fe a a the eunuch found Christ. Receiving : him into the church by baptis: Pring Sunday School {|i de si ove nin ai : : ly OC ~ 3 Jesus Christ, ths Son of God, v. 87, ial head : He erected no artificial barriers be- The accret action of a Lesson ie [Lh ang his God. pis tequie Nm dg si omg ome Fondamenar "En To Be Mads Gay With Flows tonal flag over Ba \ Norwegians were : *+*=| David Livingstone, haunted by the ers to Cheer City ~~~ Greenfan, area. Inj ¢ nes, who seized | August 2. Lesson V--Philip's Mis- | thought of thousands of villages yet Workers : the nam ised | high 'a {ive posts fn. the| Siomary Labors--Acts 8: 2640. untouched by white man, must press 1 % the 'question as to hip of | gove ©" At length, after the Na.| Golden Text--Therefore they that |on through African forests. So, too, London--The parish t. Bar | that vast frozén ite poleonto neg rs, in 1814, the union was| WCre scattered abroad went every Phi'ip, his work wth the eunuch com- - tholomew the Great, Sm i, Lon. : ~~ Greenland 1s considered to he Dasish C solved. Greenland, Iceland and the Where preaching the word.--Acts | pleted, left him to hurry north to Azo-| All great and honourable actions cumstantial evidence, the story carried | don, within gasy reach sound #-e lortitary, was discoyered by Ne Farces were not mentioned in the dis-| ANALYSIS Jus, wens miles off. "The language|are accompanied by great difficulties |is found to be very often wrong. of Bow Bells, is an extraordinarily A 4 men and Noswoglan territory in | solution agreement, an dthey wer all |. dontl sseribey his deparqure '8 evi-! and must be undertaken and overcome| Often, too, it depends on who re-|drab one. Canon Savage, the rec. ¥: _ early days. For 400 years Norway and | kept by Denmark. . BEARING ne OF bri a, ys ges a Testament | oy answerable courage --Punshon. |ceives the news as to what construc-| tor, writes a correspondent of the f - Desde ware Gnited, and hind land | In the meantime the relationship be-| 11. rue work. Coro iT Acts 3 18: 12; 2 Kings 3: 16 ijah, 1 Kings DId This Ever Happen to You? | tion Will be put on it, and sometimes Chieti Soisace Monkton says he Bile = vasa colony | to both. Also, | tween the Greenland. and their| } h Fone > the conclusion drawn is without fn-| does not know of a single open a -» 3 Norwegian expeditions have made the motherland, eig i gn 14-25. It was early morning and Mrs. Smith | yo;tjon unkind, because of lack of| space where the people can see a i$ es a '#oction claimed by the hunters a base | faded away. The last ship known to IIL. BREAKING THROUGH BARRIERS OF What New York happening to look out-of her window |y,,yiedge of the circumstances. So flower grow. \ uh Aon : : of operations, and have thus come to | have visited the old Norse colonies in RACE, Acts 8: 26-40. . while she was dressing, saw her neigh-| yo pang the best way after all is just| But the canon has determined y ook upd it as theirs by right of ogcu,{ Greenland returned to Norway fn 1410.| I orioN--Philip was the fore- Is Wearing bor, Mrs. Humber, who was mot very | to pass no judgment at all, to be safe. | that this condition of affairs shall fa "my foes Ee | With no support from home the colon. | runner of the larger general mission -- strong, Tush out of her home and run; poy you think so? no longer continue. He and his 58 PP T0¥ ret fecord or Greenland dates fos decayed rapialy, the settlers either | to the Gentiles. Appointad one of the |BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON | ores 0 0 os oo ee man came Twilight Hour Story church-wardens therofore applied if( [1 from the beginning of the tenth cen-| being destroyed by the Eskimos or ab. | Seven, his consecrated gifts soon made -- soon the young married man came uo ong Other Little Friends | for and obtained a "faculty," to re: BA tury, when the Norwegian Cunubjorn|8orbed by intermarriage with them,|lim @ missionary. His sudden and |jijustrated Dressmaking Pattern Fur- running out as hard as he could come. i (rl "hat funny when Topsy, the | Move tho headstones and monuments ty § : 18 reported to have seen a land to| When John Davis visited Greenland In Bpontaneous movements uador the im. nished With Every Pattern Halt way over he turned around fu-i, =" i510 one of Flufty's kittens| in the churchyard, aud lay out the Te the west of Iceland, believed to have| 1585 there was no sign of any people Mediate impulse 31 she Spirtt Jomind ; ' quiringly, as though for guidance| =.= = tot 6" Tike barn in her | Bround as a flower garden with Ty = been the southern tip of the country. | there except the Eskimos. 'Bat his I Old Testament Brophets. whee io go, when she Dojuted to her mouth? And do you know, Fluffy seats, : ¢ In 982 another Norwegian, Eric the| The west coast of Greenland is de-| tte daring insight which led Te to back door, into which the young man | ,.,,. 'saem to care because she took| The churchyard abuts on what Is t Red (whose son, Leif Ericson, is be-|signated as Danish Greenland, the | break th the barriers of hatred then ran with redoubled energy. Mrs. (joo ovo, sad thoy were good | knowa as Cloth Fair, which, until ; lieved to have reached America in| eastern part being more under Nor-|and Jewish limitations. Ho is the Humber came back too, but slower, 88 gq and Flufty knew Topsy could | 8 foW years ago, was one of the ged 1000), sailed trom Iceland, discovered | weglan influence. Its trade is a mon. | true predecessor of Raul. though tired out. {ako good care of that little kittie, for | least altered and most picturesque $ - the land described by Gunnbjorn and | opoly of the Danish Crown, dating|I. BREAKING THROUGH B oF "Oh, Mary," called Mrs. Smith 0 yo know all about babies since sho Survivals of London befor tho groat _spent three years exploring It. from 1774, and for purposes of govern-| , Acts 8: 5-13. her daughter, in another room, "I'm|yaq had so many of them. So Flufty| fire. Facing the churchyard was a ail - Then followed the Colonization pe-| ment and trade the west coast is di-| Imagine a Canadian evangelist go- sure there 1s something Wrong over at jut sat fhere and blinked her eyes| Jacobean house bullt while Shakes Sh . riod by Norwegians. The settlers es-) vided into two inspectorates, southern ing to conduct a mission in Berlin #n- Humber's. Mrs, Humber rushed out | and purred, . peare was alive, It was in a ruins ae thblished churches and monasteries,| and northern. Each inspectorate is mediately after. the War! Such was of her door just now and went over to| «j guess we better put them in their ous condition, and the city author ¢ and, until the middle of the thirteenth | divided into districts, these again com- Philip going to the Samaritans. Jews Maitland's, across the street, and that | new box now and set it away off in a {ties condemned it as a "dangerous A centufy, had their own republican | prising about sixty trading settle- nd amaritans hated each other. Due young fellow who is visiting there! giric corner fn the closet," said Mam.| Structure." But at the last mom- n vernmient. About 1260 they were fn-| ments which dot the coast for a dis io | e iermingling of races after the came over as fast as he could lato | ma Lady. Just as she said that, how- ent two young architects stepped im hal i" ! uced to swear allegiance to the King |tance of 1,000 miles. These little col- 702 the aus a Humber's house. There must b® oyer, a big dark shape stood at the and %aved fit, rebuilt the tottering Piha § of Norway. onies consist of merely a few houses.| hlocd, part Jew, part Assyrian. On something the matter." | door. Who do you think it was? Well, walls, stripped off the "added ime 2 For centuries the history of Green-| There are only a few hundred Euro-| tkis account and because of thair cor- Mrs. Smith finished dressing, alter- it was Rover, and he wanted in. He provements," and restored the place - land follows the history of Norway| peans in Greenland, and probably | rupted Jehovah worship, the Jews, - nately trying to think nothing was the | never waited very long either, it he to its original beauty ag a remark- and Denmark. In 1397 these two|about 12,000 Eskimos. when rebuilding the temple after the matter and then pondering whether | wanted in, for he knew how to open able specimen of gables and timber- - exi'e, refused Samaritan assistance. she should go to find out what was, the door with his paw by just digging ed city architecture, oi Hat Pins Stage Comeback in Hats English Scenes' The most beautiful country [ have "Ye have nothing to do with ug," they said, Ezra 4: 3. The Samaritans re- sponded with an open and implacable hatred. Philip's missionary zeal, how- ever, corid not pass them by. He preached Christ to them, wrong, for it would be so foolish to go if nothing were the matter, But then it all around there. fs hurt," she thought. "No, there he his claw in a certain place screen and pulling it open. his tail_and shaking his head. on the Well, this seemed so still | morning he did that just the same as "perhaps Mr. Humber | he always did, and came in wagging You | They went to live there, and look ing out of their latticed windows on | to the dismal churchyard, they de | termined to raise a fund to convert | it into a green "vasis where the busy NNR A A ever seen is England. It. h ite : > Modern Chapeau Perches the majesty of tian] hy II. THE WORK CONSOLIDATED, Acts 8: ia away back in the field ploughing, 80 | know the way dogs do When they say | J - - Tt ay ro he oR % a pan, ou 14-25. it isn't that, but then a hundred other | "good morning." ! Noe n Hy are. 1 hi Ase Be Rotice Bsr . . alf on and Half off ly the same size as North Carolinas| Reports of Philip's activities soon things might have happened." But say, before he knew what was oe a ¥" Which the rector hag Chics the Head or Michigan, it has an amazing | reached the apostles in Jerusalem, v. Af 1s5t she just ad to phone over Napgenivk jo him he had a good) "gy Th iholomew's has a history of 4 14. They recognized at once the im- She hardly knew what to expect. If scratch on his nose. Hoe was surprised New York.--H Tw variety of scenery and climate. 0 § ' years be y AN at pins--mother will y y mate. As | oo ance of this new departuce. They ed a Ti rw I ro) Toni Ics oi Shot Wasn't enough, it seemed, 0 years bsnimd it. -Faunded By 0 remember them--are coming back in| One apProaches it from the Atlantic, P veoh : / . | Rahere, a merry gentloman at the A th li sent Peter and John to investigate. something was really the matter, or for something jumped on his back and : oi 1 11 the wake of new hat styles. ' e cliffs of Cornwall 'look austere| i th he" vis} / | court of King Henry I, it became {5 da forb ? : n sceing the converts, the visitors she half expected to hear a'siranger's wag digging claws into his fur. Can} : : 5 Bobbed hair put hat pins on the) and forbidding; but there the roses | were convinced that the work was of voice ' ol tr It was Fully: dol | one of the most important priories & shelf; bobbed hair and the fact that| bloom in January. = Stand almost| God. Until now, no signs had accom- Tn due time thi' plione was answ [yoy imagine rn Wi y Jeng in London. But King Henry VII HT the long points were invariably jab-| anywhere in Devonshire, and you| panied Philip's work such as had oc- od 3 irl . S yas A that to Rover. It hurt, foo, so a | laid a heavy hand upon its reventies, ne bing people. New millinery is bring. See the meadows .caning on the sky; | curred at Pentecost. Now, however, d. "Hello" sald the cheerful, fa-\ he thought he better got out of thei ,,, 4 yareq part of the fabric of the a ing them back. they are separated from one another | at the reception service conducted by mHliar Sales of Mss, Humber, kitchen as fast as he could; and that} ... "(uy destroyed, so that today xr The pins will be of junior size: |not by stone fences, or by split-rails | the apostles, there was a pronounced 18 that you, Mrs. Humber? Are was what Fluffy wanted him to do, too.| ,\ = Lonvard occupies the site of ie! short and useful for anchoring the or barbed wire, but by hedgerows in emotional disturbance, It was still you all right? Salq an anxfous voice. | Whoover would have thought shel the: nave, and all that Is left for A mew little hats. Coiffurés will un-| self-conscious bloom; Salisbury fonsidered tisk the comige ot the Yes, I'm all right. Why do you would have been as cross as all that? | worship is the Norman chancel and 7 : dergo changes, too. , Women either | Plain is like western Nebraska, a far V'TiL must be acconipanier hy ese ask? sho said, { After ho was gone and she was Sure, .. ing of the ancient church 3 4 . external evidences. Simon was much A little mortified, Mrs. Smith told) he was really gone she came back, | . Bt on will permit their hair to grow or | horizon; the misty slopes of .the impressed. His money-loving sou' saw 1 Ate Morne x Sirs, in whe, was red y gon 5 se be :| Not only was part of the fabrie 3 mse tricky false curls and even [Sussex downs reach dreamily to the | the financial possibilities, He did not a TW an pas a Been and,- tho von. fand you should have seen Yor event destroyed but what was left was 5 0 witches. sea. Every few miles in England | realize, like many a one since his day,|, rw) e slon = ho 9 oom 2 ike dist 4 They ware blazing just like fire and | yo omacted and turned: to other * , The modern bonnets "roost" halt |the topography changes; could any-| that spiritual blessings cannot be bar] i A Printed chiffon cotton voile that| mughed naw. if Nowa. 00 lke 1at," | they were big and round too. But het| oy igisters were let out as ti on, half off the head. French milliners have introduced 8 band of ribbon which ties across the left side of the head. American designers. have employed an elastic thing be more different different ceunties? . | But we do not gu to England for though we might well do 80; we go because in Eng- natural scenery, than those tered, v. 20. He thought that money could do anything. With an insight that is still needed, Peter denvunced the suggestion that a man's money entitles him to prominence or power shows smart sophistication for town. It is summery and cool, and yet so entirely practical. It's tubable too. The bolero is most unusual crossed and buttoned at the front. Someone phoned long distance for the what tail--say, it was big before, but naw |... really happened was only a phone call. | it was nearly as big as all the rest of { Her whole young chap across the road and I hur- hody was bigger too, because her fur , = ried over to tell him, while the line stood straight out all over her, so she ed into a printing office, in which her body put together. a blacksmith was allowed | to erect his forge in one of the alsles --the smoke on the walls may still and the chancel was turn within the church. His rebuke brought was being held, that was all." loolééd Tike a 'porcupine. rate a nl : bandeau to keep the hat on. TB ele he Marae = about in Simon, not repentance, but a| The hips are snug. The skirt has| Doesn't this remind ono a little of | It all a go funny, everyone id he Benn, Fra vat type on his The ribbon and the bandeau, wo- tions The things that we have fear of consequences. sufficient flare expressing smart fem-|the ways of gossip? In this case the| the room couldn't help laughing. "Poor | . Som us 0. SA i nad Jue have 1und are @ Suipance Ju seén in imagination we see in real: III. BREAKING THROUGH BARRIERS OF |ininity without being fussy. A narrow |actions were prompted by neighborly [old Rover," said Mamma Lady. "He! a ) . a Eels yg Ki Huy A y : Lien a something io keep the jou. ity; there 'hey are! ... As we look: RACE, Acts 8: 26-40. _ ribbon No belt indicates the natur-| interest and friendship, but gossip|came at a wrong time. Fluffy willj jg De ol > ore ig ih So i = as clamped ght LATS reno: od from the top of the hill down When the apostles come to Samaria, | al waistlire, he very often isn't. Gossip can so easily | soon get used to him when she finds | (0 "Cm CO" needed to. sdtriove 2 i new hats Dy reminiscent of into Canterbury, the setting sun glori- Pills Dlonesring weal; OF Hho Voie Style No. 2643 may be had in sizes | fly from house to house, becoming!he wouldn't hurt her kittens for any-\ yo and lying as "it does In the - the days of Empress Eugenie, wife fied the Cathedral; as we stood on him to. set out for Ed a ie 13 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches More S14 Mote uagnided, $07 in near-| thing." : on ; )! heart of the City of London, and to of Napoleon III, "| the most solemn promonetory Infyp.o consolidated the work. Some-| p- y every case, though it seems like cir-} But what did Rover think allows 1b7, build back the oid fabric. yr World Wide Famine Banished Century Ago oliff, «1 lines: England, Land's End, and gazed into the yeasty waves at the foot of the remembered One showed an iron coast and angry Tennyson's thing, he knew it was God, told hin to go south toward the Jerusalem-Gaza road. Philip from Samaria, the Ethiopian treasurer from Jerusalem, each un- Emerald green flat crepe silk, shantung in dusty-pink, red and white printed batiste and pale blue silk pique are stunning ideas for this chic model. The Public The public man needs but one pats ron, viz, the lucky moment, It is as- tonishing how capricious, how sudden ! ure. One of them said that business so far is 80 per cent. less than it was last year. An agreement wag expected ir his the Icebergs Fail to Appear On Atlantic Route " (Chicago--The danger of world k 5 Size 36 requires 4% yards 39-inch Pari Captai | waves. nown to the other, were soon to moet. 2e juires ' 8 0 to {] Anon ) (| conference regarding proposed ro aris aptaing of trans-Atlantic y wide famine was removed 100 years You seemed to hear them climb | The treasurer of Candace, Queen of material and 1% yards 2% inch rib- 20 41p Changes in v ute oF x ins duotions of transatlantic steamship liners. report that there are almost 5) y = i eat field in July, and fall Biniopis ("Candas Wag 3 royal 5iije bon for belt. public arb Ta Ri a the A so icebergs lo be sighted at sea just i i -a Wik ©) » . | like asar" in Rome aiser'" in ( 3 0 8 x 2 ' I The . ari . ortable now, although this is od gaan borne Hall McCormick looked | And roar rockthwarted under bell co 5h failed to find spiritual HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS | 00" "Ang that is a question upon| The popularity of comfortable, FOR SEREEER 0° fa the. normal 81, = lowing caves, ermany), ha iri pie Write your name and address plain- Nl one-class liners was advanced as a time of the year when the great ; "hack on the first strip of grain ever owing FY 1 satisfaction in the religion of his own ite y dress | which the public do not know their, "™"" nf ? ,rting all but the| borgs come floating down fro Ys = successfully cut with a mechanical] Beneath the windy wall. country. In some way he had come in |1y, giving number and size of such|own minds a week before nor do they | F200 or Sonyortng x re Greem 5 Tom % -- William Lyon Phelps, in "Essays | i i its sacra atterns as you want.. Enclose 20¢ in| q1way re i = | biggest and fastest liners Into cabin | Greenland, e reaper. That first clean swathe of Wi } contact with Judaism and its erad | Pi ¥ | always keep in the same mind, when sider: Usually about tha, bezinil ; wheat served "notice on the world on Things," scriptures. He had traveled the twelve | stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap | made up, for a week together. If they class steamers. This considera-| Isually "about the beginning of ih hundred miles from Ethiopia to Jeru- : L tion was expected to weigh heavily | May the iceficlds between Labrador 3 that the era of mechanized agricul- it carefully) for each number, and do not want the man,, if he do not hit § avast, salem, and now. still perplexed and |address your order to Wilson Pattern Ad oo. |in favor of maintairing approxi- and Greenland begin to break up, 3 'ture had dawned. unsatisiied, he was making his way |Qepyice, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto the tasty nor respond to the exigencies mately the present rates for first) and giant bergs float south into the "Economists have credited the homeward. Ne ' da ok "OL. the tims, whazever Ny sloguencs, class accommodations in the fast-| steamer lanes : reapers with even greaier seryise to When, on the main highway, the ia hiiiies, lis Viriues, (Rey Desi est liners. British companies, it | It is believed that the huge ice humanity, declaring that it hag ban- Ethiopian eunuch's retipue came up to {him aside or cry nim down. 1s hej. po. 1t6d, continue to favor at| masses have been "shipwrecked" om ished forever the fear of a world- wide food shortage, a fear that had existed since Biblical times. = Now, far trom fearing a shortage of grain, the nations are troubled with grain . surpluses. x | Philip, "the Spirit said unto Philip, Go near, join thself to this chariot," v. 29. That is tLe Bible way of saying that Philip, ever seeking an oppor- tunity to preach Christ, and hearing this "foreigner" reading what he evi- Does the mirror of the mo- "ment reflect his image? That mirror is an intense magnifier, his propor- tions swell, they Wecome gigantic. | wanted? lp least a 25 per cent. cut In first class rates. --- a fn - He Still Teaches at 97 ' the Labrador and Greenland coasts, French meteorologists expressed the belief that, while most of the bergs may have run aground, these which continue floating south do not survive so long as formerly ber ; dently did not fully understand, said to | : 2 3 . § The waipluste are 1, sepmonisls dently 91d ot Il np nj, sei bo | Paris Reports Drop Protessor Francesco Berger, Loy Caton each year: thei wafm. Gait « «88y, to the wide use of | Alin i oii ily saat nan. yee | In Tourist Trade don's oldest music teacher, 18 SUI} giream spreads farther north, melt Se plements. McCormick's reaper was sent a donation to a needy communit ; giving plano lessons at 97. When | ing the ice masses befora they cam we ' capable of ouly Sight or oe a5Pes {The letter acknowledging the with Paris. -- Directors of tourist reminiscensing, he talks enthusiastic-| endanger shipping. it . ' 2 | 1 oF ined the on of thresh- Mr. Knagg--"Don't you know read: "God surely spoke to you." Di- agencies, hats in sonnaskion will ally of Charles Dickens aud many --ty em I \ Juli roma ' binos used In | that? - Any fool could tell you." vine suggestions are always coming "wiy can't Jones and his wife |the conference ot transatlantic | other Victorians. He knew Mendels- i ing. Today hug ombines us Mrs. K "Phat Tacked to people whose lives are the channels | agree?" steamship companies, said recently|sohn and a host of famous musi Obeying Orders R the great grain belts harvest and rs. nagg-- at's why I aske of God's spirit. "He mar:ied an automobile girl {that there 1s no use denying that | cians, and his memory, is unusually y WS {iiet 4hresh 30 to 40 acres a day. you, dear. As a result of Philip's explanations thus " this year's tourist season is a fail-| keen. A railway director rebuked a ticket RS Pp on a wheelbarrow salary ay . pel , collector who allowed him to go AY 4 Eee, ----_-- ---- - rr m----= | through the barrier without produc- 3 . MUTT AND JEFF-- Central Should Have Had Cotton In Her Ears. By BUD FISHER ing his pass. go 1] Cl "No matter if you do know who I HY: y am," he said, in reply to the colleo- 3 > LONG DISTANCE To MISTER A. ET JEFF SPEA LO, ¢ PLEASE SEAD ME FIFTY AT Sor MUTT THEN YOU GWE |T TO HIM, CENTRAL! tor's excuse. "I am entitled to ride free only when I am travelling with that pass. You don't know whether I have it or not" 2 The collector, nettled into actiom, demanded to see the pass. "That's right," exclaimed the dire otor. "Here--why--where--wali, I declare! I must have left it at the office." "Phen you'll have to pay your fare," responded the collector grime ly. And he did. In the Negative The two Scots met. asked Sandy. "I heard fra' him today," sald Mae, "He sent me his photo." ) "May I see It, laddle?" Sandy. "No, asked no, not yet," replied his yet." "How's your brither fn America? . friend; "I have na' had ik developed At 2 ri RELATION