: THT DATLY RRITISH WIC, SATURDAY, JUNE 12, 1900. democracy. The Huguenots and the Puritans were sufficient unto themselves and found no need of state help in founding their church gavernment. Fortified with Calvin's doctrines of the sovereignty of God and of law, they were equal to any political undertakizg. The monument will rest on historic ground in a public garden laid upon the line of a former wall of the city. In a view of Geneva S dated in 1654 §s seen a strong rampart built in Dangerous Calvin's day as a protection against Savoy. In the anxiety of the time eitizens, professors, and students contributed their labor to com- plete the defense, and the fortification became kniown as the "Wall of the Reformers." 'This was removed in the nineteenth century. A central group of figures on the monument will represent the reformers of Geneva itself, Farel, Calvin, Knox, and Beza. On either side will be representative men like Coligny, of France; William the Silent, of Holland; Oliver Crom- that is keeping men out of the ministry. It HEBREWS BACK TO THE LAND. GALL FOR MEX FOR MINISTRY is rather the small results too often seen : from laborious toil. Nothing breaks 3a man | Pointing to the Fulfilment of Prophecy--The in body and spirit like seeing small returns Propusitions Made. . for large expenditure. But the minister mast Christian. Herald. face disappointment. To Isaiah with his cal Intelligence has come of a movement of came the depressing accompaniment that his world-wide significdnce, pointing to the ful- preaching would not arouse and enlighten and | oo ent of prophecy. For several years two convert, but that heavy ears, and blind Ya influential Hebrew bodies--the Jewish Terri- and fat hearts would become still more - torial Organization, of London, of which Israel and blind and unresponsive under his preach} 7.,0.00 5s president, and the Jewish Coloniza- ing. But he weat and heroically did the bid-1 co "a ation, of New York, of which Jacob ding of God and succeeded in the truest sense- | or Schiff, the millionaire banker, is president-- ic ace d ailure And . . It needs heroic men 16 face apparent haily have been considering plans for Jewish coloni- at God's bidding. Five converts m five years 4 : zation on an extensive scale, i All Jewish was all that Bishop Thoburn could claim from | pees of this class, including the Jewish the first half decade of his mimstry in India. Colonization . Association, the Jewish German A man of less heroic spirit would not have} pope Society, the French Alliance of Jews returned after his first furlough. But after} 4 the Zionists, have been independent or- half a century of service he is rewarded by ganizations, although showing mutual interest being able to baptize a thousand in a day. ¢ {in plans for colonization. Several, after full 2 Men for the munistry must be men born of b xamination, were rejected as unsuited. These well, of England. God, called of God. and who have their MES} jnoluded propositions for a colony in British Proclaimed sage from God. A college equipment dO€S | gh Africa and also a scheme for coloni- Proc'aim True F atriotism. not give a man his message. It simply pre- lo ion in Palestine itself. The first was re To the Sons of England at Stratford Rev. pares him for a more effective delivery of his jected on account of climatic unsuitability and G. F. Salton preached. He pictured two kinds message. When God calls a man to preach 15h 0 Cecond because satisfactory concessions of patriotism, --the God-Save-the-King-Sort, He calls him to preach His Word.i And with | 14 not be secured from the Turkish govern- when a man fancies he is patriotic because he that word to preach no man need falter. Jere- | oy Under the new regime in Turkey, how- shouts the loudest, the kind of patriotism that miah pleaded that he was but a child and | 00" he question has assumed a different | follows a brass band and is shown by the could not speak. God's answer was, "Say not aspect. At a meeting of the Jewish Territorial naked sword and the rattle of musketry. This I am a child; for thou shalt go to all that 1 Organization the proposition to found a great kind of patriotism may be needed at times Sif : send thee, and whatsoever 1 command thee by prey colony in Mesopotamia was discussed but it is not the best patriotism. There is the of the day. It is not due to a dearth of men | thou shalt speak." Paul" told the Corinthian} =r oa 0 An official proposal by the new other higher and diviner patriotism based upon | that the matter has become so serious. Men | Christians that his preaching was not with Turkish government offered every facility for duty to empire and country and upon love for there are in the land in abundance. On every{ enticing words of man's wisdom, but in the Jewish colonization in Mesopotamia, on an ex- | our institutions; the patriotism, too, which is ; hand men are hunting work. Let an advertise- words which the Holy Spirit taught him. that tensive scale. It is proposed io equip. an, ex- world wide in sympathy. | ment appear in our daily papers that a position their faith might not stand in the wisdom of ploring expedition to Mesopotamia immediate. The great Napoleon was the smallest of of almost any kind is open and the office of the | men, but in the power of God. God's servant ly, and make the fullest investigation: There | Men because of his impoverished idea of hu- employer will be crowded with eager appli- | should ever be able to say in the words of will be ample room in the 55.200 square miles manity and his lack of love for anything but | cants. But Jet an appeal for men for the | [saiah, "The Lord hath given me the tongue} oi 1504 which Turkey means to turn over to | self. In the struggle against the tyrant, Eng- ministry and how few respond! of them that are taught that I should know the eolonists fof all who why Eo there, in- land was fighting for liberty and God gave her : how to sustain with words them that are. gino Russia's four missions of Jews. the victory through Nelson. And yet Nelson's| 1 1.9 neard of "Pruit-a-tives® and weary. He wakeneth morning by morning | The New York Jewish Colonization Asso- | patriotism was not the truest. "Fear God, | ne great success they were having in He wakeneth mine ear to hear as they that | coco has charge of the great*fund left by honor the King and hate the Frenchman like | all Stomach Troubles, and 1 decided are taught] The ear opened to hear and the Baron 'de Hirsch, increased to $55,000,000. An- the dickens," was the great admiral's motto. | to try them. To my surpiss, wa tongue lobsened 'to speak God's Word are | yimer powerful "financial coadjutor is Baron | When he saw no farther than his countrymen True t (hey aisy checked tle essential to true success in tie ministry. Edmund de Rothschild, of Paris, founder' of he fell short of truest and most divine patriot- | gomiting. I immediately beg@@ato im- But to-day the changes are rung on the need | the famous Jewish colonies in Palestine, some ism. This narrowed vision is apt to, develop preve, and In thee ay tor, 1 of men of leadership. The minister, like his | of which have been in Existence for a quarter into the spirit of militarism and jingoism, al- caticr and 1 a So ruit-a tives" and Master, must be a commander to his people. | of a century. David Wolfsohn, banker of | Wa¥s detrimental to every form of progress, . cured me. To be a true leader a minister must command | Cologne, is strongly in favor of the Mesopo- literary, commercial or religious. There is no Mrs. Austin Habnstoek the respect of his people by his life, his learn- | tamian plan. He is one of the Zionist leaders. place €or religion in militarism; for Christian-| wpeui-a-tives" are 60c a box, 6 boxes ing, his allegiance 'to duty and truth and. his | Besides, there are many other eminent Heb- ity has for its parish the whole world and no | gor $2.50, trial box 25c. Ad dealers or consecration to his calling fle must set the | rews of great wealth and influence in England, Christian patriotism will send brother warring | from Fruit a-tives Limited, Ota example. No man of small spirit or narrow | on the Continent, and in America, interested | against brother. : knowledge or lazy life need expect to lead. a | in the Zionist movement. There are in the The truer patriotism was that of Jeremiah people to a grander conception of the King- | United States alone 350 Zionist societies. Not | who had to speak against his. own country the dom of God and a fuller consecration to the | ess than $40,000,000 would be required to pro- prophesy of disaster and defeat but who stuck work of extending that Kingdom in the world. | vide irrigation for the section to be occupied to it though it had used him harshly. It is Jut how shall we get such commanding men? | by 'the proposed colony. Turkey has promised | NOt by hating other countries that we show Jesus has given us an exceedingly simple so- | to aid the colonists in various ways, and es- true patriotism. The flag in the heart is better lution for this practical problem. He tells | pecially not to interfere with internal affairs. than the flag on the coat lapel. The man will- us that God alone can call and send the men With the exception of Palestine, there is no | ng to live for his country deserves a thousand He needs, but that He has put the power df | country the history and traditions of which are | times more honor than one ready to die on procuring the supply in the h nds of His peo-} so dear to the Jewish heart as Mesopotamia. the battlefield. ple, and that power is prayer. "Tis God's to | Here, according to their sacred books, from call, equip and send, tis curs to plead in | which our Old Testament is drawn, the Gar- prayer. To His disciples Jesus said on one | den of Eden was located, in the beautiful re- occasion, when ITe hid ealted their attention }-gion--surrounded by four rivers, as described to the need of laborers, "The harvest truly is | in the second chapter of Genesis. Here were plenteous, but the laborers are few. Pray ye, | enacted the central scenes of the great Flood therefore, the Lord of the harvest that He | and here the Ark rested. Here, too, were the send forth laborers into His harvest." We | Plain of Shinar, the Tower of Babel, the cannot lay hold of men and thrust them forth | world-old city of Nineveh, and nearby is the into this great work. We might make grave | land of Ur of the Chaldees, whence Abraham mistakes if we should do this. But we can | came. Here, too, dwelt many of the Jews dur- lay hold of God, and by importunate prayer ing the Exile. Mesopotamia has been a theatre make it possible for Him to do what He could | of events. Great battles have been fought not otherwise do. upon its soil and it has witnessed the rise our com- | andifall of empires and the extinction of mand for getting men for the ministry? In dynasties. Now its geographical boundaries the ultimate analysis of the problem, Yes. fare smaller than in ancient times. 'Tt is bound- ut. we can do many things to help God to ed on the north and east by the Tigris River, answer our prayers. When the Church of | and on the south by the Euphrates; among Rome wants recruits for the priesthood she its richer' cities are Urfa, Mardin and Aleppo, seeks them at the source. She goes to the and it has hundreds of villages. It.is a beauti- home and asks for the boy, that she may take | ful country, well suited for. agrictlture and him and mould him to her diking. We, t00, pasture, and with Jewish energy and capital, must Wirn our attention to the home, not to and a liberal and tolerant government, it would 1 take the boy out of the home, but to help the | fulfil all the needs for successful colonization. F 0} 8 FQ 1h home to train the boy for the service of God, | The land proposed to be occupied could sup-{*~ 4 2 = disbelief a ¥ so that if God should want the boy to serve port a population of 10,000,000. Near the bor- of the nas} convincing proofs of their dis ot all | 24 5: 4 a N him in the ministry of the Gospel he will have der of Palestine, it would be a great step n utuciep 15 the complete struction bi re en- 1558 Re a preparation that will male it. possible for | nearer than ever to the accomplishment of tat belongs to the deceased--if a woman, <f 3 2 6 him to render an efficient seryice. Many of that national hope which burns: in the heart Ssiybasket; shellornaments, and fish-lines are [EF Seti the greatest of God's ministers have pointed of every son and daughter of Israel--the ulti- hrown into the Sea; if a man, his Wigwam ant ¢ N back to the home as the starting-point of their mate return to the land of their forefathers. fis lr NE aI oon 3 I iG HBTS 'Pyro To | but im our day culture is so common in the | consecration. Jeremiah could point back to Rea iad HO ous Bs Sven he ha ol tae b 0 1 Fs pew that, if the pulpit lacks it, a discount is] a pre-natal preparation for his work as a ea pein were a » and their canoes 4 put upon its ministrations. Culture, in its prophet. Samuel was dedicated to God before were split from end to end. 153) Any Ww 29 "Defective. . DE Se Buying Safely TEST ------------ NEVER BEFORE HAS THE LACK OF LABORERS BEEN SO GREAT. The Mission Boards Are Crying Out For Liborers For the Harvest--The Church Is Awaking as She Never Has Done Before. Avoided by Taking "Fruft-a-tives" Guelph, Ont. Aug. 6, 1808. 1 suffered for many months with - Stomach Trouble, with vomit- constant pain, and I ould nothing, "that I must go © scraping the stomach and be by the bowels for w: "All the 5 : gave me I vomited at once. farmed, but I dreaded 1 was a dreaded an operation and | Frederick E. Malott in the Christian Guardian From all quarters is coming the call for men | for the ministry. Never before has the lack of laborers seemed so great. "Where shall | we: get ministers to man our multiplying fields is the ery of Misgion Boards, As- | semhlies,sSynods and Conferences. The ques- | tion 3¢ as old as the days of Isaiah, the young | Judean patriot-prophet, who, in the year that King Uzziah died, had his vision of God, and | heard the voice of the Lord saying, "Whom { shall I send and who will go for us™ It is | God's question, and has been ever. To-day it | has become the question of the church as never | before, because the church is awaking as never {.before to a sense of her God-given mission to | evangelize all men the world over. New fields | of labor are opening up so fast in our own i land, and the foreign field is making such drafts upon our forces that the problem. of where to get men is the most pressing problem of labor?' Almost every calling seems to be ove rerowd ed but the ministry. In the nature of things it cannot be otherwise. We must the fact that the ministry is not merely one among other callings that all men may enter at will. The minister ought to be a man among men, but he must be something more. He ought to have the equipment required of men who enter other. professions, but he must have something That is why many men shrink back from offering themselves for the ministry, They feel that they not the gifts and the graces and the consecration for stich serions work. Over-sensitiveness has per- haps kept out some men who would have been a strength to the church, and she has at times been eompelled to recruit her forces from the ranks of men of inferior talent and imperfect preparation. This is to be deplored, for we need not only more men, but better men for the ministry. face No matter how stylish your clothes you'll never look right unless your shoes have a black] bright polish. Shine your shoes with POLO Polish. The shine comes quickly, easily--and lasts long. Polo tan polish CLEANS as wel as shines. All good grocers and shoeists sell POLO Shoe Polish they completely more have Five things are essential to the truest success of this calling. If wesare to have a command- ing ministry, the men who enter must be men of conviction. The preaching that comes from the soul has the greatest power to stir the "Good for leather souts of others. Fhe Se isier must _be__ex: | ceedingly sensitive in the matter of moral dis- Stands the weather" tinctions, and he must be perfectly fearless ..... A i, {in his allegiance to truth and duty. The ministry is no place for compromisers, men who, as Cardinal Newman puts it, "never enunciate a truth without guarding themselves from"being stipposed to exclude the contradic- tory." Such men may do for the political platform, but not for the pulpit. A professor of metaphysics listened one mérning in his A People With No Religion. While from the view of the anthropologist the Yahgan is an animist and polydaemonist, believing that spirits enter into and control the phenomena of nature, he has no religion in the general acceptance of the term. Here again that weird nature whose phenomena he has personified in his imagination has also by her exigencies dwarted his introspection. No word for "God," "Creator," or "pray" has ever appeared in his language, nor from any action, ceremony, or custom can a belief in these things be inferred. Among his superstitions he believes in an evil spirit which takes pos- session and he has a word for "spirit," and is very uneasy at hearing it mentioned, for it is said that if named, it appears. With the Yahgan there is fio past, and from the moment the heart ceases to béat there is no future, for there is not the least evidence that he believes in any hereafter. When a man dies "he is gone," the Yahgans say, "is no more," and do all that is possible to blot out his memory. For superstitious reasons it is even a provocation to mention his name. One Y o u C a n n Oo t | church to a san from another denomination. ---------------------------- | The visiting clergyman 'was known to be but : Buf®is. prayer the only means at an indifferent scholar, but he was a man of Oo Vv e r e at 0 f | decided wiews. As the professor passed out ' of the church he was heard to say twice with Kello S increased emphasis, "That man has convic- He:had, and that accounted for the impression he made upon the professor. Men : of strong convictions alone can influence others one who enjoys a i g e Every 10y to turn them to righteousness. Men who ican dainty dessert cannot look upon sin and sinners with easy-going in: ' difference, who can hold themselves aloof from 0 gS 2 overeat of Kellogg's the conflict with moral evil, and who can ladgh Toasted Corn Flakes. A at the foibles of folks.instead of being touched ---------------- {with a feeling of their 'infirmities, delightful, cooling, re- freshing, yet appetizing and nourishing, table delicacy. Eat all you will --- you'll be rosier and healthier. | wanted for the ministry. Nature's Own Food-- the "Sweetheart of the Corn," prepared by LC Y id GLY Refunded, tions!" are not Men 'for the ministry ought to be men of | culture, "Many have succeeded, in a sense, in certain fields of labor who have lacked culture, Add To Ranks Of Heroines. Mrs. Lulu Small, - attached to Waldorf- Astoria Hotel, in New York, has been awarded a Carnegie medal for saving the lives of Mrs. Allan S. Towson, of New York, and Mrs. Ed- mund Mays, of Newark, N.J, at Sea Gate. This is the second.medal Mrs. Small has re- ceived for this act, the first having come from the United States Government last October. broadest sense, means a state of moral, in-| he born. Paul says his separation unto tellectual and msthetic refinement. In involves | the Gospel of God was from the hour of his the improvement Of the manners and the nativity. » John Wesley says his gifted mother morals as well as the mind. Xlany years ago | gave him to God at an early age, and fostered John Locke said: "Virtue and talents, though { In him the conviction of some high destiny. allowed their due consideration, yet are not | The list might easily be enlarged. Suffice it enough to procure a man a welcome wherever | to say that when vital godliness suffuses the es Clergymen Who Write Novels. Thomas Dixon, jr. was one of the leading pastors of the East when the first of his rapid- fire romances caught the public eye. His brother, Dr. A. C. Dixon, is pastor of the Moody Church, of Chicago. Indeed, three Dixon brothers weré educated as Baptist mini- Kellogg's Secret Process. EO he goes. Nobedy contents himself with rough wears them so. When polished Insist that you get ------------------------------ talents alone will not procure a minister the so-called culture that separates a man from and enables him to work most successfully | : . sold in Canada and | cOMes from reading alone and that may be and under the inspiration of professors of atmosphere of all our homes with its purifying power, and parents consecrate their children to God at their birth, and give them a training The women rescued were swimming; one was seized with 4 cramp, and shouted for help; the other went to her rescue and was seized by 2 3 ~ducation that are truly Christi : ; ind an education that are truly Christian in jo. drowning companion and dragged to the character, then the home avill be a help in the solution of this problem. But when the home becomes secular, and the growing boy hears of nothing but financial success, the boy will soon come to think that making money. is of Pmore importance than making manhood, and that saving money is a wiser business than} saving men. Side by side with the home stand the Sun- day-school and guilds as recruiting and train- ing grounds for the ministry Consecrated teachers can do much to turn the minds of growing boys toward the ministry. A Sunday+ school in Norwich, Conn., begun by a yong bottom. Mrs. Small plunged into the surf and reached the struggling women. She grabbed Mrs. Towson with her right hand and Mrs. Mays with her left and, turning on her back, tried to swim. By slow movement she reach- ed a place where she could touch the ground, and succeeded in dragging them both to the shore. The two rescued were resuscitated, but Mrs. Small in her struggles for saving the women and in the pounding against the bot- tom and against the bodies of those rescued, had three of her ribs broken and was other- wise so seriously injured that it was with great difficulty that her life was saved. After a long sters to follow in the footsteps of their father, Ralph Connor, author of "Black Rock" and "The Sky Pilot," in private life is Rev. Chas. W. Gordon, of Winnipeg, and it was in the spare moments of his Canadian parish work that his virile characters were sketched When Cyrus Townsend Brady is not writing historical romances, he is. busy in the parish. Until recently he was pastor of the Trinity Church at Toledo, Ohio, and is now located at Kansas City, where his sermons attract quite as much attention as his novel. The man who wrote "In His Steps," and 'Robert Hardy's Seven Days," is Rev. Chas. | M. Sheldon, of Topeka, Kansas. Mr. Sheldon, | in fact, first brought his novels to public at- tention in his own _ pulpit, reading them aloud, a chapter at a time, as a substitute for a Sun- é "When You oy EP | wlUnderwear. as MANY DON'T HEART AFFECTED. .° More People than Aware of It. girl in the face of great opposition, sent out in fifty years twenty-six ministers and miss sionaries, besides scores of consecrated work- in other callings. What one school has invalidism her health was restored. It is well to honor such singular heroism, such a risk of life to save the lives of others. There is a vast deal of selfishness in the world, which expresses itself in the minutest details of every-day -life, and there are records of humble deeds of benevolence and heroism that would fill. libraries. Human life seems more precious as we notice such efforts to redeem it and as we witness the courage and unselfish- ness of those who work for the 'salvation of others. Phe home and foreign fields are full of heroic men and women who dre risking their health and dives in their efforts to save the souls of their fellows, and there is no lan- guage that can describe the rewards that await diamonds or and set then they give a lustre." Virtue and 10c. ' Made | 2 welcome wherever he may go. le needs Phe in culture. The culture needed is not that partial AR Canads | ture that runs to the ornate, but that per- Green fect culture that runs to simplicity. It is not his Tellows, but that 'true culture that gives a man sympathy with évery form of human life, Corn Flakes for its advancement. To this end a broad education is essential. Not an education that Over 37,000,000 packag: mn ] U-ited States in 1908. | gained insseclysion, but an education secured eerie | in} the S@CiCty of fellow-students at college | ample erudition and broad outlook upon life, ay evening sermon | tested by experience in the grea rorkra-day : ie | . d by expe ce e great workra-day Charles Frederic Goss, author of "The Re- Jemptitin df David Corson," is one of the lead- ing pastors of Cincinnati, and the list could nelude several other ministers who have found it an easy step from the pulpit to the novel tworld,® The sacial life of a w ell-ordered col- lege has a value for culture, but it is only supplemental to reading, to the discussions of | done others And then the pulpit { the class-room and the experience of life. The | may be a great power in pointing growing | medimval theologians did well to designate the | boys and young men to this calling, and in | classics and kindred studies "the humanities." preparing their hearts and minds for a pos- { All studies: tend to refinement, but literary | sible call from God.® The minister has ever | studies in particular humanize and refine the | been the chief recruiting officer of the church. nature and broaden the sympathies. The college, too, can help by maintaining a The ministry needs men of heroic fibre. able | Christian atmosplrere and spirit that will exert | to endure hardships as good soldiers. "Three | an influencet upon the student who enters the university undecided about his calling in life. EN said Martin Luther, "make a divine-- prayer \meditation and trials." The minister | The writer knows several men who became conscious of a call to the ministry as a result IRISH WHISKEY | must give himself to prayer and meditation, but trials will come uncalled for, and if he be | of their contact with Christian students and them through divine at the hands of professors. Back of all this is the prayer-life Famous for over a a man of the right mould they will make him; the Master century for its delicacy if The office of the | 5f the people of God, and when that flags : n= if noty they may break him. of flavor. "I do not envy a | these will fail. God knows the need as none Memorial To Calvin At Geneva. | ministry iS not a smecure Of highest standard of clergyman's life, as an easy one, nor do I} of us can know it. He wants men for His " as 9 Purity i y ' , x tS men tor There has been no monument to Calvin or clergyman who makes it an easy | work, and only He can discern in men the : : ? oo " z . one." said Dr.'Samuel Johnson... A jong and | fitness needed for this work, and only He can to the: Reforsat ion in ig Jeavest It is especially laborious 'course of study must be taken as al call. men to this high calling, but, paradoxical * that is EIave. De Mr ees Ey oe ai recommended by the | preliminary to ordination. Small Jongrega- as it may seem, He has laid the burden upon Sannot. he jdemified, It 1s Raya ; there ore, i i drive als il : : that the nations whose early history owe | Profi ion on tong "drives and-short salariés will go Youre va 3 RE i o . Medica 0 essio g His followers by commanding them to pray.| 0 0 Geneva have responded to the appeal account of its peculiar "" DRYNESS" €rs may do TO M15 MAJESTY THE KI NG. SirJohn Power & Son Ltd. ESTABLISHED AD. 1791. Discipline The Parents First. It cannot be too strongly urged that in deal- 'ng with neglected children, especially those guilty of offences against the law, it is not the -hildren but the parents or guardians who should be held responsible. A child brought 1p in ignorance--its faults uncorrected and its better promptings unencouraged--is sure to be 1 source of future trouble, and the punishment 's visited on its unfortunate head instead of on those who neglected their duty and ignored their responsibility, There is a greater cruelty to a child than physical ill-treatment-- the cruelty to the mind and heart, that leaves it 'n moral destitution and robs it of its high pur- pase and missjon in life. It is cruelty to a child to expose it unnecessarily to: contact or association with vice 'or anything that defiles or contaminates. It is crueity to deprive it of ducatior==of a moral gs well as secular kind --or to shut it out from those happy antici- pations and pleasures which are a right and heritage of childhood. - If this thought were fully realized there would be a most decided change in the system of dealing with this class, anid parents would not so wantonly an - peatedly neglect and wg their offsprisg. EB ¢ I: i? b envy the i i | Hous, together in the opening years of service And | "Pray ve the / ar h send TH 4 . peal : } : bt od , arrive { 1 Tay he Lord of the ha vest that He-sen for a visible testimony to the Reformation the longed-for day arrives for the} forth laborers into His harvest. for } n) mi . This response 'is dlpe in part to recognition of b minister that he has a town or aty charge. he I onse is: q re \ find that his duties are doubled, and that the historic significance of Calyin's career. It is the desire to ffétpetuate the memory of the = stress and strain are still more severe upon t 1 » te ) > i | body and brain and nerve. But these things | the palm of his hand is covered with fine oil | reformers as great historic figures, whose ideas contributed to religious and political liberty. co old . . : : . : as nothing to thé true minster when the | paint, and an npression taken on thin paper. at J is | While Calvin was no advocate of popular for follows his work. Tt is This paper, originally signed, constitutes his : v that iteis the small salary > government, he was the father of Puritan | when -------------- When a traveler in China desires a passport, sete After a girl gets 10 he about she pives up the wea career and A close friend is all right--ubtil. he dedlines to lend vou money. puts in twenty-fom succee he long socking a husband iten saidmio-day Jassport ths