1 l BKGE FOUR" f? SundaySvhool leslonilikiéi - MARCH eo-‘oul-Llus or- rl-is HISTORY FROllAiRAi-iAM" - "Aim" 39 -' -- " . T0‘ 9°i-°"i°" nova NOT run WORLD, nelthel‘ ~ iihvlvw -G¢=éf!l_'l‘qalu"-'A_llfl* ' = Lth would tile love 5 = ham to 8016111011) - I f Zl“.'..-Z“'l‘~'.‘.ll.'Zln-..§l ill null-Lions . . . Golden Text.- Jehovah is merciful and gracious. Slow to anger, and abundant in lov- ing kindness - -—Psa. 108. 8 v Devotional Roadlng.‘—Psa 83. LEQsQN THEMES - The Thcocracy. .'l‘he history of the Jewish nation begins with Ab- raham. the friend of God. the fol- her of the faithful, "the 1111998“)! of all nations which have helda mon- otheistic belief practically." With him and with his family was made Jhe first covflosn‘ of promiss- Ia Egypt the family became a nation. The stern discipline of toil and suf- fering in the presence of their com- mon enemy bound them together. The great signs and wonders of the Exodus declared their high des- tiny. At Sinai the covenant made with their forefathers was renewed, confirmed, and amplified-to the as. tion. The Law was given as g schoolmaster for the childhood of the newborn nation, "a kind of ex. ternal conscience" to train it to obedience. The Israelites entered Canaan. and the first part ofthe promise to Arbraham was fulfilled. B"! f" 9- 10KB time the nation seemed to make no progress, The Deriod which intervened between Vthe entry into Canaan and the ms of Samuel was a time of anarchy and BDOBNRY- The Book of Judges is a record of two centuries of na- tional disintegration and religious declension. It was necessary, hum. fllliy Sneaking, in order that hey might learn their weakness. hey were unable as yet to hear the pure Theocrncy. the direct govern. merit of God without the interven- iiilgn (at an earthly ruler. Some vis- l e, 0nd must be found to unite __ nto a solid mass the scattered trih. es which could not as yet he rh-rrhy bound together into one bylhe in. visible tie of a common allegiance to Jehovah. Mater-in} and Dorm“! means "will PPQDKIe the way for the spiritual and religious and. Otherwise the nation must cease m exifll. 810111111 i0 Pieces between the enemies which surrounded it 0n all sides. In order to make solid advance, retrogression was lu- evitable. At this critical juncture God raised up ssmhe]. “a prophet second only to Moses," to guide the Pam)" "imllgh this crisis in its existence, and effect the transition ‘oéfie ‘$90115 “like oi‘ its education. of c‘ lonarchy. The sovereignity a v s ble monarch was a declen- sion from the ideal of the Theoc. mo?" Yet B king might have been ~ given by God in his own time as a, necessary factor in the training of the notion. But the demand for a 31:1?’ as made by the lsaelites at . PBPiOIi. was the direct outcome of fllithlessness. It was a defection from God. Nevertheless, the re. quest was granted. God frlst gave MRS. DAVIS NEBVUUS WIlECK Tells Women How She Wall Re- stored to Perfect Health by Lydia l"..l'inkllaln’sVegctableCompound Winnil g Man.— [cannot speak too high yofwhst Lydia E. Plnllllilflfl . egetable Com- pound has done for me. Iwal n ner- vous wreck and l just. had to force myself to do my work. Even the sound of m own children payin made rne feel as i " ' = I must scream if I -- they did not get awn from me. l ’ ' ' cou d not even speak rightto lnyhiisbnnd. The doctor said he could do nothing for me. My husband 's mother advised me to take theVegetable Compound and I star ted it g once. I was able to do my work on more and it was a glensure, not o b rden. Now I have a ne bouncing ho yand am able to nurse her and en- j oin my work. Icarlnot help rec- om en mg such u medicine and any seeing me before l boo it, and seeing mo now, can see what it does for lne. I am only too pleased for you to use r5131 stimonilll. K-Mro. Emu DAvis McGee St. ,Winllipog, Mun. Lpd a E. Pinkhom a Prince Text- Boo u " Ailments Peculiar to Women ' will be cont ‘loo free C. dl E. e hrziuiiolfodicincflo. ' ' no Ont. For Today [nothings ‘thatfinre imtbe world. If . 25 15. MARCH 3i TRUST IN THE LORD with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding-Pro- verbs 3:5. APRIL 1 GREETlNGS.—'l‘he Lord bless thee and keep thee. The Lord make his face shine upon thee, and be grac- ious unto thee. The Lord lift up his countenance upon thee. #114 give thee peacer-Numbers 6:24-26. APRIL 2 THE KINGDOM. 0F GOD colneth not with observation: Neither shall they say, Lo here! or. lo there! for, behold. the kingdom of God is with- in you.—Luke 17:20, 21. ' APRIL 8 0H THAT MEN would praise the Lord for his goodness. and for his wonderful works to the children of mam-Psalm 107:21. APR! L 4 THUS SAITH THE LORD that created thee. O Jacob, and he that formed thee, 0 Israel, Fear not: for l have redeemed thee. l have called thee by thy name; thou art lllinc.——lsaiah 48:1. APRIL 5 TAKE N0 THOUGHT saying. What shall we eat? or. What shall we drink? or, wherewithal shall we he clothed? But seek ye first the kingdom of God. and his right- eousness: aild all these things shall be added unto yoll.-Matthew 6:31. 3. them a king according to their own ideal, that bitter experience might teach them a lesson they would not otherwise learn: and then a king "after his own herat," a true repre- sentative of the kingdom of God. In his hands such a monarchy as we may conceive might have been asked for with oilt sin, flllfllled im- portant purposes by consolidating the scattered tribes into a body strong enough to maintain its inde- pendence. thus saving the nation from destruction. and preserving it to fulfill its great destiny of bless- ing to the world- Tho Hierarchy. .'l‘he Hierarchy at length took the place of the Monarchy alid resumed the ideal of Theocracy. When the kingdom fell, and the discipline of the Cap- tivity had done its work, “tho unity of a church tlcceeded to the unity of a nation." The voice of prop- hecy ceased. In the absence of new revelations, the people pondered on the plist, iill ilt length “the time was fulfilled and the kingdom oi God came." , Mountain Personalities. .'l‘he his- tory we have reviewed in the last quarter may be compared to a moun- tain range in whose high elevation there are conimandiug peaks. This range began with Abraham, the Friend‘ of God, the Father of the faithful; Joseph the Herbert I-Io- over of the Egyptian famine: Moses the Liberator. Legislator, and Prop het; Joshua, the Citizen-Soldier and Man of Courage: Samuel. the last of the Judges and the Founder of the School of the Prophets. Salli, the first King of Israel, the many- sided David, shepherd, musician,'st hlete, soldier, ruler, diplomat, mys- tic and murderer: and Solomoagthe most ,brillisnt failure in the whole history. Each of these mountain men brought to us lessons both of warning and inspiration. No one of them was wholly good or wholly land. lt may be said that in each case the good was greater than the evil and that each did his part in the ongoing revelation and ever- lirowing kingdom of God. FOR sruov mo olscusslon What “mire the llIrreP great pgrloflg l" "i" 1113""? 0f lsrncl? How many oi those epochs are covered by the lessons of the post tllroe nlollihs? Wllcn and with whom did the Theo- "BPY begin? What wns Abraham's kront contribution to religion. What "is "m" v! the Judges! ivliell did Samuel BDDflnr? What was his mission and message? wha; pa" did he have in establishing the milllflffiiii’? Was he favorable to ""5 ‘Yilflfllle? What was the result "is monarchy and the discipline of "l9 cfllliivii! revive the earlier ideals oi’ Israel? Does disappoint- lflflili rightly received lead to grggg. er spirituality? Woo this true oh Israeli‘ Characterize the "Mann. buokoonhlmvuliiolll in time». o was the national condition during, of the monarchy? Did the fall of’ miqitf-JHARLOHEEQWN GUARDIAN ‘f Welfare ' AniiPublis new ‘.".'.".' .:fi:...r:":a TO-LD av, lzaoloi smstuwx cerium: WORS: One oi the health talks broadens.- td to lull lame in ulllarlo my Lllu star." ruullc neartu nla-terial lrolll tus institute of Huhltc MOIIUI, loon- uvll. Dun. wraps-led by request oi the IPPUWDCIBI Board ot‘ Health thtough Ur; J. J. Nuddleton. Lois ol people say “l would rath- er have the iund ot smallpox they have had lately than get vaccinated and maybe have n sore arm lor. a month or lose it altogether, like a man I heard oi." 'l‘ba/t is all very well; but there are two points that people lorget or don't know. 'Ine flint point is that the very mild smallpox n6 have had for the last twenty years or so is distppear- ing and a much more severe lornl is gradually tailing its place. For a long t-lllle we nad very lew die 0i smallpox. because of the mUdDixlB of the cases, but. now deaths are being reported here and there, the storm is gathering and we are due to have s SQVGTDuOUl-IDIQUKIIQIIIB day, not so lar away——)ilst when and‘ just where we cannot say, ol -l..'0lLl‘S_&. ill 1920-21, the cases lu- cleansed 138% and they were six tillles as latul. So the first reason people don't get vaccinated-because smallpox is s0 mild»is no longer a good rea- son. Smallpox la getting worse slowly lbut steadily and no health officer will be surprised to see a return of‘ the Iklnd we had twenty or thirty years ago, where one out oi e\ery tour canes died, and the others were disfigured or maimed or ‘blinded ior life. .In Glasgow in 1920-21‘, one third of all ‘the unvac- cliiwted cases ill children died. Now the other reason people don't get vaccinated ill because they are afraid they are going to have very sore arms, blood poisoning perhaps, or even lose their arms, They forget or don't know that ths new methodof vaccination, in- tlotluced ilito the Canadian army by a. Canadian right here in West- era Ontario during the war, has been used on many thousands of soldiers, many thousands of men, women and children, even young baubles w-iihout the slightest injury or trouble. First oi’ all it doesn't hurt-very often even children don't know when the physician is doing it- tlley keep their a-rnls held out and their set teeth tight, expecting a stub or cut or something and when the physician says "all right, don't hold your arm up any more——lt is all done," they don't believe it_. tin the second place. no blood is drawn, so there is on chance oi anything going wrong with it after- wards. in the thi-rd place. there is no dressing, no bandage, no celluloid cap, nothing alt all to put on the arm afterwards; you just pull down your sleeve and th is all. in the iourth place it takes lees than one minute by a watch from IF fllllfillPiliil, A 51in Blillllifi’ Harmless Laxative for the Liver and Bowels \ woml HILE Y0 SLEEP Feel ilnel N0 glliping or incon- ‘_ t follows s l-ntle liver and llowclfilennsing wtll “Cuncsrcts.” Sick Headache, iliousness, (lam, In- digestion. lllll oil sucll distress gono g‘ mornl . For Men, Women and - lldren- 0o boxes, also 25 slid 50o elm, any drug store. new book Think oi’ it! A big 200 page book with 700 well tested recipes and housc- hold pointers for about the cost of paper, printing and postage! No wonder they are going rapidly-edition limited. Send 30c for yours to-day [postpaid]. WESTERN CANADA FLOU For all your baklPg—-< " for big loaves that rise right up out oi‘ the pains- for delicious astry, always insist upon urity Flour. FEATURES Tested, economical recipe: you can depend upon. Weights and measures. Ilauschold information. R MILLS COMPANY, Limited Toronto, Ontario 105 PURITU FLOUR . g _ the time ‘you roll your sleeve up until you roll lll. down again. in the flltll place and all the time.» it protects you aga list smallpox it’ you need protection-Al you are so you would take it. Butll‘ you are alreadylinnlune to enlallpole- it you are sale already, “then the vaccination won't takewfnd you -have no more trouble at all. dlow can all these things be‘! Well here is how it is done. A drop of purified» vaccine, pre pared here in Ontario by the Pro- vincial University and supplied free ‘by the ‘Provincial Board of Health is placed on the arm. Then an ordinary sewing needle._ care- fully sterilized of course, is point- ed through the vacclne and one thousandth oi‘ an inch ‘is set into the very surface of the skin so that no blood whatever shows. This is dolle rapidly eight or. ten times all inside of an eighth otan inch, on three different spots, the process taking much lms thun a minute. 01' counse the arm is washed first, this takes up most of the time spent in vaccinating by this new method, As soon as these tiny little pllcks a-re made, the surplus vac cine is washed off and the sleeve pulled down~total time spent from rolling lip the sleeve to rolling down. including washing, one min- u-tel There is only one thing for the person who is vaccinated to rem- ember-don't touch the Place. don't scra-toli it. don't put anything on it at all, don't bandage it or use court lplsster or anything-duet "Llenve it aloni." ‘F- “ S Will il it doesn't také’. that is all lllere is to it. ll it ‘does ‘lake. leave l»! alone just the some and keep on leaving lt alone. Til-e arm ~will take care oi itself perfectly through all the stages of vaccination. right up until it is all over, if you will do your part-and your part is to leave it alone and keep on leaving it alone. If you fuss with it, scratch it, put o. bandage on it or s protector. of anything else except your ordin- ary clothes you may have some tron-ble. it you leave it alone. You won't. Get vaccinated. It won't hurt yoll. it may save your lli‘e. your W!“ or your livelihood some day- i! isn't ialr to your children to leave tl-em uninsured aiiflilifll dmiuim” Get tlleln vaccinated b_\"'tlie new method even ll you don't lnsurc volirseli. Give til-s cllilzlrcll a square don] on this smallpox dancer on)’ Wll Y. Th.» prflphéc)‘ mentioned nbflvl‘ has now come true and the local papers have recently rarefied "ii" the severe smallpox outbreak in Windsor and the border towns ls n: a particularly virulent WW which may mill! i“ 5° P" w“ fatalities. No one Jmows the do)’ ii may appear on the ifiiliiii- vwcm‘ tion is ouch a simple procedugie. he only known protection for t I reu in tile public schools ol Chur- lottetowa, 85 per cent in the salu- Inerside School and 89 per cent lil the rural scllools- are UNVAUCIN- AilED. lls your child one of these’! Relu- ember that Prevention ls better than lbellig hideously disfigured to: lite. Who would be to blame ll' this occurred-certainly not the innoc- ent child. Parents-you owe it to your children to see that they lire properly VlAOGINWDI-ID. She Always Keeps Them in the House Ontario Lady Recommends Dodd‘: Kidney Pills Silo Says They Arc An Excellent Remedy for Lame Back. Dunbar, Oat., March 28.—-'Spcc- isl)—‘1i have been a user of Doddll Kidney Pills for twenty years and 11nd them good for ‘lame back." Such is the tribute Mrs. A. Burk- ley, a well known and respected resident here, pays to the old Cali~ Adian kidney remedy, Dodd’s Kid- ney Pills. "I recommend them to everyone, and am never without them in the house." ‘All that is claimed ior Budd's Kidney Pills is that they are a kid- ney remedy. They heal and strengthen the kidneys. The)‘ Riv used to treat rheumatism, drops)’. ‘backache, urinary troubles, diabetic and heart disease. became all these ills are either of tha kidneys or caused by diseased kidneys. Women's troubles, or nen-rly- all of them, come from sick kidneys. Budd's Kidney Pills will relieve kidney troll-ble, no matter where or in what form it is. - , EVENING SOARFQ Scarfa for evening wear are ire- quently attached to the frock with ends free that may be distributed to suit the whim of the wearer. Discovery for Eczema Ono of. tllo striking things about this ‘i? ‘I ‘iliiil’ "ll’li""l"i"' "‘ii.'i'.“.'la...'.'3' II . $110 rill-Elli mnlivglclgl: m?! llllllldllltc. The formula is being published in order that y slclano mo! know us! what hsalins iflido°i°ifilll€ihififll~o ‘ll ll"? m“ ng sores or hard crust: VI iill-JO loathsome disease. and Y0! 1i" n” Cross school inspection lllUW that 15.4 iwr s81" 0" loin Men" of this rouge of hismry, I nil \ Ioluoronfloollll-illlowbotwg “mere-am ~- hi. l. A. FOITIR, Drought.