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’ »i -x- V ■" ' " ’ V • •, I ; f 1 1^51; ' • '• •• ' * t ' r-V.' ' : f • -r- ^ . /• " 1 / * ’■ \ * 7 : .I-'’" • ' n ■. % X -'V .2 -.JUkc* \) ? ; ’.c ' BARNWELL SENTINEL, BAENWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA .. PAM THffIK H“H4+ , 4 i ++tl+ , il+‘H'++ , l , +++++f++++++++++++++ , H , ++t+H+ , K+'}, Perhaps no other careerTtfsts the quality of womanhood so re lentlessly as trained nursing. It calls for many qualities, spiritual and physical. The reward is not large,, apjd while many seek them, but few are able to win the big prizes the service offers. Sidney Page, age eighteen, is taken in at the hospital as a probation nurse through the influence of ybung Bn. Max Wilson. The Pages—Sidney, her semi- invalid mother and her Aunt Harriet—had taken in K. LeMoyne, a strange young man, as a roomer in oader-to help meet expenses. He’s very mysterious but charming, and Joe Drummond, Sidney's high- school sweetheart, becomes violently jealous. Immediately Sidney enters hospital service her threads of life, begin to tangle. You get first sight of this in the Installment printed f\ere. . / ' . *. I • • ' JVrhupv never in his twentyTwo “Terribly, rears httd yound Drummoad been" so.,.. “A little danger adds to tht v ? r.4t' of near a thrashing, Fury that he was things. Yoirknow wtyat Nietzsch> says ashamed of shook Le Moyne. For about that.” : very Ceur ol' himself, he thrust his- r **J am not fond of Nletxsch^.” Then, hands in the pockets of his. Norfolk With an effort! “What does he say?" o the expenses of the house on the Street. “‘Sorry, old' man; We made another arrangement.” They left the hospital together. Everywhere the younger map received the homage of success. „/The 'elevator man bowed and flung the doors open, with a smile; the pharmacy clerk, the “Lectures^ are over for the s.umtuer. doorkeeper, even the convalescent pa*. CHAPTER VI.—Continued. "Tired?” He adopted the gentle, al most tender tone that made most wom en his slaved/ ' . “A little. It is warm.” ‘‘What "are you going to.do this eve ning? Any lectures?” * , ‘Two thin, igs are .wanted I f the true man—danger and play. Therefore he seekefh'woman as the.,most dan gerous of toys.’ ”, "Woolen are dangerous only whe,Q you think of them ns toys. When a man finds that a woman can reason- do anything but feel—he regards her as a menace. But the reasoning worn* in is really less dangerous-than the * other sort.” - . This was -morr like, the real thing. •'■•d jure He* jnwie.-makers; they. Shall fu-» < ;iileil Hu** children of Hod.-- Matt/o;!». , A soldier’s epitaph. D" tint These wonderful words of blessing, ring in o:,ir o;;i s ns ue scan ah xiouM.v. Tv j >> t - - fully, day try day tlie-list of tlit* /alien i'll U»«* huttletield. Tlfey, w e feel,- are I he true peacemakers in this tdrrihle lime, the men ylwi give their all Who give themselves for the cause of peace. They nisi who make what is prrlmp«< l hefgreater MMerifiee. who come -bn’ek maimed or crippled for life, yet light- (By E. O. SELLERS, Acting Director of the .Sunday School Course In the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago,) "'opyright, 1»17, Western N"Vw»pn p<*r Vnloa.) LESSON FOR JANUARY 23 1 s • - REVERENCE OF AESUSTFOR HIS FOLLOWERS’ HOUSE. .' be 1 shall go to prayers, and after that to the roof for air.” ^ -“Can’t you take a little ride tonight and cool oil? I'll have the car wherever you say. A rldetjtnd some supper— how does it sound? You could get Away at seven—” “Miss Cregg Is' corning T With an impassive face. the girl turned away.- The workers of the op- eratlng ropui surged het ween them. tient who was polishing the great brass doorplate, tendered their tribute. Doc tor Ed looked neither to right nor left. • ■ *. * * . * * * *- ‘ —*c.' —^ — Sidney, after her involuntary bath In the river,, had gone Into temporary eclipse at the White Springs hotel. In the oven of the 11 kitchen stove sat her two small white .shoes, stuffed with pa per so that they might dry in shape. Hack in a detached laundry, a sytnpa- coat. . .. . . — “Y^ry well,” he said. “You go to’ her \yith just one of these ugly, insinua tions, and I'll take mighty good care that you are sorry for it. If ypu are going to behave like a bad child, you deserve a licking, and I’ll give It to you." ~ v s - An overflow from the parlor poured out bn the* porch. IJe Moyne had .got himself in band somewhat. lie was still angry, but the' look in Joe’s eye startled him. He put a hand on the To talk careful / ^fractions Hk_e this, boy’s shoulder. , , 'with beneath.e&e» abstraction its c<m- “You're wrong, old man," he said, j cealeil personal application, to talk of “You’re insulting the girl you care for j woman and look in her eyes., t<» discuss by the things" you are thinking. And, j new philosophies with their freedoms, If it’s any^ comfort to you, I have no j intention of interfering in any way. You can count me out. It’s between you and her.” , Joe picked his straw hat from a chair a mj^ stood turning it in his hands. “Even if you don’t rare for her, how' do I know she isn't crazy about you?” “My word of honor, she isn’t.” “She seuds.you notes to McKees’.” “Just to clear the air, ITTshow it to you. It’s no breach of confidence, It’s about the hospital.” ~ But lie was clever with the guile of "Thetlc mftid* was ironing various soft Into the breast pocket of his coat he. the pursuing male. Eyes of all ou him. while garments, " fifid singing as she dived and brought Up; a wallet. The lie turned at the door of the_ wardrobe > room and spoke-to her over the heads of a dozeu nurses. “That patient’s address That I had forgotten. Miss Harrison, is the cor ner of theTurk and Ellingtou avedue.V 1 “Thunk you.v--^ She played the game well, was quite aim. He admired her rooiuesk. Cer- fainly sh«f Hus pretty, and Certainly, too, she was interested in him. He went whittling into the '"wardrobe room. As he turned he caught the in terne’s eye, and there parsed between them a glance of complete oHiBprehen- slon. . The interne grinned. The room was not empty. His broth er was there, listening to the comments of O'Hara, his friendly rival. \ - — “Good work, hoy!" said O^tlara, and clapped u hairy hand on his shoulder. “That last case was a wonder; I'm * proud of you. and your brother here is indecently exalted. It was the Ed- ' wdrdes method, wasn’t it? I’ saw it, done at his clinic in New York." ” “Glad you liked it. Yes. Edwardes ": was a pur oi’Mnthe in Berlin. A great * surgtum. tmy jamr old chap!'' - —~1’here strettT threc-tttt-n in thrrottn- try with the nerve aiid the hand for jt.” O’Hara Wentlouf, glow ing with fils • >wn magnanimity; Ductur. Ed stood f»y uni waited while his brother got Into h.is»'etothes. ( He was rather silent” There were many times, when .he wished that jheir mother could have “tjved fd — See trow he hud carried"out. Mg promise tfr'^rmrke a man ~oFMax.'" * Sometimes he' wondered what she worked-*" Sidney sat in a ironing chair lii a hot bedrootn. She was carefully wallet had had a name on it in gilt let ters that had been carefully scraped off. But Joe did not wait to sq£jth<* swathed in a sheet from neck to toes, note.' . except for her arms, and she was being “Oh, damn the hospital!” he said— and Went swiftly down tJie steps and into the gathering twilight of the June nighL - , ~ — as phiJosophLc.iis possible-. Someone tupped lightly at-jhe door. “It’s Le Moyne. Are you all right?” ; "Perfectly. How stupid It must be for you!" - "I’m doing yer.v well. The maid will soon he ready. What shall I order for supper* ?" • “Anything. I’m starving.” * “I think your shoes have shrunk." .“Flatterer!" She laughed. “Go away and order supper. And 1 caii see fresh lettuce. Bhall wv have-a salad?” K. Le-Moyne stood for a moment In front of ,the closed door,‘for the mere sound of her moving,’beyond it. Things had gouewery far with the Pages' -roomer—that day in the country; not. so far’ as they were to go, but far enough to let him see ou the brlfik’bf u liaf misery he stood. He could not go avTayTHe had. prom ised her to stay j/he was needed. He thought he could^hiive en'liy-ed seeliig hoy ,wus~*rnxd about her. Iter marry Joe, had she fra red for the held mit her Arms to* Ilf tv i»oy. Tfiaf.vytiy, at least, lay safety for Ah, that was too had! Iter, The hoy had fidelity aud devotion written large over him. But this new’ complication—her romantic iuferest in Wilson, the surgeon’s reciprocal Inter est in her,^ wlth/what he knew of fhe man—made him quail. From the top-of the Barrow stair case to Hie-foot, and lie -had lived--* CHAPTER VII.' Sidney and K. Le Moyne-were- din- ^ lng together at the White Springs ho tel. The novelty of the experience had made her eyes shine like stars. She. saw only the magnolia tree shaped like a heart, the terrace edged with low- shrubbery., and beyori^ the faint gleam that was the river. The unshaded ghire of the lights behind her in the housie was eclipsed by the crescent^'"eiTge""of the rising moon. Dinner was "over. Sid ney was experiencing the. rare treat of after-diuuer coffee. Le Moyne, grave and contained, sat ' across from her. To give-so much pleasure, and -so eusily ! How-young :she w as, and radhint! vvonder. the I.F^SON* TEXT—John 2:13-22. . GOLDEN TEXT—My linuae ahall oalled a house of prayer.—Matt. 21.If __ Skipping the details of genealogy, ■'hearted, with, the happiness of men j.ldr-th and boyhood, John plunges Into .who have made the greatest surrender. 1 die Svork ami inlnistrj .of , --. Lord. Shall we think together for a few our previous lessons lia\e taken up moments of God's peace ,and how. he , luatter of his eternal (»o<Ihe«d* the gives it?. It litny help us now. and w °rd made flesh, the witness of John, hereafter when the war is over, and | J‘* sus u,l d John the Baptist, hjs first - international and. domj'stic problems disciples and the wedding at Canaan, come pressing upon u* with bewilder- j S<mn;^f these events have been skipped ing insistence—help us to play tlm i . . part which each of us tiiust play t«»- i t^at’hrer should rieylevy them briefly ward the achievement of a better and j more ' t'ljristian state of life. The peace_which jwecetled this war, fudged by our standurd, was a false | jieaee. The mighty forces of human nature, of racial tendency, of national j self-assertiveness were there, hut wpn t to die weddlug fpr he had many things to teach by means of It. The over without much consideration. yey& rW The wedding at Canaun probably oc curred in ’March, A. D. 27, and the events of this lesson in Ala’ll of % the ?y Passover week of that .year,. bo.th' c events occurring early In the flrft year of the ministry of our Lord. Jesus j: there w as no complete harmony, no real co-operation. Individuals, classes, groups, nations, .were 'either en gaged in a^wjld eomjietition of self- issertibn arid self-aggrandizement, or*, ii| eowsudiee or eynieai sloth, stand- story is familiar, and . yet God Is p£T- lormiug the satiie mjracle every year except by somewhat slower process.- John lays strpng emphasis upon the ‘signs” which Jesus performed as evi- . *- . 4T* ing aside and snying. “Let tilings take "tlreir course.”, “Let them light it 'otlf." j Hence the ^fowth of an tmchr{iff&n ; Jesus’ fetation tft the ^omie 1 deuce of his offlee. This miracle Is an allegory."*. It Also throws light upon > spirit in eomr^eree and industry, in -ko- Applies the Word of God eiai Iif.e, iti politics, national and in- i ^VV* U-l")- As tKe-^Shn of the Law terna\lional. ’ ' J e?,u ' 4 observed all of Its requirements and therefore went to the Passover 1 (Deut. Kkld; Luke 2:41). We would suggestv-the reading of IMersheim’a -- To Obtain Peace Within. "With the IndividuaiH is as the cohuiTunity,' for Gotl with made' each of us a bundle of mighty fiircys— forces which if left ungovertied nifty bring s.wift disaster,' even a*- earth quake or hurricane bring death and destruction . where they break forth. Our passions, desires, all the natural movements and tendencies, of our body. un<r sjiirit, must needs i»e yo- ojieruting harmoniously under . the ‘Life of Chrlst” aTthl8"poTM, especlul- ly his .description of the feast. Jesus fpiind much of Interest, and also saw that which filled hhespirit with indig nation aa he entered-the temple (v. 14). Great number* of oxen and sheep and doves were, required for the sacri fices. Every family must .bring for sacrifice a lamb, the sacrifices being , ler • tne<j la j n j B f nuer court near the great bund of <fod, if we are to have jience i a]ti»r. Those living nearer the city within, rhe ^co-operation of us a+Land . rou m firing their own sacrifices, but of ail our best faculties at their best, tfios^ who came from far distant points God-given capacities back 1° ; found It more, convenient to purchase God for his control, aud all their en ergy put forth without self^ssertlou. tfietr sacrlfiwrnearer the tempi?. Thus a business had grown within the She Went W„hite " *nd Clutched tht Edge of the Tabl®7~^ in harmony with.the movement of mjr j oourta _ w hich gave rise to an Immense dk4h*wj«®Asuch is and shall lie the work { amount of covetousness- and selfish- of the peacemaker at home. It is work i ness. The yearly tax due from every that can only be effective if, first, j ew could not be received .except in we have made our own peace with f th?~ native coin; hence the money God. ^ * The Beatitudes are our best study in wartime, amf in every time, tkt they, give us the "jiortr^it »f our—Mastc tef, tire years"torment!. At the foot, however, he was startled out of hia reverie; Joe Drummond - stood there 1 waiting, for him. his blue eyes recklessly alight. "You—you dog!" said Joe. There were people in the hotel par- or., Le Mtiyne took-the frenzied boy by—the eliiow and led him past the dooFto the empty porch. - “■Now," he said, "if you will keep your voice down^ I’ll listen to 1 what you have to say.” "You know what I’ve got to say.” This falling to draw from K. Le Moyne anything but his steady glance, Joe jerked his arm free and clenched hiS. flstT , ,- . “What did you bring her outJiere I for?" 7 . “I do not know* that I ow> you any explanation, but I am willing, to giiie yopjotu*.* I brought her out here for a - trolley ride ftud a picnic luncheon." i He was sorry for the boy. Life not having b?en all beer and skittles do* Ttilm. he knew that Joe was suffering, 4tml'wtmauarvelously patient with him, r'here‘is she ntmi?'’ J “ShiNjiad the misfortune to fall in river. She is upstairs.” And, see- light of unbelief in Joe's eyes: to tuhke a tour of invests gatiou, ynuNyill find that I am entire ly truthful. In ti.ie laundry $ umid—” “She is engaged to me"—doggedly. “Everybody in the neighborhood knows it, and yet you bring her out here for a picnic! Itig—it’s riflanprt rmton table wasj)eing brought; they were not to he alone. But .what roused in him violent resentment only appealed to Sidney’s curiosity. Carlotta Harrison came out alone. Although the tajqiing of her heels was dulled by the grass, although she had •cxrhangedHiep~eop-for tho-trlack -hat,- Sidney knew her. at once. A sort of thrill ran over her. ^It was the pretty to discard old'creens and old morali ties—that was his ganje. Wilson be- She fairly came content, interested again. The girl Another ; his philosophy and gave him a chance changers within tfe courts. The re sult was that the temple had become a “den of thleyes" -(Mark 11:17).; This ^ had undermined the ppyter of religion, sketched by his own hand.' f-Here are j an ^ turned men away frdm the truth*, meekness and mere,v. the antidote to ; This place, mo^'to be a house of Mir-a^verlion and brutal truculence; j prayer (.Ter. 7:11; Isa. 56:7) had be but between the fwo^ at the heart of eome a vanity fair; a show’, and the them ns it were—-a flaming passion for righteousness, such as winged The to deft-ntl tt. With thf conviction, at, " ordB -Ivnunclatlon pro- their then! went'on. that Le Moyne I-harhccs. anti and his companion mu.t surely hav’a "T'f ,h0 ^ W* gone^she gained case. v f ,kkl ' rs ou ' ,,f tl,l ‘ ‘»W* It was only by wjld driving that she got hack to the hospital by ten o‘clock. Wilson left her^-at -the^-corner, well TdfiTrTTT \vl rtl -htms^tfr - AfFh^Tdrove^ np the- Street he glanced across at the page-house. Sidney was there on the nurse from Doctor Wilson’s ofilce, Wns ! f j otfrs ^ap--.^jkJng to a tall man who i- it possible but"of course not! The book of rules stated explicitly that such things were fdrhidden. “UrnTtcturn around,” she said swift ly. “It Is the Miss Merrlson I told you about. She is looking at' v^s.” ^ Carlotta’s -eye^ were blinded for a moment by\the glace of the house !lght£a__lThen she sat up, her eyes oh te Mojne’s- gravq profile turned to ward the valley. Lucky for her thflt stood below and” looked Up at her. Wilson settled Sidney was 4* June night was in his blopd 1 his tie, lii the darkness.'jx^faving the gifts tl rhjghty pretty girl. The. ^getually make Ills He was ,n ,ls Gifts Man Musft Cultivate. * All these gifts we must envet ear nestly if we Avould he trtte pehcemalc- era, fur. it. is Hie growth of "Christ lu us, and that alone that can make us worthy to^'be called' “Sons of God.” And so we come "to him in the holy sacrament of fellowship and peace, that shall most ef- likenoss to grow’ Much we have learhed anew very object of the temple wBS _sacri* Wilson hud sToppeaTfiTHit bar, that ^M^sbYi med fffrer hirn Sidneys inswnetive good maimers for- ' __ bade her staring, that only tlie edge of the/ summer ougli the trdes. She went white and clutched !ie/,s rues “Can’t You Take a Little Hide To* * , - , jiiflht? M - i fW'otrld think of his own untidy methods compared with Mat’s extravagant or- /def—of the bag f for instance, with the dog’* collar in tt^hud other things. On these occasions he_alwayS determined to clear out the bag. . "“I guess I’ll pe getting along," he said. “Will you be home for dinner?" “I think not. I'll—I'm going to run -outofTown. and eat where It’s cool." The Street was notoriously hot in -ummer. ’ '*■ _ ‘*There ;, s a roas^of beef. It’* a pity ro cook a'roast for one." Wasteful, too, this cooking of food for two and only one to eat it. A rout »f beef meant a visit, in Doctor Ed’s modoit-paying eliefltele* He etitt paid »■« meat - His-fist had unclenched. Before K. Le Muyne’s eyesfiis own fell. He felt suddenly young and futile; his just rage turned to blu"tering in his ears. “x don’t know where you came from,” he said,' “but around here,d^* cent men cut out whek'a girl’s en gaged.” ‘ ’ , “I see !” - *-■ “What’s more, what do we know about you? You may be all right* but 1 how do I know it? Yo v u get her Into trouble and I’ll ^ill you!'’ It took courage, that speech, with K. Le Moyne towering five inches above him and growing little white about the lips, "" r - '.J■ “Are you golhg to sayall these things* to Sidney?” ‘T am. And I am going to find out why you^wy»wt«4rp 4uat now." . the edge of the table/ with her eyes closed. That gave her quick brain a chance. It was madness, June mad- ness. She was ahvnys s?*eing hjra, even in her dreams. This man was older, / much older. She looked again. S safely leave her mother. - She had notJuieimiLstakeu. Heje, and after all these months! sorry he had not'kissed, Carlotta good, night. He rather thought,, now he looked back, she had expected it. 'As he got out of his car at the curb, a young man who had been standing ln the shadow of the treebox moved quickly away. of - this holy saermnent in these tryublous times. 'We have,learned to value’it more than ever before as!a meeting-place of the great concourse fleed to the greed of gain. The de fense often made in our day, of buy ing and selling In the house of God that It has to”'dd witb the cause of... worship will not bear scrutiny In the light of this passage Into these sur roundings this young reformer enter*, mul places his finger upon the heart t-he matter when he quotes the scrip ture. The reason of his action was what the scripture said about the ' house of God. Present day followers of Jesus can learn a lesson tron\ these words. II. Jesus Fulfills the Word of God. (vv. 18-22). Jesus Spake as one hav-. Ing authority, and these merchants knew they were In the wrong. He em bodied In himself, as prophet, the i ness.. “That you, Jdfe?” lie called. But the boy .went on. * . * * • i moraTschtiment of the nation, aud ex- of the faithful,-Avhere^w^-eftnaetuttI-4^^ his authority. It looked like ..high- ize by our communion wcHr'him" oi)f'| nmWe?nreanmTt6n unless Jesus were a privilege of* communion with all who prophet .sent from God; therefore (jie Here we 'make good- our ' demand lor his credentials Tv, 18). ' fellowship in- the "Communion „f : Jesus gave a sign, a sign which they Saints,”" living and . departed. At d,d not understand at the time (v’. 19; _ ; God’s altar we feel ourselves; most • near . to tliose, our loved ones, our Sidney'entered the hospital as a pro^ ' h( ' ro ™' whoHe bodily . presence is reft batioher e^rly'In August. Christine i ] rora us for a Again, we have was - to be married in September to 1 yarned to value it moTeMis the great L(Palmer Hbwe, and, with Harriet and I **»*,<* Christian intercession, where K. in the house, she felt that she could I ! h< L '* eT ’ V r ,r , es T ence our - High Priest and Intercessor we can K. Ld Moyne, quite unconscious of her pres ence, looked down Into the valley. Wilson appeared on the wooden porch above the terrace, and stood, his eyes searching the half-light for t^er. If he came down to her, the man at the next table might turn, would see b*‘r— She rose and' went swiftly back to ward the hotel. All the gayety was gone out of the evening for her, but aha -'kjj ’ lay before the Almighty Father'the needs of pur loved ones in- peril. The balcoiyy outside the parlor, wns already under way. On the night be fore she went away Sidney took chairs out there arid sat with her mother un- tif the dew drove Auna to the lamp in the sewing rootn aud her “Dally r A| £■?? ■■ J i ■■ J. L ■ **. ' . i noujjnt^ rraamgr Sidney sat alone and viewed "het lettered by ritual and ceremony, un- Church's Weakness. It Is still true tluh if we will “let him (Jesus)- ... alone,” unencura- <he-trlnv ati'fi <iogma,-un- world from this new and pleasant angle. She could see the garden and the whitewashed fence with Its morn* lng glories;’ and at the same time, by tttwvm* m n vmr 'iiiy biishu bouse across the Street. She looked mostly at the Wilson kouser K. Le Moyne was upstairs in his I “It fS>.j50 dark and , depressing, nut there—it makes me sad." “Surely youTk^not want to dine In fhe. house?" “D<1 you mind?*' “Y’our wish is- my law—tVhlght,’’ he said softly,, ; _ - • After all, The evening was a disap pointment To him. The spontrineTty had f| || || | f-f | iril H'll M‘1' gone out of it, for some reason. The A * » .girl who haiFThrllled to his glance those two mornings in bis office, whose somber eyes Md _met his. fir? Tftf "Bre. across the operating room, was pot playing up. She *at back in her chair, eating littie, starting gt every step. Her eyes, which by every rule of the gam? should have been gazing Into bis," were fixed bar the oilcloth-covered passage outside the door. — , ^ « distorted by the false witness of life which denies faith, “all men will be lieve on hiiu.” Nothing is clearer than the fact that the.world's quarrel is not g.iihT ntfpffinted'' l»p. ; man organization of his influence. Yet I the tragedy,- not only of today but of . fornuw days also, is that the 1 church room. 8H! could Ircdi him trompln? i , “. as "U** • w * *° '«»* Cl>r,, “ up u,jd down, and entch, ocw<ionally 11 1 ne * ’ lls ;the bit*er-sweet odor of His old briei pipe. Matt* 12:33-40; 16;l-4). The resur rection of Jesus Is God’s seal to all of the ciaims of Jesus. He also sp?aks of his body as a symbol and type of wuiat is to. take, place in their national temple, an .event which occurred some forty years later, though they at the time did not understand It. Jesus fore saw that these leaders would destroy his body on the cross, and that for the same reason they were at the present time opposlug him Ip-what he had done. The Jews, thinking unljr of their temple, in whose courts they were standing, referred to the time spent in the erectlon of the build!ng tv. 20). and thought that their argument was Invincible, but they did not know what was to take plpce. Not even the dis ciples of Jesus understood his words at the time, but after his resur^iyioii they remembered them and - their ful- flllmenK The death and resurrection of Jesus was In accordance with the word of Godi Ills whole l}fe. birth and works can be traced in the Old Tests ] \ Whit *ort of disgrace i* K. ) | > l -LeMoyne trying to live down? . • ] f A theft? WWc ertion?—A. • betrayal?. Or would you say he , ► Rail beeA- disappointed in Jove? ipostouc spi it of “ho irian, save-Jesus uuly.” In her own life, and consequently In ?!«* mes sage’ and witness.—The Christian. (JP BE CONTINUED.) ‘ ' ' \ ' . -S ' A new method , of cold storage In* sUlaUon, invented In England, ir to uae “I think,/ after ^’all. yop are fright-"stabs of cork^expurded to over twlc* aamam/mammmmaammtrmmmmm n aiil'S"lTsl—ef * ^ , . .Life or Peace. ' To ferive known -one good--fid itrah— one man who, through the chances and inisc^ances s>f a hing-life, has carried his heart in his hand, like a palm •bfnijchj wuving ulj discords into peace —*he!ps dur faith In God, In qurselvek, and in each other, more than many , sennons.-Mj. \\\ Cnrtla. —-~w— all religious meetings. The bodies and souls are temples (I Cor. 3:10; 6:19). -7 Church buildings are the temples of God (Bead A. J. Gordon’s book on "How Christ Came to the Church"). The Sunday school Js a -Temple of God. • ! r *■•■. Do we see to it that our pupils act in ways and manner worthy bfi God’s true worship in the honsk of Gefff Oar presentation of the lesson, our singing and our prayers do they hooor the house of God t r — , l7I sJk V \ .-* * ■:Ulii