=~ __; ;,._"E.’.$ E ~ .2 ~ as.» s..,,____z_ p‘ ,_”,___ ,,_,_. _ _. . w’... _____ .. l i l w...) .‘~=f\— w" firm-w PAGE TWO Church Stands 1;~_-___ 1,000 Feet Above Sea Level CARNABVON, Wain, Aug. l1.- MI.) — The ancient elmroh of Llsngelynin, Csrnarvonshire, has been reopened after being restored. The church stgnds nearly 1,000 feet above sea level overlooking the s..nwsy Valley, and, being exposed to the mountain storms, had suf- fered to such an extent that it was n y to carry out immediate repairs to save the structure from becomin s ruin. All the root tim- bering has been overhauled and treated for attacks by the death- watch beetle. With few exception: the ancient timbers have been re- tained. Nearly all the roof had to be resisted, and other improvements have been blade. The church consists of an early nave, s 14th century chancel, s. north transept in the peculiarly lo- cal position level with the east end, and s. porch of the 15th century. Between the nave and chancel are the fragmentary remains of the earliest road-screen and loft in the district. The 15th-century east window, of three equal lights, is in a 14th century niche, which prob- ably contained the image of the Vir- gin or of the Patron Saint. On the east wall, near this window are the remains of the Creed 1n Welsh in block Gothic lettering, while on the south side are the commandments, and over the window in England the words "Fear God and Honor the King." These probably date from the Restoration. The simple low octagon font may be of 124th century workmanship. Combine Rail Air Service LONDON, Aug. 12—(C.P.)'*Rail and air services combined now oc- cupy the attention of railway com- panies in the United Kingdom. The Great Western Railway Company has a feeder sir service at Cardiff, connecting that city with Bristol, Torquay and Plymouth, and now the ‘Southern Railway Company is considering the adoption of a sys- tem of era-ordination between rail Ind air services. A contract has been entered irto with Airword, Limited, Heston aero- drome, to investigate the whole of she company's rail system with a view to establishing» new sir ser- vices between suitable points. Thev will consider the possibilities of arr line services to such places as the Channel Islands and the Isle of Wight and other resorts which could be linked by air with express train terminal points. The provision of aerodromes ad- jacent to railway stations and ways by which the company's rail trans- port system may be meeded up and improved by the use of air trans- port will alsc be considered. Slum Clearing Being Started JOFNIIJON. Aug. 11-(0.P.)--1on- don is embarking on s slum-clearing scheme involving the expenditure of $175,000,000 and. providing for the rehousing of 250,000 people on a basis of five persons to a tenement. The expenditure will be spread over 10 years. The bulk of the displacements will be in Stepney, Bethnal Green and Shoreditoh. A preliminary survey shows 20,000 insanitary houses in courts and alleys, where rehousing on the sites is impracticable. and 9,- 000 in areas capable of redevelop- merit. files Go Quick ‘Xingu blsedin or protruding piles go quickly and don't come back, if you really remove the cause. Bad blood circulation in the lower bowel and hemorrhcldal veins caus- es piles by making the affected parts weak, flabby almost dead. Salves and suppositories fail be- cause only an internal medicine that stimulates the circulation and drives out the impure blood can actually correct the cause of piles. Dr. J. S. Ieonhardt discovered a real internal Pile remedy. After rescribing it for 1,000 patients th success in over 900 cases he named it HEM-ROID. Hughes Drug Co. Ltd, and druggists everywhere hell HEM-ROB) Tablets with guar- lntee they will r-nd your Pile mis- kry or money back. J imvnzns Tender!‘ will be received by the, undersigned mill August 28rd for, the purchase of the old school at Central Royalty, for School Janitor for the coming school year and fer hauling eosl. No lender necessarily accepted. EUGENE CULLEN, - Secretary. CIAPTII l! Virginia ‘lakes Steel Indolent and self-indulgent in all other ways, Virginia wes a stoic when it came to suffering for beau- ty‘: sakel For insternce-now-she would have given anything u; have tinn- bled into bed, and siurnbe ‘ But there were many little rites mat she must g0 through, first. Before ringing for Annette, her maid, she must perform those bor- ing exercises that caused her fig- ure to maintain its girlish slender- ness. - (Maddening eo think of the Page chit free for years of all such tire- scmetricks! Little did Virginia know that at the present moment, that same ‘chit’ was weeping her heart out for the very man Virginia had snub- bed!) The latler, then, arrayed in fas- before the long pier-glass, and pro- ceeded with the tiresome bending backwards, sideways, etc., that was calculated to foster lissom grace. She must touch her toes twelve times in succession, coo. And there was the strenuous ‘wind-mlll" exercise, and a whole host of others to be gone through. Virginia was encouraged in the good work by acquaintance with a certain celebrated moving-picture star, famous for her beauty and svelte figure. They had met on boardship on the Atlantic crossing, and a. certain vanity in both had drawn them, temporarily, to each other. . . . The cinema queen, known the wide world over, had been the am- azing product of self-discipline. Vir- ginia had marvelled at the physical rigors she endured. There was the meagre breakfast of hot water, varied occasionally by a glass of orange juice, and s scrap of dry, unbuttered toast. Eggs andvbacon were anazthema. Following on that, there was the four-milks walk around the deck, another glass of hot water, and an i1our's vigorous session with the trainer in the ship's gynmaslum, Seated on that uncomfortable eon- trivance, the ‘electric horse’ (which was a cross-section of the real ani- mal, fashioned of wood and leath- er, and complete with saddlel) the film-star would press the button marked ‘trot’ and career- for many figurative miles to the improve- ment of her physique. ‘Canter’ and ‘gallop’ buttons were in use, too. Indeed, one day Virginia, fired by the girlish one's example, had mounted the electric steed, and mistakenly had pressed all three together, 5Q that she uncanny m1- ma! had actually thrown her off! After a. luncheon that would have been an insult to s robin, the film-star had reclined for a couple of hours in the ship's torturo- chamber, known as the Electric Baths. Here she lost pounds in weight under the violent purple liflhte. And not content with that alone, she would totter into the Russian and the Turkish lethal chambers, a dim shape 1n the steam um swirled about her, and endure fur- ther woes, not least of which was the pummelling of the masseuse, who concluded matters by playing a high-powered hose upon her at long distance, just as g flrgmgn seeks to overcome s confiagrstion. But the flaming urge for youth and beauty couldn't be extinguish. ed in the film-star's breast. She was well past forty . . , (mm-q- fml’. if the awful truth were told!) . . . but when she entertained at tea-time in the Regal Suite nve thou-Sand dollars for the six day's trip, that suite had cost her! but don't forget she was s. queen in the ‘movie’ world, and queens always hire the Regal Suite, as any ghlp- Plul; clerk will tell you!) Miss Goldi- locks wasnt a day over twenty-nine unless tea were served in the Sun Parlor, and the light struck he: st the wrong angle. But oh! st night! That w” he, triumph! Complete with adoring husband trailing posgegglvgly b’- hind her, and with the admiring eyes of all the millionaires and milllonairesses upon h", m, "m; sweep into the dining saloon a half hour late for dinner, clad in g wondrous Paris gown , , _ and at her entry, the clatter of knives and forks would cease, corks and glgg. ses would be suspended in mid-air, and down to the humblest steward | Every eye would gleam. and every mouth would gape. For the long, strenuous day was closing. and the film-queen was s radiant, lovely, laughing Twenty. "A more girl!" “So beautiful!" "My dear, did you ever see guch clnating pink silk pajamas, stood- HEARTS AFIRE B! MARY CHRISTIE ' Viginie Dale wes l!!!“ *0 l!" self:- "Sheb year and years older than me, if they only knew it. But they all adore herl Every man Jsek of them! And every women envies herl Then why not If" After that voyage she had hired Annette. Annette had been the film-star's maid. She was proving quite a treasure, in her- way. Virginia rang for her now. "Turn on my bath, Annette, and put in the reducing salts-about three pounds of them. While the water's runnini. 81W B10 l R00- msssage. Did you get the new as- tringent? And did the eook send up the ice?" The paragon inclined her head. “Yes, madam. Everything is ready." Virginia reclined in a low chair and closed her eyes, the while An- nette‘s clever fingers ‘manipulated’ the muscles of her face. Soothing it felt. Tills was one part of the beau- ty regime that she liked. Her thoughts drifted off to pleas- ant pastures. Tomorrow she would seek out Peter Armstrong. Tomor- row she would further matters in that quarter. He already liked her, was attracted to her. She had every confidence in her own powers. Unlcss-unless-that Page child should set her cap at him . . . i’ Hadn't he looked at the Page child with a curious expression in his handsome eyes? But that was nonsense? She- Virginia Dale-was a. thousand times prettier, and more subtle. She could capture any man she fancied! (To be Continued.) N onconformist Chapel Closes LONDON, Aug. 1Z—(C.P.)—~ Bishopsgate Chapel, the only non- conformlst place of worship to sur- vive within the "one Square mile” of the City of London prqper, with the exception of the City Temple, has closed its doors for the last time. The congregation boasted an “ancestry" going back well over a couple of centuries, for it was founded soon after the passing of the Act of Uniformity of 1622, which caused many ministers to leave the Church of England and to take their congregations with them. For many years now, though, membership of Bishcpsgate Chapel has steadily dwindled, and the building meanwhile has fallen into decay. The deacon: recently con- cluded the only way to revivlfy the Chapel would be to secure the ser- vices of s. minister of exceptional attainments. The expense of doing this. and the sorry state of the cha- pel premises, forced them to the resolve to close down for good. The only non-conformist place of worship now left in the actual City of London is the well known City Temple, on Holborn Viaduct, be- ‘ J , like Bishopsgate Chapel, to the Congregation body. Under the Rev. F. W. Nerwood it enjoys a. vig- orous life. Favors Strong Africa Policy LONDON, Aug 12--(C.P.)—.Bri- tish policy in tropical Africa should be its development along the lines of a corporate State with a strong ex- ecutive and a representative Legis- lature, according to Sir Edward Grlgg, M.P., former Governor of Kenya Colony, East Africa, speak- ing at the Royal Empire Summer school at Oxford. He refuted a suggestion that he was advocating the Fascist State 1n Africa, but said that to avoid the color line they must get sway from territorial representation. A strong executive would be as necessary for the white settlers as for the natives. Talking of the vast territory in Central Africa, for which The Bri- tish Government was responsible, he declared it to be absolutely essential for Britain to face the moral issue involved. The controversy case as to whose interests were paramount, those of the natives or the European settlers. ‘This goes very ieep and is very profound," he said, "and it is responsible at the present noment for a real loss of nerve and moral in our government throughout Af- rics. "We must try to subserve the broad interests of ity and civilization and not the particular interests of any race or nation, whether backward or advanced. That is s difficult principle to ad- minister with fairness for the reason that to some extent we are judges‘ in our own case." Further white settlement he bell- rrm cnsanowrrarown ouaaomu T“ Food For The Angels Makes You Ethereal i "ANGIE. eipe for true sponceblbv: Plve or e 0gp, whites 8M W"! separated: 1 eup fine granulated suganiotmcaheflour, l-itea- » spoon salt, grated rind and Juice mthemringeymrngwemerrsiliemm- faneylighciytiunstotircuglmbd summer 10W! will! sponsesuaaosaoauosssaomsrbesosnvulhsudcqauuuybvluus cakes that require many egp. Then till iihlok and lemon colored. "m! eggs are i. expensive and plentiful, add the lemon iulvv and rlud- sud. and the diet oalk m- lees fatien- the whites beaten vow Itlfl- Hull- llOllfi OAII DID I001)‘ All lIDIAL IAII, PARTICULARLY ill‘ YOU'RE REDUCING. ing deserve. i Sponge, (I other similar cakes, 5 and slnsol cake, while rich in many l ly fold in the flour and salt sifted three times. Bake in s deep pan about so minutes. Invert over cake TlIG-BDWTBOIABNIDIA The celebration of the bi-cenn- cennry of the birth of Hannah m“, o1 High Wycormbe, has drown prbiic smtention to the early day! of s movement which hes been of greet influence ‘in molding reliclbul teaching, not only in this count?! but all over the world. From the middle of the ‘ghteenth century not! today the Sundpy School has . held s firm place in the affections a lugs sections of the population in Great Britain and has main- T7ze Story Oi’ ' The Sunday School "gistofdod," itmwriilngtowel» lqyon Deoembesifl. jiflftsfter descpibinghow heroism meets twioesweeneveryfimcev and Monday, me eayn-"Ilhfl III I- wlldlilsleeomsillnbuteeemwiil-i ingtobeinsinsstedflsehsdlv- eueiiherdeysltoiilsewlhsefil- ingesmetelle usinherdierv. "sohcltatlorise-uldindlsoemenbto ehoncemyeondltloninlifefbrst sireiseliletoleylntheendllnt "liheeesM-ieedllwsethenebleio makchssbecnreoompensedbil hundred fold reward in lhh life." eggs, are not so fattening as butler- ' rack until it drops out of pan. cakes. The eggs provide pvoteini Sunshine 011w whiohissbodybuilderandnotsn; Sunshine cake is mode practi- energy or rat maker. The combine-Mill! "h! "m9 Ii I 59°08! ""- tion oi’ sugar, eggs and flour is|imt most recipes cell for the addi- mueh anim- tp digest than theltlon of two extra. egg whites. This heavier one of sugar and m, mnnlmekes the more read about w flour and eggs. 1703""? use make s few cakes of this? Hem ess whites (about 3-4 our) variety and see wherein the differ- f5 ees yolks (about l-I cup). 1 we gm,‘ 11¢, Bygne m called gpmgg, riine granulated sugar, i eup cake some sunshine, some slver-and- {$101113 1-4 $95-$00" 657$- 34 59"“ gold, some angel cakes, etc. {spoon cream o! tartar. 1 teaspoon First of all, the angel cake. ‘This ‘crease extract. u the queen oi’ all cakes, fluffy} The method is exactly the same tasty, light, easily digested uncles for true sponge cake- .really easy to make if directions Pill“ B01011 9B1"! are followed. or course, 1c does not, This cake ls made 11w the me- require a lot of beating, but if the rlnsue tsoe of spouse cakes. whore cock has s mechanical mixer, the 5118B!’ il FORTH‘! 0V6!‘ lliffll’ 170M011 job is simpler and dome in less'¢B'8 Whites and beaten‘ lust like time. li-niled frosting. It is a delicate ,cake, and directions must be foi- Elowed carefully. i 1-4 cups egg whitas (about! 3°“ a" ‘m? Fwumfid m?“ 12 whom) and i-4 cup wanker to 238 degrees or 1 tempos“ mam of twat to a. short thread stage. Pour slow- 14 teaspcon “It ly, beating constantly, over 4 stif- 1 1-2 cups fine granulated su- “y beaten °53 whit” Add grated rind 1 orange and continue beat- ing until well cornixned. Angel Food Cake RN‘ - 1 teaspoon flavoring exiswct 1 cup cake fllour Beat the egg whites with s fla/t wire whisk, or in s mechanical mixer until they are frothy but notdmThensddcreamcftalrhisr and continue beating them isntil they will stand up in peaks or pJlnts and will not slip when the bowl is turned. This means the/t the point has been reached when the moisture of the egg whites is combined properly with air. Gradually fold in the sugar, pre- viously sifted twlce, with the fla- voring. A combination of vanilla and almond is the usual flavor, but orange or lemon may be med, q- rose extract. ' Last of all fold in the flour which has been sifted three tunes with the salt. At this point, avoid any stirring motions, butconti-nue with the cutting and folding ones. Pour the batm- imo a dry un- x-reased cake pan, preferably with a cone centre. Bake in a slow oven, startina’ with 260 deg. and grad- ually increasing it to 860 deg. so that the cake is done in just an hour. The easiest way to regulate the heat of the oven, if you have no automatic control, is to piece idseeaksinscoldovemtirenlighe the burners and gradually heat oven to s moderate one. When cake is done, invent the panoverscabersckunililocoled. ‘Ilium mauve from pan. It is incorrect to out angel food ww- The nieces must be either broken or pried apart with two for“ working with the tines beck to back. It is unnecessary and ined- visaVe-toflvoetansngelfoodoahe, althwsh some people seem to like it. Variations of Ansel Food A variation in flwor may be se- cured by adding one teaspoon cin- namon and 1-2 ‘ nuhmgg and 1-4 ieaspooneach cloves and e-llspiee to the flour before it is bined with the egg whites. This cake is served, topped with mop- ped cream, individual portions. Some people like a chocolate an- eel food cake. To make it, without increasing the fat content, use eo- eos. When measuring out tile floun- useonlys-dcupofitsudfillthe cup with sifted cocoa, l-i cup. Proceed as usual. Mssescisino cherry angel food h also lilned. The barker is tinted slightly pink with cake coloring, and finely out Marssohlno cherries are added to it. Use no more than 1-2 cup cherries for the whole eshe. ‘mis particular cake is fron- ed with s cherry frosting, made with the juice mm the mm, warmed s. little and mixed with and enough eonfeoiiionerk sugar to sense flwnd or minced cherries thicken It. Properly made and baked angel food cakes will dmp out of the pens by themselves when suffi- eientiy cooled, upside down. 3P0!!! Spence cake is made with equal htlllifif of egg yolks and whims, There is one true sponge cake and two other varieties-a hot water Beat yolk of 4 eggs till iihiok and lemon-colored, add gradually, beating constantly, 1-4 cup orange juice. When mixture is very thick, fold in the egg white mix, than very carefully 2-3 cup cake flour sifted with 1-2 teaspoon cream of tartar. Bake the cake in moderate oven, asforsponge cake. Itrns/ybe frosted if desired. with a plain orange frosting. Hot Water Cnke Yolks 2 eggs, whites two eggs, 1 cup sugar, 3-8 cup hot water or milk, 1-4 teaspoon lemon entradt. 1 cup flour, 1 1-2 teaspoons baking powd , 1-4 teaspoon salt. Beat yolks of eggs until thla and lemon colored, add one half the sugar gradually and continue beat’ z then odd water, remain- ing sugar, lemon extract, whites of eggs beaten until stiff and flour mixed and sifted with baking pow- der and salt. Bake 26 minutes in s Cream Sponge Cake With Strawberries 4 egg whites 4 egg yolks 1 cup sugar a tablespool cold water 1 teaspoon lemon extras: 1% ‘ “ * 1 eup flour 1%. teaspoons baking powder $6 teaspoon saJt Have s11 ingredients measured be- fcre beginning u» work. Sift swar- one in four times through line sifter‘ and measure. Sin dour once and measure. Seat egg whites until stii! but not dry, beat in. half the sugar grad- ually and set aside. With same egg beater, beat egg yolks with liquid, until thick and lemon-colored. Beat in remaining sugar. s mbine mix- tures. Mix and. sift dry ingredients and out and fold into other mixture. Bake in ungressed pen well lin- ed with paper, in a moderate oven for 30 minutes. When cold split and cover with chilled sweetened strawberries. Leaves Estate Valued at $1,000,000 LONDON, AM. n-Lsdy Mount Stephen. who died in May leaving an estate valued at approximately $1,000,000, made bequests to the Queen and other members of the Royal family. Lady Mount Stephen, who lived in London and was ‘l0 Yeersofllmwesthswidowof Lord Mount Stephen (George Stephen), Canadian financier, first President of the Canadian Pacific Railway. who died in England in 1021. ‘m the Queen she left art tress- ures including: Enamel portraits of Queen Anne, Charles 1., Prince George of Denmark, Queen Caro- line, wife of George II, and a min- iature of Charles If; a collection of articles in gold and silver pique tortoiseshell; a diamond riviere of old Brazilian stones, with a square diamond in the centre; an ivory ch talned its position by sympathetic n“ “m, ‘and m mgh/wwmbe understanding of the needs of thehvumuxmmmwdniuom_ children and s zlealfmtion that m those needs vary 1n the changes h,“ h and chances of time. The early Already by 17$ Wesley e Sunday School was not only a mm llmat be fumes “that Busby means for teaching morality and sohooh will be productive of great religion w thousandsof illiterate good to the notion. ‘mieyspsese and neglected boys and girls; it wldor and wider-end are likely in was ibr nearly a hundred years mash every pas-t of the Kingdom." the only source of secular lmowl- By 1787 he is able to sav that: edge in vast numbers of children "our Sunday schools contain up- for whom no day schools existed. wards of 800 children Ind ll II! But the religious work has always ,i,aught by our brethren without been the root and reason oi’ Sun- lpay," And a. year later lbs expres- day School activities, and in s. per- ‘ sod the View that Sunday schools iod whih was both hard and un- l are the noblest specimens of cher- responsive w the calls of child life, l...‘ which have been m on foot in when observers, trunking only of England since William the Con- induetrial welfare welcomed the iquemr. The growiih in numbers was slam or infants actually at work idue in large measure to the activi- alt the age of five the humanizlng ties of a. Churcbman Robert influence of the i Sunday School ‘Rialkes, whose philanthropic work m...“ .';“l:..*”“r'". r. “were 1:" us..." crra~a Bll 0 uman y er m those who were engaged in "slil- lcrlme lay in popular ignorance and _ vieh" occupations throughout the In the lack of any training for the week. No wonder that a oontem- mljdren. He and the curate of a pory dialect poem quoted in a neighboring parleh engaged e. wo- mmlphlw lo the Vice-Principal or man teacher, Rafikes paying a shill- st. Christopher's College tells us:— ,1“; and the Rev. ‘lib-canes Stock lslxpence weekly. This flint 8011001 ‘was opened in mo. but a row Years deter Samuel Glasse. P"! “"8 '3 lPalnsw-ick on behalf of the schools. ‘Iwas able to declare that 210.000 ;children were already being will“? Although Hannah no! has been in Ensumd. ‘The idea annealed l» regarded as the precursor of H.0- Dhilflnlhflilihilritahznflfiwmt D911 Rnlkics in th ttin f e- i" 9"’ w “t” systenratic Sundlaye snoqlglnluiqzgfi llshrnent of the Philanthropic So- for the Gloucester experiment be- 0198'! 990ml 1°’ m‘ mmun "d "H00 said, hoo wfsh’d ut th' Sun- day Schoc Wur comm every gen in WHO-the idea of gathering children together for religious in- struction was not new. St. Charles , Archbishop of Milan. founded Sunday schools in his dio- cese in 1580, and both Luther in Carmsmy and John Knox in Scot- land initialed similar work in the early days of the Reformation. m Iingland, the Rev. Joseph “Alleine, one of the 2,000 ministers elected from their llvings, founded a. Sun- day school rather more than 100 yeems labor. In 1763 lvhvs. Catherine Cappe and the Rev. ‘rheophilus Linchey, low minister of tlhe Uni- tarian Chapel in Essex Street, had similar gatherings of the young at Catterick, in Yorkshire, and other groups were brought together by Dr. Kennedy in County Down in 1W0. The school founded by Hannah Ball gains special interest from the ‘ “ , of Jolm Wesley. who held her in high esteem. Writing to her on March l0, 1782. he wants to know "when. has become of iihose little maidens" (her scholarehand trusts “that some of them will prisoners and the efforts of How- ard to mitigate the horrors of the sack. William Harvway and Henry Thornton were members of e Inn- don society set up by William N! in 1785 for establishing 911N518 schools, a society which ten 7011! inter had 05M!) scholars. In not the work was acclaimed eve!!- wihere. Adam Smith said that no plan so simple and so llwmieinl had been devised since iihe d1?! of the Apostles. A Sunday School Union was founded in 1008 and in i881, at what was regarded es the jubilee of the first School, it was elated that there were 1,250,000 scholars and 100,000 teachers in Great Bri- tain. ‘Ibdw the Sunder Icbool pop- ulation in England numbes 4M0.- 95’! scholars end 601,710 teachers. Recent years have seen many de- velopments, particularly in owl-M- zstion of the sohook and in me- thods of teaching es well as in the training of teachers. The Church of lhigland Sundely School hati- tute has its own training college, a correspondence school, and a li- brary, organises eyllabuses end ex- bring forth fruit to perfection as you have a peculiar love for chil- dren and a talent for assisting them." And he goes on to say; "See tire-t you stir up the gift of God which is in you. If you gain but one of them in ten, you have a good reward for your labor." sminatlons and issues n nimble magazine full of helpful ell!!!- tions. The “ l Sunday School Union has a fibre library of 6,000 volumes which is eat the depoasl of teachers. and poesesses s. training college with s four-year course training. Thus it is A ' ‘ by . - AUGUST 14, 193; s l0 ll n Ill llltlllllllll m v11 groans! slug. 12_ Ikchange 1 turned info lower levels during w day’! lesion. "Traders took m‘ esuidolu attitude ss the mm P7911904 W 01°00. for the long m . end. The volume of sales d; orftoslowlevelnnd thetocqm the day, approximately 12,000 Sh", eewesabmrthalftbstorygm, day's session. IIAIKI-T IIIIGUIAAB, The market ‘was irregular s; u,‘ opening but steadied slightly an,“ midday. Inter in the aesslon m list broadened out and an tone was experienced. Small loq prevailed throughout the use u l the close. International niflel eased g cents at 30.10 while Brazilian n“, tion and Canadian Pacific Rally“ 1m fractions. Cormolidated Smelt i ers, most volatile issue of the m". l ket, was off three points q, 1g as-wss Bank of Nova Bcotia st m National Steel car declined q points at 15. . REGISTER IDSS Canadian mdustrisl Alcohol 1s, Dominion Bridge, National Brem- ies, Quebec Power, Cockahut Pl“ Power Corporation, Dominion ca} and Bruek Silk all lost 1mg amounts. Montreal Power gained H u 3B 1-2 while Steel of Canada, 1m. sey Harris, St. Lawrence Corporn tion, Goodyear 'I‘ire preferred m General Steel weree were up mg. tions. Amobg the isues to hold I- chsnged were Canadian Idustrll Alcohol “A”, Shawinigan Pose, McCoIi-Ikcntenae snd Cansciu car. Sales 10,812 shores, bonds ems welfare of children, that the Sun day nchool teacher Jeseseed d goodwill alone cannot give in. 4 " which will lhold m‘; tension of the class. While _ nl victim and entirusieam area oourne, emeutial qualifications is the teacher of religion, s. bed- ‘ of knowledge is needif too and so understanding of chili wynhology. Indeed, child psycholo- gy il included in the syllabus oi eeds training eouree with leotuhi on the art of teaching. ‘Iksougn our knowledge and our understanding of child life hen progressed far beyond the mod! beginninge within reach of til Sunday school pioneers, yet the would mould not forget lie debt in than. a memorial to their wed staudsln Kensington. llt oommem- ~ cums the Christian efforts of till originators of Sunday schools d various churches from the time of Cardinal Borromeo, 1580, to that of Theopixl-lus Lindsey and Robert Rs-ikea in 1780. On the pedestal! iihsfigurecfnyoungladhlsiilu,‘ gee on iihe Bible, looking up to hi teacher with a rapt expresslo‘ ‘ his face es the lessons of faith 3 love are taught to him. lit is - o such lemons that the teacher todll must seek to build a better world. and m us.» effort the sunny‘ schools are still taking their gm! Hannah Ball must have needed her everybody anxious for the religious and honorable share.—Tl.mes Edu- cational Supplement. l: In: VACATION or your. oasms costs use ‘THAN ‘m? JASPER kdsygorfos-hogesorshorm moassod raeslseodsilsbelin- “mm Ian Charlottetown-Jeep“. 1"“ l shoulders?" boy's!" eved not only to be essential but in- evitable. The wealtls, more particu- larly the miners! wealth, in that part of Africa, which the world was insistently demanding, could not be "Such hair’. Such eyes!" "A figure like a boy's-s Greek Sciewouldgo. M, ’ wits" » aluevsesdieaetivil-abmalnlu-g, neslmls slash. assass- sponge and s meringue or syrup sponge. Some people make the hot water mange cake with not milk instead and occasionally a recipe for s golden sponge cake is found bust of Queen Victoria; portraits in oil of George III, and Queen Charlotte of Ramsey‘. T0 the Princess Royal she left her collection of Pomsndere and s %'II&___,._..-..__-__“I>- nu dlslls homW.K. 1mm, cu nun-amt. Lllltelsle. mm one‘. e r. vv. has... District Psssenser Aseut- _, gtstlon.