.THE OLD HOME DAYS. Old stone doorstop! Blerslngs on you! Ton havy suffered no "repair." Grestlnpi! Blessings! I'd known J011 " f 4 mt '?? anywhere! , . tilxty years and mot have faded Kino you anchored by too door . V here the wide back norc'J w shaded by th aautont syoattior, j Waving 'oft, through Miory'ui jn tUo delft ham do)sl , . Old stone doorstep! "I retail you! Father found you on the hill, And be said "Uy OeorKo! I'll haul you where you'll make a noble oil. Hunimnt rough, but might be reunion 'uoimh eight rapotke.ru Die, I gueesj . All of us that toil end suffer must b wrluklud more or less. That was Just like father's ways la the old home days! , So bo bltohed the oxen to you In the path the' water wore, Slowly slew yon round and drew you to the open kltoben door, Where the crowbar madu you worry and the heavy iron maw , And I taufihi'd to tee you hurry as you wrlggfco into plaoei , And he said: "I'll bet it sift'.!" ,,; In the far bom days! And yoa stayed, O stair of granitel c our home and life part) Not a thrimo upon the planet touches so the truant beRrt. ; , , ; A fond memory backward glanees through the labyrluth of years y , . Hound tlieo troop the pictured fancies 'mid tbe laughter and the tears, And we thread the tanxled maze To the old home days! Oh, the orchard and the garden, and the elms arrayed in state) - , 1 -mill one (lunt, like a warden, towers nesine mo open gmei ;., How he raptured, na and swung us-oh, the mad and merry wight! ,; , ; : 1 Through the tangled branches flung us till we shouted with delight! ., . . Oh. the joyance of the plays , la the long-home days! ' Peaceful hours! The twilight shadows of th harvest evening gray , Prooght the blossoms of the meadows in the odors of the hay, ,:.,,. : And the cows from out the clover tinkled that tbe day was done, And tlie bee went droning over with thejr goiuen armor on , - Through the sunset's fading rays In the sweet home days! ' . Hung above yon on the trellis were the Concords In the dew, . ; ' Growing sweeter for the chalice as the jocund summer flaw, I And you heard the water tumble where the river breaks In twain : - i, And the rumble and the grumble of the grinding of the grain, And you wnti'hed each changing phasa ' Of the old home duya! . . , ' i ' ' ; . '' Dcnr old doorstop! Oh, the prancos of the children on the grass, i : .'Vsjsv Aud the gambols and the dances of the laogMag 14 and lass, , v- - " ; And the song we sutHi ohan'el aethe hours ot evening sped! ., f; , Ob, thesacr.-d spot ii hkin'.ed witi tha fsMJOf the dial v . And theeetiobs of tie lays .'.:s Bung In the old borne days! . , i, Memories throng. The heart Is swelling till the pain has found rellof; Uoly sorrow's pearls are welling from the blessed fount of grief - :'':, For the music hushed and vanlrfhed. for the voloes round the door And the footprints that have vanished from the path lorerermora, As through blinding mists we gaze '.toward the old home days! v ? i '' w A. Croffut, In Rpringfield Bopubllcan. w "'T'TrrA I5riHTi5 ntm : ftrirl j w 1BU UaiilUlD GUU By JOHN Author of "The i Heard, the latest from the Philip - '?" queried young UctiLeayat vrs' club, as he Vie siianer at a mouth, j enjoying the post-praudlal hour of doles far nlente, utterly indifferent, iu their contentment and comfortable -'oitn,tl!ags, to the wind that rat Ued and the rain that beat; against the windows of their Fifth Avenue clubhouse, i "Here's a single Filipino who has the sand to charge a whole American column!" Wow!" chorused his listeners, In credulously,, "And what happened to the gentle Tagalog?" "He Isn't, or I suppose It is safe to wasn't a Tagalog, but a Moro," re plied the lieutenant, "though I sup pose all Filipinos arc alike to us here. As to what happened to him, the dis patch leaves it to the imagination. This Is all it says: ., - "Manila, Sept. 27 Three , com pa- nies ot infantry, commanded by Capt. Eli A. Helmnlck of the 10th regiment, ;. left Camp Vicars, Island ot Mind.iniu, : Thursday, to reconnoitre the Mo.ro lortg and recover stolen arms. They encountered only slight ' The -column captured and position. estroyed the Butig foi'ts, JkniedThoj'' d lu- jate of 'reniied thus su ,,'he might .aud, armed A courted a thousand .alight, elegant with clean-cut JC-tNntedJaeard. re- j..uiked quietly: "That rwlls a similar and very ex traordinary incident which I witnessed In the S'rudun tn 18SC." ; r The sooner as Stanford Hyliah, a visiting EniJlMi journalist and ex- , war correspondent, to whom the cour- ;. : tescs ot'the club had been extended, 'I'M entire comnanv was atlnntlnn lm. , mediately, and Mr, Hylish, on being pwssed, continued: i. "It was during the operations, begun too late, alas! for the rescue of Gor don at Khartoum.. I was with the col- umn commanded by Gen. Sir Herbert i Stewart, which made that famous dash ..across the desert to Metemneh when 1500 Tommies and bluejackets at Abu Rica fought off 10,000 tribesmen whose . valor Is Immortalized in Kipling's barrack-room ballad 'Fuwy-Wuzzy':' " 'An' ere's to you, Fuzzy-Wuzzy, with your 'ayrlck "ead of 'air . . You big black boundln' beggar for ( you broke ft British Square.' "The column was made up- of the Sivssex regiment, mounted Infantry, a camel corps-of guardsmen, and a detachment of men-o'-wnr's men, with a troop of the Nineteenth Hussars acting as scouts. 'We hurried along with us four screw guns una ft couple , pf gatllngs.i Big Col, Fred Burnaby, of 'The Ride to Khiva' fame, was' of Hie expedition, and rejoicing mightily thereat, caring nothing (if he had any premonition of his fate) that It was to mark the close of his adventurous ca ii or. Not having been able to get f.i-clf sent to the front, he had c t.jieJ sfveral months' leave of ab sence, aiTrrriwfWwlth a shotgua, had overtaken the army on the Nile, hav ing dodged, by avoiding the Egyptian tovtfis, imperative orders "to-" return tn rrnphed to every point of. possible ", ption by the war office authori ty who bjid learned of his departure. ' - a had made a forced march ot 18 hon, 'i and were ncaring the wells at Abuivlea. Not a man had had a raor Rvl cut or a drop to drink during n'l t' :it time. Most of us wer on the i of prostration from futtfflie and t!ie torture caused by the sand and fine ' t vhlth clogped ott moutliflj farn, I lidMiili, FftusiiiR un lntoicralilo i a, and pcnelrnti'd our worn nnd i ir.iiy oiv-i rf (l clii'Mri" Tho il'i (i ' .r ; jit at I '. 'vl'i'i k f , ! s . i ., ,nd ! v T'liAiti T nnf fllinnrfn 111011 MOl )Ml& W. HARDING, ' Gate of the Kiss." ' 1 had time. So form I squaro about our ib&gn nd animals when two mighty, eats of black humanity after the fir got each atmospho' I wjtu tho terrible ueat, as K-JCoaied to us, appeared to concentrate , too powder smoke in a donee, acrid, choking pall through which it was Impossible to see the on rushing tribesmen. The sciw. guns had to be cleared of sand before they cpu!d be put Into action. As for the Gntllnga, they had vto be taken to pieces and cleaned. Bluejackets In side Hie Biuiare were doing this ex peditiously, but with tho utmost calm ness,, ainid pandemonium, for the men told off to look after the animals were having the tussle of their lives. Some of the camels and horses had been wounded, and were , squealing and plunging madly. Meanwhllo officers were rushing along the rear of the lines of the square, shouting amid the din Into tho ears of the men to aim low at their invisible foes. "Suddenly,, on the left roar of the nnunrrsfherhe heavy cavalry and orps men had formed, an Im- lacb mass which had broken the terrible circle of fir througt the smoke cloud at ery barrojsojtliertflesl..ft fl-'f!,Rerf"nnon fh annah. with I flg'-'ftseirupon tlie square with the irresistible force of an avalanche, broke through the lines, - Some of the cavalrymen, true to their Instincts, and lacking the Infantrymen's train ing to meet such an emergency, broke ranks and rushed at the enemy. The others and the Infantry stood their ground, and by dint of terrific fighting closed the gap. Many of the hapless cavalrymen thus shut out fell, pierced by the bullets of their comrades. Toe tribesmen who bad broken through were quickly cut down,- though not before Col. Burnaby aud many other gallant fellows had been killed, Bur naby, you may recall, received ft spear thrust in the throat, Geu. Stewart himself had a narrow escape, bis horse being slain under him. "Meanwhllo one of tho fiercest and bloodiest hand-to-hand fights In the annals of warfare was in progress all along the line.' Every man, handi capped from the first by exhaustion through he was, knew that not only his own existence, but the lives of the entire command, depended upon the square being kept intact Tommies J rt i...k 1,1.- . . 1 tuu wis luu&UV liHD UeUJUUS ana IO'.-- the first time I understood how the expression 'to swear like trooper' probably had. Its origin, fo while they fought they swore continuously and horribly, and .the curses of the wound ed would l any uther circumstance have been frightful to hear, , What they were 'up against,' as you Ameri cans say, will be better understood when I tell you that those gigantic and absolutely fearless blacks hurled themselves upon the bayonets and de liberately Impaled themselves In order to Teach and enable other warriors behind them to attain, with their spears and long swords, the men hold ing the square. "AH this took place In a few min utes. Then tils' gatllngs And" other guns got to work and tbe black mass withered away in their fire and the leaden hall from the rifles. "The result is matter of history. Out casualties were nine oBIcers and 65 non-commissioned officers and mn killed and 85 wounded. Tho tribes men left about 2000 killed and wound ed on the field. It was then that the Incident re called by the lone Filipino with his bolo occurred. Nearly an hour after It was all over and the black host had vanished, the men not engaged In at tending to the wounded and the att mals wore drawn up awaiting orders. They were In loose linos, propping themselves on their 'rifles and discuss ing the bntllo. A thousand yards away a siip-rb !:; V.'h?.? rose amid the hillocks of slain and looked wildly upn the s ice of n i - mt lih I i , t f urn i n m n i r j I letlc men of the desert, and evidently a chief. His actions .attracted Imme diate attention. He gazed at the thin, grim ranks ot the conquerors from the north who were blazing the way tor the advance of civilization Into the wild fastnesses ot his ancestors; scanned the horizon on every side in vain for a trace of tho Mahdi's mighty and reputed Invincible cohorts; looked once more upon the bodies heaped, and strewn around him, thenv picked up a shield and spear; and with a scream of defiance and despair charged upon the afmy at full speed! ' "The. Tommies who had supposed be was wounded as tie doubtless was, unless he had been Blmply stunned by a bullet-were astonished beyond meas ure. Not quite knowing- whether' to take him seriously they were reluctant to kill him. Besides, perhaps they felt a little sympathetic admiration for him. But the warrior was out for blood, and evidently not disposed to llston to argument His poised spear meant death to some one, and amid tries of 'Don't shoot; 'it 'lm a toss with the butt!' 'LfAk cut; Vs as mad as a March hare!' and 'Give It to the poor beggar; it can't be helped!' a dos en men raised their rifles, there was a crackling fire, and the warrior pitched forward and lay about 100 yards from the detachment ot gucrds. "That night, while soldiers and sail ors, exhausted as men rarely .are, w".1 dreaming the battle over again, or ot those they had left behind in ' the peaceful towns and villages of England, I lay sleplcss from nervous excitement, watching the sentries silhouetted in the violet night and the great bright stars that twinkled seemingly so near to earth as to db almost within reach. The -vision of that solitary warrior, such was 'ihejmpressiou he made upon me, recurred? WRh depressing persist ence, and, thought -ave Been many terrible scenes of suffering and hero-, ism In war, as it frquenty has done since, and probably will continue to do when I am alone with niytlioughts. until at my last bivouac I falimjfTlie elumbor that knows no urpMng."-t New York Tribune; CUAINT ft?T CURIOUS, In ft cerjutery In Mlddlebury, Vt., la ft stone erected by ft widow to her lovlna husband, bearing this Insorlp- tloi'T'Rest in peace until wo moei W la nrntn.1 thnt thn lsrtrost RtiVtl ever rolled was one -eccntly out by the Parkgate Wonts, it Is 80 fect long, 10 feet six le and 7-8 of an inch thick. In Egypt nets are spread along the coast, in vhich hundreds of thousands of the blrdswhlch come from Europe, all worn ouCWrum the long flight across the ocean, ace caught, slaugh tered, and sold for two cents apiece. Among the material used in the con struction ot the new Christ's Hospital at Horslmrri, England, were 40 miles of hot water pipes,-98 mllos of electric, wire, 20,000,0u0 bricks, 1,500, 000 tiles, five acres of wood flooring, 100,000 cubic feet of stone and 50,000 tons of cement, sand and breeze. An American Inventor of infinite re sources and sagacity has utilized rats to lay the telephone cables through the conduits. Several rats wore turned loose in the conduit with a ferret af ter them, to which was attached a cord. Through 700 feet of the conduit the merry chase was carried, and tho rats emorged Into daylight at the other end Just a few feet ahead of tho ferret. probably Impeded gpjutfc whti iiv i,a . Snakes in - menageries often fast many months. Cases were recorded at the Paris Museum of a rattlesnake which refused food 28 months and ft python which fasted months. But the record belongs to a Japanese py thon which arrived in Paris in Novem ber, 1890. It died in April, 1902, after having refused ' food for ' two years five months and three , days. During that time Us weight had decreased from 76 kilogrammes to 27. A telegram from Marseilles relates a terrible accident which caused the death ot a young man of 18, in the em ployment of tho electric tramway com pany, says the Paris Messenger.- His duty wait to examine the working ot the lamps in a number of carriages at the depot, and in order to facilitate his task be placed several colls of wire round his heck. Ho went from car to car In this way, when, while crossing the tram lines, he stumbled apd fell. The ground being damp, ft connection was established and tho unfortunate youth was killed outright. When picked up his head was found to be completely carbonized. ! l! , Costly Government Dnllilln. : . tt is Interesting to know that the bat tleships and cruisers now building la the government yards in England, ex copt Devonport, are costing more than the estimates, save In a single ense of the Albemarle, In which a saving at $4000 was effected. This is uoi .u.u an indictment against government buildjng as It seems at first sight for the lijht contract-built battleships now bulldfa 1 will exceed their estimates by $700,000 and the eleven crulBers by $875,000. At Devonport ft saving of $20,570 was made in the building of the Bulwark and $21,735 in the build ing of the Implacable. . , American Borses fn O vxlry. ' ' Sir R. Stewart and Lieutenant-Col-6nel Holland of the Remount Commis sion of the Britlnh aTmy have reported that the North American horse of 14.2 to 15 hands is the Ideal type for mounted infantry service. Tho fact the shipments to South Africa were not always satisfactory Is attributed in part to the hardships endured by the stock In transportation, and still moro to the fact that few of them had a chance to recover from the effects ot the long voyai;o afiej become used to a new and trying climate befote they v,ere hiinhd to t'n fuint for active sscvka, : : 'SSL . "Gas macliii In Sydney, Australia, It has been r en wo c ii. 'ion t! -i oi lv 20 p i t ; th !y- n, . ( 1 ,, 1 ' - i ccpip fi n ., i r ii c i ( ,, , ii i " H ri vt'd SI" ' '.), ,..;-..r f;.. i r - UTILIZING OF WASTE. PROGRESS IN BY-PRODUCTS' MANU FACTURE IN RECENT YtARS. The World's Jnoremrnt f treallh n. pandant Upon finding Economical Cset for Initnurlat rubttaiiCM War in Vblch Kerus Is Mari rrcdnellv. v The following extracts are taken from a report by Henry T. Klttredgo of Boston to the director of the cen sus upon the utilization of wastes and by-products in manufactures. ; Mr. Kit tredge Is a well-known expert in man ufacturing processes: "Nothing In the arts of manufac ture is more indicative of economic efficiencies than the utilization ot pro ducts that have been rejected as waste or residues in the industrial processes. The acme of industrial economy is the profitable employment of every atom of matertaly in whatever form it may be presented or however obtained. -Every particle of an organlo or inor ganic substance has a useful part to play in contributing to human necessi ties or pleasures, and when it per forms no function toward some useful end, or remains dormant, it shows that the ingenuity and enterprise ot man have not reached their fullest devel opment, or that the arts of the labora tory have not revealed all the secrets of nature. "For nearly a century the world's main supply of soap depended on soda, which 'was obtained as a product ot the sulphurlc-acld Industry. .Notwith standing soap was known to the an cients, it was regarded even fh the middle agog as a luxury, and when it was aot readily obtained, tb cleanliness was concfw Clothes and by pi in France-' tlon discover some method for n from common salt, whlcl shown by Du Hamol, in 1 tain the same base as soda. 40 years thereafter, Scheele found thai caustic soda could be obtained from salt by the action of load oxide; but the production of soda by chemical processes was unimportant from industrial standpoint until Le Blano secured results that gave to the world one of Its principal Industries. His discovery was baaed upon the treat ment of chloride of sodium with sul phurlc acid, forming hydrochloric ncld and sulphate of soda. The hydro chloric add was regarded as a by product of so little value that It was allowed to pass off into the air, to the great detriment of vegetation In tbe neighborhood. To remedy this evil the English government, took .action against the soda, works to compel them to condense the acid and keep it out of the way, and this led in directly to the discovery that , hydro chloric acid Could be used as ft valua ble agent In the bleaching industry, which, however, was at that time far from having attained its present height of development, The choicest perfumes that are placed upon the market are no doubt obtained from oils and ethers extract ed from flowers"; but there are many others which are artificially made, many out of bed-smelling elements. The fusel oil obtained in the distilla tion of spirits has an odor that Is peculiarly disagreeable, yet It is used, after treatment with proper acids and oxidizing agents, - in making the oil of apples and the oil of pears; and the oi) of grapes and the oil of cognac are little more than fusel oil diluted. jQiLcf pineapple Is best made by the h ditiii;neid hiK0i t L ""i. ..A and sulphuric acid. One ct the most popular perfumes may be obtained from one of the products of gas tar, out of which is also obtained the oil of bitter almonds, so largely cousumed In the manufacture of perfumed soap and confectionery. The refuse of cities throughout the civilized world is -now generally col lected and disposed ot for sanitary reasons, though in many instances It Is utilized to good advantage for industrial purposes. The collection of this refuse has been made only within a comparatively few years, but Is now carried .on systematically, being more or less self-supporting and ad vantageous from an industrial point of view. Formerly this refuse was simply accumulated and disposed of by burning, or casting Into streams or onto waste land. Now, bones, glass, rags, Iron, paper, and other articles are separately collected and sold. "The food wastes of New York City are disposed of by what is known as the Arnold utilization process, which is, briefly, steam digestion and sep aration or the cooked product into greases and fertilizer fillers. The greases are all, or nearly all, shipped abroad andv it is bollevod, refined and separated into several grades, such as 'glycerine, red oil, lard oil, and Inferior grades.' It is not known that refineries In this country are as yet able to handle what Is known as garb age grease, as the secret of the trade seems to be held abroad. The solids after; being dried and screened are sold to the various manufacturers of 'complete fertilizers,' and by them made up into 'grades which seem to be particularly adapted for use in the Cotton belt. . . . K "The economic uses of furnace slag have been greatly developed within the last few years. Formerly Wlag was carted away from th furnace and dis posed of in the moBt available place, as o much refuse material,, hardly worth the cost of carting. A consid erable portion of this waste is now put to some profitable use as a sub stitute fofr artificial porphyry in tbe construction of bii.'Idings . and for street pavements. Paving stonos are are made from it for the streets of Mets, Brussels, and Purls, of a oualltv suflielrntly durable to stand heavy trafhe. . very Important innovnlion In the metallurgical In lustry In Otnn;ny Is the utilizing; of tlm wn-to '-.. r,f bU.st furnaces for work in sr . g si 3 eu, f. .n,t ...lnhnrir, .iri rw r, miifliP requires, to fetch and carry in the development of an Important gas-machine industry. "Nearly all of the formerly waste products of lumbor and timber are now turned to seme utility, and Borne of the new ; products thus formed are ot considerable value. Ot this later class may be mentioned saw dust, which was formerly considered an' absolute waste material, tud was allowed to float down the stream or waa thrown Into a heap where It could be most conveniently disposed ot. French"' cabinetmakers 'have found a way of preparing this mat erial which gives it a value far above that of solid timber by ft procoss that has been In vogue tor at least 25 or 80 years, combining the use ot hyd raulic press and the application of intense heat. "The production lot acetio, wood .'ni.n Mj rVim anwriunr. Is one of the latest enterprises in Norway, r THE AMERICAN WIFE. T ThU it Trn flctnr of Hor Toward Her Hlii! But the American wj James hns summed up t" wife in Just one sentr "Tho American wlf" nt Iibi liiicihan'a n' they are e of not Is botjr' rue. J quenco This actly true. quite ft ge: band. Ey have goi unaffef' ful. f the k-lire"73s s what his prole? Is. She thinks bet Is ft profession or vo- Ahnt is generally regarded as Tedltabla; hut this Is practical ho knows or cares about it. She Jgfe vising early and hurrying to office. She hours him sitting late a tne eight in fi:e room overnead; ftnd she Is probably aware that he Is frame reed in a great sea of papers and documents of sonw kind or other- tiresome and stupid things that he will persist in bringing home and fussing over.'.':.,,,: . . She finds that he must sometimes stay In town all through the summer when the thermometer is in the nine ties and when the sickly heat sweats on the very walls or sizzles on the pavement. She. thinks It very incon siderate of him to do this. She would really rather have him go with her to the cool, wind-swept nook (tat she se lects for her own summer's outing. Just why he does not go, she cannot possibly Imagine, It is ono of the curious, irrational traits which he possesses and which prevents her from taking him quite seriously. Perhaps be will run up there for a day or two; and when he does come she is very nice to him, apart from scolding him ft little for getting so hideously thin and sallow. But he is not particularly comfortable there. He follows her meekly Into the dining room three times a day for a while, and then he has to go back to what ever It is that he does in town. Just what It isr she doesn't know. The household bills are paid; the checks come to her regularly. She does the things she likes to do, and sometimes dimly recognizes tho fact that it la peasant to have somebody to see that her various projects and arrange mcnts all come out so nicely. Her hus band la really quite what a husband ought to be. He does hit duty perfectly, and she has a very accurate notion of W6M v-tta-m- out her bidding, to leave her absolute ly free from care, responsibility or worry-T-such Is the whole duty of the American husband. And then, she Is so very sure of him! It never enters her head that he has anything to wish for, that he' can possibly be conscious of a void some where In Ufo, or experience even the faintest stirring of dissatisfaction: that he could ever Imagine anything different from what he has; that he might ever dream of an existence where he should be something better than the household banker, a glorified butler, a superior maltro d "hotel. She Is absolutely satisfied with herself and absolutely sure of him. She does not want another kind of husband, so why should he desire a different sort ot wife? Ainslee's Magazine. rii Spider Mysterv. How does a spider spin a thread from one bush to another at a height from the ground and then draw It so tlg'-t? asks a correspondent In the New Century. Every one who has ever walked through or country line early In the morning has felt the strained threads npon tbe face, and often these threads are many yards long, but the way in which it is done remains a mys tery. He does "not fly across,' drawing the thread after i'm, for he has no wlngB. Neither does be descend to the ground and then climb the opposite bush, for this would lead to Immediate and hopeless entanglement of the gos samer filament. How, then, does he do it? M. Favler, a French scientist, has discovered that a thread one yard long will support, by Its own buoyancy In the air, the weight of a young spider. It would thus be irt tbe power of a Ju venile to spin a thread of that length and trust to air currents to carry It actoea and attach It to an opposite push 8j that he himself could then pass over and draw It tight But many of these threads, to Judge from tlielr strength and consistency, are not the. work of young spiders, and, as every observer knows, they atA often many yards long and drawn so tightly that that the face li instantly aware of their prssoneo when hrrakln; t!i"tn. Tho worlds nearly ahvajs done In t.'io nltfht tlwo, so that observation Is difficult.- A f ool. Tim only V, r fn ! thin till ninn r is out to n ' ttiiiiKS Is the w. it with n lythlns ottt of iho ! a !. tiii ill! I'u - S I 1 A SEEMON FOR SUNDAY AN EL: JQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED : II '. " LIVE IN THE SUNSHINE." . Th B'V Ir. a. wiionr vnapmnn Fntf" Produce! Man, nt Their Living 1 Ith World I Contending Fo tk jr,lUb-iteplnf In tti LOT of Ood. Ne Vonit CtTT.-The following Mf mon 'ntitled "Live in the Sunshine," ha been "rnished for publication by the di tinmii hl an J eloquent evangelist, the Re5 Dr. Ji Wilbur Clmpman. It was presV ed from the text "Keep yourselves in thi love pf God." Jude 21. JuJo's is ane of th briefest of all the letteif in the New Testament, containing onlv kwenty-fiv versos.' H is, peihsps, tho )asi4l the epistles. Though tho dste is not irf jitely settled, it was probably written afl I t!idestmction of Jemealem. when , ' ' s-noslle had finished their v "w-t rlli(thtful spirit of Y "VI lie writer eaiya Ho bondsman of James, and Vnmil feet, it; lury-. corniug nf CIue-ifH with missinnnrv fire ml"T characteristics must predominstr the church is to hnvo power. When one is in the world and not of it he resliy.es lie is a pilgrim and a stranger here, snd he endures trials and tempts tions hecsnse he knows that they are but for little while. The second characteristic has just ns great n influence. The disciples were constant ly exp-ctinu the return of our Lord; they remembered the testimony of the men who had heard the angels on the slopes of Oli vet, and attain snd stain they opened their eye, exneotins; to behold Him face to face. It was this hone in their hearts which in spired their lives, transfigured the cross and it shame and kept them pur in the midst of all temptation snd sin, The third characteristic is equally im portant. How much we need to long for th salvation of others! Nothing so touches the hidden springs of the Christian heart as to feel in some measure that he is responsible for those about him. Some on has said, when God would draw out all the fathomless love of a woman's heart, He jays a helpless babe upon her bosom, and it is true that the church will awake to power when she awnkes to resnonsibilitv. There is something which I have in mind which will give us all tbe things I have spoken about. It is described in th text. If then could be any nub'ect growing ot of th text to describe it. I should say that it would be "Live in the minshine." I know what the sunshine doe for the clouds; it gives them a silver lininit. I know whst it does for the grass and the trees and th flowers; it warms and nour ishes until thev blossom into beauty and fruitfulness. Take the plant away from th light and it will droon and die; place it where the snn will kiss it and every leaf rejoice. Tbi is the very poorest illnstr tion as to what the love of God will do for ns, o let us keep ourselves in the lovo of God. I. That word "keep" Is the W word of Jude' epistle; In It we are toM'ttmt God win seep us. out we aw also told to keep ourselves. Wo are to!d to persevere, hut it is also said we will be preserved. This is uoa ano man working together, and iti uiyuiiir. to sav ino least, tost the wi nreserve" and the nnr,1 "i.r..A' i composed of evftrt.lv thn m lnttM literal renderinu of llio expression that God will keep us is "ss in a garrison,": Ho' secure, men. we must Del ' HOW MAY.Wfl! KVVP nrtuttpv mm . THE LOVE OF GODV i. no wsv o efflelcnt as f Jj5f-Aaf''rciiLia)(la of n praved whenTTmet thMtVsm,,,. and bad Ins name chsnied from Jacob to iiei. junws prayen when he plead with God to look with favor again upon His chosen people. CJirUt proved in toe gar Jen, for it is said: "Being in sn atonv. He prayed more earntjt!)-." But this i not the kind of wayer I hurt in mind; It ia rather the kind that Christ offered when He wnfl a:nne nn fhn mnnnlnln wlik nj t imarirt th Father talked with Him more than He with the Father. It is the kind, that David describe when he savs: "My meditation of Him shall be wee't." Faith is tbe eye with which we can see Uod, and meditation the wing with which fly. to Him. It ia the kind of prayer offered when the suppliant feels thaf he j the only on in all the universe; it is th v riw iwa ii our mother could hear, or the dearest friend i n earthy w should feel that it had been di- veriea ana aaa not reached Uod. It is th kind of prayer we offer when we let God talk to us as well as tsflllim. This will keep us in tho love of Uoavv t. KVi?v Xm " h rStlii old book, the Bible. Two gentlcmcis'ivere rid ng together, and when they were about to senarnt,A Ana salrAl 1a m. ,.r, . , ,- .u. Lull , UJ TUU ever read your Bible?" ; "yes said hi. menu, u, uui i receive no Dencrit be cause I -feel that T An T,nt .l. C..IU "Neither did I." replied th other, "but God loved me," and that answer fairly lifted the man into the skies, for it gavo him a new thought. The question is not at all as to how much I love God, but rather as to how -much CinA ln. Read the Bible in that way and it will help you to live in the text. " Lov dictated everv word. Inm ajWte every entence, lov presented every prov idence, love sent Christ to die upon th cross, and you can not read it in this way without keeping yourself in th love of God. : 8. All the mean of fevc will keep u. but If there is one abovu another it would d in jjora eupper. Xh very ooming to the table and takini thst whih sent His body and Hi blood really lift the soul into such a condition that it is on with Christ. He that hath seen Christ hath ween the Father, nd he that is in Christ is in the Father. What Wlwr w could there be of ratereing into His love ? . U. There must be emnhasis noon th preposition "in." The Greek signifies th cjosest connection', the most intimate osso-. cistion and the most perfect communion. All these things Are possible. The soul oi Jonathan was knit to the ami) nf lint-;,! and there may be just as close a fellowship ucbivceu arwe uuu ill loi.'.owers. Aow and then in this world we find person! whose lives are so blended that tW !. most 'ook alike. This is oftentimes, true of the husband and wife. Tennyson had it in his mind when he said: "In the long years liker mut they grow." This commu nion of the believer with Christ is suggest ed by the stones in a building, which take hold upon the foundation; bv the branches which take hold upon the vine; by the dif. .rent: mcmoers ot tne liorlv knit toirciner; V the union of the husband and wile: bv he union of the Father and the fvw; so li:it in tins lm.ua tlici-fl in a sttilnhiv, vi- :(ti)t,v, cwiscinuat,es, Bisection and pfv?,ct rmonv. If ont. w in ChriNt, he will. live nve the world and the he e vY he eov(r r,iV tin tSi a s.j ii. fin in this lire we eaten strains of the love of God. We behold, it in the mother' disinterested, self-denying love; we see 11 in tne lovers iow, the little child's innocent sffeetion, but these things are only hints. The Bible gives n th best revelation. Beginning with Genesi the scroll is constantly un folding. Patriarchs and Utopbet. judn and kings each tell their story. So, little by little we get flashe out of Hi great heart until they all come tocether as th ravs or th sun are converged in, the sun glass; then we begin to understand. It was not, however, until the Son of Rmht' eousness aros at th dvent that there fame th morninn light which eives m the thought, not of th edmmistrntion of Hod, but of Hi heart. What is infinite oyer The purest, sweetest, tenderest thin known on earth I the overhangms of a mother over the cradle that contains her babe that can give nothing bach : re ceiving everythin and returning nothing vet the love of the mother is but a drop In' the ooeah when comtwred with the lovo of God. It is infinite, infinite! There' widen in God's mercy A Like the widoness of the sea; There's a kindness in His justice, -. - Which is more than liberty.- ' Fnr th love of God is broader ; Than the measure or man a mmu, . 'And the heart of th Kternal I most wonderfully kind. ' -er In England an archilencon, bovini! ed almost me enn oi nis me. au n Lso constructed that he omim speno ving davs in stinshme. Jn the morn- nlaccd his chair so that he could e toward the east and see the Vt noontime they wheeled his south window, where he Vie sun in his meridian, tint ir they Mnid place ndow. where he could y sinking behind the ' me ask yon in the o keen vonr faces to- windoW, hut when even ir face1 toward the wet Ml Ar Innrnev thrmnrh ften too-ready until the storms t j-unur ana every-dnv trials t, Vnat shadows we would nrise ii!ve, smiling.', as V" saw them Vic fNSne. and thus .I so Ttr JT - ' T J. 'hing into the dinant nothmirnest nl ifvion. If we could but reason calmly """""""d patient.lv and resolutely with our- n one I . . . ... t t. ,i. . . t selves, as we ner.imes musr. near ma imu Kruises alorn? life's rugged pathwav. and bathe them in His heavenly dew of hope until even the senrs leave not a vestiee of their existence as we gase upon them attain with the solacing eyes of eternal faith: if we nonld onlv train our human ears to listen to the tolls of sorrow that re bound nnon them ss we perforce must of ten see the heavr clouds fnllini unnn some beloved breast; if we could only train our heart to thrill with the ecstacy of iriirher trust and j) supremer rove instead of mor bid human despair when some mortal eye, some hand, some' voice in which we vainly trusted, oh! so fnnd'v. dcsecTttes tho ped estal of loyal friendshin and honor upon which our lov elected their endurance, had turned to moolr us. or thrown us help lessly aside, or traduced ns bv calumny or distrustful suspicions. Ah, ves! if we onlv. could do these tninirs how different would our lives eem in their riassinir. But we must only try, rememberina' our Ravionr'a hssw heart and cross-wearied shoulders, ad His blwdinu feet on the lonely road to Calvary. He also hd to reach the immor tal toal of neac thronsh life's reHerest shadows. He ro'd aneellcallv at His en emies, and tn-dnv He turns oh! we know not bow often to Wot out the sins of Hi wandering human fold as tlicv cr out to Him for mercy below. Christian Work, Tbe Tether's Band, Nor is the sense of safety all thftt h awakened in the meraorv of a father's hand. It tells also of guidance and com panionship. Not only in stormy eveninw was the large hand reached down to clano the little one. But memory is filled with pleasant outlines aid beauties of the eoun trv. alwava enided bv the father's hand. The hand of father cw"Sp mean so much. both of pleafiim.' thai phrssgj is" 4 BIH Cir-. Isnu Father' hand." Episeopal li. - Zmbi of Ham Fssllnr. "Mor of the evil in the World than we often think for can b traced back to the lack of home feeling -in childhood davs," uy th Watchman, of Boston. "Where that does not exist, the young man or woman lose the invaluable consciousness of the solidarity of the family. They com to feel that they stand only for them selves, that they need not consult the in. tercet of others, and they miss that happy restraint of affection far those with whom God united them in the closest of ties. In pit of all that is said about the misdoings of th children of devout parents, we be lieve that it will be found almost univer sally true that the children of happy Chris tian homes turn out well. They 'havo a pectal guard in their hearts against the eductions of evil They do not sin against th home, and the memory of their own happy households weaves an ideal of the homes they desire to build, which keep them brav? and pure and human." When Prayer t Kded. ' It ia well to let our spirit of prayer find expression according to God's grace nnd our needs. It is said that "when a Breton sailor puts to sea hi prayer is. 'Keen me, my God; my boat is so small, and the ocean is so Wide,' "We need God' loving care at all times, and no place or degree of danger is beyond th. limit of His ability or readiness to give protection. Sunday School Time. Keep Hp BplilivBl Tone. Cease to live in tbe atmosphere of your in, by which I mean that you must see to it that your mind is occupied by thoughts as far removed as possible from those in which your temptation can take root. It is a great mistake to loiter Around a sin to which one' nature is prone. Your moral strength will depend upon your spiritual tone. E. J. Campbell. The excellent laws for the preserva tion of. gams have been enforced so thoroughly In recent years that there has been ft remarkable Increase in the number of game animals and game birds In the New England and Middle States, and also In other ports of the country. This is especially conspicu ous among the deer., The past season more of these graceful creatures were seen not far from Eastern towns and villages than at any previous time in a half century. Game wardens have been active and efficient, and have nt tended to their duties f'litlifull.v. T deserve hearty public support In ti,. ,f work..".' A "Bull" on a Tombstone. A tarresnondent, formerly 4, c.i'li a,!, nt ion to an "it ff I' )- 'l I - ii" ' 'i n. i us i,' on a t inii 1 Vi t o" r d v ill. h, ho v s. i-i GOOD RHYMES CONE WRC When th English tongue w sneak Why is "break" not rbymed with "li Will you tell me why It's true W say "sew" but likewise "few" And the matter ol a verse Cannot eap his "horse" with "wors "Beard" sounds aot th same as ' "Cord" Is different from "word" I'Oow" Is eow, but "low" is lowu, 1 '8hoe" Is never rhymed with "ft Think of "hose" and "dose" am ,And ot "goose" and yet of "eh Think of "oomb" and "tomb" ail "Doli" and "roll" t and "hom" And sine "pay" Is rhymed wltb1..,,, Why not "paid1' with "said," I pray? We have ''blood" and "food" and "goo "Mould" Is not pronounoed like "ooulii Wherefore "done," but "gone" and "lo Is there any reason known? And, In short, It seems to me ! . Bound and letters disagree. Bangalore Magazine, HUMOROUS. "Didn't you hear the doorbell, Bridg-1 et?" "Yes, mum." "Well, why didn't you answer It?": "I did answer Hi I t said 'O, fudge!' mum." . "They say young Waller Mw away to cultivate b bis vc" ought to use a harrow to "It Is harrowing enough airy Magazine Editor Wo douk any dialect stories. Author -T.1 a dialect story. It's ft story of . in which the people talk up-to-kt slang. Wlgg I see the automobile "Is to be Introduced Into modern warfare. Wagg What's the matter? Isn't tr gatling gun considered . dead i, enough? . 'I Aunt ArtV"V does it happei that WiM" Vomoted at schoo 2 mffrisr"tau oung man," said the stern p "do you know my daughter Is a ch feuse?" "Yes, sir," faltered the suli "Well, do you think you can keep s in fines and gasoline?" "Life is full of contraries," philo sophically remarked the ' If ". ' ' "Yes,'' said the grumpy boar. instance, we have the bi and the coffee weak.S1 "I fill the public e nomDoua oratftr. "TS" little man; is a . den "Why, hi Nell He" gin ne ever lovs pected you to bell course. And he really beginner, to get oft that uf"-aru He -I have proposed to at least four "vaiW V Philadelphia girls in my life, and each f i oi tnem nag said she would be a sister to me. She That accounts ior . theirv calling Philadelphia the "City of Broth- , erly Love." ..,!, Hoax I saw the doctor at; your house yesterday. Some trouble with the baby? Joax Just a little finan cial, trouble. Hoax Financial troublej ot the baby's? Joax Yes; he rwal lowed a penny. 'm "After all," said the flrst physician, J "death Is a mystery. We know nothing about it," "Well," .replied the other, "there's one thing I've discovered about it." "What's thnt?" "That it's invariably fatal." IJkui gave th eTTiiioiMen uple. Crown Prince ot Slam, His royal highness, Maha Vajarl vudh, the crown prince of Slam; was ' born January 1, 1881,' and on- the death of his , brother , was proclaimed suc cessor and crown prince January 16, 1895, He has been in England since 1894, and during his eight years has been engaged in study, first under a private master, later at Sandhurst college and later still at Oxford unt--v''tTl.J"1'torrJl'('.ntl"'' ' college, which he left ntheT out of the South African war, he , sued his military studies with so results that he holds the rank of fit nt lieutenant In the army. He develops 1 a decided tasto for, history during hla stay at Oxford, and has written a lit tle volume on "The War of the Pollnh t Succession," which, has been very fa vorably mentioned, says the Indepen dent. He Is, a handsome, well-balanor ' thoughtfull young man, accepting the: attentions with a dignity that become his station and with no attempt at display. Indeed, he is taking this en tire Journey quite as seriously as bo did his years at college, and the uni versity, and pursues It as a part of his preparation for life. He 1b an ex cellent English Scholar, has a pre'Jv manner in speaking, and has been v ' happy of expression1 In the respon he has made before numerous bom of trade and other assemblies. " Edward th Seventh' Lack. , Did you ever hear of the King's luck in finding' fiinga? asks the Diinilo.-. News. His Majesty once dlRcoverr among the heather on a IHglUnd tn-,-: . a scarlet satin Clipper with a real lin mond buckle. That was' when th.i King was quite a lad. Unfortunatiily there was no sequel, no Cinderella, "no nothing!" Again, while at lioiubunr. Ills Majesty found a very prul.iy mother-of-pearl penknife, ami B'i inmneed his Intention nf imiiiK It. Thivo days later he found a go', watch, but a fair and fat owner ar rived on the scene to claim It Ilwmtiuvr 1 Caller-r.. t i i g for II, 1 I,.- sotw Gr 1 . 3" 1 I to 1 h