E3 E3 Old Blazer's Hero By DAVID CHRISTIE MURRAY. E3 PS CHAPTER II. (Continued.! Terjr well, gentlemen." said the "n tsr of interest, rising. "If you will have It, you will hare it. I'm as hoarse at a crow, but if you riake me sing it'a do fault of mm and -you must put up with it." He threw down hia riding whip and sauntered to the piauo. He struck a chord or two and the character of the kaatru merit seemed to change. It jingled till it would hare jingled under the kanda of the king of pianist but hia roica waa richer, fuller and softer than kt had been. Even uow be was not ro tag to waste a sni!T of the incense which waa wafted about him. and was at once so common and so delightful. He pre luded at half-random for a minute or two, and when he had whetted expec tancy to ita keenest edge he struck some pening chorda and in due time began to aing. Hia Toice waa of that rare and exqui site quality which Suspires immediate confidence in the listener. Co the song f nature's born singers the soul em barks without hesitation at the call of the first true note. If there had been nothing else to have accounted for it, it would have been a remarkable tribute to Will Hackett's vocal powers thnt a wayfarer should are paused in the street at the first note f hia song, aud should have stood stock till in the wind aud snow to listen. There waa, however, much else to ac eount for thia circumstauce. for the way farer waa none other th.in Will Hack ett's unsuccessful rival. He had forgot- ten the wind and the snow half an hour before, and now iu the verv act of stand log still to listen he forgot the song. He doubted the news he had heard, an I had tried vainly to persuade himself that he had no belief in it at all, but his thoughts were comfortless and disturbed. lie had been Mary Howarth's suitor these two years, and though he had been more than sufflcicntly . shy. in his suit and timid nough iu his hopes, he had hardly iden tified swaggering Will Hackett aa a rival. The Ilacketts had been well-to-do time tut of mind, but for the last three or four fenerations the family had beeu rolling ao industriously downhill that it waa a aaarvsl they had not long since reached th bottom. This sweet-throated Will's great-grandfather had in his time gam bled away one-half the family belong ings. The grandfather had in like man- Mr reduced his share by a moiety; and the father, whose career wag briefer aud more rapid than that of his predecessors, had left the remnant of the property so heavily mortgaged aa to be almost value less. Since his death the Hackett home ctead hnd been closed and waa likely to remain so, for the mining resources of th district round about were fast being opened up, aud coal pits and blasting furnaces are undesirable neighbors for a Minnlnr sent- The discoverr of the min eral resources of the bind would liave Bade carerui people wealthy, out it bad only encouraged the later generations of th Hacketts to larger extravagances. Will had inherited the tastes and procliv ities of his ancestors, and was aa deep In debt as he knew how to be. If there had been nothing worse than th fallen fortunes of his family with which to reproach Will Hackett the thing might have been borne with; but ti.i joung fellow kept the family reputation aliv in all ways, and the graver sort people shrugged their shoulders at the mention of him, whilst the feebler held ap their hands in horror. The long and th short of it ia, he waa the laat sort of man in the world for a girl to think of marrying. Now the disappointed lover knew all theae things, and they galled aim terribly. Edward Blane, sunk deep in the mem ory of these things, stood in the storm, wrathful, sore-hearted and piteous. When th song waa finished and the applause Which followed it aroused him from his thoughts, he awoke out of a dream which bad carried him both into the past and th future by a year or two. He could not have told then or afterward what Impulse drew him Into the hotel and led klm to the upper room In which the sing ing waa goiug on. The thing seemed most to desire just then waa solitude, and be had no mind to exchange unmean ing talk with people he did not car for, or even to listen to Will Hackett' de lightful singing. Yet be entered and stood rather moodily propping himself against the door, until hia old half-abandoned crony discovered him, and crossed tko room to shake hand. "Why. Ned, old tad, It'a hundred 7 oar tine I saw th laat of you. What brings you here?' "I beard your singing a I waa going by," aaid Ned. "I wouldn't come up till you'd finished." "And now," cried the landlord, "It'a pretty well beknown aa there' nothing Mr. Hackett wouldn't be willin' to do to obllg Mr. Blane, and he can hardly do lea than aing another song to pay him for atandin' out 1' the cold to listen to the first un." "Ay, sing aa song. Will!" aaid hie Id companion. "They're all rarely pleas ad to b?ar you." ' "Why, so I will," answered Hackett; "but I'll hare a little refreshment first, tt yon please. W arden." The landlord bustled from the room aad toon returned. Then Hackett aang aaother aorta;. Thia time be chose "Sally ta Our Alley," and the unlucky lover, though not easily disposed to be affront ad aa a rule, felt a personal application aa the ditty and took umbrage at It The joyful and tender exultation of the line "Oh, then I'll marry Bally" especially ded aim, ana u Binger accMeat- f look hi bia direction aeemed tm and dtateenpered fancy aa if i neant tt barb the abaft. Ha . . i -a ... a woany sunsinasi mm wait anq re- nMU to Mttor ranelea. Hack- beta began to rally "You've taken rather more than's good for you," said the sufferer. "Better stop it and go home." "Who? IT cries Hackett. "Not a bit of it! To-day's the only day we own. We mayn't be alive to enjoy ourselves to-mcrow." Thv foolish youngster spoke with ao much aplomb, and with an air so gay j and sprightly, and laughed so heartily j in bis speech thst everybody but Ned ) Wane took the speech itself to be full of j wit and humor and laughed loudly with . ,' j. ji u . so often and found refreshment so esscn- .. . , . ., . . . . tial between songs that when but an . . . . i . . ... ., , Hour unu K"ue OJ ut uuiir nrre on ui the Itacchanuliun sort, and were sung .. : . t, I .1 . . . :..!. . ua irBB innic nuu rciiueiu-ut tunu luikiii have been asked for from so accoui plished a vocalist. All thia was gall and wormwood to the unfortunate lover. His thoughts ran be fore and be saw the girl he cored for sit ting lonely and pale and sad at home, and in the same flash of time saw her husband as he saw him now, swaggering and roystering with boon eompaniona who were unworthy of him. These fan cies cut him to the heart, and at last. taking Hackett by the arm, he whisper- ed in a tone which sounded a trifle fierce from so ordinnrily mild a man: '"Come home. Ilackett. If you can't see when you're on the way to make a fool of yourself, your friends must aee it for you." It may be allowed thnt. along with his congeninl vice. Mr. Hackett had at least the congenital merit of being good- tempered. He laughed allowingly. and sufTered himself to he drawn away, but in the keen fresh air of the streets be began to red and to talk thickly, and his rival, with a heart growing moment arily heavier ajid sorer, piloted him home. and. bidding him gisvl night at the door, turned away, feeling as blank, as desolate as the night itself. ("II A PTKR III. Church bells were ringing on a March morning. They rang under a sky half covered with a tatter of ragged cloud. through the vivid rents whereof broad sunshin poured. The wind, which buf feted the music of the bells, chased the tartered clouds so swiftly that the sun light flowed over the heath, the cluster of cottages, and the church, like a series of charging waves. A quarter of a mile away from the renter of the music which tumbled in such exuberant and wind-swept mirth, stood a sign post, holding four gauut arms. Against it leaned Ned Blaue. wearing an air of deep chagrin, and kick ing with occasional sudden emphasis at any projecting bit of turf which lay within reach. While he lounged thus dejected he was unaware of the approach of a portly broadcloth personage, who picked hia way with a cat like nicety and delibera liou among the shining puddles on the western road. This person had for a long time held in view the figure of the melancholy lounger at the sign post. Finding himself still unnoticed, when he had grown quite near he coughed behind one of hi glossy gloves with an air of accident, and having thus attracted the hiunger a notice, he bade him good morn ing. There are people who in speaking convey the impression that their vocal organs are oiled. Mr. Horatio Lowther was one of these. Ilia salute was a benediction. Ned drew himself up with a start and blushed like fire. He pushed buck the soft felt hat and nodded in unswer to the salutation. "It is a lovely morning," said Mr. Lowther, pausing. "It givea one a sense of " Ue did not say what it gave one a sense of, but he waved hia shining black gloves hither and thither, and smil ed with the look of a man who has achieved a conversational felicity. Ned's face wore an expression of dis gusted weariness which he tried in vain to replace by one of interest as he sur veyed the landscape, in answer to the invitation conveyed by the waving black gloves. "The weather's right enough." be an swered. "The be!U," aaid Mr. Lowther. "The bells. Those morning bells' How many a tale their music tells! I perriaume" he had a knack which suited his voice and face to perfection, of lengthening certain word iu thia way "I perrisume they are ringing for young Hackett." Ned looked at him with sudden keen ness. Mr. Lowther, with bis bead slight ly thrown back and a little on one aide, waa smiling softly and benevolently at nature and the bells, and appeared to be unaware of the other gaze. Observing this, the young man answered in an un interested tone: "Yea, they are ringing for Will Hack ett." "Haa It occurred to your" asked Mr. Lowther, preserving hia attitude and bis entile "do you think " "Haa what occurred to me?" asked the other, looking np at him. "That Hackett might hare done I wouldn't 'ndicate a breath to disparage the young lady." He waa ctill smiling softly at the landscape a rl the bells, and could not be supposed to know that Blane waa looking at him with eyes of wrath aud wonder. "But might he not now might be not hare done little better V "Perhaps he might I don't know where, though. It aeema to me be baa done a lot better than he deserves." "It may be ao," responded Mr. Low ther. "It may be ao. But la a worldly MOM." "It la bia own- affair." aaid Blaaa, aa if th talk wearied him. "Assuredly," Mr. Lowther answered. "Oh. yea. Assuredly. Quit bia own affair." He paused there and smiled on kla eompanloB. "I do not say that 'We aha Id act too lofty a ralleyen oa mu bat It beaowrea aa to be careful even of our owe. temporary wel fare. Ik you happen to know if our young friend receives au,, thing with th bride?" "No." said Ned. loudly and with angry empty's. 'M.i dear young friend," cried Mr. Lowther, somewhat taken aback by thia unlooked-for vehemence, and recoiling pace or two. I "1 am not your dear young friend." said Ned, with a smile, which had as much anger as amusement in it- "I have nothing in the world to talk to you about, and 1 would great deal rather tm auiie. "That," replied Mr. Lowther, very sweetly, "is an invitation not to linger. I will accept it in that sense, Mr. Blanc, an I w ill w inh you good morning." The wimly music of the bells and th swiftly alternating bands of shade and shine were still careering over the heath aa Mr. tawthrr turned bis broadcloth back upon the finger post, end left th young man staring sadly after him. "What do you want to know about Will Hackett's affairs for? la h la jour clutches, you fat old spider? Hear en help him if be is! The bit he haa left won't be long in going after what hs used to have if he haa got into your web." I'ntil the actual coming of the wed ding day he had never been able to coo- I vmce himself that bis sweetheart would ,, , . . . . . real y make so bad a business of herself ' ...... ... ... as to roarrr ill Hackett. Something waa to have turned tip to prevent so egregious a sacrifice, some outbreak on i ..it. , . i diwoveiv on the snle of bia Tictim. Ilia w ife could be nothing less than a victim. to the 'unlucky rival's fancy, and h found people enough to agree with him and confirm him in his opinion. Ned had nuite resolved to see nothing of the wedding ceremony, for to what good end should be vex himself by that? And yet here he was, a mile nearer th parish church than he had a right to be. and hankering after pain with that un reasoning instinct w hich prompts children to irritate sore places. When .Mr. Mora tio Lowther had got some two or thre hnndred yards away Ned louuged after birn slowly and irresolutely. There were no faces at the cottnga windmvs and no idlers or wayfarers in the road. The belis were silent now, for the w eildiug procession had entered the church. He must needs enter the ' porch, and there, in company with two or i three peeping children, whom bis pres- i utiiit int.. aiiLernfitlirnl irrArifv ftnd silence, listen to the murmuring and echoing voice of the minister as it rolled indistinctly about the hollow building, which v.as more than five-sixths empty. He heard the groom's voice more clear ly. for Hackett's loud swrgger was but little tempered by the place aud the oc casion. The listener turned away and stood at the entrance to the porch, look ing out upon the graveyard for a little while; end then, stepping lightly by in stinct, walked down the path and into the village street It was all bare and empty as be had left it, but a sudden unreasonable fear of being observed set him walking rapidly, and he felt as if any one who should chance to see him must know how raw aud desolate and heartbroken he was. Behind him and somewhat gaining npon him, though not rapidly, waa a man on horseback. The horse was fat and unwieldy. By diut of hard kicking aud tight holding the rider quickened his pace and kept his seat until he came on a level with the foot passenger and gasped bis mime. "Mr. Edward." Ned Iilane looked up aud recognized the Hard. "What'a the matter?" be asked, for ishadrach's face was wild. "The Blazer; the Old Blazer." said Shadrach, breathing hard. "What! Not on fire again?" "No; drowned out thia time. Seven-and-forty down. You'ra wanted. I seen you by the church an' I've been tryin' to holler iver aence. but I've had all th breath shook out o' me." The Erst feeling in the wounded lover' heart was so terribly like tbankfulues that some absorbing duty called him from himself that be stood stock still for a moment, more horrified at himself than at the newa. In the next instant he turned back upon the way be bad traveled, running like a deer. (To be continued.) A Poet's Mother. Robert Buchanan had one deep en thusiasm, bis mother. She was al ways young In her appearance, but ha regarded her. to the end of her life, aa abounding even Id girlish charms. Ha could never realise that abe waa grow ing old. In looking at ber, even when she waa close upon 80, he saw tbe soft blue eyes and golden hair which he had loved long ago. "I cannot Imagine my mother aa old," he said a;;a!n and again, the day after she died. "I do not feel that aha Is dead, for I cannot Imagine the world without her." When, a youth of eighteen, he went up to Loudon, "to take the world by storm," be waa a mlaerably homesick lad. He sat In a corner of the railway carriage, bia heart aching, bia eyes dim wltb tears. "1 reai.Kd," be eayi. "that I waa foe the Drat time quite friemdlea and alone. I thought of my dear mother praying for me at borne, aud I longed to turn back and ask ber forgiveness for any pain I bad caused ber. Even now, I never take a railway Journey H night without recalling tbe dismal heartache of that midnight Journey to London." Almost dally, during this earl) struggle, did be receive a letter from ber, always full of loving lntmctton for bia guidance. Ills answers were overflowing with heart and hop . M -to-er and son were constant In tbis ten der servlca. From first to last tbey were tbe beat and most Ultimate of friends. rjaolo R a ben's Philosophy. I bev bad a right smart lot of people com to me fur advice at one time or another. In de fust place, dey wautd to aare lawyer' a fee an' In de oeit dey wanted to sec If I waa aa big fnl aa dey waa. If I didn't agree wld 'tm I was a blggar ono, f oouraa. Detroit trw Praaa. IMQIl BITT0NM01E ttlllR. Some f the most simp! id-ns of th inventive genius' have proven v( the rrit value to humanity, and it is safe to ient:..e that the idea of lVim sylvania man for a buttonhole cutting- scissor will develop into a wonderful aid to ji those dressmakers and ..th ers Into who- bands it may fall There have been tmMolihole-cultiiii wiiMort Iwfore, it is true, but here is an affair that combines an ordinaiy pair of scissors with one that will timke the little slits in the cloUi mid v. :!! avert si! necessity fur layist down one of the tisils of seamstress' art for the picking tip of aunt her. This arrangement, which Is made plain by tin ucconijianyinj; piiture, consists of a pair of scissors which inn be iism1 in ordinary cutting, to t lie handle of which is ii Mixed u pifiiliurly sliiijH'd cutting bliidc which will do the buttonhole work iu an instant when the cloth is placed lieiicuth It. There is no danger of Its bclnjr mis laid or lust, fur the worker has it ever before her, as she does the oUiir cut ting nece-saiy In her work. tier Voire I. ins In a 'iniet Hide house on the South S.de a coiik is Biiii ci-ry cveiili;t; I'V the voice of 11 mother, who lias been lrad more that! a year. Two tiny or- pli:ins. a buy and it girl, set n t h.-jr b. nrt-broht n f.itjrer's lap t-nch njghi iiu-1 are snotli.il in sleep by the lullaby their mother sang to tln-m when she was living. Tin-singing Is don.- by a plionoginidi, I. tit the latlu r lias taiighl his litil,. invi that the voi- e is their lno Ii. r's. and they netcr go to sleep without hear- Illy It. It is Just a jenr now since this fnlh- er bought a phonograph the only mu sical Instrument he could afford. I(e bok it home, ai d tlitti, out of curl sity moie than anything cle, he had his wife Blng Into it a hi la by she croon.-.! to her l nliics. The proud fathi-r took ret-on Ik, too, of his children's cries and pruttlcM, spending all his spare change f r blank records. The young vif- ti;ui a auett. cl.-ur voice, and other ree rd wife made of the favorite lullaby, but all were not eHjimlly good, and otiJy one was Jin ticrved. 1 hre days after the song was re- Corded on tlir- phoiioirrapli ryllndr thp young mother was taken sick. A wek later she dUil. Several days after her burial tin h art-broken husbai.d brought out tbe phonograph again, ard, taking his bubles on his lup. he hiard the living voice of hi dead wife roon: It's k a bye baby in the tree top. When the hough bond the cradle will rock. When the bough breaks the cradle will fall. Down will come tree-top, baby, and all. And every night nlnce that time the phonograph has sung the two children to aUep. Chicago I liter Ocean. A Oners Philosophy. The press agent of the Indian Con- grews at New York vouches for the fol- owlng philosophical remarks by Chief Joseph, "as translated by Ited Thun der:" "Small mothers have brought forth big chiefs." "BauV Deeds 1H much Bleep.'' "A scret calls at a hundred wig wams. "Kvery man knows how to make lore for hlmwlf." 'Stingy-Man tries to warm himself wllh smoke." "A hungry tdomach does not quarrel -l!h the cook." "Little Caution seta big death trap." "You can't tell a gun's kill by Its kick." IlatVNewa flies on the lightning's wings." In the dark Is a good place to look it yourtMslf." "IK not halt w ith sturgeon to catch perch." "The hornet's sting feels longer than the heron's bonks." You do not have to eat grubs be cause they taste sweet to the hear." I am always afraid that clums klrtnrs will step on my feet" The coward, envies the rabblt'a eg." A Frenchman seem Killle enmigb o shake bands with n crab." I... tfl Ki lHti'.l Abraham Iti-nelict, of the New York bur, t Hs the story of a young hum who silicic, I .i street car with a dog and turned d the atlnill m of an Irishman, win Iiiijtilied what kind of a dog 11 was. The y ting man resiled: It Is n cross between an ape and an Irishman." Then we are both iWatil (o IL' re sponded the Irishman. Booka are man's best friends; whei they bore him ba can abut them u without giving off ens. HI TTo.Mlol... ti-TIKH. Br Her. Uri.rr Xotttt. After he had scut the multitudes away, be went up int. a mountain apart to pray: and when even was come he was there alone. -St. Matt, lo: 5. There is a law of our life iu ac cordance with which a tiian spetii's a i.trt of each twenty four hours in a. irk and after that he yields to r Mse. It U first work aud tnu rest, fhe higher the recognition of this law the liner licroines the .piality of man iood. The bct:er the ni:tu. the Ix-ite: hi products of the man. While a man works he glve out. he '.M"inls. When he rests lc ii:es. Ii is folly to siipisisc that u man i is draw ceaselessly ir.-aiust his bank in-- ount and never make a deposit. It i -.ilia 11 v- a. folly to Imagine that a man . liil ..ik oil Kii.i oti V. ithoSlt !!:! !'!!- lorceineiit, refreshment that alone nines with repoM". The grout tiling in every department of life ! 'o n r ig ui.e this law and to get the ligh: ;iroj ortioit between work and rest 1 be "vise man studies this law. under lauding th.Tt if is of (eiil: thai olnili net therelti means fuln ss, richness of ':; and that !is iliciliciice meant de terioration and last of all ends In deitll. In every man there is lodged a three fill! life toe physical, the spiritual. !. ii -ii.f .1 1 the life of the body, of soul, of the mind. This law of i t:v; and tln u rep i-e applies n ;i 1 : .. I:i ail Hire" domains. A man may . p'- l t'.'e law so far as it appliis ii iii body alone. Then ill his uu I'-'dln; he Is merely an anitmiL 1 1 j . s nille.-s .'iiiil he is Minn-... It j- j i v.tal part of our JmI given infeill j .-Hi- ll.at we r iigflizt' this law mi j 'il (hive sides of our life; fliat we get I,.! .i un. I keep tin proportion of 1 1 J . : i n i c i!o cultivate one si. h- of if- :it the expense or I the neglect of i i.'ii her. Tiie Master understood ihe law and i" i-i spis ted the snim. For example, i ever presi rved a sound body. If Is where recorded that he was cvei U. lie must have been physically -bust, or he could not have left be i:i.l him such a splendidly full life, in ii, he was ever u ib-ep student, ioiii li.'.s youth he Increased in wis .:im. He was learned iu the literature ml law of his church am nation, and c was profoundly learned as a stu !'ir of human ualtire. Ills teaching cil.-cts his mind. Win-re Is llu-re an I'nr mind whicii could have given , i' wo.M the Lord's prayer and the . r noli on the mount'' There is not i s mli-i.t of the highest rank who M s not bow before the mind of JestlM "lo-i-l. of the spiritual side of his I t- who shall presume to speak and o it Jiisliee? He lived ever with Cod ml iu Coil. Cod was his life and -.lit. His was a jjerfifjly proportion I. well rounded life. It lias become . e universal pattern, which finds Its ; :ia;iful Imitators In every age and iirv clilne. Hilt tfoil tlfo r.-iitrtil7i.jl ! id foliowed a grent, a profound prln Ip i- or law. The Master hud Just i. d'il. finished uu intensely Interest av. He had been surrounded by a at throng and he hud healed their 'i.; t. H'ti. lest the people should faint - their homeward way, lie first fed ii. in--a company of about 5,000 men, .shies women and children. It la isy to understand what the exhaus oii tif such a day must mean for any ..an, (specially when It Is known that ' puts his whole heart and soul Into :.s woik. The Master has dismissed the multi tiic and taken leave of his disciples. ,e had gone, alone, Into a mountain oilttiile, there to commune with Cod .o place his wearied head on the bos iin of Cod nnd to put his heart close iy tin heart of his Father.' Tbe even tig had come and he was alone. Je s'ls Christ must have understood that .-a life and ministry were to hist only a few years, and he did realize how much was to he crowded Into that brief space of time. Yet he made and in iimk time to go apart, to be alone, to drink In the solitude of nature, iu solitude, in mental repose, be found fhe restoration of all his powers. Me understood and grasped the fact that nub a mini lives In closest touch Willi Cod he Is not, he cannot be, ,i divine man, he cannot attain tbe !nr(Kise of his life. What a strange mexfcjge this to our busy, bustling age! We are apt to hi ! that our rank or place In life . settled by the Intensity and cease-a-n.-ss af our activity. We sap the .'it .illations of our physical life, we in our minds, and our spiritual be " . hicks richness of blood. It is :.u,fO.,slble for us to attain the full ..e.iMinj.of Hie life for which we were "ended, and we fall to grasp "the ,mz.' of the high calling of (Jod In oiri-t Jesus." Would you attain a well rounded, useful, happy Ufe? Then note well the lesson of the Master. Dally send your multitudes away, If only for a few minutes, then go apart for silent communion with God. When even comes, before your sleep, let it always Snd you alone with Cod, your Father, wiiii watches over you through the hoar- of the night. Al l. Ml ST BK WKtU Sr Ne. raroe ftotl What is wrong for a chun h tueuiber is wrong for everyt"l.v, and what la duly f'r a church member k every man's duty. N'r nave people any right to Impose n ministers, deacons ami Sunday school teachers' standards of duty they themselves do not alia tu live up to. If yoa may smoke as may your preacher: If you may play the races o may the deacon, and tba Sunday school teacher hat aa muck right as any Chrl-tiiin has. The Pbari secs liid great burdens of duty os other ptsiple. but we'll have none ol i hat to-day. Kxtra sanctify on lbs. part of thoe you wt tip to do duty for the world will not let you out, Heltig intra holy on Sunday will no) 1 .-vcii." a man for p'ayitig the rascal I .ill tin- week. Tin- man Is fundament ' ally wr.iiii." who Is not trying to be ai i ii ilv In W'- business as when he la si i bis p'.iycrs lioiilile standards an I pvi . lli ged classes in morals make I in.-, r.i'-y of moral meanings and hum. I bug of life. Sllf lilir '!-' HAI'I'INKBS fir Rrr. a. A. "Alioiit half of the world's nieian. cliolla conns, from disordered nerves, iudgistioii and toi phi liver. It I time the pulpit preached without reservation tbe In tiuiule connection hctwecn happiness, morality and ht-alib. In olden lime the priest was physician aj well as priest. The way of the dys peptic is the way of gloom. It 1 difficult to be a trnint and have In ii i it. die si, on at the same time. Our COlIl-l-icii life biisiis nerve diordTS, and ii. i-i. are n-spoiill,li for many bad il.li.g-. I.i-t mi- divinity schools Incidentally 'rain tin- ministerial aspirant In a Knowledge of inetlii Inc. Kdiicate hi in in pathology as well as theology. Then hen he Is called upon to diagnose a case of utihapplncss or immorality ba will know whether to prescribe pill or player. The first secret of happi ness, then. Is to hiive good health. It if you hive ib mit't your'ratbEl-" liess be to ge jftnlili. Smiles will eoiui with good, fresh blisxJ. and as pains vanish laughter will come, and seen through healthy eyes the world n 111 Isvome rosy with a thousand' dawns and reverent with a thousand twilights. COIU'OUAI, l'I NISHMKST ft AVr. frrorf f, aVaff. From the lawyer's stnmliHiiut It may be right to hang. i-iHSit. w Urtrscate a criminal, but the law as framed by man Is not always right, from the standpoint of good morals. Law la a mailer of dTeiop inciit. Many things i-oiiiiiennnoed 100 r ii m year ago would not now b i-omloned - far a minute. If wa must have Mbitra- a.v. o. r. hail, tsariin, that fa tba place for car barn bandits. Mj Ittg gestion Is, that corporal poalahntNHlt . be abandoned mid convicts seflOncedl tor an adequate term of yemra, aa4 that meanwhile rhey Ik eompaRad ta) labor hard for ilie Improve of American roads. Hentence HrrnKNM. Work trains the will. , 1 LilH-rty is In love of the lair. " ' The painful Is not always pfcin. A good errand makes a abaft NA It Is the heart that make ktl'::tf ' Faith will break through all (,r Any harness will chafo If ftt M In IL , Uellgion Is good as a trade, 13 rrzt as a tool. Wheat that will not be bntz not be used. f A short cut man seldom CmiT'y -- thing great - " , The world Is not saved by ttV 'V we do not do. "",. lt Is always easy to forj i people's enemlea. " Perjury Is a prayer that tic" ultimately answered. " t , - A man cannot cover bia condemning God's ways. , "r' There Is Just as much da-' '"" ' riches you desire aa In thact sess. , Hi i ue siHr-concelted mas ifllglous; he cannot get awt od. .-."t Your grip on success der; " ly on the thing yon am nv go. -',;4 The world la more IlkatJ by tbo cheerful religion tearful kind. . When the devil la drlrk ' willing you should boaat t leading him. ' - ''.. Yoq cannot expect OoJ root of evil out of yvCf'', yoo are ba aging on t both baada. , ' . i j yts ?', U-.v. a mi