July 1.â€"Lesson I,â€"â€"The Early Life of Saulâ€"Deut. 6: 49; Phil. 3: 46; Acts 22: 3, 27, 28â€"Golden Textâ€" Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth.â€"Eccles, 1: +. ANALYSIS L PACL YHE JEW, Deut. 6:4â€"9; Phil. H Sunday School Lesson RO M A REEK TRAINING H MUTT AND JEFFâ€"Bud Fisher. Ir DARN ME win®D, THERE Goe3 my u1P â€" RIAXT i THE wATCR] 1ZEN SH LP App T} th th H H Ph h H t Oneâ€"Piece Slipâ€"on Dress having Vâ€" shaped neck finished with applied bands and a bow of material or ribâ€" bon. Circular insets at sides of dress. Dartâ€"fitted _ sleeves, perforated for short sleeves. For Ladies and Misses. Size 16 years; 36, 38, 40, 42 inches bust. Size 36 requires 3% vards 40â€" II. HIS CREEK TRAINING, Acts 22:2. Born in Tarsus . . . in Cilicia. Paul belonged to the Jews of the Disperâ€" sion, that is to those who lived outâ€" side the land of Palestine. It was naâ€" tural that these Jews should be more or less affected by their Gentile surâ€" roundings, and that their conduct and opinions should reflect some of these new ways of life. Tarsus was an imâ€" portant city in what we call Asia Minorâ€"was Greek in its mode of life, and was the seat of an important uniâ€" versity where Greek philosophy was taught. Much has been made by some students of this Greek training, which Paul would have at Tarsus, and it must be recognized that these forces did play a real part in his education. He spoke the Greek language, wrote his letters in that tongue, and refers to the teaching of the Greeks. But the opinion of the majority of scholars is that Greek philosophy and culture did not have a controlling part in the formation of Paul‘s views. The two greatest factors in Paul‘s thought were Jewish doctrine and the Person oust. Size o6 requires a% yards 40â€" inch material with long sleeves. Pdice 20c the pattern. No. 1719. 10W TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, givicg number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin wreferred; wrap it carefully) for e#h number and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Ade‘aide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. Use for Discarded Silk Dresses en colore of the gre t will ament in h e in vari y put to t may be b me may â€" acquire a lovely silk underwear and at the e have the satisfaction of ut of one‘s closet some old itat no longer is wearable: is rights as a citizen. This to go to all parts of the 1 we find that his language lored by the different featâ€" > wreat Roman rule. Wi fr In ann Ik h stepsâ€"ins seams may anywhere and still the )0k well. Seams may â€" with insertion if de man. _ ies, he said is very highly regard helped on many occa t th his tly m n b / whÂ¥ bowt You wea@k oug of my NONâ€" Browâ€"oc€F \ PATENTS iN YouR HaAt, MuTT, | Awb You wouLbwT Have \ ExPERWENCES$ Like THil: ma y US Ing m es, and all and remove or fullness. rs is especiâ€" but any silk loyed. t out of it, be used for 1719 th that cann as dress utilized f he said 99 Soft Roes on Toast This will make the perfect finish to a good dinner. Just cut a slice of hot toast spread with anchovy paste then place a soft roe on each. Sprinkle with salt and cayenne. To prepare roes take them out of herring you ara goâ€" ing to season, dip in oatmeal in the Scottish fashion and fry as for breakâ€" fast. Or buy them, as we do in Lonâ€" don. in cartoons. No matter, rinse then pil toast. C of parsle be soak Four ounce: cream or milk and salt. Stir the eg grated cheese cayenne peppe Stir the eggs and cream into the grated cheese, season to taste with cayenne pepper and about a saltspoon of salt. Pour gently into a shallow, buttered _ fireproof dish and . bake lightly from ten to fifteen minutes. them in cold water, dry them with a cloth, saute lightly in a little hot butâ€" ter and place one on each finger of toast. If you eut toast in squares you will need two roes for each. If preâ€" ferred, roes may be poached in hot hock or only one may be served on each finger, garnished with a tiny curl of bacon baked on a skewer in the oven. spoon milk ounce . of _ fingers of t saucepan three to 1 beaten .e Sardine Fingers Four mediamâ€"sized sardines, 1 boiled egg, pepper. salt, paprika ter to moisten, fingers of toast. Skin and bone sardines, plac saucepan with a dessertspoon 0 ter, add minced hardâ€"boiled egg till piping hot, adding more but necessary. Season highly and piled up on fingers of hot but toast, garnished with mustard London.â€"The English cook may not be able to cook vegetables as well as the Canadian. Her ice cream may fall far short of even our drng store variety, but I defy you to say that she knows nothing about savories. In England the savory, an appetizing kickshaw that gives just the right finish to a meal, is a course peculiarly British. You can dine in any country you choose, but only a British menu has a sting in its tail. Now let me give you the recipes for typical English savories, only rememâ€" ber that those intended to be served here should be served piping hot and the cold really cold: English Cooks Excel : Fri Place butt ur oun SiR HARRY LAUDER TAkKES pay OoFF Much as ho objects to spendâ€"thrift pleasure Str Har isional day off. 3 Finnan and Cheese Toast slow fit oun Ham and Egg Toasts , cook (st five minut ew. salt croutons of bt ind Cheese Custard butt n fing ish e butt scrap grated grat \bea and cayenne. _ Sur till mixture thickens, zers of hot buttered ach with a tiny sprig ve. The toast should fi M h PrIn it n h h ch ind n He Lures the Salmon Finnan hadâ€" rese, 1 tableâ€" egg, half an ndâ€" cavenne, milk in 1 the tim add chees enne. â€" St oon of butâ€" d egg, stir e butter if and serve )t buttered istard and butter hard â€" but ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO SUT nn ill cottons. Mending that has been beautifully done sometimes â€" looks conspicuous afterwards because a wrong method of pressing has been used. Never press a mended place from the wrong side because it throws up into high relief all the threads used in the mending. Press from the right side, and not too hard nor with too hot an iron, In the caso of heavy cotton goods or wooden goods, keep a pressâ€" ing cloth between the material and the iron. Bulletin dos Agriculteurs: _ There} ruling m are in the Canadian West 91 million | from th acres of occupted land, as against 147 | chronic « millions unoccupied, and this land has | plunged. the highest yvield per acre of any land | to plung on the North American (,‘ontlnent.' dition fr And these lands belong to us. We ; To surre Frenchâ€"Canadians, we dlscoveredi impose i them, we clvilied them, converted cruelty a them and boug‘t them after Conâ€"| federation, although they should llave! Mother been ours anyway by right of disâ€" off till t covery, possession, culture and civiliz< toâ€"day." ation. _ Now they belong to others. |the jam run thre chopped ham, buttered eggs, cayenne and parsley. Cut a slice of bread a quarter of an inch thick, cut out croutons, fry in butter tIll nice and crisp, then spread each with eggs beaten and scrambled with a little butter cream if liked, and seasoning. _ Heat two tablespoons of chopped ham with butter to moisten, though sometimes in England when using the famous York ham we subâ€" stitute champagne for butter. Put a little pile of the hot ham in the centre of each, sprinkle with cayenne and dish up in a circle on a fancy paper with a little fresh fennel or parsley leaves in the centre.â€"E. C. kind emb with to be not to 1t the right the right side. A patch shows less if it is possible just to trim off the torn edges of the material and not turn them under. When doing mending, keep all stitches loose so they will keep all st not pull th important, When a i B p mat Iiges sing M it C French Canadians and the W est the ch h h i th rial ut stre Neat Mending in th id m € N pla U Ni fin the th about to darn or patch any material, place the work in ‘ry _ hoops, â€" rather â€" loosely, stretching and with the place nded at the center. If a patch ed, baste it smoothly in nderneath, then catch the \ the torn material onto it, ine thread. The finer the he better the finished work . Then from the under side > edges of the patch onto the Use a fine needle and try t it plerce quite through to side. A patch shows less if f th 1M it M )lot thi b tting dire« direction as the . _ If such thread One often can with embroidery Thi cessary, fill Irawn from he threads take an n Yorkshire Evening Post (Cons.): It would be interesting to speculate upon the comparisons historians will draw between England and America during the postâ€"war epoch. The right use of wealth depends upon character, whether an individual or a nation is , concerned. Similarly, indigence is a !harsh and unreliable criterlon of a nation‘s worth. It speaks much for There‘s something about the going down of the sun, Whether‘it makes a bonfire of a cloud, Or, too obscure and lonely to be proud, Sinks on the nearest rooftop, and is London Morning Post (Cons.): If it were possible to imagine an Engâ€" land in which only the lawyers and the moneyâ€"lenders could read and write, and to impose upon such a country a constitution in which these benevolent literates would have the monopoly of government, then we should arrive at some faint conception of the sort of destiny we are trying to work out for Egypt and India. Our interposition in both those great terâ€" ritories was welcomed by all save the ruling minorities as a blessed reliel from the oppression, anarchy and chronic civil wars in which they were plunged. Our relaxing hand threatens to plungs them again into the conâ€" dition from which they were raised, To surrender such a trust is not to impose a benefit, but to perpetrate a cruelty and a crime. the jam toâ€"night gone. There s something, not of color nor _of size, In the mere going, in the calm descent, Half out of heaven and half imminent; Final, as though it never again would rise. There‘s something in its very nolseâ€" lessness, Unlike mad waters or the winds that shout Their end in one last agony of excess; Something that does not count its days nor deeds, But trusts itself to darknoss and goes out And finds whatever afterlife it needs. â€"â€"Louis Untermeyer. the integrity and endurance of Engâ€" land that ,through a perlod of stress and bardship almost unparalleled in our history, our Constitution, our revâ€" erence for order and law, and the solidarity of our Empire still attract the admiration of the civilized world. This persistence, in face of dire selfâ€" denifal, of what is best in our repute as a nation augurs well for our future development when industry and initiâ€" ative shall have reâ€"established our fAnancial wellâ€"being. The sinews that have toughened through the severest strain they have yet experienced will not get so easily relaxed by the reâ€" sponsibilities of wealth. Showing Air Togs ntly on H.R.H. PRINCE OF WALES The Use of Wealth Betraying a Trust â€""My dear boy, ney morrow what can b Young Hopefulâ€""Le Any Sunset as he flight n Idual or a nation is arly, indigence is a able criterlon of a It speaks much for Charming left Mouseh to London. ... oopmiun d andmnemlemnc mm ontntninna ns M en Each Hat Has Its Advantages n put his ro , Quebec KEvenement (Cons.): _ For the few hundred thousand farmers | who succeed in the West, there are a lm"llon who are languishing, more or less, in the old provinces. We canâ€" |m)t say that it is their fault, for it |wuuld not be true. Our farmers are !the hardest working class of the comâ€" | munity, and their toil is rewarded. ;Hul it is the absence of advantageâ€" tous markets which prevents them Minister Gives Canada Praise and Saturday morningâ€"schools have Saturday session. Then come in order Wednesday morning and Monday evening, Friday and Monday mornâ€" ings, and finally, least of all, Wednesâ€" day and Saturday afternoons. No mention is mado of Thursday and Sunday, on which days schools are not in session. It is to be observed that the halfâ€"days immediately precedâ€" ing them, however, are the worst times of the whole week. Investigation has also been made to mascertain what were the favorite subjects of instruction, with the result that chief attention was found to be given to mathematics and the least to drawing. It is suggested that this expains why pupils who are detected in drawing caricatures during the lecâ€" tures or lesson of the class, protest that it did not interfere with their studious attention to the lesson before them, the drawing being done without their minds being centred upon it. Proud of His Country‘s Re covery After Post War Depression Quebecâ€"Canada‘s amazing recovâ€" ery from wartime effects and her reâ€" markable development . of postâ€"war years represented "one of the moust amazing performances of any people under the sun," said Hon. James Malâ€" colm, Federal Minister of Trade and Commerce, at Quebec recently. All recognized indices indicated Canada‘s remarkably â€" satisfactory inâ€" ternal condition, the Minister declarâ€" ed, while a proper analysis of immiâ€" gration â€" figures showed that even though the numbers of immigrants from Great Britain had declined, Canâ€" from Great Britain had deciined, CAMt ada stlll was getting the same share of the men who left Great Britain as she did before fthe war. He quoted statistics to demonstrate this fact. In the peak years of 1911 to 1914 there was an annual emigraâ€" tion from Great Britain of 260,000 and of this number 138,009 was the anâ€" nual average number going to Canâ€" ada, about 50 per cent. Last year So far as internal conditions were concerned, the Minister stated that Canads had spent as mus in the last six years in construct‘ion as would pay off the entire nationa! debt. This was not railroad construction, underâ€" taken with an eye to the future, he pointed out but the building of homes, factories and other business plants to meet the demands of the moment. during that period. | Mr, Malcolm explain« continued to get as migrants as all the Dominions combined. people who emigrated tain Canada got one. ada, about 50 per cent. Last year British immigrants arriving in Canâ€" ada totalled only 51,000 but even so this represented 50 per cent. of the actual emigration from Great Britain during that period. In other words, Mr, Malcolm explained, Canada stlll continued to get as many British imâ€" migrants as all the other overseas Dominions combined. _ For every two people who emigrated from Great Briâ€" Agriculture and Industry bt Ni {f in with have cords what n l With a comparatively small popuâ€" , lation spread over a continental area, | there is apparently less revenue availâ€" |able for private aircraft enterprise in \ Canada than in the United States. . Remarkable progress has been made | in civil aviation, however; that is, in | the use of machines for civil governâ€" ment flying. In forest patrol work, surveys, aerial photography and in the transportation of government officials | into remote parts of the Dominion, the l.ir has become an established medium |of travel. Western cities, with plenty of vacâ€" ant land owned by the municipalities, are showing enterprise by setting apart suitable areas for airports. There is a growing need for similar action on the part of cities east of the Great Lakes,. H.milton is well in the van among eastern Canadian cities; Toronto can accommodate visiting airâ€" craft; so can some other cities. It is | probable that more will be heard of the need for municipal landing fields ‘before long, however, with the quickâ€" | ening of public interest in the air mail |\ and in commercial aviation generally. |Possibly coâ€"operat.ve action between imunicip.litien, provinces and the Doâ€" |minion. such as the Federal Parliaâ€" \ ment initiated a few years ago in highway build‘ag, may be found de ‘sirable to promot® the building of airâ€" | ports.â€"Christian Science Monitor ediâ€" ' The total value of the gold which 'h;u been produced from Placer mining 'opantlonu in Yukon Territory might conservatively be placed at $165,500,â€" '000. according to the Department of :tho Interlor‘s latest anara; report. which any country, however weak, might resent, and, under any sort of reasonable and friendly arrangement with Egypt, it ought to be wholly unâ€" necessary. The real and sufficient guarantee for the safety of the Canal is not our army but our fleet. Perhaps one day the League of Nations may take a hand in this controversy, for the matters in dispute concern other nations only less than ourselves. Meanwhile, there is no great occasion for alarm, still less for extreme counâ€" sels. An interesting beginning is being made with air mail. Incoming liners are met at Father Point, well down toward the mouth of the St. Lawrence River, where‘the mail is transferred to waiting aircraft to be carried to Montrcal, Ottawa and Toronto. Outâ€" going mail is similarly delivered to the eastbound liners about twenty hours after they have sailed from Montreal, Canada‘s air mail service is to be exâ€" tended gradually, until the whole country is traversed by a postal netâ€" Near the port of Montreal, a modâ€" ern mooring tower for airships is beâ€" ing crected by the Department of Naâ€" tional Defence. It is expected that the tower will be ready to receive the firs* of the British passenger airships, which may make the trip across to Canada with fifty or more passengers in the late summer. The supply of stopping stations for airships may be ahead of demand, as it is possible that the airship crossing may be delayed until next year. On the other hand, the demand for landing fields in the most populous parts of Canada is shead of supply. pendence wouid be likely to remain in twenty years‘ time* The preseace of a British army in permanent occuâ€" pation of Egyptian soil and even of the Egyptian capital is, it must be admitted, an affront to national pride which any country, however weak, Fredericton.â€"Approximately $400,â€" 000 will be expended this year on addiâ€" tions to the University of New Brunsâ€" wick. Two hundred thousand dollars will be expended on the Lady Beaverâ€" brook Memorial Building which is being given the university as a stuâ€" dents‘ residence and approximately the same amount will be ‘used in the conâ€" struction of a building in which will be house a forest school, a departâ€" ment of geology and a library. The latter amount has been provided by the Legislature of New Brunswick. count work Manchester Guardian (Lib.): Ts it really the desire of any sane Egyptian patriot that Great Britain should withdraw wholly from Egypt, leaving her to defend herself from all pressure or aggression from other countries? And if we did how much of her indeâ€" nendence would be likely to remain Canada‘s Notable Air Activities New Brunswick by kn wic A valuable booklet giv ous Child Welfare Jaws Ince has been issued : vincial Secretary‘s Depar copy can be gecured wi by addressing J. J. Ke Parliament Buildings, To The deposit of bituminous ':iinfls'. commonly known as tar sands, on the Athabaska River and its tributaries in northern Alberta, covers an area of approximately five thousand square miles of varying dep», density and richness. Extent of Tar Sand Deposits The deposit of bituminans "Ghnds TiA the wn a aggression ifrom other coun if we did how much of her lence would be likely to r wenty years‘ time* The pre British army in permanent on of Egyptian soil and ex Egyptian capital is, it mu itted. an affront to national Placer Gold Production Child Welfare Laws Braitain and Egypt University Additions ative action between rovinces and the Doâ€" the Federal Parliaâ€" a few years ago in g, may be found de o the building of airâ€" sued by the Proâ€" Department and a d without charge J. Keiso, at the Montreal, a mod hi ron IVS th it the ng its rsary. 1828 then var rov Durham Cas Now Thr adde astics ISt. 1 been 1 watbchi turies ecollaps Lincolr ham t warded loose &« of the beneat) tire we danger into th last fe and th for £15 at onc« castle. AAnk cast coln both hist sigh hist In : the d Durh: the bol whe fro tin the F)ve 1t AstC sh: top Durhs tence their )« it t} [R lef in it t} #} tair @T Bil aApF n« leave m b« th w the Imp Eng Eng rreat rOoWI A g Y th LGreat val E1 ing B Is in | A J the the