haven of safety. I, THE VOYAGE FROM MALTA TO ROME, Ch. 28: 11-15, : V. 11. Malta, where Paul had win- tered, was an important island be- cause of its position between y and Italy, and still it is a leading mili- tary base. Raul had gained many friends on the island because of .the at cures which he had effected, and ata of his teaffings. However, he was anxious to get to his destina- tion, and must have been very when he learned a ship was ei 4 0 for the west, even before the us date for spring travel. It was also a essel from 'Alexandria, named Dios- curi, or The Twins, Castor and Pollux, 'who were protectors of sailors. V. 12 Syracuse has always important city of Sicily, remain for two ing for a favor ¥ 13. The "west, the came th ul sheets of wa-er # Paul's eyes must hES wonder on the islan\g séa coast, and the fan hick in a few years fe J 8 destruction y a V, 14, The fact thao. was al ready a Christian ci munity at Pu- teoli is proof thf the ad been reading y widely. It is possible at thé church had been formed by "some of the many travelers who had . throu rt. P to g on. veler 1 Equity and sii) very famous for its antiquity and sti in use after all these cen One of the Roman poets has described thei Pad on nd rogues. pont apr inn-keepe: Y A Forum Paul is grea oat meeting with a UY Shem Chris- tians who had come out to welcoms him, and agai at Three Taverns, a place ten miles nearer to the city. II. RECEPTION AT ROME, Ch. 28: 16-24, 80-31. : ? V. 16. Paul's ambition was at last is dream accom] , His and one would like to know a little more -of the feeling and impressions which he must have had as he first entered this ancient city. Julius, the centur who had been his friend all along, in Siviae Pau} unto the cus- "tody of thé Prato d, no" doubt _ made 3 sider: guar vorable report, so that con-| Sororable was accorded to the apostle. He had his own private lodging, though he was always chain- ed to a soldier, so that in this way many of the guard came to know, not Paul, but the message which he vered. Paul ab! _ex- only deli ex: edge, and jghning b =) Ce dl \J 4 Priora gathering 19 Upper edge with sey. The two- inverted plaits piping of Sifhe plain piece firt has iJ bright red kasha, navy blue crepe, cocoa brown homespun, green velveteen, tweed in co and printed eateen. Style WE, designed in sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14, years, Patlern vrice 20c in stamps] or coin (coin Bs preferred). Wrap coin carefully. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. 'Write your :.ame 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 Wilson Pattern Service, 78 West Adelaide St., Torontn. Patterns sent by roturm-mail. rere pes Sense of Honor The sense of honor Is of so fine and delicate'a nature that it is only to be met with in minds which are naurally noble, or in such as have been cultivated by great examples or |shaded side of and [ing such as this, with a few ferns Fo sted with the gar- often without being as such. These natives and fields are not always at (home in sunny gardens. If natives are to be grown, they will be happier if planted in specially prepared bor- ders. For those native to the wood- land, prepare border along the A plan added, is the best solution to that difficult problem of what to plant on; the shady side of the house. Quite] a few of the wild plants found grow- ing in the flelds will thrive in the fields will thrive in the garden, but only a few are suitable. { Two natives frequently listed among garden perennials are the |baneberries, Actaeas rubrum, and spicata. These are large-leaved, woodland plants, bearing modest white flowers which are followed by ired or white berries, These plants !are effective enough for ground cover | fulva' Is lusty and wayward, "|{in a place with a woodsy atmosphere, but they lose thelr substafice when planted fn the apen--gf8dens. They cannot compa fully with tte showy perem: (dv, contri bute little mor: 1/ green fotinge ito the campesition othe garden. The | Solon n's h seal, 'so Seming on aded, wodlpdhg™ lges, will appear Le m the flow u some nafives that make e material for the following will grow partial shade or open s | Oswego tea, Monarda didyma, s {let; Phlox divaracata, lavender; Mer- tensia virginica, lavender-blue; pole- monium reptans, blue; and the Lobe- lias cardinalis and syphilitica, scarlet and violet-blue The phlox, merten- sia, and polemonium are very effec. | tive for spring bulb plantings. = The | Monarda and lobelias bl in mid. *\, The butter§ with | ff er | eith 0 th Hemer! garden phlox ive species, and ti ondi, coreopsis, and [liopsis all hail from Texas. den-rod and mulleing of our field used in European gardens, but are generally used for that purpose in! their homeland. : For Edgings rtain rock-garden plants prove 1 for edgings, but most of them ire 'special conditions order attain their best growth: Plants that are a home in hin, pebbles or in niches between boulders, / find the rich, heavy soil of den to their liking. Alyssum®Krabis, armerias and some aneMOnes will grow .in the border and may be used with good results as edgins for plantings of early bulbs. Among garden plants there are cer- tain subjects too aggressive and ro- bust for the smaller garden. Chiet among these is the Japanese buck- wheat, This plant makes a stout, shrub-like growth and spreads about with astounding rapidity. Its greens ish-white . flower possess so little beauty that its plant is hardly worth contending with. The plume-poppy, Boccania cordata, with its huge leaves and stalks had best be ut in a place large enough for it to develop and show its beauty of leat form and creamy bloom. The plant is truly a refined education.--Addison, You'vé GoT NOTHING TO | CRow ABouLT« WEREN'Y OY BORN handsome in front of a shrubbery. I -- sss ? BU Mo Sure! Bul GeexKyviLLE IS O.K% T™ev've GOT AN ELEVATOR! .| "- becomes more a muséum and less a Hoosookus THAN THERE ARE IN GGemyviLLe AND You know IT} LONDON BUILDING .OF SUN LIFE Impressive English headquarters of Canadian insurance company, ad- Jolning Canala House, near Trafalgar Sqpare. The new bullding was opened recently, This splendid building together with Canada House is a wonder ful advertisement for Canada at the "heart of the Empire." Liatris scarlosa,! bury bells should sit where they are nd others of the ot bloom in the autumn, and protected and Scablosa cauca- during the winter, as they retain most en accused of being of their follage. An upturned flower too large or too rampant for the small pot or berry basket will keep their border. The last-named is hard to foliage fresh and green until spring. forego, once seen, for its blue-laven. Hollyhocks, though perennial, are der flowers gre most attractive, There 'sometimes attacked when old by a Is no doubting that the Hemerocallis fungus which is liable to render them ; This unsightly. To avoid this, a fresh sup- | plant, 'whose tawny-orange bowers ply of plants should be grown each | appear in July, is more effective year, Lilies take longer than one; when growing in mass formation in year to attain blooming size, and a nieadow or by a drive, than when phlox will not always come true in cramped Into a small place-in-the bor eolor; most of the other perennials der, The native Iris prismatica, and are easily grown. the imported pseudacorus, orderly as a . Winter Aconite they seem' in théir swamp homes, | run riot by seed and root when trans-| ferred to the fertile soll of the gar- | One of the first flowers # break den. Their offspring will become: the monotony of winter with thelr | cheery buttercup-yellow cups framed {in quaint little frills of green leaves, weeds in a short time. Main Features 3 : 'are the aconites' (Eranthis hich do not seem to be A garden composed of a hodge-podge of plants, one or two of each kind, they deserve. rt stems and floated in shallow bowls of water, they make a charming and distinctive cen- treplece for a dinner table, Another and more lasting method of utilizing them, however, for indoor decoration, is to lift a dozen or two from the open ground when they are | coming into flower, and replant them | in a large flat earthenware saucer, | or shallow bowl, filled with sifted earth and a little sand, just covering them with soil, and putting them about two inches apart. A covering of moss improves the appearance of the bowl or saucew After flowering they may be re- planted in the garden. fided to give Y&T When increasing the stock of win- h uM eo The-Hedweto- tor aconites, the small tubers should , though not CONSIAEred as being he planted two inches deep and two hg the important perennials, 1s jnches apart in October, November, ving of a place among them. If ,. December, in shady borders, beds the varieties are used, bloom may ,r 1awns, had from May until September in | titude of Connecticut. pre Space permits, it will be fou dridonvenient to have a trial gar- |den. Here may be grown. perennials {from seed or cuttings, and plants for emergency and to supply cut flowers. If a quantity of flowers is needed in the house, it will be better for 'the pearance of the garden if they can taken from plants grown for that ose. An emergency supply of p! proves most useful when some plant juddenly takes off, as they often do, without apparent cause. There is much to be gained in growing peren- nials from seed. A number of plants may be grown for the price of one nursery plant. Most perennials bloom the second year from seed, and many will bloom the first year, providing the seeds are sown in heat during February. The biemndals, stich as fox- glove and Canterbury bells, are very easy to grow, and, since these bloom and die the second year, will have to be planted anew each year. They will self-sow abundantly if the seed mre ee = capsules are mot remov Thelse Knowledge is of two kinds: we know two, like primroses, will ndt tolerate a subject ourselves, or we know we water standing about them. The can find information upon it--Dr. Artemisia lgctifiora, Helianthus rigidus a sunflower clan, sica have all be garden. A single plant of a species might appear at intervals but there certainly negds to be some plant, or plants, in ficient numbers to form ! the plan 9 average specleg that gen flen, three plants of a gast, ~~ "je required, if ert itself in the Plants that are in feature of the dy, and of good its ideal for this pg to their sea- lily, phlox, and pns as the hardy chrysanthemum so-called lesser bY the N fn you and kiss you. She: What! Only tbree times? | at least one salad a day. It may be He: I'm golng to kiss you and kiss |. years of exhaustive investigation the Amer ean Automobile Association has spon sored basic principles to be embodied in a safety responsibility law capable of nation-wide adaptation. The principles underlying the pro posed A.A.A. safoty responsibility law were announced after a committee of seventeen, representative of the mo- torists of the entire coutnry, had sub mitted an exhaustive report, coupled' with recommendations to the execu- tive committee of the national motor- ing body. The report covered an analysis of all proposed and attempted solutions of the problem presented by the reck- less driver and the relation of this problem to the question of financial Few well-set tables do not boast of & vegetable salad, a fruit salad, or a combination of both. It may contain fish, meat, ¢ggs, nuts, or a combina- tion of two or three of these foods. Almost any womn can prepare a salad that will meet with the approval of grown-ups, but it is a far more dif- ficult matter to meet with the ap proval of children. Lettuce, toma- toes, gelery and other salad ingredi- ents do not please most children as they do adults. Still, the children need the miner-! als, salts and vitamins of salads. Until they have learned to eat the foods heutionse, sae ' that they a2 Joupousibiity for damages incurred. they will relish. Sliced oranges and oor Puecy Witomovlia Nebility tnsgry pednuts or the same fruit with pop- ce Waa definitely discarded. corn, might do for a start. Raisins Remedy Is Suggested and oranges served with sauce made| "WIth forty-two Legislatures sched- from powdered sugar, orange juice | uled to meet within the =axt few and whipped cream is something a months and with the failere of the little more "fancy." Mixtures of Massachusetts compulsory lability in- fruits of various kinds may be pre-| surance law now generally conceded, pared and served on cold, | the time 1s most opportune to put for crisp let-| tuce leaves. A tasty sauce poured | ward the basis for a sane measure to |'m going to make you a over the whole will gradually induce | curb the reckless driver and to pro the children to devour the flavored mote payment of legally secured Judg- lettuce--and one more excellent food ments," Thomas P. Henry, president will thus have been added to their of the A.A.A. declared. list of likes. , The statement of the national com- | mittee of seventeen, approved by the | AAA. executive committee and out | Uning suggestod principles, follows: | "It 1s believed, first and foremost, that the problem should be approached from the standpoint of safety--a fact which was overlooked in the case of the Massachusetts compulsory auto- mobile insurance law and in other radical measures proposed from time to time. "The primary aim should be to put | the reckless driver off the hizhways. The most effective way of accomplish- ing this fs through the universal adop- tion of a drivers' license law, | "An effective measure should make stringent provision for the suppres. a | sion of driving permits of all persons Ste: found guilty of serious violations of cake. | motor vehicles laws, such as driving _ He: Fine. I'm used to hardships. | while intoxicated and leaving the I'm stil] a Freshman at college. scene of an automobile accident in SRO volving Injury or damage. New Brunswick Registers Punishment Is Outlined Big Gain in Auto Touring | "The case of persons against whom Fredericton, N.B.--Tourist travel to 8 judgment has been rendered by a New Brunswick by automobile from | court of competent jurisdiction, but the United States during fhe 1928 Who has failed to liquidate that judg- season now closing has been 32.7 per ment, calls for special consideration. cent. greater than in 1927, according Their driving permits should be sus- to figures compiled by the New Bruns. pended until such time as they have wick Government Bureau of Informa. fully liquidated the judgment and es- tion and Tourist Travel from National tablished a future guaranty of finan. Revenue Department official returns, | cial responsibility. Permits issued for tourists' automo-| "One of the current evils confront. biles from the United States at Ing motordom lies in the fact that a Canadian Customs Houses show that driver who is put off the roads in one 359,736 American-owned .automobiles | State can move to another state, se- from the Unitedbfwy pj pj pj ppjnjjn cure a license and pursue his reckless entered New Brunswick this season course. This situation is capable of up to October 31 through the twenty- complete control. Such, control cam three ports of entry in this province be brought about by the insertion in along the international boundary. | the drivers' license law of every state - mnie [of a proviso which will forbid the Rent the Welkin {issuance of a driving permit to ay Ala person whose permit is at that time Er xsd oat hat guspended, iu; any other state. for crashed through a plateglass window faflure to respond to damages or be- was being questioned by the local S°3USe of other serlous violations of police sergeant after the accident. (motor vehicle laws. This would ren- "Surely on such a wide street as Sor the guspeusion of penalty vationap this," sald the interrogator, "you ¥ reciprocal could have done something to Crea] "It will be noted that these sugges- this accident?" | tions we Aikeered st the Iriver vied " " prove 0 8 Treckiess an I! Rie dellugsent assured Hie sible. They are based on ascertained as I could!"--Sydnoy Bulletin. facts which show that accidents are caused by a minority of reckless per sons and which show that only a small minority of irresponsible drivers fall to meet judgments." -------- USE HAND SIGNALS Use of hand signals to supplement | automatic brake lights 1s a good rule. na mi ---- New Universities Bishop of Ripon in the Universities you Review: In proportion as universi Willie: "Don't be so conceited about! Mother (coaxing Willie to sleep) : "Remember, there is an angel guard- ing you." young plants of foxglove and Canter- | Samuel Johnson, " tles comg to belong to , particular yourself, mother! | neighborhoods, from which In the T THERE ARE RE PEOPLE (N WERE A Outside of That, Jeff's Native Town is O.K. MAYBE Sob BUY NY LTT A GREAT MANY GECKYVILLE PEOPLE HAVE LEFT! THeYVE GONG TO HOSPITALS AND- AND BoOBYHATCHES, AND 4 STATE PRiSons! Nou'D HAVE T» STOP BRAGGING ABOUT YouR TOWN + | maln they draw their. students, and to bo regarded by many in those neighborhoods as chiefly existing te foster research from which the lead- ing local industries will benefit. It will become more and more difficult to keep up the tradition which the very name 'university' implies. A university should be the antithesis of a technical college or a vocational - school: a place where the sense of "the whole" dominates the parts, and every sort of study can be prosecut- ed by every type of mind. But how can & plethora of local universities hope to achieve the broad and even cosmopolitan spirit which the mediae- Sas Tniversities especially fostered, when at Oxford or Paria er Nologns students of all regularly mei? How, {above all, are adequate staffs to bs provided all round--adequate not merely as researchers in, and teach- Jers of, their subjects, but as baving * |themselves the distinctive univ __'outlook- and the power to pass it om ---- IE THEY LL COUNTED