Ifby Dicar ©1? S°Hn Tinle?. 1 * And now, O kneeling One, to Thee I^* This crimson-crowned twig of thorn, 1 Hurting, through )*aii»ion-week I've worn, 1 _ ——l give it {or a -sowiy) ——— ■ j For crucifix its rose, deep-red, For beads its thorns—the prayers I've said, Out of the fierceness of the stride, Out of the bitterness of life, Out of the groping in the night, ( Out of the struggle for the light. • •••••• Bind thou this cross upon thy breast. "• My old transgressions, new confessed, Shall he forgiven through thy grace Who pure in heart dost see His f*ce; Tell thou these poignant beads again, v ( Press thou these thorns of penance pain, And, learning all my prayers, pray I Their answer on this Easter Day. —From Collier*!. iVti M Re.\S Dr. Madi/on C Peter;, "Consider the lities, how they grow." This divine injunction meaas that we are not simply to look at them admiringly, but to look Into them, expend thought upon them and explore their spiritual meanings. The lily in Its beginning is a very onpromlsing plant. It starts from an ugly bulb, In size and shape like an onion. Treasured in Its bulbs is a re serve of nutriment. Its root Is In it self. It can grow In hard places. So the beat people, who have the real stuff i and stamina in them, will bloom on In the world thoilgh not set in an Eden K&rdeu. The lilies of the field are not idle; they grow and grow In trustful grace. They trustfully lay hold of the sun and air. The nourishment of the soil spreads about their roots and the gentle night mist brought upon the wings of God's winds wrap them with coolness and refreshment. These lilies trustfully lay hold of these things and grow and so fulfill the meaning of their lives. The Mas ter's argument Is this: What does not belong to the lilies belongs to us. The lily's mission is to stand still and (trow. To us It is given to fill our lives with industry. There is no com fort for Idleness here. Babies, sick and Infirm persons may live as the lilies do and bo cared for as they are, but hearty people, with active brains and strong hands, will be poorly cared for if they live the lily's wfy. The lilies are satisfied with the place In which God has put them. ""Tfiougn"tliere are flowers out in ttfYT' middle of the garden, the lilies do not fret at their lot. Though lomo are larger, being a little plant that can grow In the shade and, though the rosea have their marvelous red, the Illy Is sntls fled with the pure white. And so we have another lesson the lily teaches— Don't worry. Me was a wise traveler, who. when his horse died, said: "Well, I must walk now," and trudged on cheer- I fully. Yet a great many people would ! have sat down beside the dead horse and spent days in bemoaning their loss. Sadness unfits us for duty. Regret never restores what has 1 eon taken away. James Whitcomb Riley •sweetly sings: ■Oil heart of mine, we shouldn't , Worry so. "'hat we vc missed of calm we couldn't , Have, you know. we ve met of stormy pain, - And of sorrow'* driving rain, ■ t ~" We can better meet again, If it blow. We have erred in that dark hour We have known; When our tears fell with the shower. All alone. Here not shine and shadow blent A» the gracious Master meant? djet us temper our content With His own. Our worst misfortunes never bt'fail •xis. They exist only in a diseased im agination. It is easy to see through pane of glass, but through ten •pltces placed ona on the other wo •cannot see. This does not prove that one Is not transparent, nor ate we called upon to look through lmre than one at a time. The lilies love to grow in retired places* they stay In the background. You will find them-all alone in the sc xlusion of their shady retreat. When the lily grow,* it hangs Jttr "head is .though it to hide it •elf, and whon its beautiful flowers hare reached their full growth they lung their heads as if ashamed of their beauty, and felt as though they fcad nothing to be proud of as *though God had meant the form apd «ttitude of this flower to teach us hu mility—that low, sweet root from which all heavenly virtues shoot. The lilies of the field grow casting ~'feenlgnant shadow; tie create around them, by the shadow of their leaves *nd blossoms and by the moisture . which they attract, conditions iult ••ble for the growth of other plants I 9mm richly endowed. Where the lilies grow In Palestine the herbage Is luxurious. Those spots are the favorite feeding places of flocks and birds, and where the lilies grow sweet and tender grass Is sure to be found. We are to be like the lilies In this respect. We are to cast benignant shadows. In the bitter winter a boy was sell lng papers. One stopped to buy. As he bought, smiling pleasantly on the child, he asked: "Are you cold?" „ "1 was until you passed by," was his sweet answer. Roland Mill once said, "I would give nothing for that man's religion whose very dog and cat are not the better for It." Whlttler sings truly: "A little word in kindness spoken, A motion or 11 tear, Has often healed the heart that's broken And made a friend sincere. A word, a look hns crushed to earth, Full muny a budding flower, Which had a smile, but owned its birth, Would bless life's darkest hour. Then deem it not an idle thing A plouwnnt word to speak; The face you wear, the thought you bring, A heart tnayheal or'break." The lilies of the field grow through a dual life. Th«s root life of the Illy must mine down In the soil, that It may gather nutriment for the lily's growth. So we In this life must take hold of the things about us. * We are to conquer the world, not by withdrawing from the world, as if religion were a harsh and gloomy thing, and shut us out from the ordl T nary business and enjoyments of life. The lily's stem, the leaf and the bloom reach up toward and take hold of the shining sun. While we are in this world we must in a certain Bense be of It, but the higher and truer life must be kept in vigor by a steady grasping of the Sun of Righteousness. The lily is white. Whueness de notes holiness. Holiness denotes wholeness—a well built, all arotfud symmetrically developed fife. A holy man like the lily is harmonious in all his parts. He is not a jumble of Inconsisten cies, to-day fluent In prayer and to morrow fluent in falsehood. He does not keep the fourth commandment on Sunday and break the eighth com mandment by cunning frauds on Mon day. The lily grows into a beautiful rounded flower; It has no sharp edges or corners. Many people are more like chestnuts than lilies—the nuts may be good enough, but they are en closed In prickly burrs. The lily's fragrance perfumes the air and before you see tho lily yon know of Iti pretence. There la no need of argument to prove that there la a lily about The great want of to-day la not so much argument sustaining Christian ity, aa living Christians Illustrating It. Not what men aay, but what men do weighs In the minds of the world. What the world wants to-day Is up right and down square honest deal ing and after dark virtue. One day of good living la worth more than a whole ton of tall talk. Easter Salad. Cook the tough stalks of celery in one quart of clear soup stock and when tender remove them; add to the liquor two tablespoonfuls tarra- I gon vinegar, one-half teaspoonful piquant sauce and two tablespoonfuls of gelatine, Boftened in cold water; stir slowly until the gelatine Is dis solved; then turn into a border mold and set on Ice to become firm, aays the Housekeeper. In the meantime boll six eggs for twenty minutes; let i them become cold and then cut them In two crosswise; remove the yolks, mash them fine and allow one sweet red pepper for every six egga; these peppers can be purchased In cans. Add six atoned olives, and run all through the meat-mincer; add enough mayonnaise to moisten; then refill the cavities In the whites; presa two to gether and set, small end up. Inside the ring of Jelly, which haa been slipped out of Its mold after dipping an Instant In hot water. Wreathe with crisp lettuce or celery foliage. When serving, place a spoonful of the Jelly and an egg on the garnlah for each guest. Cell* Lily Popular. A revival of the calla lily popular ity ia among the Incidents of the Easter season worth mentioning. There was a time, Borae years ago, when this flower grew and blossomed In every florist's shop and In every dwelling house where the raising of plants was undertaken. Then It passed from favor. Now it returns to find so many admirers that it Is said there will hardly be enough calla lilies to meet the demand. Florlstß have not cultivated the calla into strange shapes. It has Just the same serene, stately, pure and unbending presence that always characterized It, and for this alone It receives a re newed admiration. Boston Tran script. Curious >ood Friday Observances In the Isle of Man ft Is reckoned unlucky to put Iron in the Are on Good Friday, and, instead of tongs and poker, one has to use a stick cut from a rowan tree. In Croatia and Slavonla the people take whips to church with them, and after service they beat each other "fresh and They may have some notion that the beating drives out the demons of disease, or else it Is done In memory of the of Christ. In many places Judas Iscariot it flogged or burnt in effigy. The Por tuguese and South American ships In the port of London usually have a celebration of this sort. At daybreak a wooden figure, rudely carved to rep resent Judas and clothed in ordinary sailor's clothes and red worsted cap, Is hoisted by a rope around its neck to tho forerigglng. The crews of the various vessels then go to chapel. On their return the figure is lowered and ducked in the dock three times. Raised aboard again, it is dragged around the deck and lashed till its garments are in shreds. The ship's keep ringing meanwhile and the captain distributes grog. The crews work themselves up into paroxysms of fury, Judas is cursed and de nounced, and finally the image is set on fire and consumed afold cheers. Hot Cross Onn Passing. Only 5,000,000 ' : hot cross buns" were consumed In London on last! Good Friday, Indicating the dying out of the custom. The cross bun is the modern equivalent of the cakes eaten In honor of the Saxon goddess Eostre, from whose name the word Easter comes. Her worshipers became Chris tians, but, unwilling to give up the buns, compromised by making them with a cross. Out of every 1,000,000 letters that pasa through the postofflce It la cal culated that only on* goes astray. PASSION WEEK. L AT TEX CHUBOH OATS. My neighbor passes with unseeing Like twilight waters of a pool. Her face Gleams with the pale flame of her ecstaor. She walks our street aa though twere holy rliH-t Hers is the rapture of that sacred pain Ordained of God, through God transfused . again Into the world'# salavation. She can know None sweeter than the rapture of that woe. n. AT THE ALTAR. Not by Thy will, O God, but through our acorn, Our blindness, was He set between two thieves, The Friend to all mankind. Stung by that thorn, Pierced by- that pitiless' spear, the world still grieves, Facing in penance the journey of the Cross. Ours was the sacrifice, the bitterer loss! Teach us to render love for love, to praise And save our saviours unto earthly days! AMBIT. —Lucy Heald. •'.> * - Good Friday Customs. All through Christendom there pre vail many curious customs and be liefs In regard to Good Friday. In Florida it is thought that If three loaves of bread baked on that day be placed in the corncrlb mice will be prevented from nibbling the corn, nor will the crib be Invaded by rati, weasles or worms. In many European countries on Good Friday there are eaten cakea marked* with a cross. In England they consist of a sort of spice cake, with a sugared top, and are called Hot Cross Buns. Many charities take place on the day. One of the most curious Is held at the Churc.h of St. Bartholomew the Groat, Smlthfleld. After sermon the rector places on a gravestone twenty-one sixpences, which are to be picked up by a.i many poor widows, who have heard the sermon. The custom originated in the will of a cer tain lady, who loft funds to pay for the sermon and provide the sixpences. If any of the widows have fingers too stiff to pick up the money, they for feit it. At the Church of All Hallows, London, buns are distributed to the children of the Sunday-school and the ward school. In the Church of Glen tham, Lincolnshire, there used to take place an odd performance known as "Washing Molly Grimes." The church contains an old stone Image, popularly spoken of as Molly Grimes, and every Good Friday the figure wan washed by seven old maids of Glentham, who were paid a shilling apiece for thoir trouble. This came to an end about 1832, when some property which was charged with the payment was sold without the custom being mentlonod in the deed. Symbols of the Resurrection. All the spring flowers are, fitly, symbols of the Resurrection, the re newal of life after the killing frdkts, and commerce has made the Bermuda lily a spring flower. There are sweeter flowers and lovelier. The lately developed Easter lily resembles somewhat the blossom of the despised Jlmson weed, though it seems not nearly BO beautiful to the artist's eye. —New York Times. Sjf "ALL FOR CHRIST." "For God so loved tho world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever belleveth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life." (John 6:16.) * -Up to the year 1864 the newspa-j pers of England labored nnder the; handicap of a special government tax. Tn SbofdM At looey Out—Hoi Stall IM Out Mjsdlf" ~ W. A. Rogers, In the New York^ Prisons Everywhere Are Overcrowded More Criminals and Paupers Are NoW Confined in State and County Institutions Than EVer Before—Hard Times and Undesirable Aliens Are CKieflvj Blamed. New York City.—Never before In the history of the State of New York have there been BO many criminals behind prison bars as there are at present. The State prisons are over crowded, the penitentiaries filled to overflowing and the workhouses BO congested that the Inmates are In each other's way. Prison officials and criminologists assign two reasons for the crowded condition bf the penal Institutions— the hard times prevalent for the last two years and the influx of undesira ble aliens to the big cities of the State. Unable to obtain work these men drift to crime and eventually land In prison. v „ Sins Sine Overcrowded. There axe more than 2000 convicts In Slug Sing Prison, originally built to house but 1500; the prisoners are doubted up in ceils, lodged in out houses and the chapels anil some are said to sleep in the main office of the prison. In order to accommodate the horde of convicted men recently sent from this city—and they have boen going in weekly batches of a scoro or more—Warden Frost has been compelled to place cots in the beautifully decorated Protestant and Catholic chapels. A batch of sixty-five was trans ferred to Clinton Prison against the protest of the officials of that institu tion, who say they have no room to spare. Numbers of Sing Sing con victs—short term men—in oi'der to make room for the new arrivals, are sent daily to the site of the new prison now being constructed on the west bank of the Hudson, near lona '.sland, and kept there in shacks un /ler the watch of keepers. These men are omploj-ed in the building of the new structure. The same condition is reported by the warden of the penitentiary on Blackwell's Island. The census there recently showed 1119 men and eigh ty-three women In cells. This is far above the average census, and the rate at which the courts are sending prisoners there has alarmed the peni tentiary officials. They are in a quandary where to confine the prison ers. As in Sing Sing, the problem of employing all the convicts is putting the officials of the penitentiary, and steps are being taken to put a number of them at work erecting new build ings on the virions Islands owned by the city and used for city purposes. Reports from the Klmlra Reforma tory state that that institution Is overcrowded, transfers are being made dally to the up-State penal In stitutions In order to relieve the over crowding. Moat of the Blmlra recruits come from this city, and with the six Courts of General Sessions working dally the'number of youths committed to the reformatory weekly from this county averages twenty-five. An av erage of ten a week are committed there from the Brooklyn criminal courts. A batch of seventeen was transferred from the Tombs recently to Elmira, making a 1 total of 110 sen tenced from this county during the month of March. Workhouses Are Congested. It is In the Workhotses on Bltek wells. Hart's and Randall's Islands that the increase of poverty Is ap parent. Hundreds of prisoners—men and women—are housed In these in stitutions, all committed from the po lice courts of this city and Brooklyn, **•>» own volition. The cen- Keatacky Mobs Resist Collector and Governor Will Use Mt^tia. Frankfort, Ky. On receipt of word from Tax Collector J. W. Peck that he has been prevented by mobs, and organisations frqm collecting railroad taxes in the counties of Car ter, Boyd and Elliott, Governor Will son announced that be would use the State militia to assist the official. The railroad taxes, which a number of the counties in the State owe, are heavy, and have been unpaid for many years. Trouble is anticipated when tho tM«n» (fee mountains BUS recently showed that In the work house on Bl&ckwell's Island there wero 1025 men and 579 women serv ing terms ranging from five days to six months, all for trifling offenses. In the Hart's Island Institution there were 653 men and thirty-seven women, and at Riker's Island 262 males were housed. Besides, there are scores of prisoners committed to the workhouse who have been trans ferred to the different detention prisons scattered throughout the greater city to do the cleaning. Ac cording to the figures of the Commis sioner of Correction obtained recent ly, there was a grand total of 3014 prisoners at present regularly com mitted to the workhouse. From all over the State the same reports are received—crowded pris ons, thickly tenanted workhouses and an ever Increasing demand tor admis sion to almshouses. The overcrowded condition of peni tentiaries and prisons in New York State is not peculiar to this State. Special dispatches subjoined indicate that similar conditions prevail in many other States. New York prison officials attributed It to two circum stances—the hard times and the In flux of undesirable aliens. Courts Ix-ss Lenient. Boston,-"-Jfcaaßachueetts County and State reformatory and prison institu tions are crowded at the present time as they have not been for years. The authorities attribute this condition to the establishment of Juvenile courts, leading to the arrest and conviction of many petty lawbreakers who here tofore have escaped with a repri mand. Besides, they say, the courta of late have in very many instances imposed sentences where previously they have put the accused on proba tion. The probation plan has not worked out as satisfactorily as It waa hoped. , Hard Times Blamed. Philadelphia. For the last five years the penal institutions of Penn sylvania, both Btate and county, have been inadequate. The crowded con ditions in the Eastern Penitentiary, in this city, were relieved somewhat a flfw days ago when a acore of Fed eral prisoners were removed to the new Government prison at Atlanta. The hard times have been the cause for an Increase In petty crime, but It Is not believed that there is any greater proportion of alien criminal* than formerly. •Maryland Like New York. Baltimore, Md.—All th« pent! In stitutions of the State and city are more crowded than ever before with minor offenders. It la attributed by the officials largely to hard times and the presence of foreign undesirables. In a report to the Governor recently It was stated that while there are fewer cases due to the enforcement of the anti-cocaine law, there is a large Increase in police court cases. The State penitentiary now has more la mates than It has had at any time within live years. One of the city po lice magistrates last week let off a number of'petty offenders, saying he dM not want to add just now to the number of prisoners who are crowd ing the city lan. The House of Cor rection is filled to overflowing with offenders committed from all parts of the State. Bay View Asylum, the city almshouse, is so- packed with paupers, sane and insane, that rigorous pro tests are being made against the con ditions Dre vailing there. African Explorer Sees Tame Hunting Ahead of Roosevelt, New York fcity.—"Mr. Roosevelt. In my opinion, will find hunting in Africa uke shooting cows in the back yard," said Dkna Bstes, publisher and traveler, from Boston, who arrived here after eight months spent on the _ other aide of the world. "Of course, lions, tigers and other savage beasts will be met, bat most of the other species appear to be comparatively tame," he added. Daring his trip abroad he covered the gronnd Roosevelt will visit.