Now 34, lday Quietly stun" ttiemeatg , abbot on“ N A“) , J most in "The vol- merchant Bno. 8TH Pink- ' accotdu to pub“. elf - Maud“; 3 am [40m ‘II in I I band. Foun We Witt Writ. Sun“. ninj‘ ll! [MAL- 500.00 :gnntt} a 83'. t the 'lard. many The" ape†it tho aught ‘aVO what ou to Mn. aims. My†NT]. with. t no II he at u " be - only Inv- n." gtrt r od 1‘4 for ll July tb-Le-ttrt "1--The Convenion of Saul, Ac: 22: 6-16. Golden Text -This is a faithful uying. and worthy or all accept-Non. that Christ Jesus cam. into the world to lav. sirtrtere.--t Tlm. 1: IS. 1. THE APPEARANCE or can", Acts n. mm summon or um. MN16. T Ir-cc-.,--" eonversion of Saul was one of the most tremendous spiritual experiences ever known, while it was also one of the most in. ttumttial events in the history of the Early Chureh. It is related three times at'length in Acts. and there are aha many indirect ruler-em to it in the New Testament. This admission of Paul to the church brought int? her rank! the most distinguished o the younger leaders of the Jews, and ere- ated a great impression throutthout the Jewish world. His great ability and gifts were now placed at the dis- pen] of the Christiana, and he did more than any other to carry the gos- pel into new regions. More liberal teacthzs on God, man and natum ap- pear with hire, and Christian theology and sociology assume new proportions. By his self-denying labor, by his na- tural endowments, by his early train- ing and absolute surrsoder to Christ, Paul Int-came the granted of the apostles. l. THF. APPtarANCE or cums'r, Acts V. 6. Night ttrho Dunne determination to stamp on not leads him to undertake to Damascus an importth Palestine. but near enoug canin of the things that we inn. We are not told how tian church an,†in tha capital. but. it is probabh grim» why had gnu: up to only: feast hed come into the apmt' s end had carrie r,.',':) tttN l when they retul imiplw slld mt separate from thcie Jewish comrade up all their old customs, o to their religion the womb u Mesiah. They had b peace: t on: the to the Jesus u? urvnm. merely oubleeti Inca of four nt Testalm life of mus l Trnmrtitrurut Stephen. an; Jitt Paul of union trad abet claim totie Mandi Lord. Y. 7. Heard a voice. There are' slittht differences in the three nam- tivea as giwn in Acts 9:1-19;22:6-16; 26:11:48. bat those can in explained without much difficulty. Saul du.. tinctly Mars his name called in the Hebrew tongue, and the quantion any foliows is a direct and searching one: _ "Why perseeMmt thou mu?" His any tack an these members of hia church it, an attack on Christ who in now clothed in heavenly glory. In the other mmtiws the words are added, "It is hard for the? to kick ugainat the and." us if Paul’s mind was not at cm. lie could not take real joy in 'nttietirct such ruin, white the patient endurance of the eonverta must. have “punk-d to him. He was going against bcttrr nature. V. 8. Who art thou, Lord? The mum: has often been uked whether KI'; had ever seen Jesus during the days " his ftesh, Brut a verse in 2 Cor. 5:16. is quotient “Thought hye nation has often been and wnecner gnu! had ever seen Jesus during the days " his ftesh, 3nd a verse in 2 Cor. 5:16. u quoted; “Thug I have known Christ altar the sh"-Aut even if this were the we. the present vilon was quite tritrermtt, since Jesus had risen from the dead and ascended into Maw-n, so that this was the vi- sion of the ttloriBed Christ. I am Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus was known among his enemies as the Na- zarene. and he than uses this term to make it char to Saul that he is the very Jesus whom formerly Saul had regarded with such anger and con- tempt. H. THE srmmsnn or SAUL. 10-16. v. 10. What shall I do? This ex- presses both the surprise of one over- whelmml with the ttreat change that has come to him, and also the great energy of this man who henceforth will throw himself with whole-heart- arduous into the new duties which he has to face. There is much to be done, Saw! W School Night unto Damlscus. Saul's' nation to stamp out this new cts him to undertake u Journey ant-us an important city outside nu. but near enough to learn I the things that were happen- " are not told how the Chris- turch arose in that northern I but it is probable that pil- xlw had gone up to the Ponto- ast had come into touch with " A and had carried home the 'W ', when they returned. These " xiid ttrt separate themselves trie Jewish comrades. but kept their old customs. only adding r religion tho worship of Jaws asiuh. They had been left in ill this visit which now threat- .m with ruin. rat light. This light was super- I, cunning direct from God due immediate "tartifeetation of If.» n-uw came to cull his new l This was therufon. not a tietion of the imagination, n jve vision; but a real appar- , the stlorif1ed Christ. There an ,uch appearances in the New wnt. The first was during tho csus on earth on the Mount of mutation. One cum to n, we to John at Plumes. md the fourth. In his ,ubtcatlent MUTT AND JEFF-Bud Fisher. ft ANALYSIS tten spokp of this manifes- e to him, and among tho a made by him of his spas. ng is that he had seen the but flrat of all Saul must, go Into thy city not an a motor, Runnabl-1 lower of Christ. [ V. 12. One Amman. Tho ell-meter of this man iagivon in brittbutu- gesthe wort. Evideotlr he va- 1 leader among the Christian. and was aim held in high regsrd by all the Jews. From e other amount» we learn of the dread which Arum felt in undertaking this eorntrission, for it: evil fame of Saul had preecdsd Hm. V. 14. God of. our “than. The God of the Christians is the same God, who had guided and blamed Abraham, Isaae and Juoh; and this God will to bestow his gme upon Paul, that great manna will follow: 1. In Jesus. Paul ix to find out the will of God. 2. Jesus is the righteous one, one who fu1flk"s all the hopes of Israel and who will meet all the needs of mankind. 8. Jesus will give him explicit directions for his work. 4. The great World be- yond the Jews will also hear of the wmwlcrful sahatiun of God. V. 16. Be baptized. This is the my tural cuns'cqurmm of Scul's conver- sion, fur it is the outward symbol ct entrance into the church. He is now one of the discip1r,_rta.dy to angler- take whateve to him. Saskatchewan Man Given High Award Hamilton, out.-ittrdst for bravery were announced by the Royal Canadian Humane Society here recently, after the board hnd con- sidered u large number of cam of heroism throughout Canada in the past year. For the second time in 25 years. the gold medal. highest award in the sock-ifs gift, was granted. It was voted to Albert J. Ewen, of Riverhurtrt, Sank, Mr. Ewen was working as hired man on the farm of H. J. Skeoch. when hearing screams, he rushed to the house to find Mrs. Skeoch's cloth- ing a mass of fiatttett and the house on tire from a gasoline explosion. He wrapped her ia a blanket, suffering terrible burns himself, carried her to safety and then returned to rescue three children. SMART FROCKS FOR THE GROW ING GIRL. The distinctive feature of these two frocks is the circular ftnre introduced at the hip-line, giving the required fulness yet retaining a graceful flow- ing line. The popular two-piece effect is simulated in the frock worn in View A, although in this instance for prac- tical purposes, the blouse and skirt are joined beneath the narrow belt. 1 he round collar fits becomingly to the neck, and the long sleeves are gather- ed into a narrow band. The collar: was omitted in View B and the shorti sleeves finished with a cuff. The dia- gram pictures the simplicity of pat- tern No. 1175, which is in sizes 6, 8, 10 and P.? years. Size 8 years requires :lti yards of 32-inch. or 2% yards of 36-inch material. Price 20 cents. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20e in 'stamps or coin (coin preferred; wnp it carefully) for each number and 'address your order to Wilson Patient Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. 'it/i/i., sent by return mail. r ta'sk his Mister assigns Police in London Halt Motors for Coaching Club PUSSY ACTS A8 A POND "MAMMA" TO FOXEs They are silver fox pups belonging to a breeder near Toronto, and the cat, w job wry Feriuusly. sLondon.--Memories of a century: ago were vividly brought to the attena tion of those Londoners who were for- tunate enough to visit Hyde Park on a recent aunshiny June morning to see the annual first meet of the Coaching Club. Eleven coaches, shining with brilliant varnish and bright color, and driven by men in may top hats and frock coats, formed a picture which one observer accurately called "a prancing museum of Dickensian glory." . Eleven Coaches Represent Remnant of National V Pastime of Yore The entire atmosphere of the meet-l ing was that of a quieter and more leisured age. The swift motorvars speeding through the park seemed modern anaehronisms, a view appar- ently shared by London's traffie police who halted all motor traffie while the digttifksd and sedate coaches passed through the park and then to Rane lagh. The only modern touch was the frocks of the women guests, the men and grooms being attired practic- ally as they would have'been had the journey been made a century: ago. This is the only surviving‘ccaching club in London. Until last year there were two. England clings tightly to in traditions and its picturesque mem- ories and a more easy-going age, and there were many in Hyde Park as the coaches set of? who sighed regretfully for the pre-motor days when sociabil- ity and good fellowship distinguished transportation and the roads as con- trasted with the incessant rysh and turmoil of a petrol era. The club will have two other meet- ings before the summer ends. The drivers find that by traveling in groups they avoid much of the difiV culty caused by the practical monopoly of the country roads by motor cars. Green peppers, allowing two to each? person. are to be prepared by remov-l ing the seeds and white veins, tusd! by a few minutes of scaldlng. rm. them with a mixture of chopped veal or pork and rice, chopped onion and; parsley cooked together in butter only! long enough to blend. When the pep- pers are filled, put one tablespoonluli of cream over each and bake gently! for one hour. 1 Toronto Mail and Empire month} The successful hold-up in the Union) Station has been a revelation to most people. There was an idea that a mail coach loaded with treasure would be guarded by men with loaded guns. The public are amazed to learn that there was in that mail coach hundreds of thousands of dollars to be had just for the taking. The gunmen would not be so successful 't the Government were not so slack a trustee. Stuffed Peppers Robbing the Mails While he labors for an earthly l kingdom, Prime Minister ledwin‘ hug not forgotten the Kingdom of God on earth, and " declaration of sublime faith in the Bible as a. "high explosive" which has helped and will help again to bring great revivals is a wotness that the Book is not with- out friends in high places; Mr. Bald. win was addressing the recent annual meeting of the British and Foreign Bible Society in London when be gave voice to the faith that is In him. Speaking of the “universal appenl to mankind of the personality ot our Lord," which. he says. must come to every one who reads the Bible, he fwent on, as the London Times quotes l him: “it is that faith that intimates the' Bible Society, and it is in that {will that they send that Book out in ali', tongues to all peoples of the world.i and so I come back to what I said " the beginning. It is a high explosive} but it works in tstrange ways, and no living man can tell or know how that Book in its journeying through the world has started the individual soul in ten thousand dinerent places into a new life. a new belief, a new con- ception, and a new faith. These thing! are hidden until some man, name not ple, is touched beyond all this by the Divine tire. and the result is one of those great revivals ot religion which repeatedly. through the centuries. have startled the world and stimulat- ed mankind and which, as sure as we are meeting in this room, will occur again. on through good times and through evil times in faith. I wish this 800 iety all that is good, and I would any lfor myself before I close that if I did pot feel that our work, and the work Fr, all of us who hold the same faith and ideal. whether in politics or in 'civic work, wherever it may be- if I Ldid not feel that that work was done gin the faith and the hope that at some 'day. it may be 1.000.000 years hence, "he Kingdom ot God would spread lover the whole world, I could have it") hope, I could do no work, and I would give my ottteo over this morn- |lng to any one who would take it." A Prime Minister's British to Extend Faith 'i; Aid to Agriculture ..rrF, ' 'CT-L, __...ar.r, l in All Dominion, “So much of our time in this world we seem to be carrying on our strug- gie in twilight or in tog-friends, and men who ought to be friends, hitting blindly ni the melee and wounding men who are or ought to be their brothers. Nothing but the light which comes from that Book can lighten that twilight or dispel that fog. The Kingdom of God may he very far oft, but this society works Toronto Teiegrnm (Ind. Cong.): The immigration investigation at Ottawa reported on most phases of coloniza- tion. but failed to answer the one burning question: How are we to bring in settlers, while we try to keep them out? Until this problem has been worked out the immigration will be laboring under a handicap second only to its present head. ATrkkoftheFoxRanchintrTradtt Immigration cat, who is mothering them take: her Sir Robert Blythe Greig, chairman of the Board of Agriculture for Scot- land, has just arrived in Ottawa to arrange with Canadian Government ofhdiah, for the inauguration of the plan of the British Government for an extensive chain of agricultural infor- mation bureaus. Aim of Information Bureaus Explained to Americans by Sir Robert Greig These bureau, when the organize-l tion work is completed, will be located, in British dominiona all over theI world, Sir Robert said. Representa- tives from 60 British lands ovate}: attended the Agricultural Research) Conference in London, at which the, plan for the bureau was outlined, he) aded, and them will be more than thisl number of bureaus eoarporathttt for; the development of agriculture. In: addition to their own work the {Mora-1| tion bureaus will co-opembe with the Departments of Agriculture or similar [ branches of government of all of the, :muntries with such departments. 3 Victoria Colonist (Cons.) '. The nom-l "nation of Mr. Hoover has a special‘ (interest for Canada. He is the chief l iprotagonist in the United States of , ithe internationalization of the St.', iliawrence waterway. His choice asl I President would undoubtedly give that} ipmject a fillip and lead to greater‘ 'pressure than ever before being brought on the Government at Ottawa Ito sanction what water power users 23nd transportation interests want in [the United States. A Republican vic- gtory in November next will be warn- =ing to Canada to bring public opin- iion to bear on the Government at ot. ltawa to prevent any cession to the United States of rights, which should bring, and which do belong, to this ', Dominion. “Through the work of the bureaus and with the cooperation of other na- tions already promised, farming within the next 10 years will have ac- cess to a. fund of information on a par with other industries maintaining vast research divisions," Sir Robert sai& The hardest thing in starting work. in the tima we tiddle around before getting under way we might have the molt dimeult job half done. Things are rarely as hard to do as we think they no going to be. We gttttttr most in anticipation. it's really tear that keeps us from starting. The water's line when we get in. Tho least pain comes when we plunge. The wind is coldest when we dnwdle along the tmnk.---Capper's Weekly. If we- wanted to Shirk we would organize a labor union of runners Ind say that we would cut down the race to tirt, miles and we would loaf.--- (llarence De Mar. Hoover and the Waterway The Hardest Thing ""W'Z‘EW' IL ".17 ' UNTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Looks Like the Floor Again for Jeff. Holt bee-lover! will can that the apt-n ot the old he. been 3 m “in ttthetr mantle - ell the picturesque ciueice and medievni be. lists therein comma: ebout the wise' little creetures we are still so hr iron '; understanding. Until well-nilh the. close of the seventeenth century the, muterpieces at those nee! bee-lovers t-Aristotle, Virgil and 'imTru...VGi) ietudied es practical hendbooks. and! the exquisite poetic funciea of theI older Grecinn writers which enrich the! fourth book ot the "thsorgies" were' Accepted without uestion bf our old: bee meters. But the greatest chnrm' of the Ellsebethsn and Ituert books is surely the love of bees which shine- through their passe and the writers'; dellget in the mystery and ghmor of; one of the most ancient crafts under' the sun. l The rnrest of the old English bee book: is Hyll's slender little volume. "A protitnbio instruction of the porno ordering of Bees," which wu Brat published in 1572 with his "Profitable arts ot gardening." It was published separately in 1579, 3nd in this form is I. very rare book. Edmund South- ‘erne'l “Treatise concerning the right ‘use and ordering ot Bees" (1594) is “11th equally are and a fur more in. itemtiu book, in that it is nu origin-.1 iWork. whereas Hyll's is mainly I com- !pilution trom the classic“ wriun. I An interesting feature of the book‘ it! the "tree-music" asaochted with the) Iartermwartms. The author gravely letl‘ ilorth the notes, which strikes one a ‘a typical seventeenth century conceit, Inn! in the 1623 edition this "beef ma- drlul" is expanded into four pans of music with the words. Butler unively “own he cannot vouch tor its accur- I acy "because in that confused noise, jthieh the buzzing been in the bunie ’ltime of their departing doe make, my /dull heuins could not perfectly ap- {prehend it, no that I 1m (nine to make 'iup that as I could." iiiiiiaiiiiiiiJis {A Wop 99m; The non including of the caller bee books. however. in undoubudly Clinics Butler’s "Feminine Hour “chic: or n Treatise concerning Bees and the due ordering of them. Where- in the truth found out by experience and diligent observation discovered: the idle and fond conceims which many have written anth thil subject" (1609). . . . l The old bee meters (littered greatly on the merits ot the picturesque cul- ‘tom ot â€ringing" been. Southerue jars: "When the ewerme in up it is that. good to ring them, as some doe, nay it is a common thing where there ii: no experience to keep a stirre and; 'lar on either with a nason Kettle or gl‘rying pen taking (I! the common 'proverb in) Brent mines and hove pittie thankee; for by such meant-I they ‘|make the bees angrie. and 60 further to settle then otherwise they would." Samuel Purchas, rector of Sutton in Essex and author ot that quaint little volume, "A theatre ot Political Flying- 1'i1tssttctis" lilo condemns the mutant. Cnoth l’urchae and Butler quote the _|“ancient law of Chrutettdome," where. lhy bee owners were allowed to purauo‘ itheir been when they swarmed wher. ‘every they went. "This beuetit there its of ringing," says Purchu, "that it ‘you have neighbor†near you that .keop bees, you may give notice there. ‘by to prevent wrangling. It some of itheirs should rise at the some time. "tut It they will not he stayed. but ghastening on still, go beyond your bounds. the ancient law of Christen- Via' permitteth you to pursue them ‘withersoever. but our common law is , more uneivil. and yeelda no sud: privi- .le;e, for it your Bees boo out of your if,':',",',',','; your property in loot. if you bee not more courteous." But in the whole range of bee litera- ture surely the most fascinating book is the! dainty little play. “The Pnrlia- ment of Bees, with their proper char- ncteu. Or. I Beehive furnieht with Twelve How-combos, u Plenum u Protltable . . . By John Dlye" (1641). All the characters, with the exception of Oberon, are been; the sweetness of fancy is exquisite, and throughout one seem» to her th light but of thy wings. There is no record to show whether “The Parliament of Bees" he: ever been performed, and it in lo delicate let, perhaps it is tmpomMtrle.-- Eleenour Sim-lair Rohde, in "Garden. ’Creft in the Bible And Other Essen." Watch the garden for the insect visitors. A bug in time save: nine, 1nd it saves the garden, too. - l The. million psrrrhs--as - I. run - may: of cum (and Princ- laward Ilium - no {will starvation " the peieot MMF- 'ery in the. province of Stunning. iChn'nu, and om million of the. m 'doomod to die before aid can mach ithem, seeming to American tstsstrv- or. who have been our the tank»- "rdekmt region to duke relief m- um. All than unfortunate. limo in I hunch“ - miles. of tau-rim. n action now a bum u Death Vulley in California. my. â€will Sweet- land in a much! ab]. from sm to the Chicago Daily News. On. mil.. lion of the thmm, it thinks, pmhbly can tttr-tok-out-dba) anther until relief an come {mm tho United sum, provided it tmeme. in the neat that or four moerthr. The mould million in doubtful, and an 7ii'2 can not be saved; The suffering extends to mny other m'ttliotur, we we told, but th particular um: de. vastated by bad. I. well at by drought it tho eentm of the catas- trophe. To quota Mr. Sweethmad fur.. blade. of dried mu comm tho Id. food for up millions drifting de opdrlndy ovu- tho pmvime "in: to thsd nourish-Qt. It is not too much to say that than million- have not ttodth-lNottoofar-1hrntatt, months. Oth- mimou have left the provime and an. to Hammad; Pur- ‘enu have sold their son. Ind daugh- Wen for as little as " each for tho purpone of buying their pan-age from the stricken ma. "Whlht Shuntung province hu " mys been notorious u a famine am, this year is the wont in the union'- history, the natural famine cause: be. httt manly wanted by tho politi- cal conditions. and the fact that than farming 1.116% have been turned into uttlo-fuldo for the Nationalist and Northern forces. Ink of rain, ban.. ditry, locusts. excendve taxatirm, and warfare, than spell a lingering (bath for 3,000,000 people. "With Shamans under Nationalist rule it is expects! that the patties! nbupeu which aggravated the stricken we. are “lady to and. For example, Gov. Chang (limg-chang exploitnd tho province by collecting four years' cdmced tutu from the fun-era, com- pelling thoumndn to forsake their 110an. The result was that cram were not planted. This year the mod: were ding up by the starving million. and onion before they had I chums. to Die in Slimming to sprout. “wounds. peaceful mai- Oonb of Tsinw. evuuwod that " owing to the Japanese occupation, do. depending upon the starving Vin-(on to support them." “An unfortunate vision of thou- sand: of mane-t, ham-working tart- .“ struggling erimlr to hang on " their little bite of holdings with in better outdook than I slow, painful death for themselves and fauniliei'--- such in tho word picture drum by s correspondent of the Marketer Guardian after I motor trip of 850 ‘mileI in the stricken am between {Peking and Nanking. It is estimated that 2,000,000 starving people no flee.. ing for their lives out of Shaman; into Mnnchur'u, when, they hope to find Und to eu1tivate--"ttto gm folk migration in the world todt," tho New York Times all: it. From that paper we get those further inch and thrtuws applying to tho In†are. affected: “Three yen-s of bad crop., - com ditioeur, mile“ government, bandit- ry. locum and luck of min he“ brought at least 4,000,000 people to a sum of dependence. and as many more to destitution. The Time: cor- Wt n month ngo ‘3.de that 9,000,000 people in that region were summing. Conditions gum worn. and must continue to do so until an- other crop cam, when outside help is received or up inhabitants mam L (have food can be m." Another cable dispatch, quoted br the Anne. thmatitutioet, gives “I. details: . “Honor in blended with pity st “In of m: was who hue MM- "i their “a! punt- in order to he. them from the PM of starvmtam, mug-lad their mm. and then mut- ed “out on an LOGO-mile journoy to the {no lands of Manehtgriac Inland- dde in now madly pmetieed in tho famine district: by parent" who cu barely keep We dive, or win can not out“. to see their chm dying of no" tstauwartioes Every by the women of our villages bring (In any babo- wbo haw boon piehod up. WM and from him. in: “with sud from din-ha. Sam 6. within I few hour: of their -." ow LONDON SQUARE SOON TO BE CLOSED Iamdoes.--Themre Grown! Square. ll. agteieett new within thn PMâ€. ofthe Borough Market, Southwsrhhl to be and. Thomas Hum. clerk a“ the market trustees, cm a up; 'eW nee-am of Justices held to -ittgt j dd. action-aid the Bomb Mum "opium 1755 "tttth-thed- pruimlly a aimilur institution in do!) proximity for 700 years To “dint: the distribution of â€be. it wu proposed to utilire tho “an on n private road. Mr. Hayn- mdhd that " one time a “we " cum I stood than a “\th in the aqua“. of and Aruba “(I mm: " iak'i)