Newspaper Page Text
-! pi WORLD'S Bid | TO PROTEC1 The largest gan ever built is now being constructed at the Bethlehem (Penn.) Iron Works. This enormous pieoe of ordnanoe will weigh, when completed, 126 tons. It will exceed by six tons weight the monster gun which Krupp, of Germany, exhibited at the World's Fair, in Chicago, and in length it will be nearly five feet longer than the German gun. This monster gun is being fabricated under the War Department. It is the biggest order ever given to any establishment in the world. The great gun is being built under V the superintendence of John F. . Meigs, formerly a Lieutenant 01 me United States army and a standard t artillery authority in this country. "Wftth him is associated Captain E. L. Zalinski, United States army (retired). The Government inspection work is in the hands of Captain Ira IfcNutt, of the ordnance corps of the ?rmy. All three gentlemen are on the ground and personally see to every detail of the immense undertaking as it progresses. The intention of the War Departr : ment, it iB announced, is to mount the great piece on a specially built founda. tion on Bomer Shoals. The protection "for this gun will be a turret, whioh will wholly inclose the crew and the greater part of the gnu. From k its position on Bomer Shoals the great - ? Ml 1 "piece oi oranance win nave a iuu i sweep of the channels leading into New York Harbor. There is not, it is declared, a vessel afloat to-day with armor of snfiloient strength to resist i u *J- 1a?" rfrs.t-'Si BIGGESj '**; ' It will weigh, complete, 126 tons, and 11 wui pe mouiilHU on a special luuuuauuu a its shot John F. Meigs estimates jV that? blow from the new gun would W have a striking energy equal to that of & 2000-ton ship when running at full j speed. The shot from the gun, he adds, would smash, crack and batter down any armor which it would be possible for .a ship to carry. k : The caliber will be sixteen inches, r -the length, from breech to muzzle, ; >Will be forty-nine feet two inches. v ' Through the breech in a vertical line ^ the gun will have a measurement of exactly five feet. Mr. Meigs computes the weight of a shot for the new gun at a little over 2300 pounds. That means more than a ton of metal. The heaviest shots fired in England have J not weiched over 2000 ponnds. The powder charge for the Ameri^. _ oan gun will-weigh nearly 1000 pounds. . Provided extreme elevation for range could be obtained, a shot from the New York Harbor gun should be able to travel more than sixteen miles. The greatest known range ever attained was from the famous "jubilee shot" in England. The distance measured about twelve statute miles. The United States has never before attempted any heavier pieoe of ordnanoe for coast defence than a twelveinch gun. The weight of a piece of the latter -caliber is approximately fifty tons. In the sixteen-inch gun ?- there is observed a jump of seventysix tons increase in weight. ? The first ingot for the new sixteeninch gun was cast recently at Bethlehem. It was for the tube forging and ? * ? AA AAA mi. _ - jrogaea iw,ouu pounas, xne jac&ei / forging is also out. It weighs 90,000 pounds. Under the contract made with the War Department the Bethlehem works will turn out all forgings for the great gun. The tempering and - .annealing process will also be applied at-the Bethlehem shops. When all the parts are out, the tube, jacket and hoops will be shipped to the United States arsenal at Watervliet, WestTroy, N. Y. There they are to be as ' aembiea togetner, ana toe gun ltsen rifled and made ready for service, f All metal used is fluid compressed. The specifications which are being adhered to demand the most exacting physical tests. Specimen pieces of metal are taken from all forgings, are subjected to elongation, breaking and bending tests. Finally every part of the gun must be of forged metal. The tube, for instance, has been cast and Tough bored, it will next have a mandrel introduced through its length and ihen be placed under the hammer. For this latter stage the Bethlehem works have the largest hammer in the world. It is capable of delivering a blow of 120 tons, or some ten tons more than *the famous Krupp hammer. The building of the new sixteen-inch gun is an expensive undertaking. The gun itself will cost abont 8120,000. For single guns the average cost to the Government for all fortification work in this country is roughly $1000 per ton of gun. The cost of the gun carriage and tur ret will bring the cost up to as much again as the weapon, while the cost for foundation will, it is estimated, round out a grand total of at least $300, 000.? The foundation for the sixteen-inch gun will require a depth, it is /> said, of fifty feet if earth be the basis. m A/vnafynntAil xhib iounuauuu must uc wuuU of ooncrete. For Dampening Clothes. To dampen the clothes before ironing, a Texas woman has invented adevioe which consists of a water receptacle with a sponge at the bottom, to be attached to the nose of the iron and the cloth as it slides along. QEST CANNON | ^ r NEW YORK. ^ IDAHO'S WOMAN GOVERNOR. For Two Weeks Miss Margaret Reeve Filled the Executive Chair. The news that for two weeks a woman had filled the executive chair of the State of Idaho?a thing unprecedented in this country's history? created no end 01 lively commeni throughout the Northwest. The woman is Miss Margaret Reeve, who for several years has held responible places about Idaho's State building, having for the last four years been private secretary to the Governor. ? When Governor Steunenberg and Secretary of State Lewis were called to the northern part of the Stato on business of the greatest importance in connection with the State's vast domain of white-pine timber, they were at their wits' end to know whom they could safely leave in charge of State matters during their absence, as Attorney-General McFarland had preceded them from the State. It seemed for a time the trip would have to be postponed, or that one of them would have to,remain .behind, when Secretary of State Lewis suggested to the Governor that Miss Reeve be left in charge. The Governor was almost stunned by the bold plan, bnt Miss Reeve had proved herself most efficient, being familiar with all the routine work in the building, and the Governor consented to the plan, and Miss Reeve was left at the State house olothed in full Guberna- : torial authority, which she exercised i mrtTtTh liifffrTOil^^ isrliMHMI r GUN IN THE WORLD TO PROTECT NEW is six tons heavier than the giant gun shown 1 t Bomer 8hoals, in the lower Bay. No vessel in a manner that not only gave satisfaction to the Governor, bat has won her great distinction. Before the Governor and party had been absent twenty-four houri matters of great importance were brought to Miss Reeve's attention. The Governor and Seoretary of State had left a number of important blanks to which they had attached their signatures, and it was left to Miss Reeve's discretion to issue them or not?requisitions. nDDlications for extraditions : from Governors of other States, and i many other matters. ' i She sought legal advice, bnt the atI U : MISS MABQABET REEVE. 1 I torney informed her she must depend upon herself, aa he did not "care to be ?j .1. UllAUU up iu tuo uvto yjL ouj icmoic Governor." When the Governor re- 1 turned he was surprised at the amount of executfve business his fair substitute had turned out, and frankly admitted the excellence of her judgment, although in one instance?the case of an application for extradition?he said he would not have issued it until he had given the protestants a hearing. He has announced his determination to defend with vigor every act of "Governor Reeve," including those quoted: Currents In the Atlantic. < Experiments have been going on for the past two years for the purpose of trying to learn something of the characteristics of the Atlantio ocean as a great moving body of water. As a result the whole Atlantic is shown to be slowly circulating round andround, like an enormous pool. A Church Literally Founded on a Rock. The tenth anniversary of the Presbyterian Church at Waterloo, Iowa, was celebrated a short time ago. There would be nothing remarkable about MfinuH 11 // . CHURCH UASS FROM A BOCK. that, only that the church is part of a solid rook, haying been out out of a '; big boulder ten years ago. i ELECTRIC CABS IN NEW YORK. Homeless Vehicles Hare Become a Fix* tare In the Biff City. Electric cabs, hansoms and broughams are a sucoesB in New York, so ELECTRIC HANSOM USED IN NEW YOBK. much of a success that the company operating them has just given out an order for 100 new vehicles. Daring Jane, the first moath of their operation, a total number of 632 calls were received, averaging between thirty-Wb and twelve per day, carrying 1680 passengers 4603 miles at rates similar to the horse-cab system, and each month sinoe that time has seen a steady increase in the service. The best resalts obtained from these vehicles show that about -1.25 horsepower is supplied for a propulsion of 2000 pounds over ordinarily level roads at a speed of ten miles an hour. This consumption of power is a trifle over two and one-third times that of similar work on rails, which indicates that the equipment of the battery is carefully ' * ? ?%'?** - -ii _ f xi J adapted to trie total weigni 01 tue vemcle and just sufficient for practical traveling capacity. The maximum weight of a battery for a hansom weighing 3000 pounds is 1200 pounds for a distance of twenty-five miles at the maximum speed of twelve miles or at an average speed of six miles. i |B|||g^gg|gg^. IB m irrnii<fm>w?i| H : YORK. by Kmpp at the World's Fair at Chicago, oould resist a shot from It. A vehiole to travel twice this distance could readily be built, but it would need to be twice its weight in order to accommodate twioe the bat tery equipment, xnis type 01 venicie is constructed -with the view of a speed of from six to twelve miles 'an hour, but a vehicle can be built to approximate thirty miles an hour, although it would necessarily be made as a raoing apparatus and not fit for street work. Two one-and-one-half horse-power motors, weighing 172$ pounds each, ore found sufficient for a hansom, and are Operated at a maximum speed of 1350 revolutions per minute. The Treatment of the Hair. The hair falls out from various causes. > Sometimes it is because of fevers, but more often from debility, or because there is a lack of some element in the system which is necessary to its healthy growth. Scientists declare that real, genuine baldness?or, as it was once grandiloquently termed, a 1 -A- J J-i* complete ueuuuauuu ut mc vmuiai integument"?ia caused by a microscopic creature that preys upon the roots of the hair and deprives it of its vitality. Then it dies and falls out. The cause must be ascertained before 1 any remedy can be applied. If it is ' from weakness, take tonics and build up the system. If any parasitic disease exists, destroy the organisms and the hair will probably recover its wonted vigor. As to the beneficial effects of washing the hair, all authorities agree that it is much better for it to be kept perfeotly clean. Frequent brushing is very necessary if one would keep the hair in good order, but the brush must not be too harsh or more harm than good will result. Great care should be used in the selection of a good pomade. Largeat Cast Iron Pipe Ever Moulded. Theilargest pipe ever cast was turned oat at Bessemer, near Birmingham, Alabama, the other day. The pipe was FIRST 72-INCH PIPE OAST. '~i seventy-two inches in diameter on the inside,and seventy-six and one-quarter inches in diameter, outside measurement, and twelve feet six inches long over all. The metal in it weighed 20,000 pounds. The seventy-two-inch pipe was moulded for the New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad, to be used for culverts under their tracks. A small river can flow through one of these pipes. It is as large as the great sewers of Paris which were built of brick and stone. "Dead ai a Door Nail." The door nail in earlier times was the plate of the door upon which the old-fashioned knocker struck to arouse the inmates of the house. As the plate or nail was struck many more times than any other, it was assumed to be more dead than other nails. Hence the phrase, "Deap as a door nail." If old ideas 'are to be revived, as now seems possible, the phrase may soon have a present application.? Hardware. . - i ? ' *? /.? CURIOUS FACTS. Q , Red hats were first worn by card!* nals in the year 1245. pF It is said that soaps that floats gen erally are spongy on account of the air that is in them. There is a club in Penang, on the Lo west coast of the Malay Peninsula, composed of Ohinese who hold debates in English. The want of employment in Mel- \ bourne, Australia, has created a new rh "profession." Those who sit on the Coroner's jury get four shillings a day. There is a rush for those berths. > : It is estimated that over twelve p1 million pounds of human hair are used ' annually for adorning the feminine heads of the oivilized world. Four tons is the allowance for New York City. To An tone Yallbs. of Sacramento, Cal., is alive with a ball in his brain. The man who shot him had taken several "C balls before the ocenrrenoe of the rt" tragedy. ] It is said that a stammering temper* anoe orator irresponsible for the word "teetotal." He assured his audience that nothing but "te-te-te-total" ab- , stinenoe wonld satisfy temperance re* ca formers. Idi The Constantinople Museum has " been enriched by archaeological treas- gp ures taken by the Turks during the tu late Greek war from the museums of Larissa, Trikkala, Tyrnavos and at, A.lmyron. Tt Mashonaland natives, fighting the British, seem to be provided with bli small bore rifles. They are pulling sa down the African transcontinental 111 telegraph wires and cutting them up ?c into ballets. im For once, at least, the practioe of ^ pouring oil on waters has resulted in wt trouble. Georgia cows whioh drank let from a brook into whioh oil from a burning mill flowed have been sickened unto death. an The expression "pin money" oomes Jjj from a oustom observed in the four* teenth century, when women were lm given money on two days of the year, ?P January 1 and January 2, to purohase ^ the then expensive pins. cl< The University of Heidelberg has mi made an arrangement with a German gr company whereby students who are totally disabled by an accident in the ohemioal and physical laboratories are wl to receive $500, or a proportionate ?}j sum for temporary damage. The an- W] nual dues are seventy-five cents. hti Alois P. Swoboda, of Omaha, Neb., j^? who three years ago was a physically tn] weak man, is to-day a marvel of th ? *? 1 ? m ?| strength, Having omit up nia ooay aiter ft new"system of onlture. He now p? challenges Sandow to a competitive th etaminatipn, will allow a strong man ne to place his hands aronnd his (Swo- [j* bodo's) neok and try to strangle him, br and will permit Fitzsimmons to strike ml his hardest blow on his face. . 8t< tQ Lifeboat Propelled By Hydraulic Power. J? Even though Germany can boast of je< the largest and fastest passenger ves- cc sel afloat, England has the finest, largest and safest lifeboat ever iQ" launched. She is the Queen, built by of Messrs. Thornycroft, at Chiswick, and yo is of thirty tons displacement. Although propelled by steam, she co has neither paddles nor propeller, wl Her motive power is rather novel and ba an innovation in maritime architecture. Her power is hydraulio, sea water being pumped in fore or aft, as to may be required. po The force of the water ejected from the tubes drives the boat through the jg water'at a rate of speed equal to sh that of a similar sized propeller- &b driven vessel. The advantage . of this method of propulsion lies in the fact that, having neither pro- ev peller nor wheel, these appendages cannot become entangled in wreckage, thus endaugering the stability of the br boat. mi The Queen carries a crew of nine 'Jjj and oan oarrv fortv passengers. She 0f can barn either ooal or liquid fuel and lias been thoroughly tested by the officials of the Lifeboat Association. . Sh is stationed at New Brighton.? ou New York Journal. thi ltr A Carious Case of Snmjjglinir. in< A curious cases of smuggling has ?? been disoovered by the Government m? officials on the Mexican border. In gl< May last, when the land about Nogales *n was declared subject to entry, a man |iv located a town site directly on the Tt border line between fthis country and an, Mezioo, and built a honse so that the front doors was in American territory wi and the baok in Mexico. Goods un- we loaded at the Mexican door were sent D0 1 -1 at-? a ? jaaw ilina ava/1. 9^ OQl til 1)11(3 AXUOnUltU UUUi J vuuo v v MV4ing the customs duty. The case was *go reported to the Government, and the ey land office has now cut off the operations of this enterprising man by deoiding that no town site may be located there unless there is a street run- J tjlng along the border line.?Detroit fj1 Free Press. joj Gr Made Blind by m Fright. tin While on her way home from Union no Hill a few evening ago Mrs. Henry j\b. Schaffier, of West Hoboken. N. J., jnj stumbled over a carcass of a horse, lty whioh lay in the street. She fell to the ground, and when she discovered ?0D' what'had thrown her she was com- 9tr pletely unnerved. While riding home pr< in a trolley car she was seized with a "T fainting spell and had to be assisted to her home. She recovered sufficiently to inform her husband of what 1 had caused her illness. Several limes that night she was seized with faint- inj. ing spells. The next day she was un- nr< able to spoak or to get out of bed. A co! high fever set in and in a short time ?5e her eyesight began to fail. Soon she cai was totally blind.?Trenton (N. J.) American. silt In Fainting Spell*. cul Whatever the cause nominally of a of fainting spell, it should be remem- <T bered that specifically it is due to an absence of blood in the brain, and the first thing to do is to remedy this de- Ne feet. The head should at once be placed lower than the rest of the body, 1 so that the deficit may be restored by circulation. If the patient is sitting in a chair this is easily done by tilting , gCi the chair so that the head of the ox< patient rests gradually on the floor. There should be no crowding of people pj, about the patient, and fresh air should oit be freely admitted into the room at la once. Then dash oold water in the ^ face and apply salts to the nostrils.? <oc Boston Cultivator. th< 0 OD'S MESSAGE TO MAN. :EGNANT THOUGHTS FROM THE WORLD'S GREATEST PROPHETS. ?? Lends a Spell?The Autnmn of Life ?The Secret of Gladness- Mutt Look Beyond the World ?Give Thanks In Everything:?Psalms of Gratitude. Is within the hazel's bough gift of mystic virtue dwells, lat points to golden jres below, ind in dry desert places tells iVhere flow unseen the cool, sweet wells,? ?o, In the wise Diviner's hand. Be mine the hazel's grateful part, i feel, beneath a thirsty land, The living waters thrill and start, The beating of the rivulet's heart! ufflceth me the gift to light With latest bloom the dark, cold days; > call some hidden spring to sight rhat, In these dry and dusty ways, Shall sing its pleasant song of praise. I Love! the hazel-wand may fail. But thou canst lend the surer'spell, iat, passing over Baca's vale, Repeats the old-time mlraole, And makes the desert-land a well." ?Mrs. S. E. Kennedy, In Zion's Herald. Tito Autumn of Life. ro the eyes that can see and hearts that n interpret there is more wealth of mean; and more real wlnsomeness in the chaste d charming colorings of an October wood an in the blossoming orchard of May. 3*he ring's loveliness is all garnered in aumn. and a thousandfold more. The one gromise, the other fulfilment?the one a eate and transient beauty, the other the iding richness of matured character, tere is more of usefulness and infinitely >re of hope and 'joy in the culminating aries of the ripened year than in the Dom of spring, even as there is more to tisfy and delight .in the perfected e of an aged saint than in the imitive maturity of the . child, i associate advancing age with decrepi- . de and discontent, feebleness and petu nee. is to rob life of its rioheat sweetness, pe old age Is rather the richness and irmth ana brightness of the resplendent if. The true life appears when its mateil robe is about to complete its transient inistry. The spirit's radiance then capres the physical until its own sweetness d saintllness finds some measure of adeate expression, and prophesies by its diae transfiguration of its diviner destiny, iture given no surer foregleama. of man s mortal glory than in the unspeakable lendors of an October day. Her revelains unveil the infinite. Paul's paradox is oven true?the invisible things of God are jarly visible through the things that are ide.?Eev. Dwight Mallory Pratt, In Conegationallst. The Secret of Gladness. Although I cannot say to myself "Now 1 u De iziaa, ana cannot attain to joy uy a jvemont of the will or direct effort, though It is of no use to say to a man? lich Is all that the world oan ever say to m?''Cheer np and be glad," whilst you da >t alter the faots that make him ssd, there a way by which we can bring about feelgs of gladness or of gloom. It is jast la?we can choose what wa ill look at. If you prefer to occupy ur mind with the troubles, losses, disftfH intments, bard work, blighted hopes of Is poor, sun-ridden world, of course sadss will ccme over you often, and a general ay tone will be the usual tone of youi es, as it is of the lives of atony of us, , oken only by occasional bursts of foolish irth and empty laughtpr. Bat if yoa oose to tarn away from all these and insad of the dim, dismal, hard present sun yourselves in the light of th? t unrisen sun, which you can do, en, having rightly chosen the sub>tn to tbink about, the feeling wil/ me as a matter of coarse. Yoa cannot t*e yourselves glad by, as It were, laying >ld of yourselves and lifting yourselvei 10 gladness. but you can rule the direction your thoughts, and so can bring around u summer in the midst. of winter, bj :adlly contemplating the fact?and the] 0 present facts,though we talk about then Ueotively as "the future"?the facta or tioh all Christian gladness ought to b< sed. Give Thanks in Everything. Am I to thank Ood for everything? Am ] thank Him for bereavement, for pain, foi verty. for toil? Must I lift my hands ovei y dead and say: "Father, I thank Thee at Thou hast taken away my friend?' it pleasing to my Father that lost ould be pleasant to me? Is it good that 1 ould be told to give thanks foi erything? Be still, my soul, thou hast sread the message! It is not to givi auks for everything, but to give thanks is erything. It is not to praise Ood tor th< ght, but to bless Him that the night is not eper. I have read of the 8on 'of Mao at He gave thanks OTer the symbol of Hil ; oken body. Not for the pain, but for th? ligation of pain, did the Son of Man giv< inks?not that His body was broken, but at it was" broken for me. In thine hout sorrow give thanks like Jesus.?Matheson Knit Look Beyond the World. K. picture which has no sky in it is witht the highest beauty. ''It is the'horizon at gives dignity to the foreground." A o without sky in it is most unworthy and complete. A man who sees only bondf d stocks and deeds, bales of goods and )cks of houses, stores and faotorles and | tcblnery and chimney tops, with no jams, above and beyond all these, of star* d blue skien and a Heavenly Father's faoe, not living as an immortal being .should e. There is no sky In his vision of life lis world is very beaatiful in Its place, dOod means us to enjoy it axd do faithI, earnest, and beautiful-work in it; but it only one little part oI our Father's house, hen in our thinking, planning and doing i do not look beyona this world, we are t living worthily. Wben wd lose the sky t of our life-vision the glory fades trow The only, secret of spiritual safety and od in prosperous times is in keeping the 0 fixed on heaven.?J. B. Miller, D. D., in Ivery Day of Life." Psalms of Gratitude. V psalm which cultivates the spirit of atitude is a psalm which we ought often read. If we were more gateful both oui r and our strength would be increased, atitude is born in hearts which take the je to count up post mercies. If we cant sing about them, we can at loast think out them. Thinking about them is a "??o 9 cv~n/iq Xfo/litafino An 'a Hani. Wi gtnvv. V? w ?v? js with us begets in us a spirit of humil. It leads us to magnify the pronoun 'hou," and cultivates a feeling of dependce and trustfulness which is a fountain of ' and strength Not only happy but ong is the man who, in the midst ol jsperity, can look Godward and say, hou hast girded me."?C. E. Jefferson. Life Not a Mere Playground. Life is ample as eternity. Beginnings ine are here. Life is enjoying, but life is o achieving. To lie by brooklets dream; in the nun is not life at its best. We <i to do. We are parts of hi?torj\ We ne and pass but leave a.shadow and footnt where we trod. We change the world came to. . . . Make self a prince, a sr'nty memory on whose wings the ages ill be upborne. Achieve ! Life is more in playground. It is harvest-field and tie-field. It is a place to sufTer and bear ?nt sorrow, a- d exert the effort of a Heres, and know the prose of toil and poetry battle.?Rev. William Quayle, D. D., in he Poet's Poet." UNMAILABLE ADVERTISEMENTS. wipapors Exploiting Prize Scheme? to Be Excluded Prom the Stalls. rhe Post Office Department at Washingi has notified Postmaster Van Gott, o[ w York City, that newspapers and other rlodioals containing advertisements of lemes offering prizes by ohance will be rinded from the mails. The order farther '? *??' nnnnmnlntArl vrnrda iloh the contestants are to solve by aupnthe missing letters: V?E??A, a Austria ; 0?P?N?A?EN, a city beamark, etc. It Is a mere matter ot ance whether the competitor selects the >rds designated by tha promoter as the oreot Liat/ a?d apon tfis selection hugs 5 ohanoe of obtaining the prise." \H"- b :y.".v-ffs I-H*ms&r ' ' ' ;2 V-> * V. ."v* " * . THE SABBATH SCHOOL, i INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS Tf PAO nCACUOCD OX rvn k/bwbiiiswn aui Lesion Text: "God's Love In the Gift of Hli T1 Son," I John It., 9-16 (Christmas Lotson)?Bead Luke II., 1.20?Commentary by the Ker. D. M. Stearns. "1 The lesson committee baying given the choioe of this as a Christmas lesson instead of the quarterly review, doubtless w the .majority will prefer this to'the review, and a? the quarter has taken us over the ry last stages of Paul's sojourn in the mortal body and given us his oft repeated, testi-' ( mony that he was ready to die for Christ B it is not aside from'the main thought of the review to turn to Him who died for us tt ?11 o./I moa Ka?? In PofkloVoM + K.+ ITo Ul Oil QUU TT CkO UUIU 1U UObU^DUUUi WLIOW UO might die on Calvary, the just for the unjust. 9. "In this was manifested the love of >? God toward us, because that God sent His only begotten Son into the world that we might live through Him." In ehapter Hi., 7] 16, it is written, "Hereby perceive we*the love of God, because He laid down His life yj for us, and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren." In Bom. v., 8. it is, "God commendeth His love toward us in that while we were yet sinners Christ died Aj for us." At the Christmas time, when all are. merry and send gifts to each other as w they talk and sing of Him who was born in Bethlehem, do we stop to consider what it cost Him to leave His home in glory and become a helpless babe in Mary's .^rins or .Whatitoost His Father, God, to give Him ,?r up to this humiliation unheard of before . in the history of all worlds as far as we know? ' a. 10. "Herein is love, not that we'loved , God, but that He loved us and sent His S1 Son to be the propitiation for our sins." Oh, the depth of meaning In that phrase^ "propitiation for our sins!" See Him in Gethdemane sweating, as It were, great M drops of blood. Hear Him on Calvary ory out, "My God, my God, why bast Thou G] forsaken He?" ana talk not ot Livingstone, for Africa, or Llnooln (or America, or a mother for her ohild as an analogy or in any way illustrating His sufferings for as. It is next to blasphemy so to do. His sufferings for onr sins as far exceeded all suffering earth ever saw as heaven Is higher > than earth and God's thoughts higher than, ours. He who knew no sin was made sin . for ua. The Lord laid upon Him the in- r* iquity of us all. It pleased the Lord to bruise Him. He. was wounded for. our transgressions. -Who can measure the sig- 0 niflcanoe of suoh statements? 11. "Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought also to love ene another." How . often we have read and heard "God so loved j" us," and we are glad that He so loved iv us as to provide eternal redemption freely for us even at suoh a cost. But what do if we know about loving one another and ^ laying down our lives for the brethren? Do we not often know more about hating one another, or at least 'disliking one an-. ? other? I speak of Christians so called. ? And as to loving the heathen in Africa or * China or Japan or India, or the Islands of t the sea, or the poor Eskimos for Christ's ^ sake?what do wa know or it? ta 12. "No man hath sees God at any time, j. If we lote one another, God dwelfeth In V( as, and His love is perfected in as." It is *L also written in John i., 18: "No man hath ^ seen God at any time. The only begotton ? 8on which is in the bosom of the Father, He bath declared Him." We cannot know m God exoept as we know Him 4n Christ. tn When Philip said to Him, "Lord, show as th the Father," He answered, "He that hath _ seen Me hath seen the Father." God was m in Christ. We who have received Christ te and are saved by- His precioaa blood are <t saved in order that Goa may dwell in as manifestly and be seen in our words and n works. There 1s nothing that manifests at God quite so mach as love?the love that BI was seen in Christ and is bo fally described in I Cor. xili. Let the children at this' w Christmas time be taught that He who tB dwelt in the little babe of Bethlehem will th dwell in them and manifest His love in w them. " . Ill 18. "Hereby know we that we dwell in Him and He in as, because He hath given us of His Spirit." The flnt fruit of the j Spirit Is love ("G&l. vi, 23), and love seem UI to include all the rest, and love is the fulfilling of the law. Notice that as' freely as i0 He save His Son He also elves His Spirit, hi And if we are not filled with His Spirit it can only be because oar hearts are not open to Him, and if onr hearts are not M open to Him if is because we have not be- an held as we might.and should His great ^ love to us in Christ; the love that spared on not His own Son, but delivered Him up for th us all, and will with Him also freely give ^ as all things. pa 14. ''And we have seen and do testify bli that the Father sent the Son to be the ? Saviour of the world." As the angel said ^ to the shepherds at His birth, "Behold I th bring you' good tidings of great joy, whioh y shall be to all people'* (Luke il., 10). The Father did not send Him to be the Saviour |n of a few, but of all who will oome to Him. ^ The time will come when all Israel shall re be saved, and after that alt Nations, but in a , this age the gospel is to be given to all the to world, that all who will may believe, and te: thus His body be completed from out of all Qe Nations. He is therefore calling upon us [n who believe to show these things to all the QC world as quickly as possible. What are we q, doing about it? 15. "Whosoever shall confess that Jesus is the Son of God, God dwelleth In him .and heln God." According to John x., 33, 86, the Jews understood the Son of God to be wl annul nrtth find, and Jesus SO taught DC and said: "Though ye believe not Me, tn believe the works; that ye may know ana qi believe that the Father Is In Me and I in a i Him." To receive Jeans as Ood our Sav- ra lour Is life eternal, and makes us to be h? His dwelling place. Our works should gc plainly deolare that Ood Is in us, and this th should be our constant aim and desire. If Hi it is really so, He will work In us that which he Is well pleasing In His sight. How wonder- sa ful that to be saved we only need to be at willing to come to Him, and to live a life mi to His glory we need only to yield willingly ag and fully to Him, and He will by His Spirit do it. of 16. "And we have known and .believed lb the love that Ood hath to us. Ood is love, w< and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in pr Ood and Ood in him." We certainly oan- as not comprehend His love, and we are not w< required to, but we know it from His word, th and we can believe it. Some day we shall mi be able to comprehend with all saints what th is the breadth and length and depth and height of it (Eph. Hi., 18), but now we can ap each one for himself believe that it is broad m enough to take in even me; that it is as pa long as eternity; that it is deep as from an heaven to Calvary and high as from my on lost condition up to the throne of Ood. lej Believing this and thus our oneness with Him to all'eternity, we will want to make it known to all people, and thus hasten the bo consummation of peace on earth under to ~ T-l-i aim.?ijessoa neiper. ? mi I ?8 JAPANESE GIRL AT YALE. gj Miss Yamaffuchi,a Student at the Unlver-. til slty, Wears Her Natlve^Costume. Yale University has for the first time In its history a Japanese girl as a student. . Miss Yoshi Yamaguchi and her brother, IT Leliehi Yamaguohi, have come from Kioto, Ar Japan, to complete their education. Both ?5 have studied at the Doshisba University, one of the leading colleges of Japan. Miss Yoshi intends to make a specialty of English and music under Professor Cook and Professor Parker. The girl is at her sister's home, in Washington street. Mr. c/ Yamaguchi is rooming ;at West Divinity. He expects to be at New Haven for four or five years and to study economics in the , classes of Professors Haaley and Sumner. The first appearance of the Japanese girl on the Yale campus attracted much atteution. She wears her native costume. Her "'""i kinrtl' hnfr Hhs close to her head and 8 i Is very gl09sy. She has bright red cheeks ge and is short fn stature. Her manners are refined and pleasant. Her brother Is very ho enthusiastic over Yale. ar ch A Demand For Meat Inspectors. in1 The Agricultural Department, Washington, Is finding difficulty In supplying the ?r demand from the live stock centers for In- De spectors required to exAtnlno the dressed meats for shipment, There has reoently by been a very pronounced Improvement In is the European market for Araerloan meats, on whloh the law requires shall be. inspected is before it is ahluDed. and as a consequence is Inspectors are oalled for from C&ioaRO, 8t?. va Louis, Kansas City, Omaha and other on Western points. TEMPERANCE COLUMN' ' : HE DRINK EVIL MADE MANIFEST] IN MANY WAYS. .y U ie Train Wrecker?The Erlll of Social Drinking?Earneit and Convincing Words of a Member of the English Parliament?Preserve the Desir Boys*' Chere 1b danger aheadl" Throngb the! darkness of night, HarkI a voice full of anguish Is callings ho con blame the brave heart lor its mo-1 ment of fright, ~ , hile the far-reaching gleam; of the engine's headlight On. a vision of horror is falling? ; .< ; it the hand at the throttle doe* not falter or fall; i nr^rinvn CAM fhAlAVAr fhAtKrhthA/thAAk* '1" may turn pale V" At' the thought of a death soappalllng. r |here Is danger aheadl" See, each mo- ' ment more near; . God of meroyl how fast they are going.; / hough the brake on the wheels grate harsh on the ear, hile the echoing valleys and hills, far and! . near, Catoh the sound of the shrill whistle'* blowing. ad the onlooker questions Kwlthf ear-bated'' .jri breath; :WS| ill they stop or ga.ddwn -in-thb river of death; That so near at the momantjeema flowing? . v * * * * * ?.* * mere is danger aheadl'V,,flushing swiftly*. along, Our Bepublio drives onward, unheedingJ - '-^c 3d of lovel is there none to arouse the mad throng? tail no cry reach their ears midst th? laugh, jest and song? i Are they deaf to all warning?all plead* tag? a i ighty God! give the strength; give the) courage we laok. | [ve us courage to hurl the Bum Power . from the traolc. Bare Thine arm; give the power we are] needing. < ?Thomas Sullivan, in Barn's Horn, Social Drinking. Sir James Haslett, member of. Parliament r Belfast, syeaking at a meeting recently >ld in London, presided orerfty^he prea- , -r it Archbishop pf% Canteqbpry, gave the llowlng Important testimony, ynlch we tmmend to the statesmen and public men the United States:. ... "My Lord Bishop, it Is with very great easure that I rise to propose th&t the -*5 Mt thanks of this meeting be given to yet* r presiding on this occasion. I think youi . J-fi e the right man In the right place. Thei lurch muat lead if we are to have a1 ialthy influence in society. As a strangers nongst you, I have had very great pleas-1 e in hearing all that has been said in retv/i fn fnfnl aKefinnnnm T havA nAVAW sted drink. And, what possibly Is not an isy matter, I have never offered It to hers. The greatest difficulty we have Is the soolal Intercourse of life?to enter- - in publicly, as a public man, without . inking. So strong are social habits that ,V. m have raised against you all the eapons that satire and evil oomunlcation can possibly flild. . Ton a called 'mean5 ana 'Niggardly.' id a hundred other things* I think y lord, that the change must come from \e women. They must aot as a lever in is matter, though I do not know very all how they are to ^o it. It wias one of 1 y duties, as the Majbr of Belfast; to erirtain the representative of royalty, and was a difficulty with me how I could do without drink, Unfortunately, the Lord] ' :eutenant dropped upon me just the week ter I was appointed. That difficulty was eater, I think, that I might have been >le to withstand; but I ^had then my wife Ithme, and she said, 'Well, you had bet- . r resign your office,' We carried iti , i rough at best we could. -I trust that the collection of that may still brighten her . > A 'e in-the other world. But it Is the diffiilty of soolal life that you must seek to1 travel. You eannotdo itby legislations >; :? am bound to say that when I waited >onthe Lord Lleutenaift and told himl ."M! K)ut my difficulty, he said, 'My dear felw, I would only spit upon you if you sacIced your principles.' Lord Londonderry is too muon of a gentleman to seek that II ouldln any way lower myself, and IfeltJ an old Sabbath-school teaaher, working! aongst the young, and addressing meetgs all my lire, that if I had then put drinlq i the table I would have sacrificed all} at I had ever done. Hy Lord Bishop, ltj not an easy thing to aot thus. I nave* ssed through a recent election, and my) tterest enemies were those who 1 soldi Ink. It has been sala in Ireland that thef adiest way to a man's intelligence laf rough his stomach. It is wonderful how} ndly we are disposed after we get our oner. It has unqt*estionably an immense Huence; and there is a large class In our: untry ot v&om tt may oe saia tnai sn? sdiest way to their Intelligence 1b through glass of beer or spirits. Ton have that! fight against. During my recept const, and daring a oontest ten years ago, I ver had at the election committee meet- - lij ga one drop of strong drink. If we oan-> it carry an eleotion without--It, then, in id's name lot us surrender." 1'iwtrre the Boys. Durlng an aotive temperanoe revival, in| ; iloh the Order of Good Templars was es- ':: ; :cial ly active, the depression In the Uquorj afflc in a certain New England city was lite marked. A prominent dealer said to friend: "Bankruptcy seems to be staring) ' . ^ J s in the face, for moat ot my customers ive either Joined the Good Templars or , me to the House of Correction, ana som?-< ing must be done to save my business.'* , \ 9 proved himself eqaal to the needs of th? . jflM or. by renovating and decorating hlM loon, and in varloos ways making It sof naar iiMtn A# VAnnM ' i lirdUUTO 09 kvi aouuio n www v*v|/ ? j- "Of f "1, 9n as his customers, sad abundant moneyf :ain flowed to his ooffers. I -J. The Nation spends hundreds of mllllond i. v dollars aDnually upon the education o? i boys and girls, in order, id" swore aj Drthy oitizenshlp. The,Christian oburohi ays and tolls and sacrifices, that the boya id girls may become Christian men and) jmen. But the ram-shop ""can 'live onlyj" rough the baffling of all Christian, hu-> ' unitarian and eduoatlonal effort to rear . i e young In the ways of wisdom. /Lnd the Nation not only looks on, in J lathy, while the vast procession of young an Is being wlokedly diverted from the ith that leads to virtue, honor, hea|fh, id prosperity, into that path that leads dy to degradation and death, but it gives gal sanction to the work of the. emiffriea of Satan. Reader! it may be only your neighbor's iy to-day, but it Is likely to be your son -morrow, li you ars coo seiosu 10 muu the public welfare, we beg you 'to reember that your own boy bus no security aInst the enemy that Is on the lookout r him. The liquor-seller want# boys, and ill have them if existing conditions con- ' iae A BleMed Change. Temperance people in England are notg with muoh gratification the fact that e present Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. smple, has dispensed with the use of Ines at Lambetb Palaco, where during al) ilscopal regimes since the Reformation ch refreshments have been habitually rved. This is just what was to have been :pected from as staunch a friend of tern- ' trance as Dr. Temple Has long suown mself to be. Temperance Now and Notes. The little principality of Waldeok, inOerany, has forbidden the granting of marige licenses to habitual drunkards. rt isn't the drop in the wages that hurts man so much as the drop he takes after tting his wages. That's what drops him. Drink destroys tho serene and peaoeful ippiness which a mother feels, who see? ound her sober and loving and respectful ildren. Scientific temperance instruction is to b? troduced into Queensland, Australia, ts of approved physiologies have been dared for examination, and all steps wilt taken as rapidly as possible. A. little fellow, in response to a question! his teacher, said, "The Monroe doctrine^ knowinor what Is vour own and holding i to it." I think that the Monroe dootrina a good temperance doctrine. Know what your own and hold on to It. Know thai lue of the mind Ood gave you and holdj i to It.?Rev. Dootor Conaty. .; '' ' ^"5 mi