II WITH HIS COAT OFF. \ \ y SECRETARY WILSON NOT DE 'f I TERRED BY HOT WEATHER. | \ 'Worhlnj ; Aivny in tlio Interests of the | m Parmer * Sumo IntercHtlne ; JtcsultH I i W Which Ho Hun Obtained ProHpcrlty I Is Koav with Vh Sura. W ( Washington Letter. ) \ \ "The man with his coat off" is not t M | disturbed by hot weather. TIip' v\oil- LJh \ns \ day3 ln Washington have not hT i checked the activity of that rugged IS. old worertno ! nead of tne UePart _ T y raent of Agriculture , and he is pushing * tSr aiong with his new plans for increas- C ing the earnings of the farmers , and at \ \ the same time decreasing their hours I I of labor. d-/ Secretary Wilson has had numerous \ \ inquiries as to the result of his trial % r\r \ sl'ipments of butter to England. He m * has received reports from the second \ \ shipment , and is of the opinion that JP f lit is working upon the right line and Jpvl one which will develop a largely in- U I creased industry for the farmers of * / , this country. Speaking to your cor- I % respondent about this , he said : vi "Our shipment of butter consisted it/ / \ of various styles of packages , small , M it half-pound prints , square boxes , large m\ / tubs and other packages , and generally * 5l arrived in good order. The depart- v/ raent has received letters frcra a num- { J her of Englishmen , commission merchants - / chants and others who used this butter - \ \ ter and who generally speak of it in high terms as regards its quality and J1 . flavor , in comparison with the best | grade of English butter. The only 111 ' criticism reems to be that the buiter J generally is not dry enough to suit / them , but this is a point which can be i ' easily remedied. There is no doubt inV V\ tbe world but that as soon as we "get ( r onto them" we can do business with g them , and at profit. We have just re been having some tests here in New V York of an interesting nature. We { r have had experts examining samples I . < 5 of butter shipped from England , Ireland - \ • , land , Denmark and Australia , and I. | -cf.mpcting with our own butters ship- v | I ped from the western and northwest- jgfe. h ern states. We met them half was * . JHf Tu ony one case > tnaof * a samPte from { | lf England , did the foreign butter come I\ -up to the standard of the best Amer- K ican butter. This is very encouraging § j to our butter makers and shows that J $ $ we make as good butter as is produced. i cvlif " * c * s perfectly logical , " continued the I K secretary , "that if we send our grain lw\ to Denmark to be fed to foreign cattle I \f to produce butter that we can feed it I M to our own cattle and send abroad the I H | "butter instead. " I W - "Another question which I am going I Jnrt * ° soon taJce up' " sa d il' Wilson , "is I 1 * | that of the foreign cheese market. I m , Nothing has been done in this line as I 1 ( yet , and I am not read } ' to offer any % American cheese abroad. We are not H H. now in a condition to sell our cheese Hf j . abroad for the reason that the market 43 * \ is full of the adulterated article , and Hk \ owing to the laxity of the internal rev- Hr -enue regulations it is almost impossi- Vn ble to discover it. As long as this H ' 'filled' cheese is sold as pure cheese it B is impossible to establish a reputation HR for good cheese. Filled cheese. " ex- ELg plained the secretary , "is made in Hi this way : Milk is run through a sep- Hj | arator and all the fat taken out , at a Hj'ipv value of perhaps 15 or 20 cents per Hfrn pound. For this is substituted cheap Hf | ( cotton-seed oil , lard , * etc. , at a cost of HA \ only a few cents a pound. Cheese made HjF \ in this manner has poor keeping qual- If ities , will not ripen , and is of a low H ff" grade generally. The revenue laws H * .are constantly being violated and circumvented - I \ -cumvented with regard to the sale of jS ? " tn's substitute for cheese , which is l V /V\ placed upon the market in large quan- IV i tities as the genuine article. I have I "been getting after Secretary Gage and H \ Wo Want Woolens Again. Bl V his people about this , as it is of course pi 1 .necessary to establish a high standard * 1 I -for American cheese before we can ex- i pect to do anything in exporting it. ' flt The law requires that this tilled cheese | Ei. shall be so marked * u large black type , | I i lut various mod1 of evasion are H | practiced which s ' erve to practically K | nullify the law. I believe our farmers HrIs .c-m make as good cheese as it is pos- ' HpL sible to produce , and that with proper , ( m\A& \ methods we can procure a market for ' ' W it abroad which will give us a largely Hg& increased market for this agricultural Wttv product. " f \ "The Department is doing something H about the foreign discrimination l\ apainst American meats , Mr. Wilson ? " "Yes. This matter is being carried MM forward qu ' etiy. We are going about HB this in a very modest manner and will B\ be able tc thoroughly convince foreign K V TPimtrles , I believe , that it is to their "best interests ( as well as our own ) to . ' , f-L | - n i . . . . i i -i uiir i TT-irr nmnrryrrMTT--rrfi I T * li remove these obstacles against Amer- dr n products. If they do not see it V . .mit light , why , then , there arc oth er methods. " f ' "The subject of growing tea In the United States is a subject which has recently come , especially to my atten tion. Considerable experimenting in the past has been done In tbe tea line In this country , and the trouble has always been the difficulty of procuring labor to pick the tea'leaves , but I am prepared to say that there is no reason why the southern states of this country should not raise and market every pound of tea used in the United States , and a far better article , too , than the great bulk of tea sold here now. This is an excellent subject for considera tion and experiment , and will be heard from later. " * G. H. Williams. Crop and Business Prospects Cood. A week of exceptionally favorable weather for the growing crops and a complete absence of developments of a nature calculated to unsettle confidence have brought about a further improve ment In the business situation. This improvement is not to be measured by the volume of clearing house exchanges although the increase of 7.7 per cent over the same week last year is a sure indication of progress , because many merchants and manufacturers are holding back awaiting a clearer manifestation of the improvement that is already sufficiently obvious to many But the increase in railroad earnings during June of more than 3 per cent as compared with the same period last year , and the steady purchases of se curities by American investors whieh have advanced the average price of stocks 1 per cent in the week and S1 per cent since the upward movement began early in May , are corroborative and additional evidences of the prog ress toward better conditions that is steadily becoming more apparent. The important positive influence un doubtedly is the improving condition of the growing crops. The weather has been most satisfactory all over the country , being warm where warmth was most needed , and rainy where ad ditional moisture was required. The result is that complaints of damage , which usually figure so largely at this season , are almost entirely absent. As to wheat , the winter wheat harvest is nearing completion , and is admitted that the previous calculations of the crop were entirely too low. The crop may run up to 300,000,000 bushels , or 00,000,000 bushels more than the gov ernment estimate indicated as prob able , while spring wheat is progress ing so finely and has been so extensive ly sown that an immense harvest is reasonably certain here. Our total wheat crop may run up to 550,000,000 bu , or 125,000,000 bushels more than last year. This remarkable prospect has not in the least lowered prices , which on the contrary have risen l/2 cents a bushel on the confirmation of reports of damage to the Buropean crops. It is a significant circumstance that the September option is 7 cents a bushel below the Julv price , indicating a belief that the known necessities of Europe will compel purchases before the foreign crops can be harvested. Silver a Dead Issue. Uncle Horace Bois of Iowa has just made public his views on the 16 to 1 fallacy. He declares : "For one , I do not believe it possible to succeed up on a platform that demands the un qualified free coinage of silver at the ration of 16 to 1 with gold. We have fought that battle , and it is lost. We can never fight it over under circum stances more favorable to ourselves. If we hope to succeed , we must abandon this extreme demand. " The frank statement of Uncle Hod shews that he has come to a realiza tion of the fact that a majority of the American people are intelligent enough to understand that a free coinage law at the 16 to 1 ration would simply drive us on a plane with Mexico and China. The value of the coin of ultimate re demption depends entirely upon the market value of the bullion of which it is composed. A silver dollar , under these circumstances , cannot be worth any more than the silver it sells for. The stamp of the government creates no value. It is nothing but a certifi cation of weight and finances. Mr. Boies evidently relizes these things. From his letter , we infer that he would be in favor of dropping to the silver standard and to a 48 cent dollar , if he thought the people could be induced to adopt it. But he sees they will not and hence he wants the scheme modified. He will find no tenable ground out side of that taken by the Republican national convention in the platform at St. Louis last year. Toledo Blade. The Revival of Trade. One of the most encouraging signs of a return of prosperity is shown in the statement made by Strawbridge & Clothier , of this city , of their retail sales during the month of June. The sales of the firm , which is one of the oldest in the city , were larger than in any corresponding June since they have been engaged in business. The in ference to be drawn from this gratifying - ing statement is clear , and its significance - cance is not to be understimated. It surely portends a revival of trade which , now only beginning , gives a promise of exceptional prosperity to come. And this is only one instance. The price of iron has advanced ; there is a better demand for coal ; prices are firm and steady everywhere , and not une report of a depressing nature is re ceived from any section of the country. Unless all signs fail , the opening of the ' all season will find the promised pros perity upon us. Philadelphia North American. in M giiiiwPMiMilwrimnlprtainMin I iliimrii m j. . The aiukcr nn l the Taker. - There is no motive to make a prod uct if you can't find somebody to take it. The maker must find the taker. You will not employ labor to make a product if you cannot find a buyer for that product after labor has made it. President McKInley. This Is so obvioi3 a truth that we may suppose that even a free-trader would agree to it. The conclusions in evitably resulting from this truth are cr.ually obvious. Why the free-traders cannot see them is one of the myste ries of the nineteenth century. It ought to be perfectly plain that if , by free trade , the products of foreign manufacturers are brought -into this country to undersell American man ufactures , the foreign "makers" will find all the "takers , " and the result will be that American manufacturers will not be able to find buyers for their products , and will , therefore , not employ labor to make those products. The reasoning is perfectly simple. But we have had something more than reasoning in regard to it during the last four years. We have had a prac- t'cal demonstration. The doctrinaires and hide-bound free-traders may not yet have had their eyes opened , but the people of the country have. And that's why William McKinley is pres ident of the United States. Protect American Shipping. , * 3Pf > E r Are the Mills Closing ? The convention of Iowa fusionista declared that the mills were closing and thousands of workingmen were thrown out of employment. Brad- street's and Dun's Review report the reverse. These publications are non partisan. They state the facts. They are published for the information of business men and tradesmen , and can not afford to nr-ake misleading state ments. Their patronage depends upon the correctness of their reports. On Saturday , June 26 , Dun's Review said : There is no step backward in busi ness , although the season of midsum mer quiet is near. The improvement continues , gradually and prudently cautious as before , although in many branches evident where no signs of it appeared a few weeks ago. Business men of the highest standing in all parts of the country having gradually perceived that the tide has begun to r se , are regulating their contracts and investments and their plans for the future with a confidence unknown to fhem a short time ago. Great changes before the adjournment of congress are hardly to be expected , but the removal of uncertainty is with reason expected to bring into operation buying forces which have been restricted for months. "There are signs of improvement where none were observed a few weeks ago. There is an encouraging increase in the demand for textile goods and even for cottons , " says the same com mercial report. Concurrently with the statement of Dun's Review comes in formation from the east that The custom of closing the cotton mills during the summer months which has prevailed in New England during the operations of the Wilson law will not be followed this season , the recent announcement from the manufacturing districts there indicating that work is to go steadily on this summer in view of the prospect that a protective tariff will soon be upon the statute books. With these evidences of the return of v better times it was not opportune for the fusionists to declare that the mills and shops are closing. Dubuque Times. Aidlnc ; Private Interests. The natural and inevitable question for every shrewd citizen to ask is , then , Why disturb the country and unsettle business by a lot of tariff changes that are not called for except to aid private interests ? Providence , R. I. . Journal. For the very reason that they do "aid private interests , " the "interests" of every private individual in the country , thus constituting the intere-jts of the masses 'which form the public interests. Prompt Worlc Is Proper. Protect our people from "perfidy and dishonor" by tha immediate enact ment of a tariff for protcc.ioa. iiBifiiifiSafiSHBHB&ifiHHiiiiBifiSSiBi I I I" ' II , - I I 'Hill ' | ll TALMAGE'S SEBMON. THE CAUSE OF RIGHTEOUS NESS FLOURISHING. A Dlxeourso from the Text : I.umonta- tlons , Chapter III , Verse : J9 "Where fore Doth a Living Man Complalu ? " Better Days Are Near at Hand. -5-21 CHEERFUL inter- j | rogatory In the $ H3 most melancholy M I book of the Bible ! lljnr * Jeremiah wrote so • m\ \ many sad things | lj that we have a llJIJ word named after | | J him , and when any- 1 thing is surcharged with grief and com plaint , we call it a Jeremiad. But in my text Jeremiah , as by a sudden jolt , wakens us to a thank ful spirit. Our blessings are so much more nu merous than our deserts that he is sur prised that anybody should ever find fault. Having life , and with it a thou sand blessings , it ought to hush into perpetual silence everything like criti cism of the dealings of God. "Where fore doth a living man complain ? ' There are three prescriptions by which I believe that our individual and national finances may be cured of their present depression. The first is cheer ful conversation and behavior. I have noticed that the people who are most vociferous against the day in which we live are those who are in comfortable circumstances. I have made inquiry of those persons who are violent in their jeremiads against these times , and I have asked them , "Now , after all , are you not making a living ? " After some hesitation and coughing and clearing their throat three or four times , they say stammeringly , "Y-e-s. " So that with a great multitude of people it is not a question of getting a livelihood , but they are dissatisfied because they cannot make as much money as they would like to make. They have only two thousand dollars in the bank/where they would like to have four thousand. They can clear in a year only five thousand dollars , when they would like to clear ten thousand , or things come out just even. Or , in their trade they get three dollars a day when they wish they could make four or five. "Oh ! " says some one , "are you not aware of the fact that there is a great popula tion out of employment , and there are hundreds of good families of this coun try who are at their wits' end , not knowing which way to turn ? " Yes , I know it better than any man in pri vate life can know that sad fact , for it comes constantly to my eye and ear. But who is responsible for this state cf things ? Much of that responsibility I put up on men in comfortable circumstances , who , by an everlasting growling , keep public confidence depressed and new en terprises from starting out and new houses from being built. You know very v/ell that one despondent man can talk fifty men into despondency , while one cheerful physician can wake up in to exhilaration a whole asylum of hy pochondriacs. It is no kindness to the poor or the unemployed for you to join in this deploration. If you have not the wit and the common sense to think of something cheerful to say , then keep silent. There is no man that can be independent of depressed conversation. The medical journals are ever illustrating it. I was reading of five men who resolved that they would make an expsriment and see what they could do in the way of de pressing a stout , healthy man , and they resolved to meet him at different points in his journey ; and as he stepped out from his house in the morning in ro bust health , one of the five men met him and said , "Why , you look very sick today. What is the matter ? " He said , "I am in excellent health ; there is nothing the matter. " But passing down the street , he began to examine his symptoms , and the second of the five men met him and said , "Why , how bad you do look. " "Well , " he replied , "I don't feel very well. " After a while the third man met him , and the fourth man met him , and the fifth man came up and said , "Why , you look as if you had had the typhoid fever for six weeks. What is the matter with you ? " And the man against whom the strata gem had been laid went home and died. And if you meet a man with perpetual talk about hard times , and bankruptcy and dreadful winters that are to come , you break down his courage. A few autumns ago , as the winter was com ing on , people said , "We shall have a terrible winter. The poor will be fro zen out this winter. " There was some thing in the large store of acorns that the squirrels had gathered , and some thing in the phases of the moon , and something in other portends.that made ycu certain we were going to have a hard winter. Winter came. It was the mildest one within my memory and within yours. All that winter long I do not think there was an icicle that hung through the day from the eaves J of the house. So you prophesied false ly. Last winter was coming , and the people said , "We shall have unparal leled suffering among the poor. It will be a dreadful winter. " Sure enough it was a cold winter ; but there was more large hearted charities than ever be fore poured out on the country ; better provision made for the poor , so that there have been scores of winters when the poor had a harder time than they did last winter. Weather prophets say we will have frosts this summer which will kill the harvests. Now , let me tell you , you have lied twice about the weather , and I believe you are lying this time. The second prescription for the alle viation of financial distresses is prop = r Christian investment. God demands of every individual state , and nation , a certa.li ? proportion of their income. We are parsimonious ! We keep back from God that which belongs to him , and when wo keep back anything from God he takes what we keep back , and he takes more. Ho takC3 it by storm , by sickness , by bankruptcy , by any ont of the ten thousand ways which ho can employ. The reason many of you arc cramped In business Is because you have never learned the lesson of Chris tian generosity. You employ an agent. You give him a reasonable salary ; and , lo ! you find out that he is appropriat ing your funds besides the salary. What do you do ? Discharge him. Well , we are God's agents. He puts in our hands certain moneys. Part are to be ours. Part are to be his. Sup pose we take all , what then ? He will discharge us ; he will turn us over to financial disasters , and take the trust away from us. The reason that great multitudes are not prospered in busi ness is simply because they have been withholding from God that which be longs to him. The rule is , give , and you will receive. Administer liberally , and you shall have more to administer. I am In full sympathy with the man who was to be baptized by immersion , and some one said. "You had better leave your pocket book out , it will get wet. " "No , " said he , "I want to go down under the wave with everything. I want to consecrate my property and all to God. " And so he was baptized. What we want in this country is more baptized pocketbooks. I had a relative whose business seemed to be failing. Here a loss , and there a loss , and everything was both ering , perplexing and annoying him. He sat down one day and said , "God must have a controversy with me about something. I believe I haven't given enough to the cause of Christ. " And there and then he took out his check book and wrote a large check for a mis sionary society. He told me , "That was the turning point in my business. Ever since then I have been prosper ous. From that day , aye , from that very hour , I saw the change. " And , sure enough , he went on , and gathered a fortune. The only safe investment that a man can make in this world is in the cause of Christ. If a man give from a superabundance , God may or he may not respond with a blessing ; but if a man give until he feels it , if a man give until it fetches the blood , if a man give until his selfishness cringes and twists and cowers under it he will get not only spiritual pro fit , but he will get paid back in hard cash or in convertible securities. We often see men who are tight fisted who seem to get along with their invest ments very profitably , notwithstanding all their parsimony. But wait. Sud denly in that man's history everything goes wrong. His health fails , or his reason is dethroned , or a domestic curse smites him , or a midnight sha dow of some kind drops upon his soul and upon his business. What is the matter ? God is punishing him for hi3 small heartedness. He tried to cheat God and God worsted him. So that one of the recipes for the cure of in dividual and national finances is more generosity. Where you bestowed one dollar on the cause of Christ , give two. God loves to be trusted , and he is very apt to trust back again. He say ' s : "That man knows how to handle money ; he shall have more money to handle. " And very soon the property that was on the market for a great while gets a purchaser , and the bond that was not worth more than fifty cents on a dollar goes to par , and the opening of a new street doubles the value of his house , or in any v/ay of a million God blesses him. People quote as a joke what Is a di vine promise : "Cast thy bread upon the waters , and it will return to thee after many days. " What did God mean by that ? There is an illusion there. In Egypt , when they sow the corn , it is at a time when the Nile is overflowing its banks and they sow the seed corn on the waters , and as the Nile begins to recede this seed corn strikes in the earth and comes up a harvest and that is the allusion. It seems as if they are throwing the corn away on the waters , but after a while they gather it up in a harvest. Now says God in his word : "Cast thy bread upon the waters , and it shall come back to thee after many days , " It may seem to you that you are throwing it away on charities ; but it will yield a harvest of green and gold a harvest on earth and a harvest in heaven. If men could appreciate that ! and act on that , we would have no more trouble about individual or na tional finances Prescription the third , for the cure of all our individual and national fi nancial distresses ; a great spiritual awakening. It is no more theory. The | merchants of this country were posi- j I tively demented with the monetary ex citement in 1857. There never before j nor since has been such a state of fi nancial depression as there was at that time. A revival came , and five hundred thousand people were born into the kingdom of God. What came after the revival ? The grandest financial pros perity we have ever had in this coun try. The finest fortunes , the largest fortunes in the United States , have been made since 1S57. "Well , " you say , "what has spiritual improvement and revival to do with monetary improve ment and revival ? " Much " % o do. The religion of Jesus Christ has a direct tendency to make men honest and sober and truth-telling , and are not honesty and sobriety and truth-telling auxiliaries of material prosperity ? If we could have an awakening in this country as in the days of Jonathan Ed wards of Northampton , as in the days of Dr. Findley of Basking Ridge , as in the days of Dr. Griffin of Boston , the whole land would rouse to a higher moral tone , and with that moral tone the honest business enterprise of the country would come up. You say a great awakening has an influence upon the future world. I tell you it has a direct influence upon the financial welfare of this world. The religion of " " ' ' ' * - * ) _ t _ jJJ | J Christ is no fee to successful bualncss ; it is Its best friend. And if there should come a grent awakening In thlH country , end nil the banks and Insur ance companies and stores and ofllcca and shops should close up for two weeks , and do nothing but attend to the public worship of Almighty aod after such a spiritual vacation the land would wake up to such financial pros perity as wo have never dreamed of. Godliness is profitable for the lifo that now is as well as for that which is to come. But , my friends , do not put so much emphasis on worldly success as to let your eternal affairs go at loose ends. I have nothing to say against i money. The more money you get the better , if it comes honestly and goes usefully. For the lnck of it , sickness j dies without medicine , and hunger finds Its coffin in an empty bread-tray , ; and nakedness shivers for clothes and fire. All this canting tirade against money as though it had no practical use , when I hear a man Indulge In It , it makes me think the best heaven for him would bo an everlasting poorhouse - house ! No , there Is a practical use in money ; but while we admit that , we must also admit that it cannot satisfy the soul , that It cannot pay for our ferriage - I riage across the Jordan of death , that It cannot unlock the gate of heaven * for our Immortal soul. Yet there are ) men who act as though packs of bonds and mortgages could be traded off for a mansion In heaven , nnd as though gold were a legal tender in that land I where it is so common that they make ' pavements out of it. Salvation by j Christ is the only salvation. Treasures in heaven arc the only incorruptible I treasures. Have you ever ciphered out that sum In loss and gain , "What shall it prolit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his soul ? " You may wear fine apparel now , but the winds of death will flutter it like rags. Home- ? pm and a threadbare coat have some times been the shadow of robes white In the blood of the Lamb. All the mines of Australia and Brazil , strung in one carcanet , are not worth to you as much as the pearl of great price. You remember , I suppose , some yeara ago , the shipwreck of the Central America ? A storm came on that ve3- . sel. The surges tramped the deck and | swept down through the hatches , and there went up a hundred-voiced death H shriek. The foam on the jaw of the wave. The pitching of the steamer , as though it would leap a mountain. H The glare of the signal rockets. The H long cough of the steam-pipes. The H hiss of extinguished furnaces. The H walking of God on the wave. O , it was a stupendous spectacle. r\ H So. there are men who go on in life I a fine voyage they arc making out of I it. All is well , till some euroclydon of I business disaster comes upon them , and they go down. The bottom of this H commercial sea is strewn with the I shattered hulks. But , because your I property goes , shall your soul go ? O , I no ! There is coming a more stupendous - I deus shipwreck after a while. This I world God launched it 6,000 years ago , I and it is sailing on ; but one day it will I stagger at the cry of "fire ! " and the I timbers of the recks will burn , and I the mountains flame like masts and H the clouds like sails in the judgment hurricane. God will take a good many I off the deck , and others out of the I berths , where they are now sleeping ia fl Jesus. How many shall go down ? N6 one will know until it is announced I in heaven one day : "Shipwreck of a I world ! So many millions saved ! So I many millions drowned ! " Because I your fortunes go , because your house fl goes , because all your earthly possessions - 9 ions go , do not let your soul go ! May I the Lord Almighty , through the blood B of the everlasting covenant , save your H souls. H The Daily Task. We are not apt enough to think of our daily work as the Good Shepherd's S pasture field. We are too apt to give fl heed to a miserable distinction between the sacred and secular and to seek tc fl get out from what we call the secular into what we call the sacred , that we H may find spiritual pasture fields. H * * * This is the sacred service ; this is God's work ; praying , communing - I ing , preaching , buying , selling , bricklaying - I laying , doing whatsoever things are true , honest , just , pure , lovely , of good report , which God's providence has trust into your hand to do doing them I for God's sake and in His name , the I shining motive for them God's glory. * * * The daily toil is a real spiritual - H ual pasture field ; and the best of herbage - I age we will find in it. if we will have into it the motive it so , if we will take cf pleasing God , and so of doing in it our very best. How the spiritual life may nobly grow in this pasture field of daily duty done from a divine impulse - pulse ! Wayland Hoyt. D. D. Children and Church Ooine. The fault may lie in some cases with I the minister , but much more often the fault is with the fathers and mothers. I In the matter of church attendance the I parents and the pastor must combine. The parents should require and expect the children to accompany them to I God's house as much as to sit at their I table for their daily food in their own I houses. The pastor should endeavor I to attract the young to church by making - I ing his sermons simple in language , I earnest in delivery and interesting with I illustrations. Very few sermons are 1 fit to be preached at all which are utterly - I terly beyond the comprehension of an average boy 10 years old. Grown peo- I pie , in turn , relish fresh , vivid , simple , earnest , practical preaching as much ar their children do. Theodore L. Cuy- ler. In a home for sandwich men in Lon don there are said to be several uni versity graduates and medical men , and a Scotchman who ran through. 50,000 in three years.