1, x y felled by. a blow from the gh; narrow shaft square on the side neck. The second man received tha blade of the knife just over the "that time we had reached him it became , and 53 Umihl » dying in the forest Bad run away with wounded against my logs and I went sprawling on my back. X y! 'There was a crash against my head. I did not lose consciousness, but I felt inwths van, 1 and myself, in & sort of daze, being push- blacks with firearms in the rear, be sprung as a surprise on the 18 another, © underneath the mass of fighting met. ¥ 'of marching, the! "At last I was dragged to the very men Jay down and slept Rg hs rear of the fight, and there I saw & /' sober, a process which consumed' the g gaaz's arms and legs. 1 was given the same treatment, and in short order we were being borne off through the forest on the shoulders of & party of warriors. The sound of conflict grew Syma pd le shot both dimmer, and with it van! e ties were so mixed up in a at. that our. friends would rescue uss. : combat that we didn't dare shoot fear of doing most damage to our miles when our captors set is on the red our "feet, and we were marched along, surrounded by. war both | riors. At least this was better than being carried willy-nilly, and the jolt- ing of the hurrying men had aggra- vated' my bruises almost beyond en- dutanes, : of course, but-with' ly fyiend, if he. that if he could meet the whole| I was filled with repugnance at the nza army one man at a time|fate I knew awaited us. Umhiopeg: d take him just about four|bad slain the son of a great chief, and and forty-five minutes to con-|1 was a white man. ~~ by all into food for vultures. That assured us both of the choicest pegaaz, torture. thé oi could dispense, . I wi -! A man does not like to admit fear, but I felt something very much akin that long trek 5t hopes for rescue. 3 in turmoil when Fads peer chi eftiin and a white ¥ kground the, ch man were being yells of the combatants and brought in as captives. '-e - © f the waiting warriors, | As we went through the village 8 me "who were squatting] hie segs et, old women, "bowls, stopped work and hurled the: a fight to rescue the » on ed along the ground from one man to. | number of Awemba binding Umhlope- | We must have gone a good three 3 'ground, femoved the thongs which |" | did not seem to worry Umhlopegaaz, | tribe assembled. The trial was short. "I chief, pleasantly, "and cur of a white | of the warriors approached us with she _poturned alone. with 'and I saw her give to the | nor ess than a sulky lover. I sulked too, but for a grimmer reason. - - Ldid not sleep, and my friénd walk- od the floor far into the night. Bud- ceased IL judged Malinda DE a and that'we were about warrior prisoner, and, being jealous, had informed the chief of Malinda's visits. He had promptly put an end to them, and it seemed that our hopes of being liberated were vain. This however, so long as he had received a she was faithful. : We did riot see hier agdin before the were led before the chief and the "Dog of a Chinganza," said the man, you have béden sentenced to the Cave of Death." / - "The Cave of Death!" shrieked the members of the tribe. 5 - 4Wae were led off amid a mob of wild- ly "daneing, chanting savages, men, women and children, who laughed and taunted us, all the time prancing and lating in a weird sort of dance. A quarter of a mile from the village between two enormous rocks, = tribe formed.-in.a semi-circle and. six. 'made of thongs. Crawling { one of | EFREIT : 5 EE visit from Malinda, and knew that]? Awemba braves returned and we ee empty pistol as a club, we stopped at the mouth of Seaver') * | going mad before the end should : fimo ly fi h »| By feeling our-way along the bi a wet walls and keeping the dim cirele 1 :|of comparative light always.in view, BE we found that the subterranean cave turned again with food, but that night | was 'circular in shape, and, I judged, she did not come. Umhlopegaas Was |not more than a hundred feet in di- depressed, and even with the shadow of | ameter, . * ; death over him seemed nothing more| = At one point my hand felt the rim of the hole in the wall. I could not see it, but found that it was not quite as big around as my. body. : Nevertheless, 1 pushed my hand in as far as it would go. I thought the | tunnel might grow larger, and if so, we might be able to enlarge the open- ing enough to explore the passage beyond. As far as I could feel, the hole did not increase in size. Suddenly I heard a sharp hiss, I started, drawing my hand partly out. Again the hiss. Cold sweat drenched me. I trembled. Something cold and soft touched my hand. "My God!" I cried, and yanked my hand from the hole. Twisted about my forearm was a snake. In a frenzy I tore it away and smashed it against the rocky wall until it dangled like a thong in my fingers. Repugnance sickened me, and I drop- ped it. Then I laughed. Umhlopegaaz was holding" me about the waist. I cried, then laughed ag: my face with my "hands @hrough it aud ; : | 4 all Umhlopegaaz was stoical, yet his or girl who desires to wear garments said to the centurion that unless the terror must. have been greater than|dependable for taste, simplicity and, sailors could be prevented from desert- what I had ®conomy will find her desires fulfilled Ing, there was no hope for the pas- Price of the book; mine, for he did not know encountered. When 1 was myself again, I told him, and even-that sturdy warrior shook like a leaf. The noise and com- I sprang into their midst, using my motion had roused' all the reptile life of the cave, and all about us we heard a hissing and the sliding of slimy bodies. I would have welcomed the stinging sensation" which . would have meant. that the fangs of one of the snakes had darted into my flesh, for no death from poison could be so terrible as to perish™ from 'starvation among "the But the snakes were evidently not poisonous, nor had they fangs to bite 'with, for although they wriggled over our feet and twisted about our ankles hey did not molest us. -- Umhlopegazz groaned. Even "he was by his breaking down; but strengthened s weakness, I rallied him, If we were to die, it were better we should die sane. I had a terrible fear of : s come, ~ So that o- ight HY to fight off tormentors, we made our way ini 1 hi of dim light. It w TAY ao) we knew night must "he ap- oach "It seemed years later that circle dwindled into nothing and we were left in blackness, in the forest that night, at the mouth of the Ca | "DAINTY DANCE FROCK: All Paris dances in these flower-like i frocks of youthful charm, fashioned ;of filmy georgette, A shaped yoke of | silver lace is deeper at the front and back, and outlines the round neck, sway gracefully with every motion, are trimmed with the silver lace at the lower edge, shirred three times at the top and set onto the plain founda- frock lends itself to many materials and you can easily make it from pat- tern No. 1287, which is.in sizes 186, 18 and 20 years (84, 86 and 38 inches bust only). Size 18 years (86 buet) requires 5% yards of 36 or 40-inch jor 8% yards of 64-inch material. { Wheh making the yoke, cuffs and | lower edge on panels of lace, 2% yards of lace flouncing 16 inches wide is re- quired, the yoke and cuffs being eut from the upper edge of the flouncing. Price 20 cents, covering | Fashion Book are advange styles forthe soldiers on board. Paul revealed the home dressmaker, and the woman in our patterns. 10 cents the copy. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publighing Co., 78 West Ade- laide St.,, Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. --- "Be still," he commanded, and I stood silent. For 'some 'seconds 'they spoke, then the voice from, above ceased and my friend explained what had passed. Malinda had bade him wait patiently until the following night. | That was all we knew. We were to wait all that night and the next day. Time was not. It was one long, un-| measured period of blackness and, ught for me." The reptiles] | . | dark Std my feet and ankles, but, 1 might have been one of them for all | the effect it had on me. I laughed and cried and prayed, but how the, hours passed I do 'not know. I remember that Umhlopegaaz shook | me into sensibility, and I realized that the circle of light had faded, and that it was again night. I did not know! that I was hungry, yet I musp have | been, for we had not eaten. Then came. the. voice from above. | There was a little whirr and a thud. | Umbhlopegaaz put a leathern rope into my hands and told me to hold it until he should climb to the surface of the earth and lift me out. | I swayed on my feet, and to make, sure, he fastened the thong under my | shoulders. He clambered upward, and a few moments later I felt myself lifted. Fresh alr stung: my nostrils as I wag lifted into the moonlight. Umbh- | lopegaaz was standing beside Malinda. f I staggered and they supported me until I was able to control my own legs. Then we fled into the forest. Of the trip to the Chinganza strong- hold I-need not tell. Day and night we traveled living on herbs and ber- ries. whigh we gathered, and at last we staggered into the kraal Umbhlopegaaz is a chief now, unless he has been killed, and Malinda is his wife. 1 have known many women, beauti- ful and talented, and I have cared for some of them, but the one for whom I would do most, the one who seems most beautiful of all, is the savage 'Malinda as she stood-in the rhoonlight | ve of Death. : present aa Save the Twine; Since moving on the farm, I have |X, THE 8AYE ESCAPE 70 LAND, 87-44... ai ER while little cuffs of the lace finish the short kimono sleeves, Panels, that tion in a slanting line. This type of in the The designs illustrated in our new] Be of good cheer. It fs 1) be n afrald.--Matt. 14: 27. y ANALYSIS. I. PAUL'S FAITH AND BAGA- CITY IN A GREAT cuists, 30-86. : i INTRODUCTION=-The ce the rR EL R & 0 AN NR - whieh. this thoechy ha + examining weeds and other the exact account of an eye-wi besides corn to determine the eff Luke 'having attached himself to Pi aul Special attention has been and noted in his journal the this work this summer and whole Is of the adventure. But infested areas in Hu apart from this technical value, the and Kent, narrative throws a most interesti : light on Pauls practical wisdom and pected to lead to thelr beooing % plants other than corn if they had come down to us excellence it owes to its be s ability to assume the functions of leadership in a great material crisis. When the safety of the ship is threat- ened by storm and mutin , % ble presence of mind A remar before breed in oats to some extent, yet the which the commander of the ship and ripening of the oats long befors the. the mi' officers on have "borers are full grown results in thels place. And this mas- death, so that oats are not a soure tery of the situation he owes to his of danger as breeding places. In pot avincible Fo in the power other cases it was found that goodness of . 3 | or other crops were only. at In the present lesson we are deal-! hen they were growing among the with the practical measures . ..\ 1.0 alongside of it, , and that a to ea a sil Tather than gre there was a fleld of weeds or {sought to save the eouls of men. Yet 8nY other kind of crop, as for example; religion has to do with the whole of "sugar beets, any appreciable distance | Hfe, band we see Se power of faith i the corn, there were no corn no the Jricties counse! rers present, though sometim | forward by at this moment than other kinds of Bare Tool Seri 8 iiss We have Heard like the corn borer were there. Al Fa es Ah as ona. | the evidence shows that we never find ATTH BAGA- | 1orers in weeds or in other crope than OITY IN A GREAT CRISIS, 80-86, foe or oats exeept when they have . 80. The storm was now so high' been attracted to these by the close Ly the ship so helplessly adrift that proximity of the corn itself. What crew, g of he i sorted to the r safety, re-. the-borers would do if there were no edient of | corn is a matter of conject s | : ure, and Er ET ray Id retext of laying out further anchors at present. Cleaning up the corn Bowe the ship's d. But Paul was Plants and plowing the stubble de- |aware of this cowardly purpose, and Stroys, of course, the borers present | resolved to prevent it. in the weeds in the corn field as well Vs, 81, 32. The only thing to do|®$ in the stubble and debris. as to appeal to the centurion and a ° Poultry Feeding Tests. A couple of winter feeding tests with poultry, ten birds in each pen as nearly equal in type and breeding as possible, at Nappan, N.S., Domin- ion Experimental Farm are of much interest and' value. Two pens were used in each test, which severally ex- tends over seven and six months. In the Superintendent's Report for 1024 details in full are given of the re- sults in 1923-24 as well as the aver- age for three years. In both cases both the cost of feeds .and egg values are included in the particulars fur- nished. The first test which extended from Noveniber 1 to May 31, was to determine the relative value of beef versus skim milk when added to the laying rations. The three year aver- age of beef scrap was 625.3 eggs with a profit per bird of $1.079 in pen No. 1, and of skim milk 938.7 eggs with a profit per bird of $1.66 in pen No. 2. If the increased profit over feed con- sumed can be credited to the skim milk, says the report, when marketed through the eggs, it has an average market value of $1.32 per hundred- weight, Test No. 2, extending from Novem. ber 1 to April 80, was designed to ascertain the relative value of home mixed versus commercial feed mix- tures in economic egg production. The three-year average of pen No, 3 of eggs lald with home-mixed was 680 at a profit per bird over feed cost of $1.277 and of pen No. 4 with commer- cial feed mixtures 607 at a profit per bird over feed cost of 94 cents. In each case- the rations supplied and the constituents of the home mix= ture, as well as the methods adopted in feeding, are given in the report, which can be had free on application | wi [the trick intended by the crew, and sefigers. The soldiers acted promptly, and cut the ropes of the lowered boat, | thus allowing her to fall off. In a moment the boat would be engulfed in the swirling waves and swept to | the bottom. Vs. 83, 84. Then Paul turned to the passengers. Day was about to break, {and as hé looked on their wan and | terrified faces, he was reminded that they were weak from long starvation. | For a whole fortninght they had stood y the boats, so to k, unable to] put off their PR thel on a night's! rest or to snatch any but the barest| mouthfuls of food. Pgul earnestly | advised them now to 4 a meal in earnest; their - health required it; moreover, they need fear no danger. For God had given him the assurance that not a hair of their heads would perish. Acts 27: 22-25. Vs. 35, 86. As a proof of his own confidence in what he said, Paul takes bread, and after thanking God in the presence of all, he breaks the bread and begins to eat. His example proves sufficient to rally the courage of the stricken phssengers, and they all take somd food. © II. THE BAFE ESCAPE TO LAND, 87-44. V. 87. The total number of 'sons on board is here given as 276. But certain ancient manuscripts~say 78, and it is possible that the smaller number is the right one. V. 88. The step is now taken of lightening the ship of part of the cargo. A grain-ship, conveying 'wheat from the East to Rome, she had to be| relieved of part of her burden if she was to right herself in these shoal waters. So, after the passengers had eaten, all that remained of the wheat was thrown overboard. V. 89. Morning had now broken, re- vealing' a strip of coast near by, on | Vv escape either the whole of (iodmbibugn Ri Aik id Gh 7 fn bins or wagon-boxes can which the ship was drifting. Nobody knew what coast it was, but -descry- ing a creek with a sandy beach they resolved, if ble, to run the ship in there, and to take thelr chances of safety. Vs. 40, 41. The anchors are welgh- ed, the salls hoisted, and the head of the. ship being got round, they quake with the wind for the beach. for- tunately, the ship strikes a low shoal off shore, and her bow sticks fast. Meantime, the breakers begin to pound the afterpart of the ship to pieces. Ve. 42, 43. In this crisis the sol- diers, fearing for the escape of their prisoners, Jan to put them to death. ut the officer in command, wishing to save Paul, forces them to desist, and issues the order Sauve qui ; Every one who can swim is to take to the sea and make for the shore. The rest are to follow on rafts or wreck- . 44. And so it comes to pass, All by swimming or on float- to the Publications Branch, Ottawa. -------- Feeding Bees in the Winter. If bees are to be wintered so as to come out ready for work in the spring: it is necessary that they go into win- ter quarters with plenty of stores. Owing to the fact that the bees raised considerable brood in the fall of 1928 24 at the Lennoxville;"Que., Dominion Experimental Station, more than the usual amount of feeding was required. This was accomplished by feeding three frames of clover honey per hive, and supplementing with a syrup made of sugar two parts and water one part. Common five and ten-pound honey pails were used as feeders with sixty or seventy small nail holes punched in the covers. The pails were filled and inverted on top of the wreckage. Not -- life is lost. rom the above narrative we should § learn that the man of religious faith wilk also be 'hand to Religion the storms of and selfish ick to put forward his in any real crisis in life. not mean escape from life, still Jess a narrow d regard for one's own safe-| 4 It isan attitude of the whole of, 'e which ehould inspire a man to more courage and stedfastness, | ly in the matter of Rerving weak and terrified isla - under the as follows: Multi 25 fourteen colonies were put away in a cellar especially. fixed for the pam. pose, and four were placed in qu P the iruple winterirz case with dry - 'arer shavings es an 'insulator. Each ~~ of the colonies to be wintered in the cellar was fed to weigh up to 70 pounds without the cover w 5 in the wintering case were weigh 80 pounds. country. An who keeps o frames of each colony. On November