PRESS, VOLUME XIX. FRANKLIN. N. C.. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 24 1904; NUMBEil 34 : THE FRANKLIN MOTIVE. fiat a youth with" stilled tlsage by the jj, , throng' d approach of Fame, t . Baffled In, his Brut endeavor, careless" 61 ... nis nonorea nnnio, -.--.--titm a sage accosted, nulling: '' Whore lore, Brother, do yon wail, While the multitude sweep ly yon, and there's clamor at the gate Where the oil and timid pass not, but Even in our nercest strlvlugs; and the the youthful oud elate?" frailest life it dear. High the privilege of struggle to true "Of these aimless feuds I weary. lilt men In dayillke there. noble thus to strive, Whou the great world shrinks together, When the mighty aud successful on the . and men upeak across the sen, ' weak and tailing thrive 1 And Hxnown swings wide her doors to ''What voice b) ft bid you onward) What gentle MernyVi golden keys I " Voice was it bade yoil rest? , , ,. ... A Twas the whlspi-r of a fiilut heart, hot Then the youth's deep VM enkindled, the Wail of tho oppress. , Hud Be utood up In Ills light. . Hliel A noble man Is ever but In up- Baying, "Then for all I struggle! for the ward toiling blest; . weak I J'ln the fight. " . . . And be prens'd the Upward highway, "Upward toiling! Where to, father singing s he sped along- ' -,, ' I.) We lose or do we gain Wdrld-wlde love and selfless service' Is there more In All our trtttitfplis thud ' was tlte" burdeu of bit song . softer ooituli for rlRln?" : S Till his volte and forid were swalldwb'd Bald the sage, but slowly, thoughtful:' tu the clamor and the throngi t Leander Turueyi In Boston Watuhirtad. TTTT TTVTTTTTtTTTTTTTtTTI & a hero & Cy Annie) H atmiltoti Donriell; t The boolt slipped to the floor and Honorla Keller sat tack in ber chair with a genlle yawn. "That woman was a herp.i'isho sakl aloud. "The kind I'd like' to be. I never wanted to be anything rnilte as much as to be a hero. Dear, dear, that's what I used to lie under the trees and dream about, while other girls dreamed about lovers. To do something splendid and bravo think of that! Helgho!" She crossed the room and surveyed her small, trim figure In the mirror, with a rueer deflarco in her face. "Oh, It's you ajaln, in It? she cried. "It's nlways you, always! Never somebody tall and firrc a-nl hero-lsh. You'd make a pretty hero, wouldn't you? Did you think heroes were cut out Ave feet tall In their shoe3? And had round bar;' faces and dimples? Dimples!" She turned awny and paced restless ly up and the bright little room. The gentle purring of the sleeping children stole out to her faintly through tho half-open door. Once, when she 'failed to hear It, she stopped In her walk to listen anxiously. Heavy feet tramped by, now and then, In the corridors, but the step she was waiting for did not come. "Hp's late again," slio said aloud, in the fashion of lonely women. "He was late yesterday and day before, and day before that worM wlthovt end." A sudden bitterness distorted her her sweet face. Hono! What kind of a parody on the word was this pair of little rooms In a great noisy hotel? Was there the slightest resemblance to a home about them? They were bright with gaslight tonight, and pretty with. the bits of. womanly touches her wistful fingers bad given them against heavy odds. And how the children had helpeiU Jed's horse, over there In the corner, Nell'Ssorry doll on the couch, the Tiny One' rubber dojs and cats everywhere, bless them, how they helped ! Honoria Keller tad been married eight years and she had never had a home. From one hotel or boarding house to another they had drifted rest lessly. The children had been born In hotels that was Honorla's greatest grief. It Beemed like doing the chil dren a great wrong. When Harry laughed at her the hurt deepened and widened, It was all Harry's" doings, anyway. When they had money enough, he said, In his easy way, they would have a home. Time enough. Suddenly the woman pacln; the bright little room uttered a sharp sound of pain. The old wound would not bear opening. She hurried to her usual refuge, tho children in their beds. Their little flushed, peaceful faces always calmed her. "You don'l lay It up, do you?" the mother sobbed softly. "You know mother wanted to give you a home to be born In, Jed. Nell, Tiny One! You don't lay It up?" For a little while she sat beside them. In the darkened room, touching their little cheeks in turn, with the soft mother kisses that never waken Then, comforted, she wont back again to the light. Hut the evening wore on, dragged on. without the sound of familiar steps outside the door. Some where a clock chimed 10, then 11, then 12. "It was 12 last night," she said, and waited. Then 1 o'clock rang oul In one clear note. "It was 1 the day before yesterday," Honorla said. They had parted In bitter anger in the morning, but that was too familiar a thing to count. Lately tho partings (had all been angry or cooly Indifferent. When had they kissed each other goodby In the morning? Honorla caught her breath In sharp distress. "At home we would It would bo dif ferent If we bad a home!" she cried out a little wildly, "How can we love each other In this way, without a home?" . The great house settled Into quiet. Somewhere a great way pit, doors shut with a 'Anal clang, and loud keys creaked in their locks. "He will not come- tonight," Honorla said. . But she waited until morning. She had waited that way before, and i Jie morning Harry had come. This time It was different. In the morning a messen ger boy brought her a note from him. "Have gone away. You will not be sorry. It has been In the wind some time. I should liked to have kissed the children goodby. Harry." How long It was she sat there with the brief little note In her hands, be fore frightened Imperative little On sen tuarsreri and nulled her hank " "-" . -- - - I. IU leml-consclcusneas, Honorla Keller never knew. The weight on nor heart did cot lift or ease. It seemed to crush and choke her. The quecv, metallic voire that answered the chil dren's wondering questions was not her voice. She did not wonder It terri 6ed the Tiny One. "You isn't like mamma I 'wants papa!" he wailed. "He has gone away you will not be aorry," repeated Honoria stlltodly. "It has been in the wind some time. He was sorry not' to, kiss the chll " She canght her breath as the row of scared" little torn Imprinted itself on her staring reynaa. -; A sudden wave of keen, pitiless consciousness swept over ber like a flood. It was all so plain now! The kindly mist had lifted from her mind.;; .' . J.f- f '"Yes; far morn: for emen woe) . , Bring a sweetness to tue jJtrlk And thH ss-ftv t.hM nlll.lnna sm Sweeps tip, like a heav'n bound rlveri , " - -. -. , - j "What! No (tain! No kindlier spirit! Ah, a larger love 1 here. That day somehow lived itself bill; and then the next Somehow, for the children, Honoria lived. The throb' and smart of her hurt weru ail she realized at first. Small things made no Impression on her mind. Years afterward she wondered whether on those first days the sun had shone, or it had rained. It was a chance re mark she overheard that aroused her from ber lethargy. Some one outside in the corridor made the remark to some on elcs. "The woman In that room there No. 21 's been ' de serted," the strance voice said In wvha. was mean., for an under tone. "Yes, sir, deserted! Sounds liko a novel, don't It? An the chil dren's there too, all right. Just lit out an' left 'en as I'm a sinner." "As he's a sinner!" growled the other voice indignantly. "It's brutes do thlnyo like that They ain't men." There was sympathy In both rough voices, but Honorla did not heed. The words, not the tones, tyirnt Into her brain. Was that It? Was Harry a brute? Dear Lord In Heaven, was she deserted? "No! Harry would not do that!" she cried In anguish. "He went away we were angry with each other. He thought I woeM not be sorry. Not sorry!" She sprang to the floor and paced to and fro, till the frightened children crept away by themselves. But the days that went by grew Into weeks, and he did not come. And at last the kind-hearted hotel proprietor was driven to take the step he had been dreading. He went up to Num ber 21 one evening and knocked Sently. "Come in," a weary voice said. "Ah good evening, Mrs. Keller, sood evening," he said nervously. "I that Is, I've er called on a terribly embarrassing errand. I've put It off and put It off. hoping he that Is. Mr. Keller would show up again. I want 'ou to be'leve it was an awful Jolt for me to corf e up here tonight and ;ay It. bnt. Mr. Keller, that Is" Me cau?Ht o';t his handkerchief and mopped bis faco. "There's a bill against your husband for three months' board," he blurted out des perately. Honorla sat looking at him steadily, letting this new disgrace Alter Into her brain. She did not flinch before it, "You mean." she said quietly, after i minute or two. "that Har that my iusband owes you a good deal' of :nonev for our board, bis and mine and the children?" "Yes, that Is er a modicum, a modicum." "And that we must go away at once? Of coii'se I see that. But but" for the first time her sweet voice broke, "but I have no money to pay the bill. Walt! please don't say a word. Please go away and let me think. I must think. You will give me time to think?" But how to think? Honorla wrestled all night with her problem. One thing was definitely clear. She must pay the bill before she went away. A way, a way, oh, to find a way! What was to come afterward did not matter yet. This mountain must be climbed Irat. The next morning she noticed a signed posted below, over the laun dry windows. "Wanted: a first-class woman to do fine Ironing. Fancy pay for fancy work. Apply within." "Grandmother used to tell me I Ironed her caps beautifully," Honorla said, a sudden resolve In her mind. "But perhaps now I'm not a first class woman," she added with a pitiful little smile. But she applied for the work and got It. She and the children took a cheaper room in ono of the at tics and she went resolutely to work to earn the money to pay the bill. That the work was terribly taxing to her slender strength did not deter her. Her courage supplemented her strength. And little by little she saved the money. Afterward she wondered; now, she ouly worked. Tho night the sum sho was saving had grown to the needful dimensions, ber poor sore heart wa almost light On Jie way up to her attic she overheard some one calling her a hero. It sent her straight to her blurry little mirror. "You don't look it!" she said to the worn, shabby little figure before her, but she smiled a little and nodded to It, frlendly-wlse. "You were always wanting to be one, and I suppose this was the best you could da" That was the nlsht Harry came back. He was terribly thin and wan. "Dear," he said, after the long ex planation was over, how could you think I would desert you like that?" "I dldnt," she answered simply. "And I didn't!" he said; as It lie had not said It already a dosen times., "Thero was no tlre to write a longer nolo that night, when the Head made up his mind at last to send me about his business In such a hurry. And then," be ' Shuddered "then the imnih on the train and the. nothing nes noth In gness noth lngnesa.r , "Ob, hush!" she shuddered. , , ' "And' when I came out of It," he persisted. "I couldn't remember. I only remembered today Honoria." "Only tufay, dear." she cried Joy fully. "But Harry, today Is now! Ant) tomorrow do) you know what ww art going to do tomorrow?" "Yes, wait, let me aay It) Tomor row we're going somewhere home, Honorla?' American1 Agriculturist: BROUGHT LIFE BACrS. Man Dead from Electric 8hock Had " Hie Circulation Restored. Is it possible to restore life to a person killed by an electric shock? Dr. George W. Crile, of Western Re serve Medical college, Cleveland, O., bellevos that it Is. He experimented ft ytat igd with the purpose of demon strating tha valita of adrenalin as a life restorer. His subjects wore dogs. He Succeeded ill restoring to life ad animal that hl& been - dead froni strangulation tot 15 minutes. The re suits til his experiments! wail thed given to the' medical profession in a paper In whieh h6 told how artificial respiration had been Induced by press" lire upon thti thorax of the animal, the; injection cf a solution' of salt watet and adrenalin ihto the veins doing the" rest Dr. Crile has now tried the same experiment upon a human subject; the' body being taken two hours aftor death. The attempt , to restore llfo was not wholly successful, but circu lation was produced In the body three hours after death, end an hour later there was a response from the heart, leading tho Surgeons to believe tbat If they had got tbe subject lri time' they would have succeeded. Thomas Kelly, a lineman, who bad been stricken at the top of a telephone pole by coming in contact with , an electric lisht wire, was the, subject. The accident happened about 11 In tho forenoon. The body was taken as soon ss nosslblo to the Western Re serve college, where Dr. Crile was ready to begin with the experiment. He was assisted by Dr. William R. Lower, who has worked with him for some time. Preparations had been made In tbe college laboratory. The body was placed upon a table and surrounded with hot water bottles. One surgeon seized the right arm of the deceased and sought to induce ar tificial respiration. He soon an nounced that the hmss were working, air being taken in and expelled regu larly. Another surgeon began manipu lating the breast In tho effort to assist the artificial respiration, and another opened the vein under the left arm preparatory to Injecting a solution of salt and adrenalin. The mouth was then opened, JUie. tongue drawn for ward with forceps and oxygen admin istered to the lungs. The physicians worked desperately. One of them held the pulse. After four hours Dr. tawer announced that they had produced cir culation, but that the heart refused to respond. With great rapidity and skill, a cav ity was opened, and while other Bur geons continued the Injections of adre nalin and the administration of oxy gen, Dr. Lower kneaded the heart with his hands. It was a forlorn hope, but the surgeons did not despair. A faint response on the part of the heart was noticed two or three tlms, but when tbe manipulation stopped the response ceased. Philadelphia North American. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. There are 23 football teams In the Syrian Protestant college at Bolrut. Neither frogs nor snakes llv In Alaska but toads are frequently mot with. Seven hundred and seventy-atne parts in every 1000 of human blood are water. . Rain has never been known to Tall In Iqulqul. Peru. The place' contain! 14,000 Inhabitants. Water and a handful of dates ot flour suffice the Nigerian native fot his one daily meal. All mills in Japan run day and night, the change of hands being made al noon and midnight. In the province of Samara, Russia, 405,000 persons got their subsistence from less than three acres of land pei capita. The only two great European capi tals that never have been occupied by a foreign foe are London and St Pe tersburg. There Is a point near the famoul Stony Cave, In the Catsklll mountains, where ice may be found on any day of the year. A drinking cup pronounced . by th British Museum to be 3000 years old, "has been found In the Held at Stoning field, Essex. It Is now In tbe Chelms ford Museum. When the white man first reached the city of Mexico it had 300.000 In habitants, probably more than the cn tire population of the North Ameri can continent A quart of oysters contains about the same amount of nutrition as I quart of milk, three-quarters - of a pound of lean beef, two pounds ot fresh cod or a pound of bread. There Is a wild flower in Turkej which Is the exact floral Image ot hummingbird. Tbe breast - Is greem the -wings are a deep rose color, tht throat yellow, the head and beak. J most black. - With a population ot about two mil-' lion five hundred thousand Paris hai fewer than ono hundred negroes with; in its limits. It is claimed tbat tht colored population of all France it leso than 550. . - ' i Wfhat la said to be the largest lo ever floated In Puget sound has beet tc ,ed Into the Capital bos factor) pond. It is a 40-foot spruce log, nin feet through at the small end and 11 feet through at tbe large end. It wai cut on tho Skagit rtver banks. I ? A new grammar school will be erect ed at Northampton, Mass., this sum mer, to be called the Hawley Orammai school to commemorate the fame a Major Joseph Hawley, the revolution ary hero, CNCLE SAM$00LD FUND ENOUGH OF THE METAL TO GIVE EVERY AMERICAN TWELVE DOLLARS. Treasury Reserve 6S0,0O,00Cl What One Man Could 00 If He Pessesssd the Entire Accumulation The Qi gantio Dimensions of Ha Bulk. At present the United States has more gold than any other country, in the world. ' In the treasury there Is a gold reserve of $G50,000,0ou, to 'say nothing ot 1322,000,000 more in the national banks, says the Salt Lake Herald. - . And to awell the total we are, not withstanding the vast store of gold in this country, beginning anew the- im bortatisn or the precious metal from Europe, $2,t0o,ooo having recently beeii Contracted fof, tJncle Sam's children have over 12 in gold aplocd, which, however, is less than th cltliens ot the Frertoh repub lic pdssess. Fof each one of them there Is A little more than $21 df gold coin. Germany comed third in the per capiti computation, the figures' being 12.8l. Great Britain has $12.34 of gold pgr capita, and Russia, tJ her enormous pdillaton of 128,000,000, enly 5.6t; The per capita figure for the entire British empire is a shade Under $3.20, that of India's enormdtls horde of 297,000,000 sotils being only 15 cents: Here, as In other tiililgs, the' British empire exhibits the most astonishing extremes, for there are parts thereof where the per capita of coined gold Is in great excess; in Australia, for In stance, there is $24.26 in coin as mon ey for every man, woman and child. At oi;e time the South African Repub lic led this, with per capita figures of $26.34, but now Australia Is the high est. Canada's per capita is a few cents in excess of $3. If one man should own the enor mous hoard of gold In Undo Sam's treasury what a lot of good he could do! Ho could pay up the debt of the Ar gentine Republic, and European bond holders would put up a monument to him. It would be rather a. costly monument, because It wou'd take all bis gold to win it. He could take the burden of debt off the shoulders of Canada. That would make him a promoter, for then he might be willing that she should get under the wings of the screaming eagle. This newly rich man might not think of any of these things at ail. Here are a few more suggestions made In an entirely friendly spirit. If ho couldn't pay Uncle Sam's debt It would naturally be supposed that he could help his uncle out In the matter of pensions. But, bless his soul, he couldn't do much In that line. Ha would be unable to touch the bill at all, and could only pay the pensions for a couple of years, while his Uncle was getting his breath and preparing to start in on those of the Spanish war. ir he really wanted to belt) his uncle, he could run the post office de partment for two or three years, pay ing all the bills, and then he'd have either to start out and gather in a new fortune or go to the Home for Indigent Millionaires. If bis brain boiled for bigger plans he could keep up the armies of the czar and William the kaiser for a year, and allow these two fighters to promote their schemes for universal peace, If his travels in collecting gold gave him the collecting man la, he could make a string of skyscrapers here In New York, buying up every building more than ten Stories high and the land on which It stands. There are limitations even to tho millionaire, but this he could do. And, -if he didn't like their style, he could wipe them all out and and build twice as many more somewhere else on the island and in tome other way. The American nation has money to burn. Tho trouble would be to find a place to burn It. If you were to take, this enormous slim of money In one dollar bills and fasten them end to end they would make a string 81,200 miles long, which you could easily wind around the equator three times, and even leave 10,000 miles or so hanging out In airy space. To make a bon fire of these bills would probably re quire one of our biggest parks. The Immensity of this sum, the gi gantic dimensions, of its bulk in gold, or, what Is more startling, in silver, and Its valae and purchasing power In this world, are bewildering to con template. Distributed among the pop ulation of the land it would give every man, woman and child $12. Distrib uted among the population of this city each man, woman and child would re ceive $350. If you will consult your almanac you will find that thre are In this country over 70,000 paupers. If this gold were divided among them each would receive over $13,000 a small fortune. This amount of money would buy the whole UritlBh nary, if that navy were for sale, and leave enough sur plus to' carry on a pretty lively war, Or If you. did not care to Invest the whole sum In one . enterprise, you might for less than half of it, or $325, 000,000, buy or duplicate all of the fol lowing Interesting things: A fleet of 65 first-class battleships. The St Loula World's fair." ' The Brooklyn bridge.' . Halt dosen buildings like the cap ital at Washington, the House of Par liament,' Westminster Abbey, Notre Dame ca ftedral In Paris, and a hand ful of castles on the Rhine. - If all this gold were rolled into one ball it would make a' sphere which would weigh In the neighborhood of 2,400,000 pounds. If you were to di vide it into six balls of $100,000,000 each and place them upon heavy wag ons, It would require a long train of elephants to drag them. ' . Really, this is a marvellous sum of money when you come to measure it If it were given to you In $5 gold pieces, and you wero able -to stack them one upon the other as a gambler piles his chips, yon would have a golden rod 460,000 feet highmore than eighty-six miles, or fifteen times as high at Mount Everest, Asia's loft iest peak. If you would rather have the pile thicker you might take the sold la tfublc block! one foot in thickness, each one of which would be worth $400,000. If you were to pile these blocks one. upon another your $600, 000,000 would make a column 1500 foet high. A cubic' foot , of silver Is worth $12,000 111 these days. A moment's figuring Will show yuil how high your column Would be It you could e change all this gold for silver, if ali the gold In the world were to be rolled Into ono sphere it would make a globe 25.3 feet In diameter. Our $600,000,000 would be one-seVenth of this quantity, GLOVE3 FROM RAT SklNS. Only One Pair Mad? and It Was Very Small. A roport comes from Copenhnren that a great rat hunt has been or ganltod tiicre, and that tho skins ct many thousands of the victims are to be used in making gloves, if the rat hunters in the Danish capital cherish any such hopes they are doomed to disappointment. IUt skins cannot be made Into gloves fit for commerce. Thd belief that a valitnlilo raw material is being neglected here survives cHly in the minds of the inexpeit. The glove milk er knows mttch better. A Norwegian mcrchnnt tiiice came to England and Informed a well known glove maker that he had collected over lutl.OOO rat skins and was prepjared to receive biters fof them;. He wns fully convinc ed that the skins were suitable for glove hiakl'iR. Bilt the Manufacturer found that the largest skin wnS only some six inches long, and he held up a kid skin for the fmallest. sizo of glove, a child's, which was eight inch es long, and asked how he was to cut such a glove out of a rat skin. Then be took up the smallest skin lor a lady's glove, eleven inches long, and when ho asked how that was to be cut out of a rat skin the Norwegian merchant laughed al tho idea and went away disappointed. The best of fer he got for those Bkins, which ho had collected with so much care, was Ave shillings a hundred weight from a man who wns willing to boll them down for glue. A famous glove making firm has a colled ion of curiosities relating to the trado, and ono of them is the largest pair of gloves ever mnde cut ot a rat skin. The belief that such skins could be made Into gloves was laid before tho managers so confident ly that tlicj resolved to put It to the trial and they ordered a number of the skins of the largest rata which could.be found In Urlmsby. But the rat IS a fighting animal and benrs tho marks of many battles on his body, and II was found that the Skins were so scarred and torn that It was witn the utmost difficulty that perfect pieces large enough for the purposo could be obtained. In the end, aftor ten skins had been used, a pair ot gloves was cut and made, and they are retained In tho collection to this day. But they are so small that they would only fit tho smallest of small boys. Thus It was show that, how ever cheaply rat skins might bo ob tained, they would offer no advantage to the ghivemaker, Tho rabbit skin Is equally useless for this purpose, and humane people also may dismiss from their minds the fear tbat the skins of pot dogs are made Into gloves. The dogskin glove of which we used to near is made of nothing else but the skin of tbe Cape goat Pall Mall Gazette. Mustaches and Crimes, Frank Richardson, writing in the Cornhlll Magazine, insists on tho dis honesty of hiding tho telltale upper Hp. "Of all the great criminals of our day," he says, "I can recall none who dared to practise with a naked face. Drs. Lamson and Neilt Cream Judiciously concealed no much of their physlogonomy as might be. Fowler, who murdered by night at Muswell Hill, and Jabei Balfour were bearded men. Walttrlght wore the 'mustachlos' ot his period. James Canham Read and Deeming, and Bennett of the 'bootlace murder' were possessed of mouths tbat prudence compelled them to conceal. "The blue burglarious jowl Is a fantasy of the novelist. No burglar goes about with a face that in itself amounts to a previous conviction. When he is In jail matters are dif ferent, for our prison authorities wisely decree that the convict's face shall bo shaven and his head be thorn. They at least Insist on seeing the man as be Is." Pay of Women. "Why are women paid less than men?'" This question was asked of John J. Johnson, for many years a buyer for Marshall Field, the great Chicago mil lionaire retail merchant. Mi. John son is at the Wlll'ard hotel. "That is easy to answer. They are paid less because their work la in ferior to men's. Women as a class are not competent workers even in those things In which they have al ways been occupied such as cooking and sewing. - "But the clamor , of women advo cates Is always for equal, wages be tween the sexes. This is a cry which is not based on reason. Men can do more end better work than women. Tbat Is the reason they are paid more. "When I was associated with Mar shall Field I always employed men when It was possible." Louisville Herald. A Gensroua Host., One of the oldest institutions in the city of Melbourne, Australia, known as the "8 o'clock rush," Is In danger ot extinction.' For halt a century a philanthropic icstaurant proprietor has given a free meal at $ o'clock ev ery evening to " newly arlved ;; im-' mlgranU or respectable persons who were temporaraily "down on tjielr luck,",; No professlnoal loafers or chronically unemployed were encour aged. The attendance averaged about a hundred, and every Melbourne Jour nalist considered It his jduty to write a description of the scene at least once in his career, l'he proprietor ot the restaurant, Is now retiring from business. He Is said to have received legacies from people whom he thm befriended and who afterward prosper ed. ;' .-v. V A SERMON FOB SUNDAY AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE BY BI3H0 E. C'ANDREWSi Intdecti 'ChT.fllHnltjr and I.otb" Cliurth Ministrations Bliould U Dlmtod ownt Freeing the H nioao HonX ol that Sfinsbness Which Is Inherent. - BnoflKt!, Y. Bishop E. O. An drews, Of the Methodist. Kpiacopal Church. Iireached Sunday morning in the Central .'ongrcgntional Church. His subject wnst "Christianity and Love." The test d( from I Timothy i:5: "Now the rnd of the commandment is charity out of a mirr heart, and of t goad conscience, sad of faith unfeigned." Bishop Andrews said: Kvery careful reader of fti Kugli.ill Bible takes knowledge of the fact timi tli Knglish language, like every other living language, is in process of change, lie knows the significance of words, as well its their form, and occasionally their order changes, He reads, for instance, in the l'silms; "My heart is fixed, oil ttod, my heart is lixed," and he remember that that word "fixed" at the time our version was made had the meaning, which we ttill retain in our colloquial speech, "to be fixed up," and so he reads: "My heart is prepared, oh God. my heart is prepared." lie rends in tho Kpistlt to the i'hi'isulon ians that tlu v which are alive at t lie sec ond coming ot Christ eli ill not prevent them ihst are asleep, and lie remembers that the tvord ''prevent"" originally meant to precede simpiy, and came to Lave its )ireent hiesnliig became he that precedes another is likely to get in the way of that one and obstruct mother who follows, and so he reads that at the Second coming of Christ tiler that are alive shall not precede, or sbsll not have the advantage over theni that sleep in Christ, for both alike shall b called to meet their Lord in the air. So in this text we have the word "char ity," a word which to-day signifies either almsgiving or kindly judgment of others, but irt the time of our version it had the meaning to which the hew revisers have irturnM, vil.j "love, er "benevolence," and in this passngo We read this statehientf The aim of the Cwm'Tna'ndiueiit is benevo' lence, good will, elfeetive love, even as wd speak of the love of man to tiod, then alsd to his fellow men. Another llible criticism is worth our" wdiile. The word "commandment," liku tlw word "law," may have either a narrotv or a broad significance, 'i he narrow t-ig-niiicance of th:t is "particular precept'' a' tended liy "(larticular sanction. ' A broad er meaning is that of a "holy ordained in stitution and system," and that broader meaning evidently should be here iKcd be cause of the context. We come then to the entire stolement: "The end. or aim, of the whole Christian institution is love out of a pure heart, and of a good conscience, und of faith unfeigned." It originated in a heart of boundless love toward man in un act of love unparalleled, we may suppose in all the ages of eternity even the gift of (Soil's only Son. All its precepts turn in this direction. Church or ganizations and ministrations of every kind, if they be rinhtiv directed, have sun ply this purpose to discharge I lie human soul of that KPllishncM that belongs to it bv nature, and to enter into it all tho love of (iod. Now all familiar with the New Testa-. Tnent knew that this is no solitary utter anceit is but "one of monV broad ond comprehensive statements.- One came to the Master saying: "Which is tlt first and treat commandment r And He ans Tholl shalt love the Lord tliv (lod all thy heart, and with nil thv soul, sin with all thy mind, and with nil thy sircngin; ims is ine nrsi niiiiiiiannmciii, and ttio second is like unto it: Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. On these two romnisndments han ail the law and the prophets." In another passage St. Paul tells us that "Love is the ftiltillmg of tho law." If thcrj be any other cominauii ment, tt is briefly comprehended in this saying: "Thou shalt love thy neighbor ns thyself." St. James calls this the "royal law." St. l'aul tells us: "Above ail thin, have fervent charity one toward another." And Ht. John, in a memorable passage, in one of his' epistles, tells us that "tlod is lore, and ho that dwellcth in love dwrllelh in (lod nnd (iod in him." Christ told the story of a man who went down from Jerusalem to Jericho ami fell among robbers, as ono may nowadays do on that toad. They robbed him, stripped him of his raiment, wounded him, and left him balf dead. Then came one ot the chief representatives of the current religion, a priest, and passed by on the other side, Then there carne down a subordinate rep resentative of the current religion, n in vite, and he came and looked and passed by on the other side. t Then came a heretic in religion, an alien in race, and, looking Upon the wounded man, he was moved with compassion and dismounted and bound up his wounds, set the wounded man on ilia own beast, brought him to an inn find took care of him for tli? night and paid the charges, leaving money for addi tional charges, saying to the inn keeper: "If it costs more I Will repay when I eoinc gain. And tint alien in race, that here tic in religion, the Lord Jesus presenU be fore us as the one great example of our practical religion. Now be pleased to notice two facti in this natural love. In the first place, much of it is limply instinctive, a divine im plantation (or high purposes, but because not founded in moral reason, divine reason, therefore without moral worth, it is nut part of that endowment of human nature by which the propagation and thd educa tion of the race IS' made possible, but it does not implv of necessity any high moral quality. The bear will rush on the point of the spear in the defense of its cubs. The wildcat will die for its young. The eagle, with Unwearied patience, will teach the young eaglet to fly. Will you, therefore, lav: "Behold, what paragons of moral ex cellence?" Would you not say of them if they lacked parental and filial love: "Be hold what monsters?" In the second place, this natural love is marked by great limitations in its extent. It is laid upon one's family and one's friends, upon one's neighbors and eountry, upon those who are of the same race, or it may be ot the samo religious faith, or of the salc political' persuasion, and it is hemmed in by these limitations. How many a man goes to the market place and to the exchange with perfect indiflereneo to the prosperity and happiness of his fel low man and wrestles with them in busi ness to return to his home to lavish gladly upon his family all his ill-gotten gains. There are many generous men in all our communities, but they may be also men de sirous ot having their generosity duly ac knowledged and trumpeted abroad through out the world, and if they fail of that ac knowledgment - somehow their charity seems to sour upon them, and they feel that they are not recognized as they ex pected to be. Benedict Arnold was an em inently brave and skillful soldier, and so far as we know a true patriot, but he was a spendthrift, and when Congress censured him in various ways no at length becauio Benedict Arnold tho traitor. The truth is that it is very easy to overload ail the joists and timbers of our soul with these defects, and we may notice in passing that a great deal that passes for charity is of tcntimes a thin veneer over unmeasured masses 06 selfishness, and we may further notice that sometimes we have credited ourselves with very great tenderness and good will toward men. because, for' in stance, we wept over tho griefs and woes of the heroes and heroines of fiction, and yet find ourselves (such is the inertia of our nature) never so much as lifting" up our hands to relieve the unutterable woes that crowd in human souls all. around iiv. Another detect of the natural love is that : simply an unrighteous love; I mean it hunts the quslity of righteousness in that it is a mere kindly affection and desire to do kind things to those who, are objects of our love, while at the same time there is no recognition of that foundation which up holds the whole process of human life, that fundamental truth which only can confer" snv large and permanent well being. Finally, this natural love is oftentimes ungodly. That is to say,' it is the recogni tion In man (the children of UoJ) ot this or that scintillstion of the inlinite good ness, while it withholds from Him who gathers unto Himself all conceivable ex cellences, all truth, patience, generosity, tenderness, teniierauei, long sunering, all uurity-r-whilo it withhold from Him the heart s true loyalty. ISo that this native or natural love ot which we speak is indeed oftsntimes a vrv faiut reflection and im- ag of that perfect love toward which Christianity calls us. And so we turn buck to the text, and bear the words that bt. Paul said: "The aim of the command raent, the whoifl aim of the Christian in stitution, Is lov out of a purs heart, and out of a good sonseiente sud -out ot faiiu unfeiened." , , FirstIn this matter ol Christianity w have to do with such divine forces in their operation upon human nature as yield hopes ot even this great- result. It is not that we expect ourselves to strain any such goodness, but is it not possible that He who made this thing wc cull the hitman soul with all its varied powers ol observa tion, reason, imagination, fancy and mem ory, conscience and will, He who made this strange, subtle, intangible thing we " the human soul, may not He reiuaks the soul, enter into its prdfrtundest depths, so reconstruct, reorder and inspire t that it may shinf in all the likeness of God? Is it nnt said, "He will do for us far inpre ev cre.lingly than we can ask or think? And that Is tin warrant in this Christian church, and in all these Christian churches for the high aspiration toward which Christianity points us, And the other thing to) b said is tins, that however true it is that most of us who profess and call ourselves Christiihs rome far very far, short of this1 high ideal of character; however true it iff that with many of ts our Christianity is simply, as it were, an Stteinpt. to secure self-well-lie' ing in the long reaching future alas! that it is such a narrow form of Christianity as that however tme that may be, neverthe less I take it lor granted Hint perhaps every one present has during some time ill his experience some in contact with some SDiil, has become intimat p'rl',j with some life, upon whom the divine truth, the divine providence and thu divine inspira tion has so operated in transforming power that the soul seems to have entered into the verv fellowship of llrfd. even has be come radiant with divine life, the -features have been chiseled by tire soul wikiin. the eye has" looked tenderly out toward all men whom it has met, and now and then the very habitation ami habit of such a person becomes unspeakably endearing, be cause of this dwelling of the Ixvrd Christ within. Second The aim of Christianity IS love not only out of a pare heart, but olso out of u good conscience. That is to say, its aim is not a mere sentimental overflow of ti.ii-H and pity; it shall lie a living and mhhl cnxino within, under the guidance Of God. as to method, and as to measures, of a wide y instructed moral sense, t'hris tianitv is something beside mere happiness. It aims at the preal soul of life under the guidance and shaping of an instructed moral nature. And finally the love at which Christ ian itv oims is a love out of faith unfeigned. Let faith return. Hi ing back your Bible. Behold one living nnd eternal God. He H love, nnd He linn loved this poor world so that He has .effected redemption for man kind and lifted them across the heavens, lias thrown Ilia arms around man. in or der that He might lift him up by His Holy .Spirit. Prayer, so that the broken hearted and the sufferer and desoiate fnny go apart from the eyes of man nnd pour nut their hearts to God, whose ear can cntch their faintest sigh, and whose eye beholds the falling tear. Providence. No sparrow falls to the ground without His knowledge, and the very hairs of your head aiv numbered. Death;" transformation. Life here: intro duction to the life eternal. Let these truths enter and live within human souls, aud somehow the human rare has become transformed by these facts. I cannot meet n man, woman or child, but at once I know .1 - :.. I I'-.l I....-., Whv cltr.llM llieiK IS OIIL- MHO!!! iirn. ...... .. not love that one? And so it comes to ,s that wherever Christianity is there is ii.l love wdiere it was not. Tncr'ssstTcnces are interesting. There mav seeniTr yon to he various defects in 1 1,,.' Iiialnrienl nafls of the Bible, but if vou will only tell me Till IIiim"; a jisilll whose breath is love, whose inspiration is love, which makes this earth a paradise and a very heaven of love. If you tell me where that comes from I am sure 1 shnll know how God comes down to our world in the goicl nf Jesus Christ. Second. How much ChristinnitV havi you? Not how much religion. The Brah min, the Maliommednn have religion; that is common to all nations, but how much Christianity have you?' There is one an swer. So much Christianity as we have self-forget fulness, self-sacrifice, charity; so much and no more. May God help us. There is infinite resources for us. Let us look to heaven, and let us look to earth, ami do the little thinis nt hand in order that when the opportunity may come we may nourish within ourselves the victor ious forces of helpfulness until at length, if it please God. we shall be like our Lord Jesus Christ, who was the very fulness of love toward man. 1.1 fe Without Any Waste. In the ltocky Mountain cold fields is a mine without a dump, writes Kev. R. Scott Stevenson, in the New York Obser ver. Father and son opened a vein of ore, nnd with some reward for their labors fol lowed it back into the mountain until at the end of sixty feet the ore faded. One day when they were looking over the deso late place that once promised to produce a fortune the son said to his father: "We'll try again. It looks like fire had burned off a great pillar of gold, and when it fell it broke in two, and what we've dug out was the upper end shoved down the mountain side." They climbed up 200 feet further, dug down and found the original vein, which proved so rich and pure that no dump was needed, for there was no waste. A life of consecration is a life without waste. God ran use oil such a life brings to Him. Kvery word spoken in His fear, every act performed in the consciousness of His eyo upon you, every service rendered willing Vy. Ho treosnres and rewards. A life of real consecration is so near to God it finds and brings to Him Only such gifts and ser vices as He is willing to receive and bless. Whst to I-reaeli. Dr. Theodore Cuylcr tells us that he never preached a sermon in defense of the Scriptures. He preached tho Scriptures themselves; and they proved to be "the fmwer of God unto salvation." We have orty new books upon "The Changing Viewpoint," where wc need a hundred upon "Jesus Christ, the Same Yesterday. To-day, and Forever." The apostle told us, many centuries ago, that there would be things to "be shaken; but he also assured us that there would be "things that re main." Whoever devotes his attention to the shaken instead of to the firm has mis taken his call if he remains in the min istry. "What tho world needs," said Dr. Van Dyke, "is not a new Gospel, but mors Gospel!" -.'hat hits the nail on the head. The Duty or To-Dbt. Let it b; our happiness this day to add to the happiness of those sroun' us, to comfort some sorrow, to relieve some want, to add some strength to our neighbws virtu.--Chanoing. Jap Var Extra. tt 8? e- . 5? S 3 j Tbe fin de t'tecle Japanese publish ers are as prompt In sotting war news on the streets as thoab of western civilization M M Sfi 'FUKU8HIMA'8 WAR 80N0. - , Japanese Warrior Wrote It While He Was an invalid. - -. Gen. Fukusnlma, whose horseback' -' ride through Manchuria and Siberia several years ago made him a popular hero, has greatly increased his hold on the public by two things, says the Washington Star. When be was called to .take part, in the council of war held shortly before tbe outbreak of hostilities he was seriously ill and con fined to his bed. But despite the doc- : tor's orders he got up, went to Tokio. remained there) for several days until his presenio wae no longer neces'saw, ' then returned home, went to bed, and wrote a war poem that la being quoted y and sung all over Nippon and her sis- ' ' ( ter islands. This poem has figured prominently In tbe celebrations of"Vlo tory and Is even now being sung by the soldiers with a gusto that pro-, ; claims for It a fame commensurate . ( with that enjoyed by our civil war songs as "Dixio" and "Marching , Through Georgia." Here is a prose and almost literal , translation of Gen. Kukushima's liter- j ary effort. It may not appeal to Amor- '. s. leans In ltd present form it is im- - ; possible for mo to get a metrical translation of it but when , mng. by , . i jubilant Japs it certainly strTs evon ' j tUn r.ntiinn.a li.ia ulln hftHt II Rllf) not one, unless he Is deaf, has not , i heard It. y "The world-famed island of Japan, its present state is known to all, with -a great emperor whoso dynasty runs back for centuries, whose subjocts , number 60 millions a country built witii patriotism, whoso people exceed ; in valor and courage. "And tho enemy who come against us, whose state every one knows, i treucherotis and lying are they. And i they take tho province of another , country, burn the houses without -cause, kill the people who are tnno- , cent, and dishonor the women and children who are fleeing. They mur1 dor the children who cry for milk.,, The barbarity and wickedness of the '; Slav neither God nor man can forgive. . "Their country is wide, but only a desert. They are populous, but only , like tho crows. They are ono iiundred ,' and fifty millions, but they aro of 60 ; races. In the open battlefield they are cowards who cannot go forward. Tho Cossacks, who gained fame In -history, are now but the dream of centuries. As snow and ice melt In the morning sun, Russians thou must vanish. "Stnnd with courage, young mem -of Japan! Bvcn tho horses are whin-, nying! Baltic fur tho right there Is , no enemy! Oh, how joyful is thla ; battle! Despoil, destroy Port Arthur ; aud Harbin! Fnr away on the sum- -mit of the Ural mountains there ' thou plant the flag of the Rising Sun! Chase the Slavs to tho forest of Mos cow! Shine forth the right and fame . of our emperor to the universe, and UUjtlJi lpo ponra of this WOrJd Her Allowance. ' Mrs. Holdcn Moore writes thug to, the Cleveland Leader of her experi ence in earning money, on tho prin slple thai "a penny saved Is a penny earned." My husband is a generous man, and has been as liberal as his means al lowed In giving mo money for my own use, and, best of all, I have never had to ask him for money. Ono day he ex plained to me a business transaction he bad under consideration and said: "It will take every cent I can raise, and I fear I cannot carry tt through unless you go without pin money for , six months. I do not like to- ask you ( i to this, und If you do not care about . i doing it I will call the deal oft." - i I saw what a good thing It wa8-foTr's bis Interest, so I cheerfully agreed to ' get along without any money.'. I waa. so cheerful about It that he said: f "I'll tell you what I'll do; I'll stop smoking, I'll shave myself, I'll' buy no "V more magazines, I'll walk to - and . from work and will go to the theatre only once a month Instead ot once or 1 twice a week. All the money that I would have spent I'll put into a fund for you. Our gas bill has averaged $5 a month and you may have all ' you save on that." J I was delighted with this arrange ment At the end of six months 4 found I had earned $118.. But I re- f celved only 82 cents. Find the Gei It lacked but Bye time for the train to al down-town station, aud the subuiu,..-. - tafW ites were hurrying into It, when m . man in the garb of a mechanic eat down by the shie of a finely dressed passenger In one of the seats In tjo rear car, took a paper from his pock et and began to read. ; 'i "Plenty of empty seats in here yet, aren't there?" growled the man in fine raiment moving along grudging ly. :- - '. "Yes, sirr," pleasantly teplied the newcomer, "but it will be crowded soon, and I thought I'd pick out a gentleman for a seatmate while I had a chance. Yoyth's Companion. The All-Round Hostess. , To be a successful hostess now adays one must be all things to all guests. The outdoor girl who doca not . appreciate rare editions of first proof etchings and cannot sympathize) with one's mania for collecting minia tures would think house rich In these treasures a very dull spot 1 deed unless there were adjacent go', llnka or skating to make life endur able. The grumpy old bachelor v.1. does not care for exercise will scarce ly go Into ecstasies over fine houm' . and "Jumpers" unless his enthuslaw -i has been warmed up viands don to a turn and wines of a vintage. 1 ' dotea upon. Chicago Journal. No Chanee of Confusion There. "The trouble with our people," claimed the popular orator, "is t; they too often confuse license wi liberty." -i'';- "-. , "I don't know about other kind ; license," Interrupted a thoughtful h: Ing man from the audience, "but can state' emphatically that th- no confusion bstween a mar, license and liberty." There were approving nin? back to the rear ot the hall Orleans simes-Democrat.