The Missouri Bar association has adopted a series of recommendations which, if followed, will radically re- duce the divorce business in the Mis- gouri courts. A New York circus manager has placed at the service of the war de- partment twenty-five elephants for the campaign in Cuba. In one way or an- other those Cubans, sooner or later, are bound to be given a show. The proverbially dull English Sun- day is disappearing under the influ- ence of the bicycle. In this country the reverse is the case, declares the New York World. The bicycle has nearly killed Sunday baseball in many Western towns. There is no particular objection to jokes about the advantage of enlisting football players for the war, but the New York Tribune ventures to predict that the young heroes of the gridiron would make an uncommonly good record f they should volunteer to serve their country. Says the Boston Herald: —It is Mark Twain who observes, in one of his sketches of travel in foreign parts, "that the reason there is comparatively little arable land in Spain is because the great majority of the Spanish peo- ple are in the habit of squandering it on their persons, and when they die it is buried with them. President Dwight reports that the already visible requirements of Yale for buildings and endowments cannot be supplied for less than from $3,000,- 000 to $4,000,000, which he hopes to secure during the next six or seven years. Lest this announcement should stupefy the friends of Yale, he adds that the university has received as much as that since 1887. It is a strik- ing reminder of the generosity with which Americans respond to claims upon their benevolence. The naming of the new battery on Sullivan’s Island, Charleston (S. C.) harbor, after Sergeant William Jasper, is said to be the only instance on rec- ord in this country of a fort being named in honor of a soldier otherthan a commissioned officer. Sergeant Jas- per was shot and killed at Savannah, Ga., on Oct. 9, 1779, while planting the flag of the 2d South Carolina regi- ment on the British ramparts. He had previously distinguished himself during the attack on Fort Moultrie, June 28, 1775. There is a fashion in vegetables as in everything else. At present celery is rising to the top of the wave of pop- ularity. change. is a delicious vegetable when boiled, steamed, fried or baked. It makes an admirable soup, and a superior salad. When old medicinal virtues, being an active nervine. The seeds dried and pulverized make celery salt, and this mixed with powdered pepsin, makes an invaluable remedy The root, which most Americans foolishly throw away, when washed and boiled is a very wholesome and palatable dish. ‘lhe pale green, yel'ovish tips are fine ornaments for garnishing meats and salads, and, to cap the cli- max, the chemists now extract from the plant several new medicines of great efficacy. There is good reason for the It is a fine appetizer raw, it it has for many kinds of dyspepsia. In general the phrase ‘‘American hu- mor’ has come to mean a spirit for catching the ludicrous and grotesque side of life. Yet the humor of Amer- ica today is far deeper, maintains the Chicago Times-Herald. Grim-visaged war is not the companion to evoke light merriment even in the most flip- pant minds. The righting of great wrongs does not tend to idle jesting. There are quips and jokes of the hour, but they bite with a mordant sting,and beneath the surface words betray the serious temper of the time. A zeal- ous orator for war was asked: ‘You will go to the front at once?’ ‘No, but my brother is ready,’ he replied, and asked: ‘“Will you go?’ “I suppose so, since I have no brother,’ was the dry retort of the man who had argued for peace. In this reply rings the quality of the speech of that great American, Abraham Lincoln. Such, humor is of the very essence of wis- dom. It betokens loyalty to the will of the people even through contempt for the inconsistent advocate of an unwelcome policy. But humor is a mood not always of whimsical or ironical turn. That which now governs the minds of citizens is relentless and forbidding in its revolt against cruelty, injustice, and a smarting sense of be- trayal. This republie, standing fore- most in the eye of the world, has shown the nations that the humor of America is imperative in its demands for fair dealing and respect for the rights of men. Z pot os eR eid eee ee ee Se ee 830 30 E30 3030 L308 3 203 TERRIBLE DYNAMITE CRUISERS AND BATTERIES. = & WE OWN TWO SHIPS UNLIKE THOSE OF ANY OTHER NAVY, SA) 50% 93 33 OCOD GED HONGO eset ‘With the incorporation of the Brazil- ian cruiser Nictheroy into the United States Navy under the name of the Buffalo that branch of the service will have two ships that are unlike those of any other navy in the world—de- stroyers on a huge plan. These two ships—the Vesuvius and the Buffalo —are throwers of dypamite. The ex- plosives which they throw do not de- pend, as do those thrown from the tor- pedo tubes of ordinary warships or-the missile sent from a torpedo boat, on any mechanical contrivance inside of the missile. They travel through the air, and their propulsive force comes from compressed air, which is stored in a tube that is more like a gun than a tube. The shots have ranges far su- perior to those of the torpedo and ac- curacy which is almost perfect. The one question is whether large ships like these can get near enough to an enemy to reach him with their shot. They are not like torpedo boats or torpedo boat destroyers. They are large and noticeable objects, and while the Vesuvius is armored, the Buffalo has little defensive power. Butif they do get near enough to an enemy to is different. Against this objection the gun offers these advantages over the submarine torpedo: It has greater range, is almost absolutely accurate, and the projedtiles cannot be stopped in its course by torpedo nets or exploded by rapid fire guns, as it is too swift in its flight. The aerial torpedo which is thrown from the dynamite guns on these two ships is shaped like the head of a rocket and is about ten feet long. FIFTEEN-INCH FULL CALIBRE DYNAMITE PROJECTILE. Spiral vanes guide its flight and the explosive charge, consistitig: of from 200 to 500 pounds of nitro-glycerine, is in the head and middle of the pro- jectile. When loaded the entire af- i#ir weighs 1000 pounds. It can be set to explode either on impact or by a time fuse. A range of 2000 yards with entire accuracy is attainable. As said before, the question is whether a ship carrying these guns SANDY HOOK’S DYNAMITE BATTERY. use their dynamite guns properly the ship against which they operate is doomed. No armor, no strength of construction, no bulkheads can save the warship that is struck by-the tre- mendous charge of nitro-glycerine or explosive gelatine with which the aerial torpedo is loaded. The Nictheroy originally was a merchant vessel owned by the Mor- gan line, and her name when she was in a peaceful occupation, was El Cid. She was bought by the Govern- ment of Brazil in the time of the last revolution there, and was to be used against the insurgents, who had seized the navy and were bombarding the forts in the harbor of Rio de THE THREE DYNAMITE CRATERS OF THE VESUVIUS. Janeiro. She was refitied pretty thor- oughly as a cruiser, and her coal bunkers were so arranged that they protect the machinery and the parts necessary to operate the gun. The latter is mounted in the bow, and projects through an opening in the spar deck, giving it a clear range for- ward and permitting a free motion on each side, so that it can be trained either to port or starboard. The air reservoirs of the gun are in the lowet hold, on the starboard side, directly under the gun, and a central air-pipe leads up through the foundations on which the carriage of the gun could get near enough to attack anen- emy. To approach an alert ship of war close enough to use the dynamite gun the Vesuvius or the Buffalo must steam for several miles under fire, for the ordinary powder guns of any warships will throw shot at least three or four miles, and the big guns will carry seven miles with fair accuracy. The dynamite throwers must rush at the enemy under a storm of shot, there- fore, and this, at the rate of speed of either these ships, would mean that they would be exposed to it for fifteen minutes at the least before they could reply. But if they survive this fire and drop one projectile within fifty yards of the greatest battleship afloat, the result will be the enemy’s annihil- ation. No craft can withstand the shock of an explosion of the amount of gelatine or nitro-glycerine which their projectiles can carry. It is somewhat misleading to speak of dynamite guns when referring to the dynamite battery on Sandy Hook. What they are really is torpedo tubes that discharge aerial torpedoesinstead of the submarine variety. The tubes are mounted like cannon, and to an extent look like them; but, exactly speaking, they are torpedo tubes, and nothing else. Like the submarine tor- pedo, they are of use only at close range, or what is considered close range in these days of high power steel cannon which throw shot ten miles. The dynamite battery has an extreme range of only 4300 yards, a little over two miles. The accuracy of fire of the dynamite battery is great. This is due to the absolute evenness of the propelling force. Compressed air projects the torpedo. The best of powder varies in pressure, while compressed air is exact.. The full calibre projectile (called full calibre in distinction from the snraller projectiles, which are made to fit the tube by means of fingers) weighs 1000 pounds, 500 pounds of it being explosive gelatine, either nitro- DYNAMITE CRUISER VESUVIUS. rests. Shields protect the weapon and the men who serve it. On the way to Brazil the crew prac- ticed with it, using ‘‘dummy” pro- jectiles, and its accuracy was found remarkable. The gun was so new, how- ever, that the men were almost as much afraid of it as the enemy was expected to be, and there was consid- erable relief on board when it was found on arrival in Brazil that there would be noneed for firing it with real dynamite, as the revolution was over. Smce then the successful in- stallation of two batteries of these guns ¥n United States forts has made artillerists more confident, and much reliance is placed in the ‘work of both the Vesuvius and the Buffalo. One weakness of the dynamite gun system is the fact that the projectiles are discharged with compressed air. This makes necessary a special plant which, of course, means complica- tions of the kind that every naval officer is anxious to avoid. It is not so bad on land, where the necessary steam plant can be protected wifa earthworks, but on a ship the meiter glycerine or guncotton, and it is fired with an air pressure of 1000 pounds to the square inch. This pressure is exerted so evenly and gradually that the explosive is not shocked into pre- mature detonation, and it is so steady that the unwieldy torpedo or projec- tile hits with remarkable accuracy. The enormous charge would wreck the hull of any battleship afloat, even if it did not strike the ship directly, but exploded anywhere within fifty feet of if under water. -There are two dynamite batteries at forts in this country. One is in Fort Scott in San Francisco Harbor and the other is in Fort Hanceck, on Sandy Hook. The Fort Scott battery con- sists of three fifteen-inch and the Fort Hancock battery has two fifteen-inch and one eight-inch tube or gun. The torpedo boat Vesuvius has fifteen-inch guns, : A Kansas genius introduced a bill in the legislature against snoring: in sleeping cars, hotels, churches and other places where the practice ie more or less annoying, AGRICULTURAL TOPICS, The Broody Hen. When the hen is broody, remova her to a new and clean nest at night- fall, and put some china nest eggs un- der her, and darken the nest by plac- ing a cloth or board in front of her, If she sits quietly all day, it will be safe enough to put the clutch of eggs under her the next night. Feed her only dry food while sit- ving, and always have fresh water where she can get it when she comes off. While she is off, see that the eggs are all right, andif any have been broken in the nest, it may be neces- sary to wash the others, as anything which closes the pores kills the chicken. The Life of Peach Trees. It is an almost universal complaint that peach trees do not last as long as they used to do. ~~ We do not believe that this is on account of the weather, because late winters certainly havo not been so destructive as many that occurred thirty to forty years ago. The increase of borers and of fungous diseases, in which we include the yel- lows, are, we think, mainly responsi- ble for the change. By keeping borers out and dressing heavily with potash manures, peach trees may be made much longer lived than they used to be. One of the secrets of the longevity of old-time peach trees was that they were never severely pruned, and never produced heavy crops. The old-time thirty-year-old peach trees had a tall trunk with very little top.— Boston Cultivator. The Gladiolus. What the geranium is to the living- room window-garden, the gladiolus is to the outdoor garden. Such a display as I-bave had of this flower this sea- son! I planted several hundred bulbs among the border plants, and for a month past people have been stop- ping to stare at and admire my free tlower show. And it has been worth coming a long way to see, I assure you! It seems as if every bulb has put up from two to four flower stalks, and such colors! Scarlets, crimsons, pinks, lilacs, mauves, cherries, car- mines, violets, yellows, in endless shades and combinations. No two stalks seem to give flowers alike. I can’t help wondering if the milliners did not get some ideas here for their daring color combinations for hats and bonnets. No two plants were just alike as to flower, it seemed. We cut the great stalks laden with gorgeous bloom for tall vases in the house, for church decoration, and for gifts to friends, but the supply seemed inex- haustible.— Eben E. Rexford, in How to Grow Flowers. Ventilating a Barn Basement, Luther Hoffman, of New Jersey, writes: I have a basement that covers 32x85 feet. This winter I have forty- eight head of cows in it that I am milking and feeding. I have no trou- ble concerning ventilation. Basement is eight feet high. banked nearly to top of wall. There are two driveways and at the end of each I have small windows whiclt I can drop from the tep. When I laid the foundation I used three-inch round tile pipe every six to eight feet just under the sill. These need not bo closed except in case of a blizzard. On the west end there are large win- dows, but I seldom open them, the pipes furnishing enough air. On the south I have double sash windows. ‘The top sash is hung with weights so I can drop them from one inch to two feet, according to the weather. except the space occupied by doors. I also have three hay chutes, which ex- tend from stables out through the roof. These I open or close according to weather. all day, I often leave all ventilators fresh slaked lime. The Bell Glass in the Garden, - The advantage gained by the use ot bell glasses over melon and cucumber | vines is gradually gaining recognition in this country, where it bids fair to be of greater service even than in foreign countries where it has long been practiced. melon in August The north side iss The front is all windows | est | and committed to jail, attempting to ‘When cattle can be out | | ident that it Boilers have been placed near the well {and an effort will be made tomogrow i that they | selves against these attacks. have no fear of further trouble. | counter close to KEYSTONE STATE NEWS CONDENSED HIS FOOT SEVERED. Lightning Maims a Boy and Kills a Dog. Woman Rendered Unconscious. Lightning striking the house of George Waddle, at Liberty, Lycoming County, tore off the shoe of his T-year- old son last week, and the boy’s foot was almost severed from the leg. The bolt also struck the stove, shattering it and killing a dog close by. It passed out through the side of the house, sete fing the building on fire. At Sterling Run, Mrs. Thomas Moore was sitting near a telegraph instrument, when she was struck by lightning and rendered unconscious for ten hours. The following pensions were granted last week: Abednego Womer, Philips- burg, Center, $6; Samuel Mardus, Sax- ton, Bedford, $8; Levi B. Lary, Brook- ville, $8; W. M. Gill, Franklin, $6; W. Cameron, Ohioville, $8; Samuel Shank, Salex, Cambria, $2; Samuel C. Weaver, Waynesboro, $6; John A. Noal, DuBois, $6 to $8; Wesley Stephens, Strongs- town, Indiana, $8 to $12; James Shaffer, Irvena, Clearfield, $10 to W. H. Robinson, Pittsburg, $16 to George B. Dutrow, Altoona, $10 to Thomas Rank, Watsonville, $8 to Frederick Heyl, Allegheny, $12; Mary Conley, Johnstown, $8; Catharine Ann Steiner, Pittsburg, $§; minor of Aman- der Baker, Roulet, Potter, $10; Mary Long, Altoona, $8: Jemimah Walser, Mackeyville, Clinton, $8; Mary 7T. Fox, Bellefonte, $8; Annie M. Campbell, Al- legheny, $8; minors of Mathias C. Oliver, Wyalusing, Bradford, $12; Sarah EE. Horning, Horatio, Jefferson, | $12; Eli G. Fitch, Athens, $10; John D. Clark, Mercer, $6; Thomas H. McCon- nell, Johnstown, $6: Thomas Cart- wright, Patton, $8; Lester Steadman, Crawford, $&; Philip W. Miller, Cata- wissa, $8; Henry Schwenk, Austinville, $30; Philip Showalter, Everett, $12; Lemuel Sterling, Harlansburg, $8; Joseph Smith, Milan, $17; James Brad- dock, Pittsburg, $8: John J. Coller, New Bedford, $17; James W. O'Daniel, Meadville, $10; Kate M. Caldwell, North East, $8; William =H. Boyer, Bellwood, $6; Henry Bloomfield, Al- toona, $12; Jacob Gwinner, Harrisburg, $6; Josephus Ross, Washington, $6; Isaac Wolf, Tower City, 36; Isaac Thomas, Bellefonte, $8; Jacob Shull, Shippensville, Clarion, $6; Pulaski B. Broughton, -Bradford, $6; John B. Cramer, Berwinsdale, Clearfield, $8; Archibald Croyle, Johnstown, $6; Robert McKnight, Bradford, $6; Mar- tin V. Orner, Altoona, $12; James W. Shaffer, Irvona, $10 to $12; Samuel Zimmerman, Milesburg, Center, $6 to $8; James S. Neil, Indiana, $6 to $8. At Chipmunk, N. Y., last week, a gusher was struck that promises to eclipse any well struck in the Bradford field in recent years. The well is the property of the Seneca Oil Company, and is located on the reservation, about 500 feet northeast‘of South Van- dalia station on the W. N. Y. & P. railroad. The Chipmunk sand was tapped at 3:15 p. m., and oil at once gushed from the casing and was ignited by the fire in the boiler. Driller Andrew Cauflield and Tool-dresser James Hogan made a run for their lives. The well has continued flowing without a break ever since and a con- scrvative estimate places its produc- tion at 190 barrels an hour. Many oil men who have visited the well are con- is flowing 150 barrels. to extinguish the fire with steam, but its owners are not very hopeful. Harry Trimble, the young man who | was shot by Herschell Merritt, a non- union mill worker, at Scottdale, a few jays ago, was taken to the Mercy Hos- pital, Pittsburg. Merritt was released on $1,500 bail. The chances of Trim- ble’s recovery are not known. The | parties involved in the trouble and in | recent attacks on the non-union men were not connected with the strikers. The non-union men say that they have not been molested by the strikers for months, but by outside parties, and propose to defend them- Officials William H. Woodring, a hatter, at Allentown, was arrested the other day charged with burn . the store. The night watchman found the stove in the store . overheated and goods on a the stove saturated with oil. Woodring was formerly a | prominent Easton lawyer, and a mem- : A | ber of the open and sprinkle the wet spots with | | shall’s foundry, Pittsburg, while | furnaces the other | stopped. Pennsylvania legislature from Northampton county in 1893. Peter Guth, a millwright ‘at Mar- con- near one of morning had clothing caught on a rapidly revolving shaft. He was whirled around a number of times and fell to the floor, dead, as soon as the machinery was The left arm was torn off structing a scaffold i and the body was mutilated. Guth was To ripen a musk- | in our northern | states is a feat not often accomplished, | or even in early September. ever this has and can be done if na- ture is thus assisted: A twelve-inch bell glass placed directly over the hill at planting time has a two-fold advan- tage; that of hastening germination and preventing the rotting of seeds in rainy weather. As soonas the seed- lings appear the glass must be raised gradually; those which I have in mind ultimately resting upon common bricks turned on edges. These form an excellent support. Three bricks to a glass leave ample space for the vines to run out—a privilege quicklyavailed of. Daily watering is of course in order save in cloudy weather. An idea of the difference in growth may perhaps be best obtained by notes taken July 15, 97. Side by side are four hills of cucumbers planted on the same date. Twelve-inch bell glasses were placed over two of the hills and gradually raised as described. A growth of two feet only had been made by the open air plants against five in the glass capped hills. With such strong sun-stored root-growth melons can but steal a march on the ordinary cantaloupe calendar. Other glass devices may perhaps be less ex- pensive and answer the purpose as well.—G. A. Woolson, of Vermont. Clothes More Important Than Beauty A strange girl reeently camo to Atchison as a bride. ‘‘Is she good looking?” we asked an Atchison wow- an who had seen her. “I didn’t notice,” the woman replied, ‘‘but she is well dressed.” —Atchison Globe. Ro Aa An act of Congress in 1872 ished flogging in the navy. abol- i $7,000. 34 years old and married. Insanely jealous of his wife, William 3arton, of Shamokin, a few days ago | dragged her from bed and with a rock | How- | head and murderously struck her on the several times. Although dazed weakened, Mrs. Barton managed escape to the street, help arrived and Sarton was overpowered and lodged in | e hat : i | it for a time and eternity, but they chose jail. His victim is in a critical condi- tion. The Evangelical tuning township was vandals recently who church in broken amused Pyma- into by them- down the seats and using the Bibles as a door mat. The organ was overturned | and several windows broken. Young men in the neighborhood are suspect- i ed. The will of James A. Wiley, filed at washington, Pa., leaves $3,000 to the First Presbyterian church of Washing- | ton, and at the death of his sister a | $25,000 mausoleum is to be built. About | $50,000 is divided among relatives. Thomas Robinson, former superin- tendent of public printing, has sued the Pennsylvania railroad for $25,000 damages for injuries received Novem- | ber 27, 1897, when struck by a train at Harrisburg. The county commissioners at Butler offered $500 reward for the arrest and conviction of the person or persons who murdered Adam Kamerer. Mrs. Kamerer has offered an additional $300. The sheriff closed the Hotel Weir in Johnstown on executions aggregating F. P. Weir owned the prem- ises. Judge Wallace of New Castle, who sued the. Pennsylvania Company for $500 for legal fees, has got a verdict for $300. = Porter Kinports of Cherrytree, Indi- ana county, has sold all his hemlock timber to Williams & Fourman of Williamsport for $2,000. S. S. Crawford of Butler, who was given knockout drops and robbed of $125 last week, fell from a roof and broke his leg.’ Notice has been received that the salary of the postmaster at New Castle has been increased from $2,600 to $2,700. TE SHBBNTE SHO. LESSON. INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS FOR JUNE 5, Lesson Text: “Jesus Condemned,” Mate thew xxvii., 11-26—Gglden Text: IX Tim. {i., 15=Commentary on the Les- son by the Rev. I, M. Stearns. / 11. “And Jesusstood before the governor and the governor asked Him, saying, Art Thou tlre King of the Jews? And Jesus said unto him, Thou sayest.” He gave the same answer when Judas said, “Master, is it I?” (chapter xxvi., 25). After all the agony of Gethsemane and the insult and mockery before the high priest, along with Peter's denial and all forsaking Him, He has been brought by the chief priests and elders of the Jews before the Roman ZOov- ernor, on their part determined that He shall be put to death (verses 1, 2). When the wise men came from the east. at the time of His birth, their inquiry was, “Where is He that is born King of the Jews?” (chap- ter ii.,, 2). And it shall yet be seen by all nations that He Is what He confessed be- fore Pilate. 12. “And when He was accused of the chief priests and elders He answered noth- ing.” There was nothing to answer, for there was no truth in their accusations, and He knew that they were determined to kill Him and that the time had come for Him to let them. 13, 14. ““And He answered him to never a word, insomuch that the governor mag- veled greatly.” Pilate saw that”’he had a most extraordinary prisoner. He had never met one like this, and he knew not what to think of Him. Pilate had strange work on hand that day, and no man before or since ever had just such anopportunity.: Looking at Jesus we see how we should aet when unjustly treated and falsely accused, for He left us an example of patient endur- ance of wrong that is unparalleled (I Pet. if, 20,21). 15. “Now, at that feast the governor was wont to release unto the people a prisoner whom they would.” Pilate gave the release, but the people chose the man. Consider Him who stood dumb before Pilate as hav- ingup to that time released millions of pris- oners from the power of satan,and millions since by His going to prison and to death for us. He still lives to set the prisoners free; and whosoever will accept Him is for- ever free. He might have set Himself free, for they could not take His life unless Heo willed it (John x., 18). But He could not free Himself and us too. He died that we might live. 16, 17. “Whom will ye that I release unto you, Barabbas or Jesus, which is called Christ?’ Our lesson say that this man was a notable prisoner. In Luke xxiii., 19, it is said that he was in prison for sedition and murder. Fancy people asked to choose be- tween a red handed murderer and the spot- less Lamb of God, between one of the great- est of sinners and the only Saviour of sin- ners, Barabbas or Christ! The choice to-day Is between the most notable ofall prisoners (see Rev. xx., 1, 2), the father of lies and a murderer from the beginning (John wviii., 44), and this same Jesus who silently—but, oh, so beseechingly for our sakes—awaits our choice. 18. “For ho knew that forenvy they had delivered him.” It is written in Prov. xxvii., 4, “Wrath is eruel, andanger is out- rageous, but who is able to stand before envy?” Stephen said in his sermon that ‘the patriarchs, moved with envy, sold Joseph into Egypt” (Aets vii., 9). - 19. “Have thou nothing to do with that just Man, for I have suffered many things this day in a dream because of him.” This was the message that came to Pilate from his wife as he sat on the judgment seat, Good was it for her if she never suf- fered but in a dream because of Him. She acknowledged Him to be a righteous Man, but we have no evidence that she received | Him as the Son of God. Multitudes even yet call Him a good man, but will not ac- i cept him as God their Saviour. 20, 21. “Whether of the twain will ye that I release unto you? They said, Barab- bas.” The [chief priests snd elders put them up to thisy for they were bound to destroy Jesus, There are many in places of authority who influence others to do wrong—many false teachers who teach error. Bd 22. “Pilate saith unto them, What shall I do, then, with Jesus, which is called Christ? They all say unto him, Let Him be crucified.” So they decided that they would have none of Him. He must he killed—the creature hating the Creator, man attempting to do away with God who made him, He eame unto His dwn, and His own received Him not. They said: “This is the heir. Come let us kill him, and let us seize on his inheritance.” And they caught him and cast him out of the vineyard and slew him (John i., 11, 12; Math. xxi., 38, 39). How Hs had told it the his | this affair. to | i dren.” } | ferred to trample it underfoot. selves by defacing the walls, breaking | | all to them over and over. again, for He | knew it all from the beginning! But their hearts were hardened an‘ their eyes were [ blinded. But what about Pilate’s question? for there is none like it. Every one who has ever heard of Christ must ask it of his own soul, “What shall I do with Jesus?” He is before each one for acceptance or res jection. 23,24. “I am innocent of the blood of ! this just person. See yo to it.” Persuaded | of His innocence, vainly seeking to release { Him, yet afraid to do right because of the | people, Pilate washes his hands before them all and proclaims his innocence in But it won’t wash off, Pilate, as easy as that, as you have found ere this. It is easy to say, ‘1 am innocent.” But what does God think of it? In Mark xv. 15. the record is that Pilate was willing to content the people, but he certainly was not willing to do right at any cost, 25. “Then answered all the people and said, His blood be on us and on our chil- They might have accepted this precious cornerstone and built surely upon to have it fallupon them and crush them (Math. xxi., 42, 44). They might have been as safe under this passover blood as were their fathers in Egypt, but they pre- Feartal was the curse they pronounced upon them- selves, and it continues to this day. 26. “Then released he Barabbas unto them, and when he had scourged Jesus he deilvered Him to be crucified.” The mure derer goes free, and the innocent is scourged and crucifled. What about this .blood, Pilate? On what ground do you scourge an innocent man? But O, my soul, leave Pilate to God, and behold for thyself God manifest in the flesh receiving those stripes on your behalf, for it is writ- tenthat He was wounded for our trans- gressions, He was bruised for our iniquities, the chastisement of our peace was upon, Him, and with His stripes we are healed Isa. liil., 5). Hear Him say: “This I bore TR What hast thou done for Me?” May such love constrain us to meekly en- dure all things for His sake!—ILesson Helper. The Ship as Safe Preachers are supposed to bring bad | fuck to a ship. The late Dr. Deems, of the Church of the Strangers, told this story of an ocean voyage: “There were several priests on board, and every moment it was believed that the ship would go down in a terrific storm that arose. The priests in a bedy called on the captain and informed him of the panic among the cabin passengers. “The captain replied: ‘Go forward to the forecastle and see if the -crew are swearing.’ The brethren were shocked as they peeped into the sailors’ quarters by round after round of the most fearful oaths, and when this was reported to the captain he said: ‘Go back to the cabin and have nothing te fear; there is absolutely no danger t¢ the ship. When the crew get to praye ing I will let you know." ” = >