> C CTTFi* BY BJ LLI O.YS. FHOTECTWH THiOCiES IM»*CT BV FM.T& *** >• Tw» M 1M i rwnbed the aited su:i» A MtHa* dollar a*a;*. alike as to tt* j •4X b top Most?, saaordt* at taasr m ho ■xmumtutc that a pro»*r *i» tar.C •as taut to loreift trade j Gauaily uatMoosaat a artusi* dotreesits i» the fact ro« l>.Utoa dollar tuiuar of •a mr- u .alias to those she hat• all their pot;Ural hope* and am h.ftoa* .pot. the effort to show that • It to I «a» the oaly thing that rouid ■sake atonr* petty and cheap ftnoislf eaouffh the tots that ■uah*' both t.he CoMktitM aad the hryutta look «Hy are the product °* a » nge- caoatfc la the history of the 1 Sited liu'o trader ' M< K.eley aad ep» * »; . 4- ■ ' -»t *r> of tu» pear at va» atMmS'td by the troasnry purest of »tat:stae» that ta the year IMd oar foretpa 't»n»ia*r *oa dollar hae aaiie gold aad gold erva-ato M«> had •* Kd the ttits' rrewir-e» of s.l hank* -a he Faired iltatee are grtteh Py the •aloe repcMr ee I IH ITT JM. aad the iShre »«.mt*eT Of 'tie MBUn of < U» e and fthan e shoa* the I»e»-e*uU* i-tfjtg puoer return* uf all ♦it*e» out' dr »«f Ne* Turk at |: mi; *h i4< and himm of 'fe* lf> of Nee York al ti ll atT Umr its* aoo • *!j* attebuob to ur far: ’ba' 'la r&Msa uf »t.o*' for «a*r £ U: - s ^ttrf of iW asubt: of boo*) it «* uiatMaa j*rr i*|uu Tlw ttatrart: |i.t* tfe* oa on February 1.. W •: TT j1% ** ■*> (U Btam is dmi stibb at £.4«r.l«5*Jg£. and tb* rtmi laMi-ab P*~ «at-*.* at t- >* Tim |»m a prr a|. tt tUaa :a *ay rartaer ■Borfb t iv of ?»** n—tty. MB * l:f» i! am* t2S 42 ©t» 'mtrmr- ! 1W* ir~ »: <« February imc ia* *Bd us February L W*. flB«t \t. j» >ud re or? bnae* ia nmtury ** ' kiu«L a rapid *ra«tb tn tit* irr • ♦ of Bn«*t us t in uiat »«n bat iba: r-oirroe by tfc* jmat llirw or f«««r yaafb Tb* tonal aut*) in cir .a'toa today »» JB jrr **n»t sroater baa. at :w U-* abta* «d tba ft*-a. fear *15 ate tb* **»id aad *o.d «erttfkb**a .* Uinlatai >J par c« ltf and of r<*id and cold - *rtd< at** fat** JttMM pra« local ly tao-durd* oi Lb* iorteaae, tbara f«r* Latins *•« in sold " a* *-djua ins Ubk *bo*» tba am-' -at of gosd aao total re -r . a* Mb at tba W-gienies o? *a<*b ,■ *i .! tb» b* « **ar Crum July 1. ltfb. to data fifttc. m Jtt’jr Ort lab Apr, laly Ort i*3b-. lac Aprl €b*t„ * **»- Jar Apr, Jmiy 0*1. !’•**•- Jab r«b. Gold * '■•cin a at nrrtib ■ *•*-*■ > in. «.r<*iatJtob Unlild—, 1 40 Ml* ;«! i_. niiio.m 1... StfJBbJM U : su .sic .toe !. Sid 1£>4 : .Sd4j»:jir 1 !*4 j i «:» 44* >4i i i *~* **4- Trs i T35>*- 1ST i i :rr;44^»'! 1 . TM TIC T3 1 ..US 224 144 i ... TT» lab JBT 1 . aMiJSSwacs Total in t :ri-utatiu& Jtollan lb«b.T2S2dM sjss*jn.«a» 1 .CCS* Cbe CM l.MC C2fc24C 1 CT* M4» SJS i :ri.i«w.cc<‘ i.ntju.MS i>43 4ir ;«> IJUAIS! HOC 2*1 41* 1JCT W4CJMS 1 >2^.424.232 i >44 Tie.lftC lJUOba.lTd 2««Z.14>.32a INI LABOR VOTE. ► ' * H* '•* party u-'u-VU ei- j - *# a a «« .*>- nw .: .u vo:.b£ »- •Mffc *«ar »i i in !t o( the pr«»|*ni) vfc^t tu i-utiBtrf has »• * *rc uada* the H*|Hiblicao *<-«:&** ratios »tn the jrupU uu from a realm** of dq»r rttna» hard t:at*» tmrtrr pony u» a am rau I14 full ttsaa and waps* »rr» good. It was diffi* ul! to be r.eee tha; the wage-earner* in any number would rot* for * chawge. But liw-r drd. The Democrat piled up Motor at the largest majorities in sec tions dotted with mills and furnaces. A great many wage-earners listened to promiiMs that times for themselves and evaryaody else might even he better, aad tb**> voted to ush*r in a condition of thing* which, instead of helpiug them, swamped everybody. \gaia in Ohio last year. Golden Rule Jax» an a platform wholly theoretical aad unsubstantial. drew almost bis en tme support of over a hundred thou sand votes fma the manufacturing csti** of the state. An almost unex ampled business boom was in progress. Everybody with the will and the srretigth to work were hard at work and prospering The state campaign was generally regarded as a skirmish line fight for advantage this year, and bewce tb» wage-earners were adjured t» stand by the parry of sound money and protection But. nevertheless. Mr. Jonew made what, in the circumstan ces was a surprisingly large Inroad on that vote. This unnatual and unreasonable course cm the part of labor is due to two eaueea. Demagogues make their appeals specially to the labor vote, and labur.ng m*a are too often suspicious of the party which makes business good, misuse of an absurd belief that w soever helps cap tal to prosper is an enemy of labor. The Republican par ty s gains this year, therefore, may be tijr t«d to come chiefly from business n't and farmers who know the ad vantages of living under a sound mon ey and business r'imuiatiug adminis trat on and are not willing to take ham**!- under any other kind—and from Democrats who < annot indorse their own party s narrow sighted pol icy against national expansion.—Kan sas f*jry i Mo. • Journal. REPUBLICANS MUST WORK. tetf»r ta H* Apftrahaadaa the K» ivM »f UiarroaHdMirr. titbougb the Republiczn party stands before ili»* country and the world wall a *p:end:d re.-ord and witu a I its promise* u» the people mad * four yaara ago faithfully fulfilled; al though the nation is not in the enjoy rr.**rt of its greatest era of prosperity. huffy through the fulfillment of these }•' tn.se* rtad the ats- adirimstiation *' P-^ulent M'Kinley; although it is * foregone . lu-ion that McKinley * .*e e*M»a»:nated for another term, . nd although there ne\er was a time ».*■ n the Re.,ut»l an party was more united tfa-n a***. ye; there Is danger 1 ahead. This danger '« not a ins more nor '!e** man o\er onfldenre. Republicans ■3j» that tfier hate a wily fo;> to coll et; • *h. one always on the alert and 1 need* u» tak- aJ an:.;Re of every op poit unity to g«*t in an effective blow. lsau* r» ? n » mailer in what grilse it may appear, will bear very c-lose war htug It is no: known what - ene he opponents are now hatch ing *y what trap will be sprung to -»*< fa ej,s.j..p.. ting Republicans. Ta itejmnljran leaders a Washing • •on who have beet* watt hue the a rift of • . !.«► »*— .n the JVbi i -ratio plan r* tire to get together on general prin• n»ie* *11 order to beat the Republuau • < k* • ne\t lampargn To ibis end a • uaion with every disturbing element a :h* -ountry under tbe leadership of Bryan is invited The only way for • Repub., nr!* * i i this influ 1 ent» .» jo organize for work and then work when organized. >«-na:or B veridg ha* sounded a note <•' warning t.» the Republicans of this state, fpiirin; that they have too wm. fa confident-” in *he oontJnut •*o*i o' the existing <-ondition of things without effort or their part. 1 he sejia'or a* well a* otaer leaders of the par-;* in this stat^ at Washing \ ton nee danger ahead, and therefore the ar» solicitous. ?t Joseph county Reput*' an* ha\e set a good example for other portion* of ’he state by per f**'lnr a complete organization for •arnpami work thus early in the year and by sustaining a well officered, per manent Republican club of large n^m -rship to a.d :n this work Thus in 1 .*re*t in the cause is kept up and the *.»'•' IwalH put in shape for aggres ive and effective work. If every cona rnun.ty in the siate would do the same there mould l»e no complain* on the part of the leaders of lack of enthusi asm or fear of the result next Novem t*erSoutn Rend ilnd.l Tribune. READY FOR ALL COMERS. Work Iuxm.i of MUcbief. V recent dispatch from Ixiuieville. Ky reports that the jeans clothing busia* ■-* in that section is booming. Shipments last month showed a gain of 2H per cent over those of January, 1899. and manufacturers have more orders tor spring shipments than they ever had before. There are eight or ten jean mills in the vicinity of Louis ville. and all are sharing in the gen eral prosperity. There is very little doubt that the present trouble in Kentucky would have taken on a very much uglier as pect if there had been as many idle discontented men hanging about to swell the mob on the one side or the other, as there would have been when ilson law free trade had closed our factories, put business at a standstill and thrown men out of work. Men with work to do haven’t time to hang arotwd looking for trouble, and our policy of a protective tariff sees to It that men have work to do—all they want of it It sees to it in Kentucky as well as in the rest of the country. The result is peace and quiet, instead of discontent and mob violence., Work instead of mischief is only another way of saying protection instead of free trade. THOSE RECIPROCITY TREATIES Abwurdity of CreatlD| a Tariff by Law Only to Satoah by Means of Trsstlsi. We are not at all surprised to hear that Germany finds fault with our Italian treaty, nor shall we wonder if Italy finds fault with the French treaty and so on throughout the list. No other | result was to have been expected from such a system. To construct a tariff adapted to the country's interests and needs—a tariff w hich treats all foreign nations on a basis of absolute equality, and which can be understood and reck oned with by our producers and ex porters on a basis of simplicity and ac curacy—and then to set about the amendment and modification of that tariff in a dozen different and bewil dering directions strikes us as the most notable modern instance of the open ing of Pandora's box. It introduces into our financial equation the factor of a mischievous confusion. It lays us open to the charge of favoritism and discrimination. It sets in motion the machinery of an interminable and pestiferous complication, at home and abroad. It can give satisfaction, con tent and security nowhere. The very idea of setting up a tariff law only to honeycomb and dismantle and emasculate it afterwards through the medium of a swarm of special trea ties strikes us as objectionable in the j last degree. If the tariff is imperfect, unsuited to our necessities and poli cies. why not modify it in congress? Why amend this schedule to satisfy Germany, and that schedule to placate France. aDd so on to the end of the catalogue, and conclude by satisfying no one, not even oureslves? Section 7 of Article 1 of the Constitution of the United States provides that "ail bills for raising revenue shall originate in the house of representatives." It goes on to say, however, "but the sen ate may propose or concur with j amendments as in other bills." Section J 2, article 11, provides that the presi ' dent shall have the power, by and with the advice and consent of the senate, to make treaties. The ques tion. then, is whether we can. by cali iug these tariff arrangements with for eign countries "treaties.” use article 2 of the constitution to nullify article 1 of the same instrument. Apparently j the arrangements under discussion did ! not "originate in the house of repre ! sentatives.” Apparently their purpose | is to "raise revenue.” Thus we have. I under the operation of the reciprocity ciause of the Dingley act, a set of laws which refer solely to the raising of revenue, but which have not originated in the house of representatives, nor ; been submitted to that body's judg ment and authority. It is no part of our purpose, how ever, to make free with the constitu tion. We recognize the monopoly of the members from Podunk, Waybark and Possum Fork in that respect. But it seems to us a very grotesque, not to say ridiculous, situation, which puts the bouse of representatives in the pre dicament of formulating a tariff which somebody else can tear into tatters and which subjects American producers and exporters to the bewildering un certainties of laws that reduce the chameleon to a dull, neutral and un changeable complexion. In our opinion it would be well for the senate to reject the whole lot of these absurd “treaties.” and for con gress to abolish the High Thingabob Pl< nipotentiary Nonsense under which they have been bred. We have a con gress to make tariffs for us. and for eign nations should be left to approve them or not. according to their fancy and caprice.—Washington Post. Firm Bait* of n Protected Murk cl. The United States by the growth of its foreign trade has passed completely from the ranks of the debtor to those of the creditor nations. And this in the face of the free trade theorists who predicted that so long as this country maintained the protective system it could never build lip foreign trade, and would always remain a debtor. Our agricultural exports will rise or fall with the seasons in other parts of the world, and as other nations are able or unable to raise their own food. This is inevitable, and no legislation can anticipate or remedy these fluctua tions. But legislation can assist and has assisted manufacturing industry by preserving for it the home market and encouraging it from That firm foundation to seek foreign markets for its surplus products. Our exports of manufactures are expected to reach $400,000,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30 next, as against $380,000,000 for the calendar year 1899. With the firm basis of a protected home market Ameiican manufacturers are reaching out KA over the world, and already the total of our foreign trade is only a lit tle behind Great Britain's, and is gain ing by leaps and bounds.—Chicago In ter-Ocean. Flight Sort of Reciprocity It is true that as the chairman cf the Ways and Means committee and the author of the “McKinley bill*’ oi 1890, Major McKinley did at that time report and doubtless favor a “reciproc ity'’ clause, but the reciprocity which he favored in 1890 was a very different article from that incorporated in th~ present law. The “reciprocity" of 1890 was a manly notice to all nations that if they did not treat us fairly we j would raise the duties on certain o! their products. There was no proposal to J-wer our duties in any case. By the McKinley bill raw sugar, molasses, coff/v. tea and hides were upon the free list, our sugar growers being com pensated by a bounty on production, but the President was empowered, whenever satisfied that countries ex porting those articles were imposing on United States products duties which under the circumstances were unfair, to promptly impose a “reciprocal” duty on (hose articles imported from ruch a country. That is not a bad kind of reciprocity, and it is the only kind which Mr. McKinley advocated when in Congress.—San Francisco Cfcroulclr TALMAGES SEBMON VICTORY OF RETREAT. LAST SUNDAY’S SUBJECT. Mach Accomplished by Waiting for Op portunities—Joshua's Plan or Ambus cade Cited as a Successful One for the Righteous. [Copyright. 1900. by Louis Klopsch.] Text: Joshua viiL 7, "Then shall ye rise up from the ambush and seixe upon the city." One Sabbath evening, with my fam ily around me, we were talking over the scene of the text. In the wide open eyes and the quick interrogations and the blanched cheeks I realised what a thrilling drama it was. There is the old city, shorter by name than any other city in the ages, spelled with two letters. A, I. Ai. Joshua and his men want to take it. How to do it is the question. On a former occasion, in a straightforward, face to face fight, they had been defeated, but now they are going to take it by ambuscade. General Joshua has two divisions in his army. The one division the battle worn commander will lead himself, the other division he sends off to encamp in an ambush on the west side of the city of Ai. No torches, no lanterns, no sound of heavy battalions, but 30. 000 swarthy warriors moving in si lence. speaking only in a whisper; no clicking of swords against shields, lest the watchmen of Ai discover it and the stratagem be a failure. If the rois tering soldier in the Israelitish army forgets himself, all along the line the word is "Hush!" Joshua takes the other division, the one with which he is to march, and puts it on the north side of the city of Ai, and then spends the night in reconnoitering in the valley. There he is, thinking over the fortunes of the coming day with something of the feel ings of Wellington the night before Waterloo or of Meade and Lee the night before Gettysburg. There he stands in the night and says to him self. “Yonder is the division in am bush on the west side of Ai. Here is the division 1 have under my especial command on the north side of Ai. There is the old city slumbering in its sin. Tomorrow will be the battle.” Look! The morning already begins to tip the hills. The military officers of Ai look out in the morning very early, and, while they do not see the division in ambush, they behold the other division of Joshua and the cry, ! "To arms! To arms!” rings through all the streets of the old town, and every swoid, whether hacked and bent or newly welded, is brought out. and all the inhabitants of the city of Ai pour through the gates, an infuriated I torrent, and their cry is. ”Come. we'll make quick work with Joshua and his troops. A Sernilnc Repnlif. No sooner had these people of Ai come out against the troops of Joshua i than Joshua gave such a command as be seldom gave—“Fall back!” Why, they could not believe their own ears! Is Joshua's courage failing him? The retreat is beaten, and the Israelites i are flying, throwing blankets and can teens on every side under this worse than Bull Run defeat. And you ought to hear the soldiers of Ai cheer and cheer and cheer. But they huzza too | soon. The men lying in ambush are ; straining their vision to get some sig nal from Joshua that they may know what time to drop upon the city. Josh ua takes his burnished spear, glittering in the sun like a shaft of doom, and points it toward the city, and when the men up yonder in the ambush see it with hawklike swoop they drop upon Ai and without stroke of sword or stab of spear take the city and put it I to the torch. So much for the division that was ; in ambush. How about the division under Joshua's command? No sooner does Joshua stop in the flight than all his men stop with him. and as he wheels they wheel, for in a voice of thunder he cried “Halt!” one strong arm driving back a torrent of flying troops. And then, as he points his spear through the golden light toward that fated city, his troops know that they are to start for it. What a scene it wTas when the division in ambush which had taken the city marched down against the men of Ai on the one side, and the troops under Joshua doubled on their enemies from the other side, and the men of Ai were caught between these two hurricanes of lsraelitish courage, thrust before and behind, stabbed in breast and back, ground between the upper and the nether millstones of God’s indigna tion! Woe to the city of Ai! Cheer for Israel! Victorious Rctrcnt. There is such a thing as victorious retreat. Joshua's falling hack was the first chapter in his successful besiege ment. And there are times in your life when the best thing you can do is to run. You were once the victim of strong drink. The demijohn and the decanter were your fierce foes. They fame down upon you with greater fury than the men of Ai came upon the men of Joshua. Your only safety is to get away from them. Your dissipating companions will come around you for your overthrow. Run for your life! Fall back! Fall back from the drink ing saloon! Fall back from the wine party! Your flight is your advance: jour retreat is your victory. There is a saloon down on the next street that has almost been the ruin of your soul. Then why do you go along that street? Why do you not pass through some other street rather than by the place of your calamity? A spoonful of brandy taken for medicinal pur poses by a man who 20 years before j had been reformed from drunkenness \ hurled into inebriety and the grave one of the best friends I ever had. Retreat is victory! Here is a converted infidel. He is so strong now in his faith In the gospel he says he can read anything. What are you reading? Bolingbroke? An drew Jackson Davis' tracts? Tyndall's Glasgow university address? Drop them and run. You will be an infidel before you die unless you quit that. These men of Ai will be too much for you. Turn your back on the rank and file of unbelief. Fly before they cut you with their swords and transfix you with their javelins. There are people who have been well nigh ruined be cause they risked a foolhardy expedi tion in the presence of mighty and overwhelming temptations, and the men of Ai made a morning meal of them. • • * Krinoni for But there is a more marked illustra tion of victorious retreat in the life of our Joshua, the Jesus of the ages. First falling back from an appalling height to an appalling depth, falling from ce lestial hills to terrestrial valleys, from thron%. to manger; yet that did not seem to suffice him as a retreat. Fall ing back still farther from Bethlehem to Nazareth, from Nazareth to Jerusa lem. back from Jerusalem to Golgotha, back from Golgotha to the mausoleum in the rock, back down over the preci pices of perdition until he walked amid the caverns of the eternal captives and drank of the wine of the wrath of Al mighty God. amid the Ahabs, and the Jezebels and the Belshazzars. Oh. men of the pylpit and men of the pew. Christ's descent from heaven to earth does not measure half the distance! It was from glory to perdition. He de scended into hell. All the records of earthly retreat are as nothing com pared with this falling back. Sin's Triumph BrUf. The triumph of the wicked is short. Did you ever see an army in a panic? There is nothing so uncontrollable. If you had stood at Ixmg bridge, Wash ington. during the opening of our sad civil war, you would know what !t is to see an army run. And when these men of Ai looked out and saw those men of Joshua in a stampede they ex pected easy work. They would scatter them as the equinox the leaves. Oh. the gleeful and jnbilant descent of the men of Ai upon the men of Joshua! j But their exhilaration was brief, for the tide of battle turned, and these quondam conquerors left their miser- | able carcasses in the wilderness of Bethaven. So it always is. The tri- ! umph of the wicked is short. You . make $20,000 at the gaming table. Do you expect to keep it? You will die in the poorhouse. You made a fortune by iniquitous traffic. Do you expect to keep it? Your money will scatter, or it will stay long enough to curse yo*.r children after you are dead. Call over the roll of bad men who prospered and see how short wac their prosperity. For awhile, like the men of Ai. they went from conquest to conquest, but after awhile disaster rolled back upon them, and they were divided into three parts. Misfortune took their property, the grave took their body and the lost world took their soul. I am always interested in the building of the pal aces of dissipation. I like to have them built of the best granite and have the rooms made large and to have the pillars made very firm. God is going to conquer them, and they will be turn ed into asylums and art galleries and churches. The stores in which fraud ulent men do business, the splendid banking institutions where the presi dent and cashier put all their property i in their wives’ hands and then fail for $500,000, all these institutions are to become the places where honest Chris tian men do business. How long will it take your boys to get through your ill-gotten gains? The wicked do not live out half their days. For awhile they swagger and strut and make a great splash in the news papers. but after awhile it all dwindles down into a brief paragraph: "Died suddenly. April 8. 1900. at 35 years of age. Relatives and friends of the fam ily are invited to attend the funeral on Wednesday at 2 o’clock from the late residence on Madison square. In terment at Greenwood or Oak Hill.” Some of them jumped off the docks. Some of them took prussic acid. Some of them fell under the snap of a Der ringer pistol. Some of them spent their days in a lunatic asylum. Where are William Tweed and his associates? Where are Ketcham and Swartwout. absconding swindlers? Where are James Fisk, the libertine, and all the. other misdemeanants? The wicked do not live out half their days. Disem bogue. O world of darkness! Come up. Hildebrand and Henry II. and Robespierre and. with blistering and blaspheming and ashen lips, hiss out. ' The triumph of the wicked is short." Await ing Opportunities. How much may be accomplished by lying in ambush for opportunities. Are you hypercritical of Joshua's maneu ver? Do you say that it was cheating for him to take that city by ambus cade? Was it wrong for Washington to kindle campfires on Jersey heights, giving the impression to the opposing force that a great army was encamped there when there was none at all? I answer, if the war was right, then Joshua was right in his stratagem. He violated no flag of truce. He broke no treaty, hut by a lawful ambuscade captured the city of Ai. Oh, that we all knew how to lie in ambush for opportunities to serve God. The best of our opportunities do not lie on the surface, but are secreted. By tact, by stratagem, by Christian ambuscade, you may take almost any castle of sin for Christ. Come up toward men with a regular besiegement of argument, and you will be defeated, but just wTait until the door of their hearts is set ajar, or they are ofT their guard, or their severe caution is away from home, and then drop in on them from a Christian ambuscade. There has been many a man up to his chin in scientific portfolios which proved there was no Christ and no divine revelation, his pen a scimeter flung into the heart of theological opponents, who never theless has been discomfited and cap tured for God by some little 3-vear-old child who has got up and put her snowy arms around his sinewy neck and asked some simple question about God. * * • Importance of Good Atm. The importance of taking good aim. There is Joshua, but how are those people in ambush up yonder to know when they are to drop on the city, and how are these men around Joshua to know when they are to stop their flight and advance? There must be some signal—a signal to stop the one divi sion and to start the other. Joshua, with a spear on which were ordinarily ’van* the colors of cattle, points toward the city. He stands in such a conspic uous position, and there is so much of the morning light dripping from that spear tip, that all around the horizon they see it. It was as much as^o say: , “There is the city. Take it!” God knows and we know that a great deal of Christian attack amounts to nothing simply because we do not take good aim. Nobody Knows and we do not know ourselves which point we want to take when we ought to make up our minds what God will have us i to do and point our spear in that di- \ rection and then hurl our body. mind. ; soul, time, eternity at that one tar- j get. • • • Th*> Need of Cnarace. I have heard it said: “Look out for a man who has only one idea; he is ir resistible.” I say look out for the man who has one idea, and that a de termination for soul saving. 1 believe God would strike me dead if I dared to point the spear in any other direc tion. Oh. for some of the courage and enthusiasm of Joshua! He flung two armies from the tip of that spear. It is sinful for us to rest unless it is to get stronger muscle and fresher brain and purer heart for God’s work. I feel on my head the hands of Christ in a new ordination. Do you not feel the same omnipotent pressure? There is a work for all of us. Oh. that we might stand up side by side and point the spear toward the city! It ought to be taken. It will be taken. Our cities are drifting off toward loose religion or what is called "liberal Christianity,” which is so liberal that it gives up all the cardinal doctrines of the Bible; so liberal that it surren ders the rectitude of the throne of the Almighty. That is liberality with a vengeance Let us decide upon the work which we as Christian men have I to do and in the strength of God go to work and do it. • • • A Year of MrrfiN. I believe that the next year will be the most stupendous year that heaven ever saw. The nations are quaking now with the coming of God. It will be a year of success for the men of Joshua, but of doom for the men of Ai. You put your ear to. the rail track, and you can hear the train com ing miles away. So I put my ear to the ground, and I hear the thunder ing on of the lightning train of God's mercies and judgments. The mercy of God is first to be tried upon this nation. It will be preached in the pul pits. in theaters, on the streets— ev erywhere. People will be invited to accept the mercy of the gospel, and the story and the song and the prayer will be “mercy.” But suppose they do not accept the offer of mercy—what then? Then God will come with his judg ments, and the grasshoppers will eat the crops, and the freshets will devas tate the valleys, and the defalcations will swallow the money markets, and the fires will burn the cities, and the earth will quake f-om pole to pola. Year of mercies and of judgments; year of invitation and of warning; year of jubilee and of woe. Which side are you going to be on—with the men of Ai or the men of Joshua? Pass over this Sabbath into the ranks of Is rael. I would clap my hands at the joy of your coming. You will have a poor chance for this world and the world to come without Jesus. You cannot stand what is to come upon you and upon the world unless you have the pardon and the comfort and the help of Christ. Come over! On this side are your happiness and safe ty; on the ether side are disquietude and despair. Eternal defeat to the men of Ai! Eternal victory to the men of Joshua! Saved by » Doll. An exchange gives a story told by an Indian agent of the manner in which a doll averted an Indian war. On one occasion Gen. Crook was trying to put a band of Apaches back on their reser vation. but could not catch them with out killing them, and that he did not wish to do. One day his men captured a little Indian girl and took her to the , fort. She was quiet all day. saying not a word, but her beady black eyes watched everything. When night came, however, she broke down and sobbed, just as any white chilld would have done. The men tried in vain to comfort her, until the agent had an idea. From an officer's wife he bor rowed a pretty doll that belonged to her little daughter, and when the Apache was made to understand that she could have it. her sobs ceased and she fell asleep. When morning came the doll was still clasped in her arms. She played with it all day. and appar ently all thought of getting back to her tribe left her. Several days passed .and then the little Apache girl, with her doll still in her possession, was sent back to her people. When the child reached the Indians with the pretty doll in her chubby hands it made a great sensation among tb»m. and the next day the mother cam? with the child to the post. She was kindly re ceived and hospitably treated, and through her the tribe was persuaded to move back to the reservation. The Editor** Miitskt. Editors have their troubles. One of these men. who presides over the des tinies of a western newspaper, is mourning the loss of twro subscribers. No. 1 wrote asking how to raise his twins safely, while the other wanted to know how he might rid his orchard of grasshoppers. The answers went for ward by mail, but by accident the edi tor put them into the wrong envelopes, so that the man with the twins re ceived the answer: “Cover them care fully with straw and set fire to it. and then the little pests, after jumping in the flames for a few minutes, will be speedily settled.’’ And the man with the grasshoppers was told to “give castor oil and rub their gums with a bone.**—The Columbian. An Annual Disturbance Politician—How are things up in your country? Fanner—Waal, I tell you, the country's lik?ly to be consid' able disturbed most any time now. Politician—So? Expansion or silver, I suppose. Farmer—Spring plowin’. Insolence is not logic; epithets are the arguments of malice.—R. G. In gersoll. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON IV. APR,L 22 _ LUK£; CHAP. VII. VS. 1-10 Golilau T„,_ Llk, „ . _ p l..h ■». lh. ^ Th*' F~' 103:.8 Healing a Scrnut 1. -When he had ended , ings.” Those of th* s.jL‘ 1 ,as **?* Muunt. Both in Lai * °.n 0,1 a series of miracles follows ''Matt,,fiw the promulgation or the *1 ,,,H,n riple, of the kingdom of £2 n fT the Sermon on the Mount > \ .Ll,,to thirty verses < Luke7S^TfS!Lwd by »wo miracles ami the summary many more presented a« a nJish, the^^ptist that Jesus «£ that whole >eKion a,() a £ turion was a Roman military ofW ™ , rnmen? T.“f R°m^‘ "lilitary* gov! eminent, th.s centurion was probably -thr 8arris,,n at Caper “ n entu.unis servant, who was dear unto h.rn." R. V. margin, “precious to him. or "honorable with him ' "Was sick, and ready to die" R \ . tlte point of death." lli„ disease, ^-t ortl ing to Matthew, was the juiisy, and he ■was grievously tormented." X "And when he heard of (concerning) Jesus, the words and the deeds which showed his character and his power “tie sent unto him the elders of th* Jews ” Not of the synagogue, for which another word is used, but of the people, the Jow tsh government, the leading men, heads of families. The centurion probably felt that Jesus, being a Jewish prophet, would be most influenced bv the leaders of his own people, who were the centurion's friends. 4. "Besoughi him install'.ly," i. e., ur gently. as in the phrase “continuing in stant in prayer .’’-Cambridge Bible а. “He loveth our nation,” attracted doubtless by the great superiority of their religion, their loftier hopes, their better morality. “He hath built us a synagogue.” thus expressing his interest and faith in their religion. б. “Then Jesus went with them.” say ing according to Matthew. "1 will come and heal him.” Some of the delegation seem to have hastened in advance to the centurion’s house, “which was probably in the suburbs,” in order to re) eve his anxiety before Jesus could an ve. As they drew near to the house, " he cen turion sent friends to him," with another message. He probably had heard of the healing of the nobleman's son i i Caper naum while Jesus was at Cana John 4: 4t>-53>, so that he knew the presence of Jesus was not necessary; and lie also felt, “I am not worthy that thou should cst enter under my roof." This was an expression of his conscious sinfulness in Hie presence of a holy prophet, endowed w'ith such wondrous irower from (Jim). 7. “Say in a word. ' as he had before to the nobleman's son. 5. "For I also