HARVEST TIME HERE Sermcn cf Congratulation for Christian Endeavorers. pr Talmuse WtutM Mlttity (llturM in Ilia Tell-'lbf (irowlk and Perfection uf ( Lirie tlajiity. Copyright, 1901. by Louis Klopech, N. T. W jtl.ll.KK'-. July I. Although Dr. Taluiage was hiuuereu from attending the great annua! meet ing of the Christian Endeavor society at Cincinnati, his sermon shows him to lie ia sympathy with the greut move ment; "text, Aruoi 0:13: "Behold the tiav. come, taith the Lord, that the plowman shall overtake the reaper." Unable because of other importanl duties to accept the invitation to take part in the great convention of Chris tian KndeaVorers at Cincinnati, begun last week, I preach u sermon of eon-j-ratulation for all the members of that magnificent association, whether now fathered in vast assemblage or busy In their places of usefulness, transatlan tic au j cisatlantic, and an it is now liar veal time in the fields and sickles arc flushing in the gathering of a great crop, 1 tlnd mighty suggestive lies in By text. It Is a picture of tropical clime, with a season so prosperous l lint tin harvest reaches clear over to the plant ing time, and the swarthy husband man, busy cutting the grain, alums', (eels the breath of the horse on hi. shoulders, the horses hitched to the plow, preparing for a new crop. "Be fcnld the days come, saith the Lord, that tlie plowman shall overtake the reaper." When is that? That is now. That is this day, when hardly have you done reaping one harvest of religious result than the plowman is getting ready for another. In phraseology charged with all ven om and abuse and caricature I know that infidels and agnostics have de clared that Christianity has collapsed-; that the Bible is an obsolete book; thut the Christian church is on the retreat. 1 shall answer that wholesale charge to-day. Between 3,000,000 and 4,004,800 Dn dcirsrers sworn before hlgb Heaven that they will do all they can to take America for Qod, Europe for God, Asia nd Africa for God are not the signs most cheering? Or, to return to the agricultural figure of my text, more than a million reapers are overtaken by mora than a million plowmen. Be sides this, there are more people who believe in the Bible than at any time in the world'a existence. An Aaab guide waa leading a French infidel cross the desert, and ever and' anon the Arab guide would get down tn the and and pray to the Lord. It disgust ed the French infidel, and after a WMf, is the Arab got up from one of Ms prayers, the Infidel aaid: "How do you know there ia any God ?" And Hie Artb guide said: "How do I know that a man and a camel paseed by our tent laat eight ? I know it by the footprint in the sand. And you want to.knuw bow I know whether there la any God? Look at the sunset. Is that the foot step of a man?" And by the same proceeds you and I have come to noder itaeffl that this book is the footstep of (tad. But now let ue see whether the book is s last year's almanac. Let ua are "httaer the church of God is a Bull Runt retreat, muskets, canteens asversacks strewing all the way. The frest'English historian Sharon Tur- ; atr, a man of vast learning and grd. socurtcy, aot a clergyman, but an at- . orney as well aa a hiatorion, gives this OTCmhtlminff atatla.ln in 4 Christianity tad jn regard to the nans- ! will." Why, my friends, infidelity ia ber os Christiana in the different eon- not half ao blatant in our day aa it turiens ln the first century 50O0u was in the days of our fathers. Do Christians, in the second century 2,000,- I ywu know that in the days of our fs MO Christiana, in the third century j there there were pronounced infidels wdwo Christians, in the fourth cen- "7 W. 000,000 Christians, in the fifth ternary n.ooo.OOO Christians, in the ! !r.th century 20,000,000 Christiana, rn ! Joe seventh century 24,000,000 Otacis- ! 'at, in the eighth centurv 30.000.006 t h, .il , . ... . I vneuinia oeniury tu,ouu,- j WO Christians, in the tenth century 50,- j 300,000 Christians, in the eleventh mm. i "yTO.W.oooChristUne.inthetwselfth , 'arery 80,000,000 Christians, in the j h-rfeetith century 75,000,000 Chris- ''at, in the fourteenth centurv 80.000.- I. v II I 1 1 I , U I " I , ' wmstlana. in th fimK t,,,.- M.000,000 Christians, in the sixteenth ,ntry 115,000,000 Christians, in the "'nteenh century 155.000.000 Chris- UB. in Kn -1 1- , , . ' rii-iiicriua centurv uu. '" I. nrlstln mA I i K utVOUCULC, UIJUII . j'"' ln uly one century and more made up in the following cen- , r"0. whrle it is the usual computa . 11 tBt here were at theclose at te , century 470,000,000 Chris- tu makinr u to believe that before tts oenturw- . -i j .i !ii.i II k . . U, wmm uuvm uj Hiiru notanna. - ' ' luri-n it. I,.,,..,, ., ., ,f. p i ia,T Chrictlnnlt..! - l... i. t -inenai liow lonesome it nnikt wiu TBKe It out or the uoor- , "or Christianity! Four hun- j aillions in one centurv In f... or tnis year 2,500,000 copies of - o f n . , , . , nrt 1 - ..ubuiai.iiuuiT-u. --in ia im- an oil rill nuiih .in " snH .i. . , . -- uown everv irate. Si-n how -luuora is being surrounded and j . "lOlnbed nnd attacked h thia nil -uiiii unaisai si .i, i... "U.nin.tn.-.u I. , , " a ' IITHIIIIIIIIK ""lonanes and native helpers u cMirilfP leic 4. a.- 1 urii'cnih i .. .a c a ...vWjuu 1 11 1 it n l Tl tl II I onver- Now there arc over "W.OOO convert, I. V- ' iu 1 1 c i ii r uuu m OUalltn.v-.-- . . B f my 1, to plant the batteries. It r ass niunv ,.... , i a In . il " " ' ,v.r I'm ll I l Ul Will "eand lh.o j -ii .t , eand they maj do all theworkin ten minute. These Gospel batteries are being planted all along the sra coasta and in all nations. It ma 3 take a good while to plant them, and they may do a'l their work in one da) . '1 1.. j Will. Nations are to be born insdsy. But just come back to Chrlstendi in end recognize the fact that during the last ten years us BMuy people1 have con nected themselves with evauge Ileal churches as connected themselves with the churches in the first 10 J ears of last century. So Christianity is failing back, aud the Bible, they suy, is be coming au obsolete book. I go into a court, and wherever I find a judge's bench or a clerk's desk I find a Bible. l"pon What book could there be uttered the solemnity of au oath'.' What book is apt to be put in the truak of the young man as be leaves for city life? The Bible. What shall 1 find iu nine out of every ten homes iu this city V The Bible. In niue ont vf every tei homes ill Christendom? Tlie Bible. Voltaire wrote the prophecy that the Bible in the nineteenth century would become extinct. That century is gone, and 1 have ro tell you t hat the room iu w hich Voltaire wrote that prophecy not long ago was crowded from floor to ceiling with Bibles from Switzerland. Suppose the congrena of the United States should puss a law thut there should bo no more Biblea printed in America and no Ribles rend.' If there are lit), 00(1,030 grown people In t lue 1' nitetl States, there would be 60, 000,1100 people iu an army to put down such n law und defend ttieir right to read the Bible Hut suppose the con gress of the Onlted States should inuke. a law against the reading or the publication of any other book, how inuny people would go out In such a OTUaade? Could yieu get 60, 000,000 people to go out ami risk their lives in the defense of Shakespeare's tragedies or Gladstone's traits or Maouulay'B "Uistory of England?" You know that there are a Cliousuint uieu who would die in the defense of this book where there is not more than one man Who wonld die in the defense of any other book. You try to insult my common sense by tell ing me the Bible is fading out from the world. It is the most popular book of the centuries. How do I know it? I know it just as I know in regard to other books, i Harw many volumes of that history ( atre published? Well, you say 5,000. now many copies ( anotner nook are published? A hundred thousand. Wtjich la the more popular? Why, of coarse the one that has the hundred thousand circulation. And if this book haa more copiea abroad in the world, if there aro fire times aa many Bibles abroad aa any other book among civ ilised nationa, does not that ahow you that the moat popular book on earth to-day ia the word of Qod ? "Oh," aay people, "the church ia a collectkesn of hypocrites, and it ia lott ing ita power, and it ia fading out from the world." Ia It? A bishor of the Methodist church told bm that that denomination averages two new churches every day. In other words, they build 730 churchea in that de nomination in a year, and there are at -least 1,500 new Christian churches built in America every year. Does 1 (.hit liuiV n m Ihniifl, Ik. I'hrlatUn church veere fading out, as though it were a defunct institution? What stands nearest to tlso hearts of the American people to-dey? I do not care in what village or what city or what neighborhood you go. What is K? In it the poet oSSee? Is it the hotel? Ia it the lecturing hall? Ah, you know it ia not! You know that that which stands nearest to the hearts of the American people ia the Christian church. The infidels aojr: "There ia great liberty now for infidels; freedom of platform. Lnfldelity shows iu power from the fact that it is everywhere w, 1 . -., I .,1 . n.l S k. It in public authority, and they could get any political position? Let a man to-day declare himself antagonistic to the Christian religion, and what city wants him for mayor; what atate waata him for rovernort what na- . . .... . . how wama mm lor president or lor king? Let a aaaa openly proclaim himself thn enrmr of our irlorioua Christianity, and he cannot get a ma- jority of votes ki any stute, in any city, iu any county, in any ward of America. I ana mightily encouraged because 1 1 find, among other things, that while thia Christianity has been bombarded for oenejsiriea infidelity haa not de- cfrwnil nnfl rhurh ue erilllllpil i.ui. 1-1. a. ...i ... uuuiarwi , ur WW UVKU mil! TCI nc Ol one chapter of all the Bible. If that haa been their magnificent record for the centuries of the past, what may we expect for the future? The church all the time getting the victory, and ' their shot aud shell all gone. And then I find another must en ! couraging thought in the fact that ine secui.ii ii lining i'ipub uiiu liie I -.1 1.. 1 U .. tum for the oroi'liiiniLLioti of the flnsnel. Kverv banker in this eanltal to - morrow, every Wall street banker t,,..rrnu In N',.w Vnrk. avarr Stutu street banker tomorrow iu Boston, mo i . i. i.B. I'll r v 11111,1 h ii-t-i, ui nil l i ' i 1 1 1 i w i I'hii-nl,. hi hi i arerv Imnker in the Z7. , ' , . n - ill hnvn In Ins liiiikut a treatise on Christianity, 10, 20 or 30 passages of Rnrlnturn in tlie reiiorts of sermons int - ilLIICU UMllm V..V , u HHI. 1, 1, .., t ,., on.i ... .s . It will be so in Chicago, so in New Orleans, so In Charleston, so in Bos ton, so in Philadclphlai so in Cincin- ( ol trt nmrvivln 1 Lnnn' the tl'ni-t societies are doing a grand and glo- j rious work, but 1 tell you there is no power on earth to-day equal to the fact that tlio American printing press : is taking' up the sermons which arc preached to a few hundred or a few thousand people, aud ou iluuday rtiorning and Monday evening scatter ing thai truth to the millions. What .ii encouragement to ev-ry Christian maul Then you have noticed a mere sig nificant faei a you bava talked with people on the subject, that they are getting disgusted with worldly j'liiioa opliy us ;i matter ol comfort. They aay it docs no. umouui to anything when yi.u bavi a dead child in the ( lu.'ise. They tell .iu ivheu they were kick und the door of t hi- future sc?m-d , opening tin- only comfort they couid find was the fjoapel. People are hav iag demonstrated .iil over the land that science and phlloaophy cannot aolace the troubles and woes of the world, and they want some other re ligion, and they are taking Christian ity, the only sympathetic religion Unit ever came into the world. You just take a ecientifto consolation isto that room where a mother haa lost hor ahild. Try in that case your (splendid doctrine of the "survival of the fittest." loll her that child died because It was not worth as much us the other children. That is your i "survival nf the fittest. " Just try your transcendentalism, your phlloao phy, your science, uu thai widowed soul, ::ini tell her it was a geological necessity unit her companion should 1m taken away from her. jiwt us in the course of the world'a history the megatherium and tli iohtbyosaurua had to pusH out of existence, und then you go on iu your scientific, consola tion until you get to the sublime fact that 10,000,000 years from now we ourselves may be scientific specimens on the geologic shelf, petrified speci mens of an extinct human race. And after ymi have got all through with your consolation, if the poor afflict ed soul Is not erased by it, we will , send rtvrth from any of our churches the phiiuest Christian we have, aud with One-half hour of piyer and reading of Scripture u-oinises the tears will be wiped away, and thn house from floor to copoiu will be flooded with the calmness of an In diaji summer sunset. There Is where I see Uie triumph of Christianity, i l'eople are dissatisfied wrth every thing oise. They wuut dud. They j want Jews Christ. The fact la that Infidelity nnd ag noaticlam are founded en igno . ranoe geological, ignorance chemical, I ignorance eetroneesical, ignorance ! geographical. We hava heard what I the enemies of Christianity have had j to testify. Now I put before you the i teatfmoeiy of the church on earth an ; the church in Uaaven. Net hftn, uot a thouaaad, net a million, but all of the chvuarh on earth and all of' the redeemed in Heaven. Will you take taw evidence of those who have wit nessed as well aa felt the power of religion, or will you prefer tlie tes timony of those who begin by declar ing that they have never witnessed or felt Its power? You tell me that on a certain 4th of March, to yearn ago, a prerMent of the United States was maaagurated. How do I know It? You tell me there were 10,000 per sons who distinctly heard his ineftigu ral addreea. I deny both. I deny that be was inaugurated. I deny that his inaugural address was delivered. You a4c why? I did not aee It. 1 did not hear it. But you say there were 20,000 people who did see and hear him. Is not the testimony of the 20,000 who were present worth more than the testimony of one who was absent? Now, there are some men who say they have never seen Christ crowned in the heart, and they do not believe, it is ever done. There Is a group of men who say they have never heard the voice of Chrtat, that they have never heard the voice of God. They do not believe tbat any hing he It ever occurred. 1 point to twenty, a hundred thousand or a million people who say: "Christ waa crowned ln our heart's affeetiena, we have aeen Him and felt Him tn our sous, and we here heard His veios; we have heard it in the storm and dork neeer; we have hoard it again and again." Whose testimony will you take? These men who aay they have not heard the voice ef Chrlht, have not seen the coronation, or will yon believe the thousands and tens of thousands of Christians who testify of whet they saw with their own eyea and heard wrth their owe) eare? Young man, do not be ashamed to be a friend of the Bible. Do atqt put your thumb in your vest, aa yeung men sometimes do, snd swagger about t iilking of the glorious right of nature and of there being ne need of the Bible. They have the light of nature in India and China and in all the dark places of the earth. Ihd you ever hear that the light of nature gave them comfort for their trouble? They have lancets to cut und juggernauts to crush, but ne com fort. Ah, my friends, you had better stop ymir skeptkiam. Suppose you are put in a crisis like that ef Col. Kthan Allen. I saw the acaount and at one time mentioned it in an ad dress. A descendant of Ethea Allen, who is un infidel, Baid it never oc curred. Soon after I received a let ter from a professor in one of our colleges, who is also a descendant of Ethan Allen and is a Christian. He wrote me that the incident Is aecn ratc; that my statement wa authen tic and true. The wife of IVh.in Al ln was a very consecrated Woman. The mother instructed the daughter in the truths of Christianity. The daughter sickened and was about to die, and she said to her father: "Ku du r, shall I take your Instruction or hli.ill I take mother's instruction? I ii ti i going to die now; 1 must have the matter decided." That man, who had been loud in his infidelity, Mid to his dying daughter: "My dear, you had better take your mother'! religion." My advice Ts the same to you, O young man! Ymi know reli gion comforted her. You know what she said to you when she was dying. You had better tuke your mother's religion. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. mans In Hie InteemntlOBMsl Series (ur Jul) nun i.Mi cnlle aVtsrafcusn. Prepared bj n C. Lcnlrcton. TUB LOBSi S THAT, III. t . i::l-.v) 1, Now the Lord had said unto A or a in, Jet thee out of my country, ;.rr u ,n thy ather's house, ui to a lunU lii it l will hew thee: ii. AnU I win maki at thei a great na ton, and 1 will Diet, thee, and ir. .I.i- thy titiue sn-at; and thou shall be u blessing. I 3. And 1 will bless Hum thai bless thee, tad curse hlru thai curseth thee; .mil In I ihee shall all families ot tin- tartb be pleased. i 4. So Abrum depart, d. tin l...n: hud I (Boken unto him; and Lot Hint with him; lir.d Abratn was seventy and live yearn old llthea he departed "ut of Haran. 6. And A brum took Karat, his wife, and Lot his brother's son, and all tin ir Mil llanee that they h.n! gathered, and tin I .mils that they had. (often In Haran; and ihey wenl frth to so Into tin land "f .'ana. in; and Into the land ut Canaan they tame. 6. And Abrum passed through the land into the place of Blchi m, unto the plain of Mori h- And tin- ( 'a i. aai.it a- I hi n In the -al. d 7. Ami the Lord appeared unto A lira m ind said. Unto thy seed will l u.vi- this and; and there bullded he un altar unto Ihe Inird. who appeared unto him s. And he removed from thence unto a nanataln on the east uf Bethel, and pitched his tent, having Bethel on tin sest, and Hal un the east; and there he jullded an altar unto the Lord, and calltd ipmi tin nam of the land. 9. And Abram tourneyed, on .-till toward the south. 80LDBN TEXT. 1 will bless H i ml make i name srreati nnd thou ibult In- n blessing-. lies, 111 tat. NOTES AND COMMENTS Two stories come up for considera tion In connection with this lesson, tad they are embraced in the eleventh and twelfth chapters of Genesis, Uead he whole of both chapters. The n" ttoriei lire: The Confusion of Tongues.. The Call of Abraham Qi nesls II Qi ni l is The Confusion of Tongues, The loAdf according to Ussher's biblical ihronology occurred iu the year L'.i is d. ('. The population at this time gain began to increase through the fumllies of Noah's three suns, and as ihe population increased a new civil! tation was gradually taking the place 3f the old. Before the flood there wn anarchy, after tc flood began the -eign of law. Not law aa we under stand it to-day. Patriarchal govern ment Came into being, that is the head of each family or group of families be ran to exercise control over and com mand the obedience of his progeny and icrvants in nil the affairs that per ;a!ned to social life. He became the judge in case of disputes, and exercised generally the functions of ruler and Df judge. For 100 years these people poke one language. But they lie fame too numerous to live longer in ne community, so they separated, oine going to the east, some to the ecet, others to the north, and many to the south. The immediate cause of this grent migration lay in a great project which was on foot near the present site f Babylon. Tlie people hud begun to fear another flood. A tower that, would reach to Heaven leemed a plausible way of preventing any wholesale destruction of life. They had begun to forget the promise af (iod. So God Himself took a part in the work, and nbout that same time it happened tbat the discovery was made that they could no longer under- titad what one said to another. (If course it was impossible to go on with the great Undertaking when gen eral intercommunication was denied l hem, so gradually the work was dropped nnd the people separated. It is said that to-day there nre over 3,000 language spoken, and that all are traceable back to less than 3(10 leading iangnnges. The OOnfuaion of tongues has always been going on and will con tinue to go on as long as people will continue to work at cross-purposes with the plans of fiod. Contrast the lay of Pentecost with the day of 'onfuslon of tongues. On the day of Pentecost the disciples of Jesus be came brothers with all the world, and were understood by each hearer iu his own tongue. The Call of Abraham. -Oeneail 12: l-'. letails the account of the call of Abra ham. This may be sitrri to be the first great call recorded in the Bible. It reminds us of the call of Moses a lit tle later, of the call of Samuel, of the call of David, of Jeremiah and Isaiah, of Matthew and Saul (Paul). Kvery man receives n Di vine call, but these referred to have been especially notable in that they were of national or international im port. The call of Abraham meant the beginning of a nation, and, through this nation in rhe person of Jesus f'hrisf, the salvation of the world. Abraham was n religious man, a man of God. His heart was so nearly right that Hod could say: "I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee." He was a man so pure in heart that the Lord appeared unto him (Gen. 12:7). Ur was the holy city of the Chaldeana. It waa an idol at roua city, worshiping many gods. If the truth were to be perpetuated among men, the men who saw the truth would 6ave to give it n better environment into which to grow. Abraham was a worshiper of the true God. he heard the call to leave the city of idolatry. Because of his ready compliance it was made possible that in him should all families of the earth be blessed. Wheat nnil Chaff. Christ completes the command ments. The picture of Christ is developed in the dark room of prayer. Your feelings In the meeting may be injurious if they do not become facts In the market They who do not bring the Kingdom to earth will not be brought into the kingdom in Heaven. When we nsk fur deliverance from suffering God often answers best by giving deliverance through suffering Ham's Horn. GOOD AND BAD MILKERS. Why lliilrjmen Minnie Mnke Oee si. .mil I 1.1. Of (lie Milk In. hi aii Thee . At in i Ik. i n c trial held in connection with one of the lecelit summer shows ' iii ICngland the con which was awarded the tirst prUr produced over six gal lons of milk iii the day, and her milk was so rich in qualHj thai i' produced over four pounds of butter. At the game Shot there were i n exhibition other cows of the Mime breed and practically the same sie nnil weight Which produced only two to tl re. gal lens uf milk and barely urn- ooml i f butter. It would be a mistake Ni sup pose thai the feeding of one of the last-named would cost as much as the six-gallon cow, because, ns a rule, the better milker a cow is Ihe more f . .... I will she consume. It is only natural that a cow yielding six gallons of milk .should require a much more lib eral food ration than one producing less than half that quantity. The dif ference in the cost of fei ding tin cow -in question would not, however, be anything like so marked as their rela tive milk yields Wonld suggest. In practice it is found thai cows pro ducing only H, gallons to two gallons that is. six to righUquarts per day cost us much to keep gg those y ielding double that quantity. Il is only when calculations of this kind are gone Into thut the difference between good gnd bad milkers can be properly estimated. At least occasional tests should be made of the milk which all the cows in thu herd arc producing, and a similar test should be made of the food which lin y are consuming, and if it is found, as it i to be feared will be only too frequently the case, that the animals are not giving a sufficient return for the cost of the food which they ore disposing of. they should be got rid of at the first opportunity and their places filled by others capable of giv ing a better return for the food. Farmers' Gazette. GOOD PASTURE FENCE. Ite Inventor, n North Dakota Men. Una I ard One fur Three lenra with atlefaetloa, A cheap fence for cows and calves St panturs can lie made as sketched, 'l ake, two-foot posts (a a a), sharpen, drive in the ground u rod apart, leaving eight Inches ubove ground. Fasten a EXCELLENT PASTURE FENCE smooth wire (bb) on top of posta with staple (c c c). A cow is tied to a rope about IS feet long. Fasten a block six by sis inches or three feet long to rope. Attach rope in center (d) of end of stick with staple. I have used this sort of a fence w-ith satisfaction three years. I used four-foot cordwood sawed in half for posts. The longer the rope used the farther the cow can graze. J. Peterson, in Farm and Home. WATER AFFECTS MILK. . Therefore the Farmer Who Lets Ilia t'owa Drink from I -.... 1 t'omnilta i I Miiuiimif Crime. We hear some tltfsus that we find hard to believe in the way of the treat ment of dairy cows. One of these things is that there are here and there pastures in which the only watering place is a stagnant pond full of in sects and slimy grasc-. It it I won der t hat cows can driuk such si i,1T and still remain healthy, but it is certain that tiny take chances ou acquiring sonic one of the water-borne diseases common to stock. No human being should be asked to drink milk made out of such wuter, even after it has been strained through the cow. It is claimed that other owners are known to water their 0OWS out of rain water barrels. Well, tlmt is only a slight improvement over the stagnant pond method. The water iu the rain water barrel soon takes on a smell that is disagreeable to man und beast. Why can't our cows have at least pure wuter to drink? Water, pure und sparkling, enters very largely into the life of every being. Lei us be sure that the milk we drink is made from water and food absolutely pure. farmers' Keiew. euichutcl Cheese Making;. Neufchatel is a soft, white, und, us generally eaten, entirely uncured chaeae, resembling iii name only the celebrated Ncufchatel cheese of Switz erland. Very briefly and exactly we may define it as unskimmed milk, coag ulated with rennet, allow ed to atand until sour, the surplus whey removed by drainage am pressure, after which tha resulting curd is salted to taste and molded into the familiar little cylin ders of the stores. This is an out line of the process, but the questions of ripeness of milk, amount of ri nnet, length of time it stands before drain ing and the pressure to be npplii d lire not easily explained on paper, and thi i constitute the ort of N ufchati ! n .ik ing. The bumblebee, with his Fuzzy . and body, is the best carrying medium for the distribution of pollen from blossom to blossom. Without this in sect the clover field would be seed less. The blackbird is a great enemy to the insect pests of the garden and or-shard. g appears to be rapidly ap a degree of re-pect aoility Juillclel Itei-.ianl. en un con - ni e r a- tion. As hereto fore noted, the I lllll III I .11 III Ii I i II U United States supreme court holds that a stock deal cannot be repudi ated mi the ground that il is a gam bling transaction. This would teem to cover "bucket shop" deals as well s i hose oft he st i ek i xchange proper. And now we gel from the I'uited States cuiirt at Indianapolis another Illustration, observes the Uetroil l''r Press, gambler opened a "jack pot" with a counterfeit dollar, and w;ts hauled before the court counterfeit m ni j I .u dered is that II is no v lol to use a counterfeit coil a "jack pot" In a poker would Indicate recogniti game, by consideration i and w rungs in playing it, suggest i thai t is safe t for passing verdict rcn ttion of law in opening game. This iu of the if the rights while it also i have i" Kiu- terfeil money while s'.M'.iiL' I elsewhere. Tl .11 i B p pro ne s pus ker game, iecution v ession If not a . not for gambling, luiinl using counterfeit col to fleece possible tl how hairs can be spl simply for i a ii : t tempt rs. Strange "As a rub worldlings' i ' 'thorough-going i be termed 'smart,' It i- very seldom 'l hi- Onl "Smart' People, i lui t religious or pi i iis people can be culnrly observes a world rnry. "To be 'really perfi ct ion iu dreas and so cnueu, on ly contempt smart' nieaui general effect, ami artistic taste in all places and at nil times, whether it be iii the world of sport or in public p races of iiiniis ii-, and In society generally, it also entails a great deal of thought as to how all things what soever can be dune iii the best possi ble style. Smart people look nice from the moment Ihej rise In the morning to the last thing iit night and never give themselves away over the smallest detail of appearance or conversation. When they entertain it always 'done perfectly,' with plenty uf go and life, whether it be a dance, dinner or garden fete; ol course, to act up to this stand ard of 'smartness' would mean a large income a mastery of the ark of wit and 'tact' at all times gad in all plnces." This view will hardly receive sufficient substantiation to make it authorita tive. The young man in demand every where, to-day, is the one who can create something, the man of product ive power. There nre many who can do routine work, follow prescribed lines, carry out in detail a programme mapped out by others; but the man of origingl force, of constructive en ergy, who can Mart out in untrodden !"iths a"d w the way for others. is as rare as ne is valuable, says Suc cess. There is alway s a premium on the thinker, the man of original ideas and methods and real productive force. Insurance companies are scouring the country for such men; merchants are iu need of them, great combinations are looking for them as leaders; they are wanted in law. In the business world, in the field of sci ence, in nil walks of life. A Brown county, Kansas, gtrl loved a young man sonic arid his driv ing horse more. She was engaged to him, but when he sold the horse she stoutly declared that he would hava to get the animal back or hunt an other wife. The young man offered the purchaser of the horse a Inmus of $50 to trade back, but the latter refused, and the young man, in ex treme distress, told the story of Ids' love and his plight. The purchaser melted and gave up the horse and the announcement of a marriage is mnui to be published in Brown county. It is said that Niagara Kails lunks like a veritable midway. There nre fakirs and side shows of every kind and description, from the bearded lady to the three-horned cow, that have attracted Ihe small buy and his elders, too, for that mutter, for many years iu the circus side shows. The r.ulTiilo exposition is, of course, the cause of all this additional effort at amuaement, as it i calculated that fully nine-tenths of the people that visit the exposition during the sum- 1 iner Will journey to MaglU'.l. The Daughters of Ceres la a iclety in Iowa composed of women win. live on farms, but who have the prevailing "jitiing" instinct. Some of the wives and daughters of the farmers are said to drive over 12 miles to attend the meeting', which are held semimonthly. A systi in of traveling libraries among the various branches has been founded, and ilebatts on social und economic questions, with i heir special relation to a rural population, are frequently held. A musician in New Vork asserts that not only animals o.it piants have a pas sion for sweet iniisic, and a Hostoniati musician avefs that when he plays harmonies his sensitive plant "stretches abroad, drinking iu the music like sunshine." If. i ri the oth er hand, he strikes a diacord, tii plant tremblt and closes. The people of the United S: .. j arc the best (ed people of the v. . anil I consume more per bead per ye; . .juji I the inhabitants ol any oihei uouatrj of the w orld. L Qambl oroach'n