continued. "I'm fflad you came. Oo on, Fred. " Henry Maxwell had known the yonng man ever since his first year In the pns torate and loved and honored him for his consistent, faithful service in the church. "Well, the fact is I'm out of a job. You know, I've been doing reporter work on The Morning Sentinel tince I graduated last year. Well, last Satur day Mr. I3nrr asked mo to go down the road Sunday morning and get the de tails of that train robbery at the junc tion anil write the thing up for the ex tra edition that came out Monday morning, just to get the start of Tba News. I refused to go. mid Burr gave me my dismissal. He was in a bad tem Icr, or I think perhaps he would Dot have done it. He has always treated me well before. Now, don't you think Jesus would have done as I did 1 1 ask because the other fellows say I was a fool not to do the work. I want to feel that a Christian acts from motives that may Mem strange to others soun times, but not foolish. What do you think V" "I think you kept your promise, Fred. I cannot believe Jesus would do newspaper work on Sunday, as you were asked to do it." "Thank yon, Mr. Maxwell I felt a little troubled over it, but the longer I think it over tho better I feel." Morris rose to go, and Henry Max well rose and laid a loving hand on the young man's shoulder. "What are you going to do, FredK" "I don't know yet. I have thought fiomo of going to Chicago or some large city. ' ' "Why don't yon try Tho News?" "They are all supplied. I havo not thought of applying there. " Henry Maxwell thought a moment. "Come down to The News office with me and let us see Norman about It," So a few minutes later Edward Nor man received into his room the minister and young Morris, and Henry Maxwell briefly told the cause of their errand. "I can give you a place on The News," said Edward Nonnan, with his keen look softened by a smile that made it winsome. "I want reporters who won't work Sundays. And, what is more, I am making plans for a special kind of reporting which I believe young Morris here can develop because he is in sympathy with what Jesus would da" He assigned Morris a definite task, tad Henry Maxwell started back to his study feeling that kind of satisfaction and it is a very deep kind which a man feels when he has been even partly instrumental in finding an unemployed person a situation. Ho had intended to go back to his study, but on his way home he passed by one of Milton Wright's stores. He thought he wonld simply step in and shake hands with his parishioner and bid him godspeed in what ho had heard he was doing to pnt Christ into his business, but when he went Into the office Milton Wright insisted on detain ing him to talk over some of his new plans. Henry Maxwell asked himself if this was the M.Tlon Wright he used to know, eminently practical, business like, according to tho regular code of the business world, and viewing every thing first and foremost from the stand point of "Will it pay t" "There is no nse to disguise the fact, Mr. Maxwell, that I have been com pelled to revolutionize the whole method of my business since I made that prom ise. I have been doing a great many things during the last 20 years in this store that I know Jesus wonld not do, but that is a small item compared with the number of things I begin to believe Jesus would do My sins of commission have not been as many as those of omis sion in business relations." "What was the first change yon madet" asked Henry MaxwelL He felt as if his sermon could wait for him in his study. As the interview with Mil ton Wright continued he was not so sure but he had found material for a sermon without going back to his study. "I think the first change I had to make was in my thought of my em ployees. I came down here Monday morning after that Sunday and asked myself I 'What would Jesus do in his relation to these clerks, bookkeepers, office boys, draymen, salesmen T Would he try to establish some sort of personal relation to them different from that which I have sustained all these years ?' I soon answered the question by saying, 'Yea, ' Then came the question of what it would lead me to da "I did not see how I could answer it to my satisfaction without getting all my employees together and having a talk with them So I sent invitations to all of them, and we had a meeting out there in the warehouse Tuesday night "A good many things came out of that meeting I can't tell you all I tried to talk with the men a I im agined Jeans might It waa bard work, for I hare not been in the habit of it, and I must have made mistakes But I can hardly main you believe, Mr. Max well, the effect of that meeting on some of the men. Before it closed I saw more than s dosen of them with tears on their faces. I kept asking, 'What would Jeans do?' and the more I asked it the further along it poshed me into the most intimate and loving relations with the men who have worked for me all these yean. Every day something new Is up, and I am right now in she midst of reconstructing of the nttot business, so far as its motive for being conducted is concerned I am so practically ignorant of all plans for co operation and its application to business that I am trying to get information from every possible source. I have late ly made a special study of the life of Titus Salt, the great mill owner of Bradford. England, who afterward built that model town on the banks of the Aire There is a pood deal in his plans that will help But I have uot yet reached definite conclusion in regard to all the details. I am not enough used to Jesus' methods But see here. " Milton ea-rerly reached up into one of the pigeonholes of his desk and took out a paper "I have sketched ont what r"oitu t; me a programme snch as Jesus might go by in a business like mine. I want you to tell me what yen think about it ' 'WHAT JKr.rs WOULD PROBABLY DO in HILTON WBIQBT't PtACB as A BURUfHM MAN "I He would engage in business for the purpose of glorifying God and not for the primary purpose of making ; money j V . ,1 UUIinj llltib UllfUl W Ulll'.l- be would never regard as his own. but as trust funds to be used for the good ATI .,ii.-tt 1,., , ' of humanity "8 His relations with all the per sons in his employ would be the n'ost 'loving and helpful He could not help thinking Of them all in the light of I souls to bo saved This thought would ftlways be greater than his thought of j making money in business "4 lie would never do a single dis honest or questionable thing or try in the remotest way to got the advantage of any one else in the same business "5 The principle of nnselfishuess and helpfulness in all the details of the business would direct its detail "0. Upon this principle ho would shape tho entire plan of his relations to his employees, to the people who were MatAMuM ....I tt, imiumI linui. 1113 I.UIUIIII 1 illl'l II, 111'. L. (. ku. ness world with which be was con nected Henry Maxwell read this over slowly It reminded him of his own attempts the day before to pnt into a concrete form his thought of Jesus' probable ao tiou He was very thoughtful as he looked up and mot Milton Wright's eager gaze "Do yon believe you can continue to make your business pay on those linos? "ldo Intelligent unselfishness ought to be wiser than intelligent selfishness. don't yon think? If the men who work as employees begin to feel a personal share in the profits of the business and. more than that, a persoual love for themselves on the part of the firm. won't the result be more care, less waste, more diligence, more faithful ness ?' "Yes: I think so. A good many other business men don't, do they? I mean as a general thing How about your re lations to the selfish world that is not try mi' to make money on Christian brinoirdesT" "That complicates my action, of course. ' "Does your plan contemplate what Is coming to he known as co-operation ? "Yes; as far as I have gone, it does. As 1 told yon. I am studying out my details carefully I am absolutely con' vi need that Jesus in my place would be absolutely unselfish He would love all these men in his employ He wonld consider the main purpose of all the Business to be a mutual helpfulness and would conduct it all so that God's king dom would be evidently the first object nought. On those general principles, ns I sav, I am working. I must have time to complete the details." When Henry Maxwell finally left Milton Wright, ho was profoundly im pressed with the revolution tliat was being wrought already in the business. As he passed out of tho store he caught something of the new spirit of the place. There was no mistaking tho fact that Milton Wright's new relations to his employees were beginning, even so soon, after less than two weeks, to transform the entire business. This was apparent in tho conduct and faces of the clerks. "If Milton Wright keeps on, he will be one of the most influential preachers in Raymond," said Henry Maxwell to himself when he reached his study. The question rose as to his continuance in this course when he began to lose money by it. as was possible. Henry Maxwell prayed that the Holy Spirit, who had shown himself with growing power in the company of the First chnrch disciples, might abide long with them all, and with that prayer on his lips and in his heart ho began the prep aration of a sermon in which be waa going to present to his poople on Sun day the subject of the saloon in Ray mond, as he now believed Jesus wonld do. He had never preached against the saloon in this way before. He knew that the things he should say wonld lead to serious results. Nevertheless he went on with his work, and every sen tence ho wrote or shaped was preceded with the question, "Would Jesus say that?" Once in the course of his study ho went down on his kneea No one ex cept himself could know what that meant to him. When had he done that in the preparation of sermons before the change that had come into his thought of discipleship? As he viewed his ministry now ho did not dare to preach without praying for wisdom. He no longer thought of his dramatic de livery and its effect on his audience. The great question with him now was, "What would Jesus do?" Saturday night at the Rectangle wit nessed some of the most remarkable scenes that Mr. Gray and his wife had ever known. The meetings had intensi fied with each night of Rachel's sing ing. A stranger passing through the Rectangle in the daytime might have heard a good deal about the meetings in one way Mid another. It cannot be said that up to that Saturday night there was any appreciable lack of oaths and impurity and heavy drinking. The Rec tangle wonld not have acknowledged that it was growing any better or that Mo fope Mi vM$W:W' "'ll',' . Wtt sinking he saw .1 I', irl I lie jtmfl!;.1! $fti ' elso. The tent swar.ncd with a confused 0Sfn fr&!iV.:-v ;.,,f 'crowd of faces, and he know be was ' i"i !?;',.vv. sitting there hemmed in by a mob of x '!jk P'i'r'y' ! people, but they had no meaning to , a, a i mm. no ion i .oweriess mi avoid spean- TIT !', l. v for you, said tour cuuerent pnysi- vou. sua four ail cians, but I still had sufficient left to try Dr. Wiles' New Heart Cure, as it was highly recorr.r.iCudc.'. to me, 1 had suffered for years with heart trouble; so ted was my case 1 was given up to die several tir.'es. Had severe palpitation, short breath and : ch pain about the heart, fluttering r-..5 ".'i-i'.l'.erin.r r-nd!s, but Dr. Milts' Heart Cure gave me prompt relief and finally a permanent cine. Mi .. J. I-. Taylor, Owansbore, Ky. ; hi I era is sold by ill druggists on guarantee lirst Lo. lie benefit! or money bai k. Book on heart and nerves sent free. Dr. Miles Medical Company, Elkhart, hid, even the singing bad softened its con versation or its outward manner. It had too much local pride In being "tough," But, In spite of itself, there was u yielding to a posver it bad never measured and did not know well enough to resist beforehand. Gray had recovered his voice, so that Saturday he was able to Ppeuk. The fuct that he waa obliged to use his voice carefully made it necessary for tho peo ple to be very quiet if they wanted to hear. Gradually they had come to un derstand that this man was talking these many weeks and using his time and strength to Kive them a knowledge of a Saviour, nil out of a perfectly un selfish lovo for them. Tonight the great crowd was as quiet as Henry Maxwell's dacorous audienco ever was. Tho fringe around the tont was deeper, and tho saloons were practically empty. Tho Holy Spirit had como nt last, and Griy knew that one of tho great prayers of his life Was going to be answered. And Rachel her sin;iii was the best, most wonderful Virginia 01 Jasper Chase bad ever known. They had come together again tonight with Dr. West, who had spent all his spare time that week in tho Rectangle with some char ity cases. Virginia was at the organ, Jasper sat on a front seat looking up at Rachel, uud the Rectangle swayed as one man toward tho platform as she sang. ".Tint u I am, without one pita. But that thy blood wni ilieJ (of me Anil that in i hutat me come to thee O Lanib of Got, I come, 1 cornel" Gray said hardly a word. Ho stretch ed out his hand with a gesture of invi tation, and down the two aisles of tho tent broken, sinful creatures, men and women, stumbled toward tho platform. Ono woman out of tho street was near the organ. Virginia CftUght tho look of her face, and for tho first time in the life of tho rich girl the thought of what Jeeua was to a sinful woman come with a sudden ness and power that were like nothing but a new birth Virginia left the or gan, wunt to her, looked into her face and caught her hands in her own. The other girl trembled, then fell on her knees, sobbing, with her hood down upon the back of the bench in front of her. still clinging to Virginia. And Vir ginia, after a moment's hesitation, kneeled down by her, and the two heads were bowed close together. But when the people had crowded in a double row all about the platform, most of them kneeling and crying, a man in evening dress, different from the others, pushed through the seats and came and kneeled down by the side of the drunken man who had disturbed the meeting when Henry Maxwell spoka He kneeled within a few feet of Rachel Winslow, who waa still singing softly, and as she turned for a moment and looked in his direction she waa amazed to see the face of Rollin Pagel For a moment her voice faltered. Then she went on i "Jurt ii t in thou wilt receive. Will welcome, pardon, cleanse, relieve, Because thy promise I believe. 0 Lamb of Uod, I coma, I cornel" The voice was as the voice of divine longing, and the Rectangle, for the time being, was swept into the harbor ef redoiaptl ve grace. CHAPTER V. If any man sane me, let him follow me. It was nearly midnight before the service at the Rectungle closed. Gray staid up long into Sunday morning praying and talking with a little group of converts that, in tho great experi ence of their now life, clung to the evangelist with a personal helplessness that made it as impossiblo for him to leave them as if they had been depend ing upon him to save them from phys ical death Among those converts was Rollin Pago. Virginia and her uncle had gone home about 11 o'clock, and Rachel and Jasper Chase had gone with them as far as the avenue when Virginia lived Dr. West had walked on a little way with them to his own house, and Rachel and Jasper had then gone on together to her mother' a That was ft little after 11. It was now striking midnight, and Jasper Chase sat iu his room staring at tho jm pers on his desk and going over the last half hour with painful persistence. Ho had wihl Rachel Window of his lovo for her, and she had not given her love in return. It would bo difficult to know what was most powerful in the Impulse that had moved him to speak to her tonight He had yielded to bis feelings without ary special thought of results to him self because he had felt so certain that Rachel would respond to his love for her. He tried to ri pression she mad spoke to her. Never had her b. inllnenced him as all now just the lm on him when he first snty end hor tonight. VY trt hih igth she inir to her. He knew he mio 11 M speak 0 fi It that ' whetl they were once alone. N that h" had spoken h he h.i i misjudged either Rachel or the opportunity. He knew, or thought he did, that she lrad begun to core for him It was no secret betwei u th mi that the heroine of Jasper's tirst novel had been his own ideal of Rachel, and the hero of tho story was himself, and they had loved each other in tho book, and Rachel had not objected. Nbonoelse knew. Tho names and characters had boon drawn with a subtle skill that re vealed to Rachel, when she received a eonv of tholiooK-fro.ii Jasper, the fact of hie love for her. and she had not bet n offi nded That was nearly a year ago Tonight Jasper Chase recalled the seem- between tluin, with every inflec tion and movement unerased from his memory, He even recalled the fact that he began to Bpeak just nt that point on ' the avenue where a few days before he j had met Rachel walking with Rollin i Page. Ho had wondered at tho time j what Rollin was saying. "Rachel.'' Jasper bad said, and it was the first time hi; had ever spoken her first name, "1 never knew until to night how much I lovo you. Why should I try to conceal any longer what you have seen me look You know I love yon as my life. I can no longer hido it from you if I would." Tho first intimation he had of a re fusal was the trembling of Rachel's arm in his own. She had allowed him to speak and hod neither turned her face toward him nor away from him. Sho had looked straight on, anil her voice was sad. but firm and tjniet. when sho spoke. "Why do you speak to mo nowT I cannot boar it after what we have seen tonight." "Why what" ho had stammered and then was silent Rachel withdrew her arm from his, but still walked near him. Then ho cried out with the anguish of one who begins to see a great loss facing him where ho expected a great joy. "Rachel I Do you not love met Is not my love for yon as sacred us any thing in all of life itself?" Hho had walked on silent for a few stops after that. They had passed a street lamp Her face was pule and beautiful. He had made a movement to clntch hor arm, and sho had moved a little farther from him. "No," sho hod repliod "There was a time I cannot answer for that. Yon should not have spoken tome tonight. " He had seen in these words his an swer. Ho was extremely sensitive. Nothing short of a joyous response to his own love would hove satisfied him. He could not think of pleading with her. "Some time, when I am more wor thy?" ho hod asked in a low voice, but eho did not soem to hear, and they had parted at her home, and ho recalled vividly the fact that no good night hod been said. Now, as ho wont over the brief but significant scene, ho lashed himself for his foolish precipitancy. He had not reckoned on Rachel's tense, passionate j absorption of all her feeling in tho i scenes at tho tont w Inch were so new i in her mind But ho did not know her well onongh even yet to understand the meaning of her refusal When tho clock I in the First church steeple struck 1, ho 1 was still sitting at his desk, staring at i the lost page of manuscript of his uu ; finished novel. I Rachel Winslow went up to her room and fa 1 her evening's experience with conflicting emotions, Had sue ever loved Jasper Chase ? Yes no. Ono mo ment sho felt that her life's happiness was at rtake over the result of her ac tion ; another, sho had a strange feel ing of relief that she had spoken as she did There waa one great overmastering feeling in her. The response of the wretched creatures in tho tent to her singing, the swift, awesome presence of the Holy Spirit, had affected her as never in all her life befora The mo ment Jasper had spoken her name and she realized that ho was telling her of his love she had felt a sudden revulsion for him, as if he should have respected the supernatural events they had just witnessed She felt as if it were not the time to be absorbed in anything less than the divine glory of those conver sions. The thought that all the time she was singing with the one passion of her soul to touch the conscience of that tent full of sin Jasper Chase had been moved by it simply to love her for him self gave her a shock as of irreverence on her part as well as on his. She could not tell vhy she felt as she did; only she knew that if he had not told her to night she would still have felt tho same toward him as she always had. What was that feeling? What had be been to her? Had she made a mis take ? Sh went to her bookcase and took out the novel which Jasper had given her. Her face deepened in color as she tuned to certain passages which she had read often and which she knew Jasper had written for her. She read them again. Somehow they failed to The I House Wife's j Burden 1 B touch her strongly. She ch.s. d the book and hit it lie on tho talle. sho gradual ly felt tlmt her thought whs busy with the Kij.ht nlio bad witnessed in that tent, Those face men mid womrvi, touched for tho 'ffrt time with the Spirit's Kl(,r'- What a wouderfnl thine; life v.'iim. uftor all I Tho complete regen eration revealed in the Mlit of drunk en, vile, debauched humanity kneeling down to give itself to a life of purity end Christlikeneai -oh, it was surely a a witness to the superhuman in tho world! And the face of Rollin Pug" by the side of that miserable wreck oat of the cutter- -she could recall naif Bhe now wiw it Virginia crying, with h r nrniM nhoiit h'T brother, just before she loft tho tout, mid Mr. Gray kneeling close by. and the rrirl Virginia had tak en into hor heart bending hor head while Virniniiv whispered something to her All these pictures, drawn by the Holy Hpirit In the human tragedies brought to ft cllmai there in the most uhiindonod ppot in nil Raymond, stood out in Rachel's memory now, a memory so recent that her room seemed for the time being to contain all the acton and their movements. "No. no!" sho had said aloud. "He had DO tight to speak to 1110 after nil that I Ho should have respected the plaeo where mir thoughts should have been. I nin sure I do not lovo him, not enough to give bim my life." And lifter sho had thus, spoken the evening's experience at the tent came crowding in again, thrusting out all other tiling It is perhaps the most striking evidence of the tremendous spiritual factor which had now entered the Rectangle that Rachel felt, even when the gnat love of a strong man hail come very near her, that tho spir itual manifestation moved hor with an sgitation far pouter than anything Jasper had felt for her personally or hho fur In in Tho people of Raymond nwoko Sun day morning to a growing knowledge of event! which worn beginning to rev olutionize many of the regular custom ary habits of the town. Alexander Pow ers' action in tho mntter of the railroad frauds had created a sensation, not only in Hayinoud, but throughout the coun try. Edward Norman's daily chant's of policy in tho conduct of his paper had startled tho community and caused more comment than any recent polit ical event Rachel Wiuslow's singing at the Rectangle meetings had made a stir in society and excited tho wonder of all her friends. Virginia Pago's con duct, her presence every night with Rachel, her absence from tho usnal cir clo of her wealthy, fushiouablu ac quaintances, had furnished a great deal of material for gossip and question. In addition to the events which centered about theso persons who were so well known, there had lieen all through the city, in very many homes and in hnsi nees and social circles, strango happen ings. Nearly a hundred persons in Henry Maxwell's chnrch had made the pledgo to do everything after asking, "What would Jesus do?" and tho re sult had boon, in many cases, unheard of actions. Tho city was stirred as it had never been. As a climax to the week's events had come tho spiritual manifestation nt the Rectangle und the announcement, which cuino to most people before church time, of tho actual conversion at the tent of nearly BO of tho worst characters in the neighbor hood, together with the conversion of Rollin Pago, the well known society and club man. It is no wonder that, under the pres sure of all this, tho First church of Ray mond came to the morning service in a condition that mado it quickly sensi tive to any largo truth TO RE CONTINUED. UfANTFII SALESMEN WW fill I ImlM To aollcll II Choire unci linrily line ol Nuraery Sto k. Hlcetetjr Work and HI Pay. Stock Replatcrfl Free. It you cannot work eteady, lake local agency. Secure territory at by writ! list at once to THE HAWK NURSDRY CO.. cheater, Saw Tork. t-21-im Mrs. Ada M. Herr, of 439 N. Charlotte St., Lancaster, Pa., suf fered terribly from female disor ders. 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