est ibiidiaif r?F) CTONAnOM. school Lesson , (By E. O. SELLERS, Director t)t- Even Ing Department, The Moody Bible In stitute of Chicago.) LESSON FOR APRIL 7. EASTER LESSON. s lug HE fifteenth of December, 1911, was the time set for the formal adoption of ono of the most important inter national conservation meas ures that has ever been ef fected. Pursuant to a con vention or treaty concluded at Washington on July 7, 1911, by the United States. Great Britain, Russia, and Japan, the fur seals of the north Pacific Ocean will re ceive for the first time a form of protection that has been shown to be absolutely necessary, and is guaran anteed by these four great powers for a term of 15 years. The agreement prohibits absolutely pelagic sealing, or the killing of fur seals while in the water, and places the legitimate killing of surplus male , seals on land under the direct control of the governments interested. This convention insures the rescue of the depleted fur-seal herds from commercial ex tinction; prohibits the citizens or subjects of the contracting powers from engaging In a wasteful, cruel occupation, and removes a long-standing disturbance of international good will. . ' Fur 6eals inhabit certain parts of both the northern and. southern hemispheres, but the most .important, herds live in the north Pacific, represent three distinct but closely related spe cies4 and are known, as the Alaskan, Russian and, Japanese fur seals, respectively. Although the northern . seals roam widely on the high seas, they always resort for breeding purposes to certain definite bits of land, and it is this habit 'which gives particular nations property rights In them and has created several inter national complications.' ' The Japanese seals visit' no land except Rob-ben-Island and certain islands of the Kurile chain;' the Russian seals never go to other chores than those of the Commander Islands, off the coast of Kamchatka; and the Alaskan Bealsv after distributing themselves over the eastern part of the Pacific Ocean as far south as southern California, make an annual pil grimage to islands in Bering Sea. Of all the fur seals, the most numerous and Important are those of Alaska, which came to the United' States with all the other resources of the' territory when Russia ceded her juris diction. The Alaskan fur seals have for many years been the subject of protracted national and international discussion, and during the years 1910 and 1911 came in for an unusual amqunt.of attention. In addition to the con sideration, received during the diplomatic nego tiations resulting in . the treaty already men tioned., Congress has enacted a new -law re lating to the seal, islands, a new dispensation has come. In the. administration of the islands, and the , government as represented by the Bureau of .Fisheries has for the first time en gaged, in . the business of taking and market ing seai skins. The "new dispensation" includes permanent scientific observation and control of the herd, discretionary authority to suspend all killing, and ' discretionary power to lease the sealing privileges or to exploit them as a government monopoly. The only land to which the Alaskan fur seals ever resort is the group of small, rocky islands lying in Bering Sea 215 miles north of Una laska Island, the nearest land. These bits of bleak land have come- to be popularly known as the Seal Islands, from their most conspic uous ' feature; but among geographers they are called the Pribilof Islands, in honor of the Russian navigator -who, in 17S6, while In the employ of a Kamchatkan trading company, followed the migrating seals and ascertained for the first time where they resorted. At the time of the discovery of the Pribilofs there were no human inhabitants. As soon 1 as the Russians began to take sea skins they transferred thereto from the Aleutian Islands a number of natives to do the manual labor, Rnd from time to time established small colo nies at various convenient points. The present population numbers about 300 on the two islands. When the seal islands came into our custody the fur seals thereon constituted the most val uable aquatic resource that any government ever possessed. Owing to the immense body of animals present and the difficulty of count ing with any degree of accuracy, estimates of the size of the herd at that time necessarily differ widely, the extremes being two million and seven million. It is safe to assume that the number was between 'two and a half and four million, distributed on 20 to 30 rookeries. At the close of the season of 1911 the 1 Alaskan seal herd consists of not more than 150,000 individuals of all ages. 1 This appalling dwindling of the herd has occasioned much concern and has subjected I the government to much unfavorable criticism, because the government has exercised full and I continuous control aunng an tne intervening years up to tne present date, it will te seen, however, that the criticism is not justified, for the reason that the decline and decimation of the herd came through causes operating when !the seals were on the high seas and beyond the protecting care of their foster father. I It is furthermore a fact that the government ! took active steps to secure adequate protection j for the seals when away from the Pribilofs, and that its efforts were frustrated chiefly by j the results of an unfortunate International I arbitration. I Although the seals are easily killed by the methods adopted by man for their destruc ; Hon cm Fea and land, they are capable of with ; standing, great privation and of undergoing extraordinary muscular exertion. To maintain themselves during winter in the tempestous north Pacific withcni resorting to Asms &Ssmmk m It VmM "iA Hv rlEAw r vfcf& 4&t iJZ? 3Aj9nz land is in itself no small accomplishment for air-breathing animals. The females, leaving the islands in November, go further Bouth than any other members of the berd, and In December appear off southern California, where they, remain until March. They then begin their long return journey, reaching the Islands early in June. Within two days of their arrival on the rook eries the cows give birth to their pups. Not until ten or twelve days have elapsed do they return to the water or take any food. Then, after washing and playing near the islands, they make their first long trip to the feeding grounds, coming back to the rookeries after three or four days. Thereafter throughout the season the cows make regular feeding trips at intervals of five to ten days. The seals subsist chiefly on squid, but also on herring, smelt, salmon, pollock, and other kinds of fish, which are caught and eaten in the water. They have prodigious appetites and gorge themselves whenever the opportu-, nity comes. On the approach of cold weather, the cows and pups leave the Islands together. Up to that time the pups have subsisted solely on milk, and they then have to learn to catch their own food, consisting of fish and squid. Inasmuch as the natural mortality among the pups In their first year Is fully 50 per cent, it is evident that they experience many vicissi tudes In the tempestous seas to which they commit themselves. The males follow shortly after, but some remain about the islands throughout the winter in mild seasons, and the natives always depend on seals for food in December and January. Fur seals and bair seals have always been regarded as legitimate objects of exploitation, and all governments having real or assumed property rights in herds of seals have sanc tioned their killing, under restriction, for fur, leather, oil, food, etc. Beginning in 1786 and continuing until the sale of Alaska, Russians were almost contin uously engaged in killing fur seals on the Pribilof Islands. In the earlier years there was a promiscuous scramble among rival compa nies, so that to maintain order and properly regulate the taking of seals the government was forced in 1799 to give the privilege to a single company, created by imperial decree and having among its shareholders members of the imperial family and the nobility, This association, known as the Russian-American company, enjoyed a monopoly of this business as long as Russia had control of Alaska. An ukase issued by Alexander I in 1S21 for the regulation of the company had as one of its features the prohibition of foreign vessels within 100 miles of the Russian coasts and islands. This ukas nvolve(, RusSK I- a dis pute with the United w..ie& anu ureat Britain, resulting in the treaties of 1824 and 1825, which recognized Russia's claim to jurisdiction over the whole of Bering Sea, Okhotsk Sea, and other water inclosed by Russian territory. From the outset the company placed a ra tional limit on the number of animals killed each year, and in the light of later experience it is evident that the herd would have been fully able to sustain the annual harvest of skins if these had been taken only from the males. But males and females alike were slaughtered in ignorance or disregard of the polygamous character of the seals, arid as' early as 1806 it was necessary to suspend operations for two years in order to permit the herd to recuperate. When killing was resumed, however, It was along the same destructive lines, and the mighty fur-seal host continued to dwindle un-' til by 1834 its numbers were reduced to one fifteenth or one-twentieth of those present in the first years after the discovery . of the, islands. The suspension of all killing for a term of years then ensupd, and by the time operations were resumed the company officials had come to realize that the females should bo protected, and later the sacrifice of old bulls and young pups was stopped. The result was a remarkable recuperation ard increase In the herd that afford a valid basis for the belief that speedy recovery of the decimated herds cf Alaska, Russia, and Japan may follow the elimination of the factor re sponsible for their present condition, namely, the indiscriminate killing of males and females at sea. When Russia ceded her jurisdiction over Alaska, the Pribilof fur-seal herd had at tained a degree of prosperity closely approach ing its condition at the time of its discovery, and we thus came Into possession of a re source but little impaired and had a knowl edge of its significant history to guide us in its treatment. It is a cause for congratulation that no coun try has dealt with its seal life in a more intel ligent, humane, and zealous manner than the United States, and it was a cruel fate that ftr so many years rendered our efforts futile. The only Occasion "when there was any laxity in our administration of the seal islands was dur ing the first years of our possession, when the government was still unorganized anywhere in the territory and various private companies landed parties on the Pribilofs and took seal skins without any government supervision or restriction. It was In that year that the larg est killing in the history of the islands was made; the number of skins obtained was prob ably not less than 300.000, and may have reached 375,000; but this take was not indis criminate, was confined to bachelors, and had no effect on the permanence of the herd. Although the indiscriminate killing of seals in the sea had been going on from very early times, this business was not extensive, was conducted by natives using spears in their canoes, and had no appreciable effect on the herd. Special inquiry made by the government showed that in different years from 70 to over 90 per cent of the seals killed at sea, either on the northwest coast Or In Bering Sea, were females. What pelagic hunting then meant to the seal herd when so large a fleet was engaged, and what it has meant recently when the fleet was larger 'in proportion to the number of seals, may be appreciated when i Is stated (1) that for every seal killed and secured by the hunt ers not less than two seals were killed and lost because they sank before-. the hunters could lay hold of them, while many that were wounded arid escaped died later; (2) that for every adult female killed on the way to the Islands In spring an unborn pup was sacri ficed; (3) that for every female killed after the herd had reached the Islands a pup on shore was left to die a lingering death by starvation, and a pup to be born the next sea son vaVlikewi8e sacrificed. The government was not slow to realize the damage done to the seal herd by pelagic seal ing, and was led to assume jurisdiction over the entire American side of Bering Sea and to regard as poachers any persons found hunting seals therein. The seizure of vessels flying the United States and British' flags followed, and there arose a controversy with Great Brit ain, which culminated in the reference of the case to an international tribunal of arbitration Hiat metJn Pari'" 5" OS. The award of the arbitrationVourt was agJJ-t the United States" on both, of the main contentions, namely, tho Bering Sea is a closed sea, and that the prop erty right in the seal herd warranted the gov ernment in protecting the seals while on tho high seas. Since the award . of the Paris tribunal the case of the fur-eeaLherd has gone from bad to worse. Ttie United States government early B.ond . its good faith by prohibiting its citi zens from engaging in the lucrative industry of pelagic sealing; but the subjects of all other countries were permitted to do so, and it was the injection of a new factor, Japan, that con tributed more than any other cause to the decimation of our seal herd. The fur-seal problem with which the United States government now has to deal presents several phases.1 The most important duty the responsible officials have to perform Is to con serve and. increase ..the seal herd. This in volves continuous care, study, and observa tion; the determination of the. actual condition and needs of the herd, and the application of the results of scientific and economic investi gation to the welfare- of the seals. A scarcely less important duty, and one that is In no respect antagonistic to the first, Is to provide a revenue and to utilize a highly useful resource at the time when that resource pos sesses the greatest, market value. This In volves the judicious killing of the male seals when they are two or three years old and the disposal of their pelts to tho best advantage. A third duty Is to ascertain what are the real needs of the helpless native Inhabitants of the seal islands, and to give them the air that is best suited for their mental, moral and physi cal natures. Recent criticism of the government's policy cf taking the skins of seals in view of the de pleted condition of the herd is based on defi cient knowledge. The fur seal being a highly polygamous animal, and males and females be ing born in equal numbers, it follows that un der the conditions that have prevailed and still continue the number of males produced Is far in excess of the requircmenfs cf nature for the perpetuation of the species. The preservation and increase of the seal herd is entirely compatible with judlcioua sac rifice of a limited number of young male seals each year, and this is quito as true when the herd is depleted as when the rookeries are crowded to their full capacity. When the pres ence of a sufficient reserve 13 determined by responsible officers of the government, tho utilization of the surplus males for their pelta and Incidentally for native food Is justiDed and demanded by common sense, and fulfills the utmost demands cf both the spirit and the letter of genuine conservation. It not a single male seal were to be killed on the islands or at sea during the next five years, not a jingle additional seal would bo produced as a result of that course. If not a single male seal were to be killed cc the Islands or at sea during the next 20 years, not a single seal would be added to the herd that will not be added if the present policy of re stricted killing of surplus mild la ccaUaucd. LESSON TEXT I Cor. 15:1-11. GOLDEN TEXT "This Jesus did God raise up, whereof we all are witnesses." Acts 2:32. , , A ' St. Paul may not make direct re ference to the virgin birth of our Lord, though he certainly knew of the prophecy that a "Virgin shall con ceive," (Isa. 7-14), but what does it ; matter? It is not greater miracle to be born than to rise triumphant over I death. That Paul assumes the fact is evident from this lesson. Literally rv he begins by saying, "Now I make known the eosDel which I Breached unto you at Corinth, whereby you are saved and what you must always re member, that Christ, who came ful filling all that was promised in the Scripture, died for our sins and rose again." Paul goes on to tell ex plicitly of many who had seen Jesus after tho resurrection and, most im portant of all, how he, himself, had seen the Christ. "Last of all he was seen of me also. Though I am least of all the x saints in that I persecuted the church, yet I am what I am, and his grace was not bestowed upon me in vain." Paul was not such a "bad man" from the accepted moral standards of his time, yet he felt the truth of what Christ said, viz., that the essence' of sin . is that "they believe not on me." The fact of the resurrection of Je sus Christ is the best proven fact of history. In the first place the dis ciples themselves did not. expect Je sus to die (John 12:34), hence, of course, they never even thought of the resurrection (Mark 9:10). In the third place when on that Easter morn. Mary reported the empty tomb and of having seen the Lord, the apostles thought it "idle talk" (Luke 24:11). When the women. reported having ac tually seen him, the men, and how many men like to take instruction from a woman, were ' unconvinced and rather doubted those who had conversed with him on the road to Emmaus. Again, when . -n by the ten, Thom as would not accept the report till he had seen his hands and his feet. Arnumonto Raerl ftn Unhftlief. All arguments to convince us that Jesus did not rise are based upon un belief and the answer of countless millions throughout nearly twenty centuries has been the words of Pau (verse 20) but "Now is Christ risen from the dead." To deny is to be lost in, the fog, our preaching vain, and we have no ground of faith. See yerses 12-14. To accept Is to place a firm foundation underneath our whole Christian scheme, to set the seal of authority and purity upon the life of him whom all men, Jew and Gentile alike, say was good, and opens a vista of hope for all who die in the Lord. Paul goes on to show that the res urrection of Jesus is the beginning of a plan whereby all the human race who are related to Christ shall like wise be resurrected. Even as through the transgression of one man sin came upon the whole human race, in like manner . by the perfect life of obedience upon the part of one man we may all be made alive. Paul makes a strong contrast be tween the death of the believer and that of the non-believer. "If I fight with beasts at Ephesus what advan tage does that have? Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die." Not so, however, with the Christian, hence be exhorts the Christians to be awake to righteousness and to sin not. Only Friends Saw Him. For the younger classes this stcry of the first Easter is a most fascinat ing one, dramatic, tender, inspiring. For the older pupils we may well dis cuss, How Easter would be observ ed. Have we fully realized that we are "risen with Christ?" Remember he showed himself only to his friends, not to Pilate nor to the Sanhedrim. Are you his friend? Have you seen the-risen Lord? A description of "Holy Fire" of the Greek Christians who gathered each with his taper in the church at Jerusalem on Easter Sabbath, and how each passes the fire on to another or carries it sacredly back to his home church, would bo appropriate in order to illustrate the fact that each one of us must ap propriate Christ in his resurrection power, and having appropriated his life we are in duty bound to pass on this knowledge to others. Paul show ed his gratitude by "laboring more abundantly." It might be well for us to draw at tention to the fact that the commun ion service "shows forth his death till he come again," and baptism Is sym bolic of his death and resurrection (Rom. 6:4), wherein we are to walk In newness of life, and that at his coming again all enemies shall be subject to the Christ. That these are great truths we all know, yet "even the least" may have a part In telllngr the glorious Easter story and that we need not dwell at the cross but pass on and behold an empty tomb and worship a risen Christ who ever liv eth and maketh Intercessions for us. 1