seh mes was ere lief an’s ‘our ring an's ing aX N.Y. din, sugs” thes and able o he. har= dar- 11 of One n—a -who. im-"" > ar- atri=- homa boy- ather and nner, m he that t ex- chita non | they y are manly 1inent chool, 1, une up: preju- nwar- 1st all Ice, 1 ‘ads.’ food Fo my t son, ealth- le my r sup- I be- have since, 2g and ill ef- ations much lusea, ay. grees tly or 3 this active -Nuts nd am nd in- ostum 1mous le.” = fo TEE PULPIT, A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. F. F. SHANNON. Subject: The Thousandfold Man. Brooklyn, N. Y.—Sunday morning, in Grace M, E. Church, the pastor, the Rev. Frederick F. Shannon, had for his subjeet “The Thousandfoid Man.” The text was, from Joshua xxiii:10: One man of you shall chase a thou- sand: for the Lord your God, He it is that fighteth for you, as He spake unto you.” Mr. Shannon said: ‘World building is not so interesting as man building. Some philosophers held that tasks are interesting in pro- portion as they are difficult to perform. If this be good logic, then swinging worlds into space must take secondary rank to building a man in time. We have no intimation that God had any trouble stringing planets along the path of His power. Yet the centuries manite in the verdict that God has had much trouble in producing the divine style of manhood. Therefore, it is safe to conclude that God never un- dertook a vaster plan than to build a man. Worlds play out His purposes in the harmony of gravitation. They spell out His plans in the law of obe- ‘dience. But man ofttimes thwarts those purposes and destroys those plans by setting his own will over against the will of God. Thus he wanders, a kind of lost human pleiad, through the space called time, always and ever coming to himself, but never wholly arrived. Yet man is God’s human *world— greater than any star-world twinkling in space, because he thinks, loves, feels and wills. Now, some. men ex- ercise these functions more largely than their fellows. Then we label them with that ancient degree called greatness. After conferring the de- gree, we spend the rest of our lives musing over what such men did when they got together. They may have been great thinkers, great fighters, great talkers, great writers, or great friends. “But in the last analysis, the greatness men adore is the adoration great men have given te God. This is why we never tire of studying the friendship of Moses and Joshua. They are two links in the golden chain which moors this old world to the throne of God. Napoleon said that his- tory is a fable about which men are agreed. ‘Rather say history is a stream flowing out from the Xternal Heart. Sitting along its shores, like deathless sentinels, are the men God raised up for handing His name and truth down the ages. Our text asks for a consideration of the thousapdfold man, and the reason for his multiplied power. “One man of you shall chase a thousand!’ More startling words could hardly knock at ithe door of the human intellect. They are too vast in their outranging mean- ing to be easily comprehended. Nat- airally enough, the mind asks for a second consideration of them. But a second reading fails to rob them of their significance. Really big things don’t grow less on second sight. Like St. Peter's, their bigness only helps the mind expand to a more capable appreciation of their true dimensions. It is so with men, and it is so with the great objects in nature. Just so a great sentence like ‘this, pregnant with large thought, is not stripped of its treasure by a second or third read- ing. It. is a thought centre round which the mind may revolve with in- creasing profit. Strictly speaking, then, what is meéant by one man chasing a thousand? Does it mean that one man, by his physical prowess, can drive a thou- sand men before him? You wonder at the folly of such a question. Still some people nre so fond of measuring life and men by the yardstick of physi- cal bulk that its absurdity may mock them into a better view. Physical things never did run smoothly on a spiritual track; and they never will, because it is impossible. The thou- sandfold man, according te Joshua, is the man in league with God, housing God’s purposes and co-operating with God’s plans, awaiting God’s signals and answering God’s voices, watching God’s strides in history and hearing God’s truth, dropped in golden num- bers, from ‘‘the harp of God’s eternal years.” He is the man with his feet on Mie earth, his head among the stars, and his heart located in heaven, be- cause heaven is located in ‘his heart. He is the son of yesterday, the man of to-day, the heif of to-morrow— Te ful for Yesterda Ss goodness, i by to-day’s blessings, and i in to-morrow’ 'S hopes. And he is all this because lie is in league with God, and knows it; because he is in love with God, and feels it; because he is living in obedience to God, and wills it. Moreover, the thousandfold man is the man God waits for. It has ever been “one man of you” who has opened the largest doors of opportunity and achievement in the history of the world. One man and God—they are absolutely unconquerable. Grasping the tangled threads of history, they have tied them into one solid knot of divine purpose. And that purpose for ever stands the pledge of a better world and a nobler race. Do you wonder that even God can afford to await for such a man? Then let your wonder give away before this mighty fact: God has to wait, so long as the world remains constituted as it is, for a man to come forward and say, “Here am I—use me.” - God answers back, “I have to use you, because I haven't anything else to use)” When a man comes out like that from the littleness of self into the largeness of God, that moment he nds forth in God’s uni- verse a thousandfold man! Chasing a thousand becomes the business of his life. Chasing a thousand tempta- tions, chasing a thousand sins, a thousand civic wrongs, chasing thousand social evils! But does he stop there? Never! Chasing a thou- sand lost men toward God, chasing them into fellowship with Jesus Christ, i ines from their haunts of splendor touched p of a pure radiant manhood! Tha is the mission of the thousandfold man. And in these days the mission is crying as with the lips of God. Where is the man? Furthermore, if history teaches one lesson it is this—God has His waits and pauses. And for what? Why, for some man to lay hold of His pur- po and carry the out. God has a = been waiting, and still waits, for mea in the everyday walks of life to be true to Him. - O, men, that means you and that means me! God calls a few men to carry on great reforms. He calls all men to carry on a reform with- in their own lives. And it is the man who will do this in God’s way, and in the spirit of Jesus Christ, that be- comes the thousandfold man. He is the determining factor in this world’s progress toward universal righteous- ness. He holds the balance of power which will usher in the millennial dawn, Gone forever the man fearinx spirit. Gone forever that stolid indif. ference. Gone forever that fast shut pocketbook. He lives for God. He talks for God. He gives for God. Consider, also, one of the two reasons for the multiplied power of the thou- sandfold man: “For the Lord your God, He it is that fighteth for you. Any man is braver for the battle if he knows that God is his champion. He may have been ready to show the white flag, leave the field in defeat, steal away in disgrace. Then let him lay vital hold of the truth that God is fighting for him. Instantly every in- gredient of cowardice will vanish from his nature. Something akin fo omni- potence begins to play “along the nerve of his arm. The soul's battlesongs of victory began to swell the rising har- monies in his heart. Championed by God, he knows that, though the worlds may fall, he shall not meet with de- feat. Camping along the path of his destiny is the Sleepless General, who holds the stars in #Iis hand, and the interests of His child in His heart. What magnificent music for the soul to hear, as we go out to life's battle: “For the Lord y our God, He it is that fighteth for you.” Let us give the truth its proper set- ting in our lives. We hear so. much o tmen fighting God’s battles. And we rejoice that this is so. But let not the lesser truth obscure the greater—that God is fighting our battles. And do we not sometimes get so busy fighting God's battles that we forget that God is fighting our battles, which is of much more importance. It may be that God could get along without our reinforcements, after all. But if God’s troops fail to come up, a spiritual Wa- terloo awaits us for certain. Let us make room for this neglected truth in our creed. It will make us better sol- diers of the.cross. It is one of the silent forces which builds the thou- sandfold man. ; But some man says, “How does God fight for me? I want to know.” God is not in the habit of doing things as man does them. Therefore, it is safe to conclude that God does not fight for us after the manner of men. His methods are not man’s methods, and His weapons are not carnal weapons. Briefly, here are a few battlefields where God has fought for you: On the Judean plains shepherds are watching their flocks by night. Sud- denly the heavens are musical with choirs of singing angels. Then one great golden star, as if driven out of its course by the finger of God to signal the shepherds, trembles above the manger. Coming to the spot, they find the babe wrapped in swadling clothes. That was the beginning of God’s greatest battle for you—and the battlefield was a manger! But that Babe increased in stature and wis- dom. He reached the highest type of manhood known to man or God. Grea as a teacher, He was greater as a man, Great as a man, He was greater as a God, for in Him the fullness of God- head made its home. For the first time, man was taught by a Life how to live his own life. God fought for you in the incarnation of His Son. God fought for you in the mysterious agony of Gethsemane. God fought for you in the blood-red suffering of Cal- vary. God fought for you in the dark- ness of the tomb. God fought for you on Mount Olivet, when Christ was taken up, the glory of His ascending body throwing a shining splendor over the track yours wiil go. In countless ways, the Lord your God, He it is that tighteth for you! He fights for you in the blessings He rains upon you day by day. In your home, in your business, in your society, in every privilege you enjoy, God fights for you. God's battlefields are smokeless, but they are victorious! We discover the second reason for the multiplied power of the thousand- fold man in the last clause of my text: “As He spake unto you.” : It is Josh- ua’s way of telling us that God always keeps His engagements. “0,” says some one, “he is talking about God's promises mnow—and they are old.” Yes, let us admit the promises are old. But in growing old they have kept their youth. What sturdy young- sters they are! We can’t afford to rule them out on account of age. Most of the best things in this world are old. The sun is old, the stars are old, the ocean is old, the mountain is old, love is old, music is old, father is old, mother is old, our dearest friends are old. But we are not ashamed of them on that account. So God's promises are old. But they have grown old so gracefully that we ought to be proud to walk life’s pathway, keeping step to their mighty music. What would we do without them? Certainly this world would be a very lonely place, if the old promises didn’t now and then steal into our hearts and hush their fears. A man’s spiritual exchequer is worth something when he knows it is backed by promises as changeless as God Himself. “I will never leave thee nor forsake thee.” That promise alone is enough to make a man a spiritual millionaire. But, remember there are over 33,000 in God’s Word that sing the same tune. The thousandfold man makes much of the old promises, be- cause they have made much of him. Sermonettes. God keeps a reward for the man who who does right. + It is a lopsided religion that leaves the coachman at the curb. The best evidence of your own salva- tion is your interest in that of other When God takes our hand He asks us to take the hand of another. There is no comfort in Repose when its head is pillowed on an aching heart. The circumference of influence de- pends upon the man at the centre of the circle. By the prayerful study of the Serip- tures comes the knowledge of the di- will. any a parent ha tes a wuse the hand of a little was on the latch.—United Pres- Ss s entered the SHBBATH SCHOOL LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS FOR APRIL 23. Subject: The Entry of Jesus Into Jeru- salem, John xii., 12-26=Golden Text, Matt. xxi., 9=Memory Verses, 12, 13— Commentary on the Day’s Lesson. iT I. The triumphal procession (vs. 12-16)... 12. . “The nexi day.” ‘After the supper. This would be Sunday, commonly called Palm Sunday. “Much people.” Vast crowds were present at the Passover. In the time of Nero a census was taken and it was ascer- tained that there were 2,700,000 Jews present at this feast. “To Jerusalem.” Jesus and His disciples left Bethany and went to Bethphage, a small vil lage between Bethany and Jerusalem. Here they stopped and Jesus sent two of His disciples to bring Him a colt on which to ride into Jerusalem. When this was procured He advanced toward Jerusalem. There were many from Galilee who knew Jesus person- ally, and great numbers had been at- tracted to Bethany, excited by the recent resurrection of Lazarus. 13. “Branches of palm trees.” This was a demonstration of their joy: Carry- ing palm and other branches was em- blematical of success and victory. “And cried.” Combining the four ac- counts, we get the following features: Some took off their outer garments, the burncose, and bound it on the colt as a kind of saddle; others cast their garments in the way, a mark of honor to a king (2 Kings 9:13); others gath- ered leaves and twigs and rushes. “Hosanna.” Hosanna is’ a rendering into Greek letters of the words, “Save, we pray” (Psa. 118:25). 1It:is like a shout of, “Salvation! Salvation!’ “King cometh.” Jesus Christ is ap- pointed King over the church (Psa. 2:6), and is accepted by the church. 14. “As it is written.” In Zech. 9:9; 15. “Fear noi.’ There, is no cause for fear. The King is able to defend His people. “Daughter of Sion.” The church; God’s true Israel. ‘Sitting on colt.’ Here. was the trinmph of humility over pride and worldly grand- eur, of poverty over affluence, and of meekness and gentleness over rage and malice, The horse and the chariot were suggestive of war, the ass was the symbol of peace. When they came in sight of Jerusalem, while others shouted Jesus wept over the city. He saw its sins and the sorrows and deso- lation which were so soon to come upon it, .16.. “Understopd not.” . It was the events themselves noiv occur- ring that were dark to’ them. : They were not seen in their true light as a magnifying, as a prefigurative glorify- ing, of a suffering Messiah. ‘Glorified, then remembered.” The ignorance of the disciples. was corrected by experi- ence; What they did not understand now, they understood when the resur- rection and ascension had-taken place. II. The cause of Clirist’s popularity (ves "17-19. 11." “Phe people’ ele. The repeated references to the raising of Lazarus greatly strengthen the his- toric evidence oi the miraele. They are quite inconsistent with the theory either ci a misunderstanding or of deliberate fraud. 18. “This miracle.” “This” is emphatic; other miracles had made but little impression, but this one had convinced even Christ's enemies. 19. © “The world” An exaggerated form of expression shoving Christ's great popularit; 111. Greeks seeking Jesus (vs, 20- 29y, 20. ~*Certain Greeks,” The orig- inal word *“Hellenes” means persons of Greek nationality, born Gentiles of the Greek race. ‘“To worship.”. These Greeks were proselytes to the Jewish religion = xod.: 20:10, ete). 21. ‘To Philip.” It is: not known why they should come to Philip first unless ‘it was because they had some slight ac- quaintance with him. “We would see Jesus.” Not merely to sce ‘His face, but we would speak with Him and be taught by Him. It should be the de- sire of every heart to see Christ. 22. “Andrew and Philip.” How pleasing to God is this union, when the minis- ters of the gospel agree and unite to- gether to bring souls to ‘Christ. IV. Jesus teaches the way of life (vs. 23:26). 23. “Jesus answered them.” Our Lord spake primarily to the Greeks and secondarily to His disciples, (1) of the meaning of His impending death. (2) of the necessity of faithfulness to Him in it, (3) of the blessing attached thereto. *The'" hom.” The ue “Should be glorified.” The time“¥has come when the old prophesies (Isa. 54: 3: 60:3) are to be fulfilled, the Mes- siah’s kingdom is to be set up in the whole earth, and Christ is to take His place on the right hand of God. 24. “And die.” The seed must die in or- der to liberate the life-germ and allow it to become fruitful. Christ must die to complete His redemptive work. 23. *“Loveth His life.” .The word translated life is often translated soul, as in verse 27. The meaning is that he who makes the _pleasures, honors and rewards of this life his chief con- cern, and- sacrifices his righteousness and integrity in order to obtain them, “shall lose it”—shall lose in most cases even the earthly rewards that he hoped to gain. and shall lose his soul eter- nally. “That hateth his life.” On the other hand, he who sacrifices, when sary, all worldly goods for sake and the gospel's (Mark “shall keep it”—shall gain eter- nal life. 26. “Serve Me.” Christ is a Master in a twofold sense: He instructs men, and appoints them their work. He who wishes to serve Christ must be- come a disciple to be taught, and a servant to obey. ‘Let him follow Me.” Let him act out the above principle, as Christ had done and was about’ to do. This is Christ’s answer to the ré& quest of the Greeks. Christians must follow the methods and example of Christ. “Where I am.” In heaven. Trumpet Flowers and Saloons. n the city of Honolulu there former- ly grew a beautiful flower called the white trumpet flower. One day a child ate the blossom and died. Immediately the people began to pluck up the plant all over the city. The next morning the roads were full of the outcast flower. Human life is too precious tc be exposed to such peril. Is not a man’s character of too much value tc be exposed to the perils of the g shop, even though the town may g license fee of $200, or even $500, from it?—North Mail. CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR NOTES APRIL TWENTY-THIRD. “The Power of His Resurrection.”— Rom. 6:3-13; Phil. 3:10. (Easter ; meeting.) Bible Hints. To be buried with Christ (Rom. 6: 4) is to pass with Him out of the at- mosphere and power of worldliness and into the atmosphere and power of heaven. There is no entrance into Christ’s life but the portal of Christ's death (Rom. 6:8). No one can Know “the power of His resurrection” (Phil. 3:10) until he has known Him; and the more cae knows Him, the more precious will be Easter and Sunday. Have you ever tried by imagination, sympathy, and love to enter into “the fellowship of His sufferings” (Phil. 3:10)? It is the climax of Christian experience. Suggestions. Those that have known the resur- rection from the death of sia need no other assurance of immortality. “The power of His resurrection” must be made by us a power in other lives before we can fully receive it in our own. The measure of a Christian is the degree in which he does not shrink from physical death, but does fear spiritual death. Every strong man wants power; and no power that maa can gain is equal to what one obtains from Christ’s resurrection. Illustrations. Children are often afraid of the dark, but they all love the dark when they are holding father by the’ hand. An artist obtains the essence of his power from his father and mother by birth. So we obtain through our new pirth in Christ the power of His resurrection, the power of immortal life. : There is a high, impenetrable wall around the next life, but Easter is a door left ajar. Just as our rising from the death of sleep is a daily experience, so. we renew every day the joy and the pow- ar of Christ's resurrection. Quotations. If the’ resurrection of Christ took place, then-all:- the other miracles be- same possible—Francis. I. Patton. O let me know The power .of Thy resurrection! O let me kaow Thy risen life in calm and clear re- flection !—Havergal. No husbandman would sow a grain of corn if he did not hope it would spring up and bring forth the ear. How much more are we has on by hope in the way to eternal life Luther. Our only hope is to enter into the victory of the risen Christ—F. B. Meyer. EPWORTH LEAGUE LESSONS APRIL TWENTY-{HIRD. The Power of His Resurrection. Rom.. 6. 3:13; Phil. 3, 10. >on from Romans is a part rument of Paul's on exemp- tion from the necessity of sinning based on the power of a risen Christ. The argument is that as Christ had a death, burial, and resurrection, so has the: Chrigtian a death and burial to sin, and a resurrection to holiness. And of this great fact baptism is a symbel and nn. Those who, “would read into this for the mode of bapt) 1 n of the ed literal, so 3 he “crucifixion” a powe al death to rection Into life : from Phil- Jus 3ti- , Wwe may 1 lanting” The pass and s would on also in his suf ell as his love There is one ps son of nd signif fer to ti I imp: 1ssioned ap- 1 addre t Y edom fre : the risen C It is an urgent ap peal to die unto sin as Christ died } i and to live unto. God as chy ith God. It makes an n of the power ing Dead unto »s that we may be thought 10 8 power of c e rat We be dead unto ail sin. se be dea to feel no 3 OT moti tow Is it the sonl So many t d seem to teac nh. 1 on the cross is a type e death of the soul unto sin. 1 constant ax oni » evil. edness » Alive unto God. negative but more th an ceasing ing good. Not cnly service g an. save it is L That is a st ial noncomplic holiness secration | WILD ANIMALS NOT TO BE FEARED. ir That is, If You Let Them Alone They Wilt Not Trouble You. “In the mountains of Wyoming,where I have hunted for years, you can find almost any kind of savage animal that you get in America except alligators. Grizzlies, black bears and mountain lions are commonly killed there,” says Hugh Sniverly, of Sheridan, Wyo. “Some of the men that come out there to hunt think that if they stir 100 yards away from camp they must be armed to the teeth for fear of being attacked by a bear or a ‘painter’ and killed. There's a heap more danger of getting killed on account of leaving your gun at home when you go down Market street. Some one might shoot you on the street in a big city, but it is dead sure that a bear or a mountain lion will never attack you unless you drive him to it. “I’ve hunted through the best dis- tricts for big game in this country, and TU've seen a good many grizzlies, but I've never seen one of them go after a man unless he was cornered or wounded. If you run into a griz- zly bear in a lonely place you'll hear a grunt, something like that of a mam- moth hog, and then -there will be a mighty crashing of underbrush as he makes off in the opposite direction as fast as he can go. All you can gener- ally see of a mountain lion is a tawny streak as he makes off at incredible speed. If he has any intention of go- ing after you it must be his intention to go around the world and catch you in the rear, for if you are standing to the east of him he is sure to go due west. ‘Mountain lions in the winter time will follow sleighs at a distance, wail- ing as they go, but there is nothing in that to inspire terror, for I don’t think they have ever been known to close in on anybody. Their terror of human beings is the thing which makes them hard to shoot. In all the time that I have been in:the moun- tains I have never heard of any one being -attacked by a wild animal that had been left strictly alone.. But I've known men to be-killed even by deer when the brute was driven to desper- ation. « “@Grizzlies are the. best game in the world. When ‘you: once get their dan- der up they are savage fighters, and the hunter's life .is .in .danger every minute unless he is a good shot and has a steady nerve. If you ever get within reach of the grizzly’s paw you are a dead one. These stories of men killing them: with knives in hand to hand fights are about as reasonable as it would be to talk of stopping a loco- motive by getting in the way of the train. If the big fellow gets the chance to deliver one blow: it is all over. There was a grizzly up our way that the cowboys called: ‘Big Ben, - who killed about one hundred and fifty steers before he was finally shot. He would break a steer's neck at one blow, and then he. would lift him up and carry him off to a secluded place. Grizzlies look awkward, but they are mighty light on their feet, and they can beat any man in a foet race.”— Louisville Herald. "Limited Facilitics. The author of an article on “The Public Bath,” in The Outlook, tells the following story: At one of the fresh air homes by the sea, where New York tenement chil dren are taken for a few days of every summer, a young woman stood one day beside a little fellow who sat digging his toes in the sands as he watched the other youngsters splashing in the surf. “Don’t you want to go into the water?’ she said to him, coaxingly. “No, ma'am,” he answered, with pub- lic school politeness. He did not need to add that he was afraid. “You're not afraid; are you? Don’t you bathe at home?” “Yes, ma'am,” he answered, proudly. “I get an all-over wash every week in the washtub.” *“G’wan!” said the bigger boy who had run up dripping and shivering, just in time to hear the little f folios answer. Tez means the dishpay Whichever the boy meant—and he undoubtedly meant one or the other—he is no worse off than a hundred thou- sand other ren of the tenements. And he is better off than his sisters, who, if at home, must bat pan or station kitchen sink. ¢ New York where among 2500 families there are but thirty-six bathtubs, where in a single block there are as many &s 800 families without a bathtub of any sort. ousands of Lathe at all he in this same dish- 7 washtub, the fr in Aistric Weather Signs. “If the chickweed and scarlet pin pernel cxpand their tiny petals, ra need not be expe See d for a few hours,” says a writer. Bees work with d~ubled cnergy just before a rain. the flies are unusually persistent eitl in the house’ or around stock {(h rain in the air. ; the ap rels stort g husks of corn are u the buds of decidu firmer protecti ter is at b ch of oy of nuts, usally ous of the sweet little bride at! bore meekly.—New York Pre i 101} « — LANC CRITICISES THE DOG. er The Writer Deelares the Canine to Be Entirely Misjudged. ‘Andrew Lamg, who was at some pains a while ago to explain why he did not like George Ade, is now at equal pains to explain why he does not like dogs. In an iconoclastic essay, which he contributes to the Christmas number of the London Kennel News, the co-author of The World's Desires denies the dog practically every virtue with which man’s friend is ordinarily credited. He says: “There is not one of the seven deadly sins of which the dog isnot habitually guilty, and I am unaware of a single redeeming feature in his repulsive character.” Lang de- nies that the dog is brave. He denies that the dog is faithful, declaring that the fidelity is really all on the side of the man, and Lang says: “It needs a great deal of fidelity in man to cling as he does to the dog, licking, as it were; the paw (the muddy paw) which tram- ples him.” Lang adds that the dog is vain. “The self-consciousness and van: ity of dogs,” he says, “might disgust even a minor poet. I have known & collie—certainly a very handsome col- lie—to pass his days in contemplating his own image in the glass. I know & dog dandy which actually makes eyes, being conscious that he possesses or- gans very large, brown and decora. tive.” Lang goes on remcrsely: “Wha has not seen a dog morally corrupt a family—reducing them to the slaves of his impulses? Tip wants to take a walk; Tip wants to go out of the door; then he wants to come in again; then he appears at the window and scratches; then he fancies the most comfortable armchair and ousts a jaded and midde-aged man of letters.” Lang dismisses all the noble dogs of history as myths. And to show that he is dis- posed to be perfectly just, he says: “Any circumstances of an extenuating character which affect the dog would be here mentioned if I could think of them.” It seems that this tirade against dogs, though now published for the first time, was written by Lang five years ago or more. The author says that it made Robert Louis Stevenson giggle when he was very ill, so he (Lang) thinks it can’t be so very bad. ” Barometer of Love. "A Dublin jury recently awarded Miss oresa O'Reiily, twenty-eight, a pretty milliner, £45 damages against James Lea, a baker, cmployed at Portrane Asylum. Dublin, for breach of promise of marriage. The defendant, who was also a mu- sician and played the oboe in a Dublin music hall, admitted the breach of promise, and asked the jury to assess damages. Counsel for the plaint iff gave the following dates of the baro metric rise and fall of the defendant's af ection for his client: “Spooney”’ stage. cman Engaged state ........ Cocling-off stage.. ..... Disengaged stage. wea a “Daggers drawn” stage. et After the defendant had paid a visit to Paris, said counsel, his visits to the plaintiff became less frequent, and in the end he asked her to release him. In his letter he said: “I know they will all be very much down on rae in your.place. Quite nat urally. In fact, I know what to expect from my own hore, a3 they have beén worrying mo very riuch of late with questions and warning me not to de ‘anything shabby. IIowever, I am act ing according to- the dictates of my conscience, and can only vindicate my conduct in ray own eyes.” ITe afterward admitted that his love had cooled.—London Mail. Men's Absurd Clothes. I lie to feel clean, and my great idea of clothes is that they should be lean and comfortable, as far as such a thing is possible in London. This, of course, excludes starch. I couldn't wear a thing which, after having been made clean and sweet, is then fiHed with nasty white aud, ironed into a hard paste, and nade altogether dis- ing. To put such a garment on my son, wear it, ricve it, perspire in it—horriblc! Tho shiny wkit> tubes on the wrist, tho shiny black cylinder on the head, the shiny white front to the shirt, the shiny blac: Doot, the rain-pipe trouser leg, the japanned » sleeve—that is your fashionably dressed man, logking lize a eold blackleaded stove with as. bestos fuel. The great tragedy of the average nan's life is that nature -re- fus nform to the cylindrical ideal, a when the marks cf his knees and elbows begin to appear in his cyl- wders he is filled with shame.—George ierna Shaw, in The World of Dress. TY 0 es (o A Bride at the Grocer’s “And I think,” added the sweet little bride, “that you y als cn me a package of young macaro The large, red grocer ioc “Young macaroni?” he “Why, ves. Don't you know what 1 There's ¢ Fecha name ot it, The bride's tone ced puzzled. 1 rv ve fore gotien After a wi red consultation with his partner at the other end , the large, re: ow. let antec You v * replied the bride. “Isn't not fully grown?" the that mt: And so preity hat the large, red groce accent accept Norway's coast 1line—1700 miles uight line—becomes 12,000 miles if wed round the fjords In these : fjords are over 150,000 islands.