&z Tfcnss I Dishonest grocers seldom resort to legal measures. It pays to be Rood; If yon get tn the penttenttary It shortens your term. A Berlin professor says that ham mering will curt a red nose. The beat ur la to quit The resident says that wealth ta not a bad thing. Who the deuce said It was? It'a the fellow that's got tt King Edward is wearing blue gog gles. He probably cannot stand the "fierce tight that boats upon the throne. Lawson says he Is educating the peo ple. He should remember that some people never learn unless experience la their teacher. A picture of Emperor William and bis five sons going to church could do duty any time as a anap shot of a military parade. Judge Tarker declares that "business and polities must be divorced." Yea, and they shouldn't be allowed to mar ry again within a year. Channcey M. Depew says he got 120,000 a year from the Equitable for giving advice freely. Most people are willing to do that for nothing. A Nova Seotian paper says Canada has enough land to give each Inhabit ant 400 acres.. We may add that she could throw In enough Ice to last till the millennium. Employes in the Panama sohe are to be supplied with meaus of healthful recreation. Heretofore they have had to amuse themselves with hammers and typewriters. An early copy of Shakspeare's "Rich ard III." was sold In London the other day for $8,750. Some day people may be paying fancy prices for Cyrus Townseud Brady's books. A South Carolina trust magnate com mitted suicide after stealing $500,000. Any ordinary man who had annexed that amount would think that life was Just beginning to be worth living. Cbauncey M. Depew Is several times a millionaire; he has a Job that he can neglect whenever he wants to without being docked, and he has a beautiful young wife. It will be a shameful waste of time to sit around and pity Chauncey. An Interesting new profession has been devised by a young man in Paris, who offers his services as "fourteenth" at dinners and house parties where the guests unexpectedly prove to num ber thirteen. He advertises himself as a brilliant conversationalist, too; but would not brilliancy be wasted on peo ple who are so superstitious as to hire him? The San Francisco Argonaut snys we have the funny spectacle of live members of a fraternity at Berkeley falling to pass their examinations and the Japanese cook who waited upon them graduating with honors." We fail to see the amusing part of the Incident In fact It is not even strange. The Jap meant business. The other fellows went to college because It Is fashionable. According to a student of current events, It Is an eneousnging sign of im proved business morality that the words "thief and "stealing" are being used these days in place of ' "defaulter" and "misappropriating." The trouble Is, however, that the thing for which these words stand do not become per ceptlbly rarer. Calling a spade a spade Is all right but it does not affect the existence of the spade. The amount of sleep needed by a boy during the first two or three years of his school life was discussed at the conference of the Parents' National Educational Union held In London a few weeks ago. A distinguished phy eiclan, Dr. T. Dyke Acland, said that the result of a correspondence with all the great public schools In England, forty In number, such as Eton, Rugby and Westminster, and with four slmt lar schools in America, led him to the conclusion that from nine to ten hours' Bleep was essential to the healthy growth of young boys. He added that only two of the English schools came up to the highest standard in this re spect whereas all four of the Ameri can schools reached it Some time ago, when President Had ley of Yale suggested the social boy cott as an effective means of bringing men to a sense of their duty, serious questions were raised as to whether the author of the suggestion knew what he was talking about But iu bringing Philadelphia Oouncllmeu to time In the tight against the gas steal the social boycott proved the most ef fectlve of measures. Ouo Councilman agreed to turn away from the machine only when his wife took to her bed from the effects of the averted faces of her neighbors and former friends. Another saw the light only when his ehlldreu came crying from school with the story that none of the other chil dren would play with thetu or eveu speak to them. Another gave In wheu, upon requesting that he lie allowed ro lead the Memorial day procession i his wan!, he was told that an honest man would be given that honor. Merchants In Eugland and Wales arc happy over the fact that the great re ligious revial Is causing people to pay their debts. Here Is a substantial good result of religious enthusiasm which even the hardest-headed materialist must acknowledge. Missionary work In heathen lands makes good customers for the products of civilisation. It has long been recognised that In a broad way, the dollar In the missionary box is the best Investment the business man can make. And now the English and Welsh merchants are learning that money given In support of revivalists comes back multiplied many times. The mystery of some people's financial irresponsibility has never been fath omed. They may be the soul of con science In-every respect but this. Per haps they uever get a dollar's worth of any commodity without a firm in tention to pay for It But somehow they never do pay for It and all the while the thought of not paying for it Is harassing and even shocking to them. There Is needed an authorita tive psychological study of the resp-v table, well-meaning "deadbeat" Prob ably no one on earth save a bishop of the English church would have been found to object to the revival which began in Wales and Is spreading In England on the ground that It Is caus ing people to pay their debts. The bishop of Carlisle, in a recent address, expressed his scorn of this sort of con version and Intimated that the nmn whose moral sense had not already made him honest was a doubtful acqui sition, under an emotional impulse, to any religious organization. A man, he said, should be honest up and down and through and through. A "religion of emotion and crocodile tears" might cause the man who was not thus hon est to pay his debts, but It would hard ly transform him Into a person of real conscience. The idea of the man who Is as religious out of church as In It and who never required conversion to prevent his buying things that he had no serious intention of paying for is at tractive. . There are many auch men. Yet it Is easily to be fancied that the merchants and shopkeepers, of what ever faith or moral system, are pleased when they see the revivalists pricking dulled consciences and causing long standing accounts to be. settled. In spite of the adverse opinion of the bishop of Carlisle, the commonly ac cepted Tlew among level-headed busi ness men must be that the conversion which causes "deadbents" to pay their debta Is a first-rate kind of conversion. The convert who takes time from his praying to hunt up and square his ac counts may not stand the highest with the bishop, but he makes a hit with all the rest and no doubt a harp al ready tuned awaits him on high. Rare Collection of Pendant. Any collection that Mrs. Johu "It. Drexel undertakes to make Is bound to be worth looking at and the assort ment of pendants which she bus re cently gathered proves to be no ex ception, snys the Philadelphia ' Press. So beautiful are many of the speci mens that there Is often a suspicious ly greenish glitter In the eyes of nor friends who are privileged to behold them, which Is not due to the reflec tion cast by Jade or emeralds, either. Some of them are plain gold, valuable for their various chasings, while oth ers are fashioned as flowers, with pet als of tinted enamel and Jeweled cen ters. On one' little purple velvet cushion, lying peacefully side by side, Is a Japanese figure carved In jade and a little design cut In ivory which represents a peasant in sabots pushing a wheelbarrow filled with little blue stones. This Mrs. Drexel picked up In Russia. Pendants are perhnps . the most favored form of Jewelry this sea son, so this collection, besides being a delight to look upon, can be put to practical purposes, providing the wear ing of such Jewels can come within the meaning of a practical purpose. Criminal Law In China. If a Chinaman dies while being tried for murder, the fact of his dying lg taken as evidence of his guilt He has departed, but somebody must suffer, and his eldest son, If he has one, Is therefore sent to prison for a year. If he has no son, then bis father or brother gets a flogging. It's all In fhs family, and somebody has to pay for it A colored woman weighing three hundred pounds, was on the streets to-day with her sleeves rolled pp to I her elbows: In the latest style. W, -J vb , '.f 1 1,11,1 TttK OTilEH U mK Ml IPS. By Iter, poesltl Sags Maciar. Text "And there were also with him other little ships." Mark 4: 30. We don't ofteu think ot these otner little ships that were boating through the storm that night on Galilee. We have, Indeed, thought of the aiscipios turning at lust in tho panic of despair to the worn and weary Jesus asleep, "Master, carest Thou uot that we per- lhl" Hut how many of us nave ap preciated this little touch lu Mark's description. "There were also wun Him other little ships!" Out yoiuier, where tho mist mantled tho tumultu ous waters like a wraith of death, there were "other little ships," each lighting Its own way for life. There was no Clirlst aboard, to whom, In the supreme moment ot peril they could turu for help. Wheu Christ spoke the wom ot nenco the calm brought safety not only to Ills Immediate followers: It was sham! also by "the other little ships." In other words, what the Master did directly for one He did indirectly for a great many others. The blessings or His neac were not confined to the men who had Invoked Ills help. These blessings wee diffused across the sui l..n w nters. so that when the storm was over It was riot one, but many ships that, with thankful hearts aboard, sailed Into the harbor beneath the hill, delivered from the perils of the deep, safe home ot last These other little ships remind. us of the unseen comradeships In life. We are not alone In the storms of life. With vou thnmrh vou mav not know It, there are other souls fighting the same kind of battle through sorrow and temntatlon: and In their courage and endurance you ought to find a certain Inspiration. Wonderful Is this ministry of the unseen sympathy of life. It Is good for us. surely, once In a while, to be reminded of It and to end acroaa the waters a friendly cry. and hold up, perhaps, a kmdly light through the driving mirk. These other little ships remind ns also of the unseen fellowship tn death. No wonder that the soul shrinks from the loneliness of that Journey. .Yet again there are the other little ships. Every moment there are other souls passing out Into the darkness of that great sea of eternity. And over them is the light of God's love; and it need not be lonely for you and me If In trust on Christ we take that last voyage of human life. When that brave soul, Cnarles Klngsley, lay dying In one room, and his wife dangerously 111 In another, she sent him a message one day. to ask If he thought It cowardly for a noor soul to tremble before the mys- terv of that unknown world. "Not cowardly." was his response; "but, re member, It Is not darkness we are go ing to, for God is light; not loneliness, for Christ is with us." And what are we, In that Inst experience of life, but like those other ships who, will make port nt last because of One who was with them, and before whose presence even the shadows of death melt Into radiant light? SCIENCE AND ItELlOION. ny Sir Ollrer lodge. Text "The heavens declare the glory of (od and the firmament show eth His huudlwork." Psalm xix:l. There Is a great deal of misappre hension about the possibility of mind acting upon matter without upsetting the law of conservation of energy, if a living thing produces an effect or moves a body which would not other wise have been moved, It Is some times said that the life must be one of the forms -of energy, otherwise It could not interact with the material world and produce the energetic ef fects. My contention is that it does interact with the material world, and that It does not upset the law of con servation of energy. Railway rails always direct the course of the locomotive, now does the rail act? It acts by applying force at right angles to the motion of the body. The gravitation pqll of the sun on a planet keeps It moving In its orbit, but does not accelerate or re tard it simply curves.lt Energy blows the bellows of the or gan, but it is the organist who deter mines where the energy shall go. By harmonizing that energy In certain di rections the organist can produce music formerly conceived by the com poser and recorded In manuscript Life is the director of energy, not en ergy. So with engineering operations. The bridge Is built by the navvies. You might say the energy is In the tin cans lu which the navvies bring their breakfast But the direction of the energy Is In the mind of the engi neer, or the contractor, or uttmutely In the mind of the genius who con ceives the work. All men realise that truth Is the Im portant thing, and that to take rcfugo lu any shelter less substantial than the truth Is but to deceive themselves, and become liable to abject exposure when a storm comes on. ' Most men are aware that It is a sign' of unbal anced Judgment to conclude on the strength of a few momentous discov eries, that the whole structure of re ligious belief, built up through the ages by the developing human race from fundamental emotions, and In stincts, and experiences rests on a sandy foundation or on no foundation at all. Everything In the universe may be come Intelligible If we go the right way to work. And so we are coming to recognise on tho one hand that every system of truth must be inti mately connected with the other, and that this connection will constlt,ute a trustworthy support as soon as It Is revealed by the extensive foundation of truth now being lnld by scientific workers w'll ultimately support a gorgeous building of aesthetic feeling and religious faith. KNOWMCIXiK FROM HTIt.LNF.Mft. Itf Her. frank CerssfJ. Text "He still and know that I am God." Psalm 40:10. It ts by quiet soul communion that we know "what manner of men wo are." "How easy we are deceived." The world flatters us and we, measur ing ourselves by ourselves, imagine we are of groat consequence. We look upon some achievement, some little success, and tn tho pride of our heart we feci like Nebuehadnesxar when ho beheld the magulflcauce of the royal city and exclaimed, "Is not this great Rahyloii, that I have built the house of the kingdom by the might of my power, and for the honor of my ma jesty?" But a few mouths away from the haunts of man and the activities of court life so restored the reason of this success Intoxicated king that he saw himself In a far different light. The loneliness of the mountain and quietness of the field now led him to say. "And at. the end of tho days I, Nebuchadnezzar, lifted up mine eyes unto heaven, and mine understanding returned unto me, and I blessed the Most High, and I praised and honored Him that llveth forever, whose domin ion Is an ever lasting dominion, , and His Kingdom la from generation to generation." Oh business man, distracted by fail ure, or Intoxicated by success, away to mountain, lake and stream. Go not to the fashionable summer resort, where the melodies of nature are mar red by tho music of men, but go rather where some primeval, forest murmurs perpetual praise. Where some quiet lake, nestled among th mountains re flects tho linage of the Divine. Find some spot hemmed In by granite rocks, that have never echoed a discordant note, and In the great audience cham ber of God get knowledge, self knowl edge that will make thee feel weak at first until thou dost remember th-it man was made ruler over all the earth, and that he Is a child of the Divine Father. And when thou dost hear nature's continual hum of praise, will burst forth In adoration, as did one of yore, who said, 'Tuto Thee, o God. do we give thanks, unto Thee do we give thanks for that Thy name Is near Thy wondrous works declare." Ah, lie down upon the grassy bank If need be, and In this silent temple stay, till tho stars look down, through the leafy trees, and from all nature thou dost catch a language not Intend ed for the ear, but for the. heart and In God's very presence "lie still and know." Thus often waiting before Him thou shalt be fitted for a fullex revelation of His divine power and glory, and shalt understand the promise of God '. through the prophet Joel when he said, "And It shall come to pnss afterward, that I will pour out My spirit upon all flesh; and your sons and your daugh ters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions and also upon the servants and upon the handmaids In those days will I pour out My spirit." Beloved, enter Into tho holy stillness and you shall know. Short Meter Sermons. ne knows little who comprehends all he knows. A short temper has the other kind of a tongue. The best way to clear your title to an estate In the skies is to pay your taxes on it now. The man who learns by his mistakes soon discovers that there la no gradu- atlng from that school. AMERICAN WOtvUN AND HOME. A Critic Hays Iks Former lias Abot Uhvit the Latter. I have not seen a single home In two great American cities, though I have visited many, says an oriental writer lu Public Opinion, The hearth has boon abolished, the radiator has taken Its place. The home Is without Its presiding deity the wise, affec tionate, self sacrificing mother, the true wife whose love for her husband was her best Jewel, whose devotion to all around her Insured peace and bar mony,.the very life of a home. And who has usurped the throne of this domestic deity? A lady partner who has agreed, before a church sltaf or In a registry office, to live together with the mau of her momentary choice, as long as it suits her or the man, In a suite ot rooms or a house for the purpose of enjoying and hunting ma terial pleasures. It Is a lady who has abolished the home ss a rello of a -barbs rotis age, and turned It Into sitting, talking and sleeping rooms with com fortable or luxurious conveniences, who khaa made over the kitchen and housekeeping to hired cooks ami maid servants or housekeepers to escape the bother of wordly worrits; In many , cases abolished it along with the home, preferlng to cat ready cooked foods In hotels and restaurants. It la a lady who tries to expiate the sin of her share In "race suicide" by caring more for a baby dog fed to square pro portions or a cat Indulged out of all proportions than for a human being It Is a lady who knows no more of bringing up children than she knows of keeping a house or cooking, both of which she hates. Hence children generally are either train! by nurses or governnssea or allowed to grow as wild as thy can tn character, their young. Impressionable minds being de prived of the character building In fluences of maternal love and Us life enduring lessons. This lady, this newest feminine freak of nature, Is responsible for much of the disastrous confusion In human society tn this laud. But who Is responsible for her being so? The men her father and husband. The father wishes her to eat well, look welt, sing well, be well educated and healthy, and full of fascinating man ners, so that she may catch a rich husband who, the mother hopes, would be as great a fool and as good a slave as her own. And when the fool and slave Is secured, she has a glorious ride on her mental automobile, whose wheels are her whims, whose steam Is supplied by htr vanity and her hus band's Indulgence, whose track Is self ishness, whose, destination Is moral rulo. RUINS OF 80UTH AFRICA. Italics Foand of the Vloeat Nalure Worahlplng Hhrlus Known to Mao, Richard N. Hall, who has given eight years to the study of the ancient monuments In southern Rhodesia, says that none of the hundreds of ruins baa been more than partially explored. Many Important rulna have been seen only by casual travelers, and the work 1 of unearthing only a part of the Great Zimbabwe area would be more than the labor of a lifetime. Still, researches have made great progress In the past few years. There are In Rhodesia no less than 800 distinct ruins and groups of ruins. Only a few scores of Uiese are entitled to rank as "ancient" Tho larger psrt of them probably do not date back of the thirteenth, four teenth and fifteenth centuries. There Is overwhelming evidence nt the Great Zimbabwe of tho ancient clvillsatiou and arts possessed by the builders of the earliest period. The Zimbabwe temple Is the finest and most Intact example of a nature wor shiping shrine known to the world. Its construction points unmistakably to some knowledge of geometry and as tronomy on the part of the builders. It Is quite certain that even the cruder methods of Zimbabwe of applying this knowledge, which was common to the ancient Semitic peoplea, were lmportod from the near east and did uot orig inate In southeast Africa. The right ascension of the sun, tho heliacal rbdng and the meridian pas sages of stars, are believed to have lcen noted at Zimbabwe. These an cient builders wero also past masters in the science of military defense, the walls showing that the builders wero military strategists of the highest or der. Their gold ornaments, finely de signed and engraved, could not have boon the work of an uncivilized people, and the hundreds of ancient gold mines show that they were skilled In metall urgy and picked out rich shoots, patches and pockets with marvelous cleverness. It Is estimated that from these widespread mines they extracted $375,000,000 of gold. Geographical Journal Overoome. Tlmson I never fainted away but once, and that was Just a few day ago. Slrason What was the cause? Tlmson My wife told me that she bad trained herself so she could walk through a store full of bargain counter sales wjtti her purse full of money and never buy a thing. Detroit Free Press.