i TO HAVE PEACE-CONQUER YOUR ENEMIES Copjrlufct. Utt, br It Blir Ommu, Unit UrIUla HifaU lU-nti There Are Two Kinds of Peace. Peace Between Nations Is One Kind Common Sense Will Bring It. Peace Within the Individual Means Long Battle, and One That Does Not End. E present to you, with satisfac tion, an earnest and timely article by Dr. Parkhurst. "Peace on earth and good will to men" is the thought for this time of the vear. wvinf. in naace? If there are mora kinds of peace than one and there are what peace is most important? . Peace between nations will come. It is coming rapidly, as Dr. Parkhurst points out. The people CAN READ, and, being able to read, they will soon refuse to be put to cutting each other's throats oyer the Quarrels of old fashioned kings or modern money kings. The few wholesale murders of human beings will probably still disgrace the history of this planet. And then thinking, intelligent and READING men and women will decide that war between nations must end. And war will end. But that will be on this earth only THE BEGINNING OF PEACE. There is a peace higher and more difficult to achieve than peace between the nations. That is the peace that passeth all understand ing, within the mind and heart of the indi vidual. How can man be at peace with himself? How can he stop the war that goes on between the passions, between the savage, conflicting interests and desires handed down to him by millions of ancestors reaching back beyond the stone age, 'and by billions of animal an cestors still farther back. Each individual has his own civil war; it Clever ends and never can end. XEach individual has inside of himself a fighthat i3 constant. 4fc In a btpad, rough way the artist who makes this picture presents the problem so simply that children will understand it, and be inter ested in it. How is the little individual striving for peace of spirit and for righteousness to over come these giant enemies that constantly at tack him? Laziness, intemperance, self-indulgence, timidity, procrastination, are some of the ene mie8 portrayed in this cartoon. All of these, and many others, fight against ace in the individual. VJHpw can that war be ended? ! "He that is slow to anger is better than the "mighty; and he that ruleth his spirit than he that taketh a city." Proverbs XVI., '32. The old wise man who penned the thirty seoond verse of the sixteenth chapter of Prov erbs knew that the' greatest men are not the great 'fighters; that the greatest peace is not the peace between cities, but the peace within the soul of man. A . How' can we have THAT PEACE WITHIN, WHICH 18 THE ONLY PEACE? Each man must' make the fight for himself, INSIDE OP HIMSELF. Each must realize that the biff enomies ARE INSIDE OP MAN'S OWN SKULL, LEFT THERE BY ANCES TORS OF THOUSANDS OF YEARS AGO, AND WORKING AGAINST THE PEACE OF THE SPIRIT NOW. , The peace that passeth all understanding will come, but slowly, as peace between nations and individuals has come slowly. If we look baok, we see that tho enemies of man's peaoe have been destroyed and left behind, many of them, ono by one. All men were once cannibals, and actually ate tho flesh of their brothers unless they were too timid for battle. Cannibalism has been left behind on our upward journey. All men, with perhaps one exception in n million, were once cruel and bloodthirsty. They tortured each other in the name of God Almighty, and His Son. They burned each other alive, tore the living flesh with hot pincers. The rack and tho thumbscrew, the boot, tho iron virgin, the bonfires of living human beings all tell us in history of horrible brutality that survived among men, inherited irom aramalb, only yesterday. Ths.t is lot behind PARTLY. We still burn up chil dren, a'; hard labor, as we used to burn heretics. We still kill women slowly in mills, as we used to kill them quiokly in the old days of witchcraft. But, we HAVE very largely conquered the demon of cruelty. Individual selfishness was the rule only a little while ago. "Salvation for me, and the devil take the others" was the old motto. But that has changed slowly. Men spend their money now, when they die, to build universities, hospitals, libraries, if they don't use it try ing to buy eternal salvation for themselves. That is progress, and we find that we are getting nearer to real peace. We must be reconciled to slow development, we must work for peace between individuals and nations in our external life, and work steadily and persistently FOR PEAOE WITHIN, the peace most difficult to achieve. None now living will ever know peace that is abso lute. But the passing years, for those that try, do bring improvement. Eventually, men as individuals and as a human race will achieve the absolute peaco, which is mental peace. ViciousnesE, selfishness, cruelty, will some day have gone to join cannibalism and legalited infanticide. One day, many centuries from now, it will be possible for human beings to say with the Psalmist, "Rigbteousnes and neace have kissed each other." Oopjrielit, 181 bj tbt SUr Oompnj. Jrtt BrlUla lUtfiU Renrred. Eet Us Rave Peace" yi Christmas Sermon By Rn. DrXharlns R. ParWwrsi In His Days Shall the Righteous Flourish Amid Abundance of Peacs So Long as the Moon Endureth. Psalms 72:7 THE anniversary ot our Lord's birth gives occasion rather for Indulg ing our spirits In tho tender senti ment of tho event than for taxing our minds by tho discussion ot its difficult probloms. Tho world Is made ono this woek rather by Its sympathies than by the activity ot Its intellect. Indeed, not only to-day, but always, people tend to bo brought nearer to ono another by tho power of heart, but repelled from each other by exercise ot tho mind. Feeling operatos as a unifying influonce; thought as a divisive influence. Henco peoplo think themselves apart, but pray themselves together. Therefore, the world needs warming moro than it needs brlghtoning, and all occasions like tho present require to be thankfully econ omized ns means of softening the frost into which, in an atmosphere ot cold thoughtfulnesB, wo so naturally stiffen. The dominant noto of the Christian world at Christmas is, "Peaco on earth," as Inaugurated by tho "Prince of Peaco." And if it sooma Btrango that the bounds of his principality have been so long and so slow in extending themselves we must remember that tho world at largo can Im prove only so fast as Improvement pro gresses in tho soparato Smiths and Joneses that make up tho world, and that the battle-grounds which compose so con spicuous a figure in the world's history aro simply tho exhibition on an enlarged scale of tho Holds ot conflict that lie con coaled in individual hearts. The world at largo is what It is made to bo by tho Individuals composing it It Is not any kind of diffusive greeuness that makes the forest green, but tho combined greenness ot its soparato leaves. It Is no diffused whiteness that composes the pearly shoen ot a midwinter landscape, but the meeting together ot the untinted complexion ot each one ot tho multitude ot snow-crystals. So the tide of tho gon e'ral purity, peace and love ot the world at largo can rise no higher than the altitude to which It mounts In tho souls ot the separata men and women of the world. This Is only to remtnd us that the sal vation of the world in respect ot any one or nil ot its virtues and graces is not a wholesale, but a retail process, and that public feuds and civil and international conflicts will disappear from the face of tho earth only so fast as they vanish from the map of the hearts ot individual men and women. A man who is thoroughly at peace with himself inwardly, who has all the Impulses and energies of his soul tuned to the ono note, the Christ-note, ot purity and loving kindness, cannot quar rel with his neighbor however quarrel some that neighbor may be. That so great a length of time, how ever, should have elapsed since our Lord's command to Peter to put up his sword was Issued, is no reproach against Chris tianity. The thoughts of peoplo who are precipitate In their expectations are not moving in paco with the methods and in tentions of God, "with whom a thousand years Is as. ono day." If the process tor fitting the world for human occupation has occuplod so many centuries that arithmetic is strained in its efforts to com puto them, it Is occasion neither for sur prise nor discouragement that tho shaping and maturing ot His moral kingdom ad vances by a movement that to our limit edness and impatience seems so dilatory. A spirit of hurry is one of tho infirmities of small minds. Tho true attitude of Chris tian philosophy does not assert itself by Its hasto to soe tho will of God accom plished, but consists rather In that patient observation and discernment that enables it gratefully to discover that things aro moving, however Inconspicuously, toward tho accomplishment of His will. And It certainly does seem that no one who is searching with a sincere desire to discover, can fall to bo assured that the movement toward the world's pacification Is distinct, and as rapid as a considerate , Christian philosophy has grounds to anti cipate. In order to know whether a thing - moves, whether on the ground or among the stars, in the material or in the spirit ual world, 'one needs to place his eye not only on tho place where it 1b now but on tho place where It was a hundred dayB or a thousand years before, and if the former ot the two places is In advance of the lat ter oven though by never so little, there is movement and there is progress. Although we aro even now hearing a great deal about armies and navies, and large appropriations for military equip ment, yet tho sentiment which prevails to day in regard to war its reasonableness and its righteousness Is so distinct from what it was a couple of centuries ago, that even a superficial acquaintance with the movlngs ot thought during that tlmo will not fall to appreciate tho change. And it is tho sentiment ot people that is symp tom ot condition. The question is not how many soldiers we have, not how many dreadnoughts there aro afloat or In course of construction, but what are the people thinking. That Is the instrument that we have to use In measuring civilization. Its Jlow or Its ebb. It signifies nothing hat a Secretary ot War comes out with a "war-scare," for the purpose of exciting sufficient nor vousness throughout the country o Justify an immense appropriation for the War Department. Nervousness docs not ensue and the Secretary's official sensa tionalism Is pigeon-holed. The document, singularly enough, operates rather as a sedative than as a stimulant The poopls are not in a warm mood. Whatever ambition an American expert In military affairs may have for the mili tary prestige ot his country, If he has at tho same time familiarized himself with tho oxhausting and Impoverishing course upon which European nations aro run ning, it Is difficult to understand how he can have tho heart, by word or influence, to prod tho American peoplo to compete in a raco conducing to tho same fatality. The European war debt amounts to twenty-six blllfon dollars, a debt which never will be discharged, the payment of the interest upon which comes very largely out of tho pockets of tho poor. There is great strength, as well as good Judgment in quietness of mind, and that quietness is every little whllo disturbed by some Journalistic announcement or other to tho effect that friction is developing between soma other country and our selves and no one can forecast what the issue will bo; that Japan or some other nation, particularly Japan, is simply bid ing Its time, and is smilingly cherishing n very sour grudgo which may eventu ate In a cataclysm of war that will carry off tho Sandwich Islands and the western quarter of our country and make them a part of the Orient Such prophecies tend to provoko the very thing which they prophesy, for such insinuations and innu endoes go across to the other side and cre ate malevolence where no malevolence existed. In the course of an address recently given in this city by Chief Justlco Wate nobl, who represents Japan in tho admin istration of Korea, he said: "Japan Is not going to war with the United States. There is no thought of It It is never suggested In our newspapers. It is fre quently flung as a Are brand by the American press, but the Japanese press is absolutely innocent of anything of that kind." All of the foregoing carries no taint ot pusillanimity, but will bo the fit distinc tion ot a nation that knows how to dis criminate between dignity and assump tion; ot a nation that in a Christian way appreciates its own interests not as something distinct from the interests ot the world, but rather as entering Into, and forming a part of, the interests ot the world; of a nation in fine that feels itself called to a great service, invited to a policy ot life and action (hat shall not be merely tho rehearsing of what has been, a barren reduplication of the old ages that have had placed upon them the stamp of the Lord's disapproval, out a policy that shall give to our na tlonal life an original tone In such way differentiating us from the rest of the world as shall draw the rest ot the world after us and cv ' mi. hood of the nations a little nearer to the finality as It Ilea registered In tho mind of God. f I