French 3 of the he has the ef- growth nber of to red, cht cer- e, grew 1e light. ht has T'S. ents. tions to Jaracter- “Milch” ow, can s if we >s. The urs our iter who married sdames” we hate 1itenance married maiden m, ‘nee’ r, speak- p at any hall clube son who ‘resume’ well not is time, ose who arty will vee sma’ stic toe’” marriage t and in- not sufii- 1f in lan- ity Jour-. s. ton of @ local sur- st inhab- a circus ction, the re found. ver, fully mains. It 10s, upon fficers, a imported xas to be over the rn Texas: els failed them, and@ sculiar to ssed into ts for the nels were y expense d so were Of course, the hones ecalls ‘the: springfield use. Tampshire 1e biggest sentatives, >ared that ond place Kentucky. e than six reighs but is breadth eight, and ue, Frank e most al¥ He is one not exer- ing lunch- 1se restau- proclaims each day ch on the where ne- where the money is 200." its Zoolog- he plan of Paris, with ous flower Rome has resent, for red cages he Capitol, gry-looking d down or by, cannot N arved., ailroad has 11 the time 10 himself ry to run a rain. Even and diges- ortance, as ly hand re- ppetite fol- ion of food. s,”” writes a constantly 3n. Every | to want to irst I was .d toast un- then, when the indiges- again. # came from bout all of About three vised me to he very first Appetite was een the case ber. I had more in my life. ¥ ds and have stion since I Nuts. When h good this thought she e believe the s found the m Co., Battle Road tc Well s a Reason.” Women in Business. , In nearly all executive positions ® women excel. It is curious that the sex, after so many years of intellec- tual seelusion, should have practical qualities strongly developed. But it ‘seams to me that there are only two things in which the business woman . is apt to fail. One of these is in working with other women, the other is in her inclination to play tricks with her nervous system by having irregular meals of unwholesome food and neglecting to take exercise.— The Reader. An Economical Empress. 4 In private life the Empress of Ger- i many wears hardly any jewels. In 8 fact, her life, apart from State occa- s . "sions, is conducted on the simplest possible lines. She is extremely eco- nomical regarding the clothing of her children. When her sons were boys the suits of the elder ones were actually cut down to fit their young- er brothers. The Empress is equally careful with her own wardrobe. She has a staff of dressmakers who are always at work remodeling her gowns, so that it is possible for her to appear several times in them with- out their being recognized.—London M.A. P. 3 College Woman's Creed. I believe in the home and the {am- Ji ily. 4 ‘ 1 believe in sane and rational : daily housekeeping, to which I am ready to give the necessary amount of time and energy. Cay ' I believe it is my duty to scrutin- ize my manner of living and to deter- mine what useless financial burdens y I am carrying. : I believe that the result of my home life should be the health and good temper of my family and the sense of living the life of the spirit as well as of the body. I believe it is my duty to propor- tion my expenses to my income in such a way as to make a home of +B ~~ comfort and simplicity without un- li due anxiety.—Indianapolis News. Blind Girl’s Earnings, Miss Cora Crocker, a deaf, dumb and blind girl, has surprised her teachers in the workshops of the Massachusetts Commission for the Blind, in Cambridge, by the quick- ness with which she has mastered the intricate machinery of her loom and the beauty and delicacy of her work. She has only just passed her twenty- i jw i { : NS first birthday and has been under the care of teachers for a comparatively short time, yet she weaves the most J delicate fancy articles, dainty colored + designs. She is said to be the only person so afflicted who has ever suc- ceeded in doing such beautiful work. There are several blind women work- ing in the same shop who, do good work, but she is the only one who 4 can neither speak nor hear. Her earnings, it is said, of more than $20 a month are steadily increasing. —Indianapolis: News. Cress-Stitching “Hints. If each stitch is not crosced in the same direction, the effect ‘will be poor. It is always better to work as much as possible in a straight line, so that each stitch may receive its tension from the same direction. Cross-stitching is well adapted to table and magazine covers, the mark- ing of linen, soft pillows, floor cush- A ; ions and bags of all kinds. © : Red and white and blue and whit linen are the favorite materials for these articles when decorated with cress-stitching. © This work must not be confused with the checked ging- ham embroidery of a few years ago. It is quite different in appearance, the heavy linen, with its lustrous finish, giving a strong, artistic back- ground for the cross stitch, which in itself has a crude beauty peculiarly adapted to the purpose in view,—Ne York Journal. Jd Washington Women Great Walkers, As they all recognize the need of fresh air in Washington, as else- where, if they. wish to retain their health, many -high-placed dwellers in the capital give several hours a day to exercise in the open. The President gets out for at least three hours daily, no matter how pressing public affairs may be. Mrs. Roose- velt spends even more time than that = in walking, driving or superintend- ing her flower garden. Almost all the Washingtonians in official life recognize the need of the daily prome- nade. Many are seen in business streets in the morning, going on household errands. Mrs. Knox, Mrs. Garfield = and Mrs. Cortelyou make many of their calls on foot. Indeed, 211 Washington takes every excuse for walking. Any bright morning the stranger may see Mrs. Roosevelt, her handsome young daughter and many of the women taking brisk constitu- tionals in the secluded portions of the Mall and bypaths of the Speedway. § —New York Press. ke 25 f/ Women as Councillors. On the first occasion on which ladies have been eligible to sit as municipal councillors their success at the polls has hardly been as pro- nounced as some of those who have 5 worked so hard to secure them the right were inclined to anticipate. Still, when it is considered that only spinsters or widows could stand and that in several instances boroughs were being served by well-tried and fully trusted members of long stand- ing, there is perhaps no reason to feel otherwise than satisfied. Notable among those who have been returned is Miss Dove, who headed the poll at High Wycombe. She is an advanced educationalist, who for some years past has been head mistress of Wycombe Abbey School, with about 200 young ladies in residence under her care. Another striking success is that of Miss Merivale at Oxford. She is a daughter of the late Dean Merivale, the historian, and her candidature enjoyed the support of many leading members of the university. She will take her seat as an Independent, and education is a strong point with her. This, too, figured prominently in the campaign of Miss Sutton, who was returned unopposed at Reading. Mrs. Woodward at Bewdley . was also spared the troubles of any contest, as was Mrs. Garrett Anderson at Aldeburgh. In Scotland the ladies were less successful. Four came for- ward and none have been returned. It is significant that Lady Steel was rejected at Edinburgh, for she has been among the most militant of suf- fragists, even to ‘‘passive resistance’’ as to paying her rates and taxes, and the rebuke may be taken to heart by those who think noisy methods are approved by the majority of their sisters.—London Telegraph. * Lips to Be Red. Lips will be of a deep rich red this season: Hips, as a topiz, have had ‘their day, and despite all the dictates of Panquin, women seem to be as hipless or ‘“hipful”’ as they were be- fore. The prophets could make only conjectures in regard to hips. It re- mained ‘to be seen what the New York woman would do. But the writer has seen the lips, and unlike all talk about hips, can say that the deep rich red is the latest fad. The majority of the women whose lips looked as though done with pure crimson madder from the tube were beyond the kissing age. One saw them not in hundreds but certainly by the, dozens at thc Manhattan Crera House recently. One would never have concluded that they had neither chance nor inclin~tion for kisses,-had they not all been so cross’ to their husbands, as they entered, and when there was any littie un- certainty. about finding seats. One wondered if they had any children at home who expected a good night kiss after “Now I lay me,” and the “God bless popper’'n mommer’’ prayer. With crimson madder lips, the face is usually pure white, with- out rouge, and in the majority ot cases was as powdery as a freshly suzared cruller. Enteri.g the Met- ropolitan Opera House, there is not such a strong cruel light, and both. powder and lip’ rouge are absorbel ‘| somewhat in an hour, or often less.’ “At the Manhaitan, on .he other hand, raany of the women eiter the hcuse through the doors jus: ir back of the orchestra. Here there is a clear, cold light; nothing crimson and kindly as there is at the Metropolitan. Even the unshaved Sicilians among the standees looked with amazement at these white-faced women with bright red lips. Some of the innocents among the mere men imagined they were members of the chorus who had entered by the wrong door.—Brook- lyn Life. DAL Belts of gold galloon are finished with huge gold buckles. Double-faced cloths for promised a place among fabrics. Modern petticoats - are that they flare wondrously feet. Jabots worn with tailored waists seem to grow fuller and wider as the seaSon advances. Picot ribbon and small silk but- tons trim the dressy black gown of an elderly woman. Without the dainty and becoming hair ornament no evening costume is now considered complete, ‘White lace motifs appliqued upon the waists of creamy net stand out well because of the contrast. Buttonholing and hand embroidery are generously used in the decora- tion of morning jackets for gifts. The jacket that forms a part of a young. girl’s plaid suit is equally ap- propriate in plain velvet or cloth of the color predominating in the plaid. Be sure that you have style and grace to sparz before you invest in one of those coats of velvet or fur whose kimono sleeves are ezag- gerated. A most attractive hat seen on the street was a plain sailor shape with a full ruche all the way around the crown of soft, gleaming satin in two suits are the new gored so harmonious shades. about the- * Truly, THE PULPIT. A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. 'G. G. MILLS. Subject: Spirit of the Lord’s Day. Brooklyn, N. Y.—The Rev. Grover G. Mills, pastor of Pilgrim Chapel, preached Sunday morning on ‘The Spirit of the Lord’s Day,” taking as his texts Romans 12:5: “One man esteemeth one day above another; an- other esteemeth every day alike. Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind,” and Mark 2:27: “The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath.” Among other things Mr. Mills said: The glory of the Christian religion is its universality. It fits all sorts and conditions of men, and when un- derstood as Jesus meant it to be un- derstood, they receive it gladly, for His appeal was always past tradition to truth. The court of final appeal is the spirit in man backed up by the experience of the race. Christianity is not the acceptance of a set of opin- ions, nor the observance of ritual, sa- cred places and days, nor the reiter- ating of numerous moral maxims, but it is getting the loftiest point of view with regard to things in general and one’s relations to one’s fellow men in particular. All Jesus’ teaching looked toward the unifying of the moral law. All progress is from unity, up through complexity back to a unity on a higher plane. In the beginning the moral law was very simple: “Thou shalt not eat the fruit of the tree,” that is, ‘“‘Dvil is deadly, do not med- dle with it.” Here we have the re- ligion of fear. Later men’s notions of evil became hazy and we had the books of the law and the ten com- mandments. This might be called the religion of restraint. It meant a se- ries of “thou shalt nots.” Every- thing was to be done by rule. The evil was to be separate from the good, one nation separate from an- other to preserve its holiness, one meat set apart from the others, one day sanctified. Then came Jesus with a desire to put a spirit into religion which should give it perennial fresh- ness. Man was no longer to consult an «authority to find whether he should or should not do a certain thing. He was to accept the guidance of the inner light. He was not to separate the evil from the good, but to “overcome evil with good.” He was to make the radiance of the one day suffuse all the days; he was not to think of God afar off watching His universe go; but as “nearer than breathing, closer than hands or feet;”’ he was not so much to be concerned with getting men to heaven as get- ting heaven into the world. This is what may be called the religion of the spirit. tion of Sunday observance in the light of this. First, the old Sabbath of the Jews, and as revived in great part by the Puritans of three centuries ago, does not measure up to the demands of a spiritual religion. Everything was nicely regulated by rule. But the man who takes his ethics predigested is in danger of moral atrophy. The body needs exercise or it will become diseased; the intellect must be, used or it will become flabby; the con- science must be trained or it will van- ish into nothingness. The. commu- nity is in duty bound to give this fac-' ulty of conscience as free ditions will permit. On the other hand, the strong peo- ple, those who tend to question au- thority and who demand a reason for play as con- their obedience become miore and ‘| more blindly reactionary. * Thus it is dangerous to multiply restrictions be- .yond what is essential; ‘because men, feeling themselves cramped, break ‘the artificial barrier, but at the same time there comes to them a feeling of guiltiness, their consciences are ‘hardened and they stand ready to break every law, as opportunity of- fers. The old Sabbath, therefore, was legalistic, it took no account of a man’s attitude toward righteousness; it only demanded that he fulfil the letter of the law. We see the result of it in the Pharisees, who were strict observers of the Sabbath, but did not hesitate to practice hypocrisy, to grind the poor in the dust with un- just taxation, and in general to leave fellow feeling entirely out of their re- ligion. 2. But the question is immediate- ly put, If the old Sabbath he abol- ished, has not Sundaytaken its place? Not at all. - Observance of Sunday was commenced after the death of Jesus. It was not to take the place of the Jewish holy day, but for a time the two ran side by side, Christians keeping. the Sabbath, with all its re- strictions, on our Saturday, and cele- brating the next day (our Sunday) with great rejoicing in honor of the Lord’s resurrection. At the outset, then, it was a day of cheerfulness. It was a festival, with joy and glad- ness, and so strong was the feeling that this was as itvought to be that we read in the ‘‘Elpistle to Turibius,” one of our oldest documents: “The Manicheans have been convicted in the examination which we have made of passing the Sunday, which is con- secrated to the resurrection of our Lord, in mortification and fasting.” here is a case of the tables turned. that this is what Sunday ought to mean—a day of cheerfulhiess and rec- reation. There should be nothing “‘blue’” about it. It should be, in truth, ‘‘the golden clasp that binds the volume of the week.” But when we seek cheerfulness and recreation we should be careful that we get no spurious substitutes therefor. Rec- reat means. just what, it says. Re- create, that is, to fit for the duties of the week. To put new life into your- self to stand the stress and turmoil ‘ef life. Some men think they can do this:best by assembling at the house of worship, some by ‘walking abroad in God’s out of doors, some by at- tending some innocent place of amusement, some by just staying at home and resting, some by a com- bination of these. We must not lose sight of the fact that “the Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.” It is to help man, it is something to satisfy his needs, not a dark law with a pen- alty attached. Now, the deepest need of man and especially Americans is rest. There is something very sweet about that phrase, “The weary are at rest.” We ought {o seek to make Now let us view the ques-. fcongruity; .ing useful lives. ' which has been the day a real day of rest. It is the “soul’s library day.” On other days it is all too true The world-is too much with us; late and soon, Getting and spending we lay waste our powers. Suppose vou lived in a splendid seven-room house and some friends should come to call on you for a time. You would give them the free- dom of the house, but all would im- mediately realize that all rooms are not the same, at least that the great parlor stands off by itself with a dig- nity all its own. You go in there dressed in your best clothes and feel- ing that there is not quite the same freedom there as there would be in the dining room, but you rather like it. You would not think of having your house without a parlor. It is that which exalts the whole. So it is with our ‘Sunday, it is the “golden clasp.” We may be a little stiffer than on other days, but it should not be the stiffness of the prisoner hemmed in by restraint. It should resemble the dignity of the king, not doing all that we have a right to do. The question of Christian liberty now arises, and it is really about this point that the whole storm has raged of late. There have been extremists on one side and on the other. Some have maintained this to be a Chris- tian country and that therefore all who come to our shores must fall in line with the views of our Puritan ancestors. All places of amusement are harmful on Sunday and should be closed. On the other side are those who maintain just as vigor- ously that New York is a cosmopol- itan city and therefore should be a wide-open town. Each party sees only one side of the truth. If the two were, to come together we would have a full-orbed view, a reasonable solution. It is true, as Burke says, much as we dislike to admit it, that “all government, indeed every human benefit, every virtue and every pru- dent act, is founded on compromise and barter.” Those who stand for a strict observance of the Sabbath forget that to some this would mean much misery, because all men are not built alike. To compel an illiter- ate man to read his Bible would be robbing him of his day of rest, while to others it would mean real repose. Those who stand for no observance at all forget what we owe to such ob- servance as we have had hitherto. It is because many of our citizens week after week have maintained their re- lations with religious institutions that the backbone of the country has been tept. When a man or nation loses grip of the higher things, when the windows of the soul are closed and covered with cobwebs, we are pre- pared to look: for. dissolution and decay. x What, then, are we to do? How are we to arrange matters so that the beneficent results of Sunday ob- servance shall -be retained and yet keep the day from being “blue,” save to moral wrongdoers? ‘Certainly not by keeping on the books the law that is now there. According to the de- cision recently rendered, practically all forms of innocent amusement are prohibited, including even stereop- ticon lectures at churches. Up till last. week the law was evaded. It will be evaded again as soon as mat- ters quiet down a little.” This will promote disrespect for all law, and this would be more demoralizing than a liberal law. Permit ‘me at thig point to say that I have no sympathy with those who-on the one side think that driving people away from Sun- day vaudeville will drive them to the saloons. I know many people in this neighborhood who attended these per- formances and none hds as yet taken to the bottle. These people are not after all very different from our- selves. They are ordinary American citizens. Nor have I any great belief in the wisdom of those who think people can”be driven to church by driving them out of the Sunday thea- tre, and if they only come to church because there is no other place open, I doubt whether. it would ‘be. worth their while to come. The .gpirit in which one attends is everything. The solution, then, seéms to be to have a law in which are specified those forms of amusement that the great majority of the citizens are agreed are harmless and which shall not disturb the public. peace or ser- iously. interrupt the repose and re- ligious liberty of the community. But this is only the first step. The law must have public sentiment behind it or become a dead letter at the outset. This public sentiment should be kept aroused by the moral teachers of the community as well as by the news- papers and by all good men. We should then have a day which would mean for all a day of rest, for rest does not mean inactivity, but har- mony. It means doing that which is most congenial. The man, who loves his fellow men and longs for the day when there shall be one brotiferhood on the earth and men shall have one aspiration—to do the will of God— may repair to the assembly of wor- ship and renew his allegiance to the old ideals; the brother who, worn out with the toil of the week, felt that he needed all his time to re- create himself by harmless amuse- ment, would not be hindered, though he might' well be pitied. All would have more regard for the weightier ‘matters of the law. All reasonable Christians will hold | Mirth and Medicine. I know of nothing equal to a cheerful and even mirthful conversa- tion for restoring the tone of mind and body, when both have been over- done. Some great and good men, on whom very heavy cares and toils have been laid, manifest a constitu- tional tendency to relax into mirth when their work is over. Narrow minds denounce the in- large hearts ewn God’s goodness in the fact, and rejoice in the wise provision made for prolong- Mirth, after ex- haustive toil, is one of nature’s in- stinctive efforts to heal the part racked or bruised. You cannot too sternly reprobate a frivolous life; but if the life be earnest for God or man, with here and there a layer of mirthfulness protruding, a soft bedding to receive heavy cares, which otherwise would crush the spirit, to snarl against the sports of mirth may be the easy and useless occupation of a small man, who cannot take in at one view the whole circumference of a largz one. —Arnot. SABBATH SCHOOL LESSONS INTERNATIONAL LESSON COM- MENTS FOR JANUARY 19, itt) Subject: Jesus and His First Disciples, John 1:35-35 — Golden Text, Jehn 1:45—Commit Verses 33- ld 37—Commentary on the Lesson. TIME.—February, A.D. 2§. PLACE. —Byv the Jordan. EXPOSITION.—I. Beholding Jesus, 35, 36. A great preacher with a con- gregation of two men, but it was one of the most important sermons that John the Baptizer ever preached. It laid the foundatién of that group of men, the Apostles, to whom we owe all our knowledge of Christ and the Gospel. Little did John realize how much was involved in the testimony he gave that day, but, faithful man that he was, he gave it, and it is bearing fruit still. It was looking intently upon Jesus as He walked (R. V. v. 36) that made John burst forth into this exuitant and meaningful ery. If we fix our eyes upon Him we will cry the same, un- less, alas, our eyes are sightless. “OO Andrew, O John. look,” he cries, “there goes the Lamb of God, the lamb of God's own providing (Gen. 22:8), the lamb that takes away all man’s guilt, the lamb typified in the Passover and every O. T. sacrifice” II. Following Jesus, 37, 38. The result of John’s testimony was start- ling but delightful. John and An- drew at once turned their backs on John and followed Jesus. John, great man, was pleased to be thus deserted (Jno. 3:26-20). Three steps of Chris- tian experience—they heard, they looked, they followed. Other steps come shortly. We too must first look at Jesus as the Lamb if we would fol- low Him as our example. It is by the look, not by the following, that we are saved (Isa. 45:22; Jno. 3:14, 15; cf. Nu. 21:9). We must first be- lieve in what Jesus has done (Jno. 19:30; Ro. 3:25), before we, ask, “what would Jesus do?” and try to imitate it. But it ic by following that we demonstrate that we really have looked and are saved (Mark 10:52; 1 Jno. 2:6). John's simple, short, sincere testimony has sent the young men to follow Jesus and thus turned tee world upside-down. Oh the power of a Holy Ghost testimony (cf. Jno. 4:39). ITI. Abiding with Jesus, 38, 39. From following Jesus the two men go on to abiding with Him. This is how it came about: As soon as they be- zan to follow, Jesus turned and gazed at them as they followed. What a look it was, so penetrating, so ten- der, so full of encouragement. One of them at least never forgot it. His story of it here in the very phraseol- ogy employed reproduces it. Then there comes a question as searching 88 the look, “What seek ye?” They did not clearly know themselves, but there were deep yearnings in their heart that never had been satisfied, and He was the “Lamb of God” and would surely satisfy. They want to know Him better, so they timidly ask, “Teacher, where do you live?” hardly daring to say bluntly, “we want to go to your school.” Men seek such vari- ous things when they start to follow Jesus, pardon for sin, healing for the body, loaves and fishes. Happy the man who seeks just Himself. What are you seeking? Jesus’ reply went to not merely the hea. of the ques- tion, but to their heart's desire, “Come, and ye shall see.” What a moment of joy it was when Jesus said that. And He is saying it to-day to every one who wishes to come’ to: Him. “Come,” He says (Jno. 6:37; Rev. 22:17; Matt. 11:28): IV. bringing others to Jesus, 40- 57. No sooner had Andrew really found Jesus, but he started right off and got his own brother and brought him to Jesus. The clear implication of the text is that John did the same. This was just as it should be; as soon as we find Jesus we should go right off and bring some one else, and the ‘best one to begin with is our own: brother. Andrew did a great work in bringing his brother to Jesus, for it was this brother who preached the great sermon on the day of Pente- cost. Andrew’s testimony was ight to the point. ‘““We Lave found the Messiah,” he said. It was his per- sonal conversation with Jesus that had settled his mind on this point. It will settle any man’s mind. A season of personal communion with Jesus is worth tons oi apologetic literature. Andrew did not stop with giving his testimony, ‘he brought him to Jesus.” Never stop short of that. Jesus looked Peter through and through. He saw what he now was and said, “Thou art Simon the son of Jona.” He saw what he was to become, “Thou shalt be called Cephas’’ (rock- man). It was faith in the Rock that was to transform ordinary Simon into extraordinary Rock-man (1 Cor. 20:4; Matt. 16:16-18; 1 Jno. 5:5). Jesus ‘‘findeth Philip.” He went to Galilee in part for that purpose. It was worth while. Short was the summons, ‘follow Me.” Philip did not know all it invelved, but he obeyed. The influence of his towns- men, Andrew and Peter, may have had much to do with the prompt re- sponse. ‘ Philip was a student of O. T. scripture and an exact man (v. 45). Philip at once hunts up Nathanael. Everybody in this lesson who found Jesus seemed to go at once for some one. else. Nathanael was decidedly skeptical about Jesus being the Christ. Indeed he did not believe He could be any good, coming from Naza- reth. But he was sincere (v. 47) and when Philip enters into no argument, but says, ‘‘come and see,” he came— and saw. When you say to the aver- age skeptic, ‘‘come and let me make you acquainted with Jesus,’ they won't come. Lemon Pis.—One. large cup boil ing water, into which stir 1-2 cup sugar, plece of butter size of a wal- nut, 2 tablespoons cornstarch dissolv- ed in a little cold water; let this cook well. Juice of 1 lemon (or about 2 tablespoons juice), some of the grated rind (I do not like the whole), 1 cup sugar added to the juice; pour the cooked thickening into this and add the beaten yolks of 2 eggs. Bake in custard pie plate until it b.ib- bles in the middle well; cool and frost. EPWORTH LEAGUE LESSONS SUNDAY, JANUARY 19. The Secret of Power for Service— Mark 1. 35-39; Luke 6. 12-16; Neh. 4. 3-6. Jesug went often into quiet, soli- tary places for prayer. He did not love the sclitude for its own sake, but because there he could collect those supplies of spiritual strength which he bestowed so freely on all who had need. His hours of secret prayer were always followed by days of unstained service. So he went into the desert place to hold converse with the Father, and then came back to hea] and to save the multitude. The desert explained the crowd, ang the crowd explained the desert. It was no small event, this appoint- ing of the twelve. All the church history of nineteen centuries harks back to that simple but infinitely sig- nificant moment. No wonder Jesus spent the whole night in prayer. He who was not willing to speak words of comfort to a handful of peasants until he had first gone apart for lone- ly prayer, was no more willing to ap- peint hig apostles until he had first taken them and their work to the throne. Nchemiah knew the combination that opens the door to success; pray- er plus work—work plus prayer. He and his followers were too busy, and the work was too urgent, to justify a camp meeting or a protracted re- vival effort. They had to work. And, as they also had to pray, they met the emergency fairly, and did both at once. Who shall say what helped them most? If they hadn’t prayed, they would have failed. If they hadn’t builded, they would have failed. But with prayer and labor they discouraged their enemies, and built up Jerusalem’s wall. t It can be stated two ways, but read backward or forward it means the same. If you don’t work for God, it is no use to pray to God; conversely, if you don’t pray, it is no use to work. And the two must be related. prayer in general is not the 'com- plete preparation for a definite task. General religious activity is not the best outcome of a season of prayer. Jesus prayed; then he healed. Jesus prayed; then he appointed apostles. Nehemiah prayed; then he plied his trowel among the stones and mortar of the city wall. And in all these cases it is fair to suppose—in one it is so stated—that the prayer bore directly on, the deed. : A prayer meeting that looks for, and has, no fruitage in service, in in- spiring people to holier living, in helpfulness, is a prayer meeting that may flourish, but it means nothing. It is a barren fig tree. CHRSTINEMDENOR NOTES JANUARY NINETEENTH. ° Topic—Songs of the Heart. Il. How Ged speaks i> men. Ps. 19. God spoke in dreams. Job. 33: +16 : ERE God spcke in visions. Rev. 1: 1-13. : He speaks by His Spirit. . Acts. 10: 19, 20. a Paul heard a voice. Acts 9: 1-7. Daniel héard through Gabriel. "Ban. 8: 15-18. : ngs (Ein God speaks to man in His creation (v. 1); but mere - science does" not hear Him, only the faith-filled heart. God speaks to man through His Book (v. 10); but we * cannot hear Him even there, if the ears of our soul are filled with the world’s traf- fic. *: eta God speaks «(v. 11) hoth warnings and rewards, and always the second after the first are heeded. drs God speaks to the heart (v. 14), but only when the heart waits upon Him in humble meditation. : Suggestions. The more we speak to God, learn- ing His language, the more God can and does speak to us. God can speak to us more as we speak more to men about Him, using what He has already told us. God speaks not as we speak, but as we listen. Are our prayers listen- ings? God still speaks to men in the still, small voice. Do we expect thunder- ings? Hlustrations. Dumb people are taught to speak by watching others speak. So we are taught celestial speech by watching God. When the white man sent a writ- ten message upon a chip by an In- dian, the chip was magic to the red man. A still greater mystery to the unbeliever is God's communication with man. Man can telephcne without wires: and who can still doubt the possibil- ity of prayer? The phonograph renders speech solid. Our memories are phono- graphs; are they stored with the words of God? REMOVE FINGER MARKS. The finger marks so frequently 1oft on painted doors by children or care- less maids may be removed by rub- bing with a perfectly clean cloth dip- ped in a little paraffine. The place should be afterward carefully rinsed in cold water and given a: final polish with a clean, soft cloth. There is no real remedy for finger marks on light wallpaper, but sometimes sim- ply rubbing with a clean cloth will help. Water accidentally spilt om wallpaper will usually not injure it, and should be left alone to dry, as interference may cause a lasting stain.—Atlanta Journal. London chemists claim to have dis- covered that two-thirds of the weight of a girl is composed of sugar. Which makes it seem to the Washington Pest all the more remarkable that there are no flies on the American girl,