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$•lin forth thy* royal �..�' : �`
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,x, .. L 1LaS 11eILtI 1C N '4c�+ V4ikA;i
i , Him Lord of all. S. L SSON FOR Spll"".:;a]t�
a TO Crown I11 i ;:;�;,. t:.. „
haXd } t: L7 in a C4 aux,,I4� s
Lesson To ic--Jonah +. brQugh P- a Wl 1�
ottGersxan r irelnents. Wlieh la t 'sea- h; ..
;1PP Y r tribe and every tongue Lesson Passage --Jonah 3:1.5, Q I '•.z..
in
d o aq v
,. Let every 3' S . t ,,,,n
i , •+ d , and ti?x't e 'Kin of on reeo, red:roin u
1 e ekiu salt the call :1-11. : •> € , son' the long .• +, Yr <,
Y•. P$''d► Responsive to , 4 ,`:. • t
>`:k:: e ' us 'lin s we t out shQotiim x .
ry� s ! ct 10:34 3 `:Sa f%'::'yr.. his s rio ? . e& , n t.
4tinYavee� redne, s Lift hi' h the universal song, Golden Text—Acts .5. ;.,y;,; j�" q'' //�. (�� ■■/�k
g f ,.<: ,14',:NinT'•' h/L11.a.'4
F+"' ?•''` 1 11:. $.:::2�r,';�:2:':c'`•i:r,i:<� 11e used a•..�s�ortti:n' un of a t' ' not y.... .�i,s•;'" r
-tation. And crown Him Lord of all. After Jonah's experiences bmug t �;: ;� i? g
i!;:'• `•.,� ,, Edward Perronet. upon him by refusing, to -do Ggids '��`�::: `'" .:...^•. used by .praetlse�shohS.. Hurii befo0.e � _
.;f;tKt you I?►a¢ ,'.:::.::.>:•:
a rya 8 will, he probably went up to J'er;Aa,- the end 'of the, se'aston it was a 'par {
tem to appear in the lei -Epic to, saVF - exit it9hat hili customary .skill h'h re-
1 PRAYER +
P H:::::vz�:•;::::::,<; c Ktic ..R :est uc'tt n'..
fisc to God with the voice 'of tlLargks- ,.,:;,�<; t k: "'wr
turrled to 'him, "ani he shot with cups t r' ¢
We make our prayer unto Thee, O o ld i 1 'S :.,::::::;::.::s>':r`s. of the make' and bore to which fox• ,
`;. o giving, to pay what' he w u n, all ,Y.::.;. :,:;:::.z::<.::}:?:<:>:n;<.
;God, in behalf of all the needy sons v :: f ear as a first class shot he had utlless a etre-re$istant
rs probability return to his, home. `'"z.:::•'.';:;:' Y .r
i and daughters of men. As they"
There he received a second ec•mmis been 'accustomed. terlal ' SL1Cl1' 'as the new-
t vilryn ,, reach out their hands, if haply they sion to go to Nineveh to cry against ```''��r��z:< %•r During the grouse season' his ma.
:.:: Ivory c+a?'lxed Yyproc *4
Yr :• o- it: "Arise, go unto Nineveh, that j'esty generally finds time to spend a..� �+
great city, and preach. unto- it the : few days Shooting with his old"friend all C>!ar .I$.USed 1n it$
preaching that I bid thee." '': the Duke of Devonshire at &o-1 ? T•
,. constrlcon.
The effects produced upon the city Abbey, Yorkshire. This old-world
by Jonah's progress through it were beauty spot neve'r'fails in its appeal lneXpen.SLVe, pertly;; ,
such as no man ever produced in a to the King. Tucked &way in a . • s Hent, easy -to apply, 7p-.
single day, either before or since. �``- backwater, Bolton Abbey is far from���
They were such as could floc onlyz. ' ;;;, the beaten track. It lies on the riv- U ;.�� roc Wallboard does,nQt
' �,
from the presence and action of the %� F' er Wharfe in a valley beautifully • .� %7Zi7yl, 1t 1$. exaCtl what
y` r..
mighty power, and the still mightier ,a' . wooded and closely surrounded by
^ hi4Is, -and retains to -day all its char- - you want for fire -safe
grace of Cod. A sense of God soon 1 <.ti r, ,
filled the city. It was shed, from .> acteristics of bygone' days., The man- ,,r walls, celli'ng.s-and par -
group to group, from street to street or came intothe possession of Henry
It turned them away from their own 'Clifford, se'con'd Earl of Cumberland, i- - , titions When yotl build,
MRS. W. H. LONG
gods just as effectually as the sailors in 1'542, whose descendants, the duke's remodel • or repair.
in the ship were turned from theirsgon 'oevon
f Dshire have Belli it evwer' since,
our
ous. 'Sargave two of my sisters '' Ask deader `tela
(1:14). °,They believed God, 'and here Prince RuRertt and his army y y
uch splendid results I decided to try
proclaimed a fast, and put on sack- scamped in the su'm'mer of -1644 on -for fall inwfOrmat1o11 •oil
is built' up
cloth, from the greatest of them even it and my whole systemincur way to defeat apt 'Hessian Moor. Gyproc Wallboard or
to the least of them." and strengthened. I eat better, sleep ,But Bolton Abbey existed 11mg 'be -
better 'arid. feel 'better than I have in
The proclamation was a compre- fore 1542. History relaxes that it send for interesting free
years. y book ` "Building and Re- '
hensive one. It excluded neither was granted b William the Conquer- Pills work smoothly without
Re -
king, peoplenor beast. Fasting was pain 'or nausea but completely reliev- or to Robert de Romillie, who b'eid it m dellin with G roc."
the first part of the decree. Aed mconstiation and bili-o'usness
'. p
y s far ,, in 10'86. Robert's heiress,, Cicely'' de p g Gyp
roc."
as history ,take us, fasVrrg has omillp, and her husband, William de
been a religious exercise in the —M;'s• W' H. Long, 55 Wood Si., RiM'eschin'es, founded and endowed a GYPSUM, LIME AND
Hamilton, On -t.
Orient. The covering with sack.. Sargon may be obtained it Seaforth Priory in the neighborhood in 112'0, ALABASTINE , • CANADA,
cloth was the next part of the decree but it was moved to Bolton in 1151 LIMITED
and then they were to express their from Charles Aberhart, by their daughter, Alice d'e' 1Romi1'le,-
emotions by crying mightily unto _ -wife of William FitzDunc'an'. Paris Ontario
God. The eastern nations Have al- Around the removal of the monks
ways been addicted to vocal demon- sionary -biographies are practically a to Bolton -a surprising charm has been
strations for the expression of the thing of the past. In their place we thrown. by the genius of Wordsworth�� '����� $g4'
stronger emotions. But by far the have a wider service from the Publica
, nd Rogers. Alice, on' the death of
most striking and satisfactory char- Library and in some places the her p'aren'ts, ado'p'ted her mother's
acteristic of this proclamation is the school library is of use to the, fam- name 'of Romulle, and as the wife of
last—that which requires from every ilies of the district. The "reading a nephew of David of Scotland, she
man a personal and practical reform- matter of the homes is supplied by had two sons, the eld'e'r of whom died
ation: "Let them turn every one news'pape'rs and magazines, many of at an early age. The youhger, called
from his evil zvay." them .carrying admirable home; read- the "noble 'boy of Egremond," from
Jonah's country was in danger ing material. What one misses' un- the, place of his birth, thus became
from the Assyrian power, which he der -the new conditions is the pres- the stole ,nape of his m'othe'r. Accord -
had hoped wa-e now to be utterly ence in the home of a few really ing to the story, he was • one day
humbled and smitten. He went out worth -while books which are life huntriin'g in the woods around' Bolton,
from the city to wait and seg what companions. The passing newspaper with the h'oun'd in his leash-, when he
would be the result -of his preaching, and magazine are not good aMugh. arrived 'at the Strid=a narrow chasm,
When he saw that their repentance Not even the public library which us- about five feet wide, 'through which For saw rV
brought forth mercy he was dlspleas- ually gives* us what we, desire. Just •the river rushes with great rapidity .0 ,, &6rthq Ont.
ed. His reputation as a prophet was 'here we should constantly remind across which "perhaps for the hu -n- Geo. A. c4ll$ & Son
touched and his country still endan- ourselves that a very large number dredth time,"
ge'red. He prayed that he might die. of our church people are beyond the "He sprang in, glee—for what cared he
"Things have gone all awry, anti reach of public libraries. In view of That the river was strong and the
nothing can ever be, right agaic+. Let this need it would seem as if a united rocks were steep; Memorial Crpss while at Bolton. This 9
me get away from such a disjointed effort might fittingly be -made to But the greyhound in the leash hung is at the north end -of the chu'rehyaTd I
LSON
world" study the whole problem of home back, and was erected by the tenan;ry of
The sinfulness of -absorbing passior reading; this to include the reading And checked' him in his leap. the Duke of Devonshire's Bolton es -
is illustrated by Jonah's contempt of of the mother to the children and the The boy is in the arms of Wharfe tate's to the memory of Lord Freder-
life. Nineveh was .not to be destroy- availability of the very best books for And strangled by a merciless force; ick Cavendish, chief secretary for
ed as he had prophesied, and his the young people and adults, For never more was y'o'ung R'omille' Ireland in one'o'f Mr. Gladstone's gov-
pride was wounded, and he says: seen, ernments, who was murdered in.
"Therefore now, 0 Lord, take, I be- Till he rose a lifeless corpse." Phoenix 'Park, Dublin, in 1882, by
seech Thee, my life from me; for it A FRIENDSHIP -MAKER The forester who had acoompaniei 'Fenians within twelve hours of his
is better for me to die than to live." him hastened to his mother, and ask- arrival.
B lton Abbe is within a few miles
•z The selfishness of an absorbing There are hobbles --°and hobbies. A ed her in the words of the period: o' Y r
passion is illustrated in Jonah's con- bobby is very expressive of a person. "What is good for a bootPe'ss bene?" of Harewood House, the country KII �
BarlI ��AIJ�Y
tempt for the men of Nineve;:. He Mrs. Clark, for instance, is a friendly, "And she made answer, 'Endless sor- den'ce of Princess Mary 'and the arl j
_,.. will not share in their repentance ; interested little woman who cannot row!' of Harewood. From' its elevated po5-I
he will not encourage their hope that iti'on in, a ark of eat beauty and One pad kills flies all day and every
P bear solitude. She developed a vis- For she knew that her son wtas dead. P gr y day for 2 or 3 weeks. 3 ads in eack
God may yet turn away His fierce iting'' system over the Long Distance extent, a windows t v the house packet. No spraying, no stickiness,
anger-, he will not join them in their command a wide' view over field's and
telephone, It has 'proved' awander- Lang, long in darkn'e'ss did she sit, no had odor. Ask your Druggist,,..
mar I gratitude that God has spared them. ful cure for loneliness, And as she And her first words were 'Let there be wo'ods'. Quite close', 'also, is Golds- Grocery or General Store.
Would He shuts himself up alone' to brood calls after ? pap, the rate's are re- In Bolton' on the field of Wharfe, borou'g'h 'H1all, built during 'the reign
+++ of Queen E7iizabeth another country 10 CENTS PER PACKET.'
- ' ''" • over his anger. In the object lesson markably low. A stately priory. '
i ilk/1 ,r J of the gourd we -see God's cure for According to this tradition, the residence of Princess' Mary and her WHY PAY MORE9'
absorbing passion. God seeks to rE: spot chosen for the erection of the (husband, "which they have used con- THE WILSON FLY PAD CO., Hatnifton, On,
' store the prophet by awakening love "stately priory" was the nearest eli- tenuously close their -marriage.
} in his hert; awakening his interest KING GEORGE ON THE MOOR g•i'ble site to the place where the boy
e, t and making him tender over the was drowned.
King George is, and has been for
gourd, There is something wonder- It is a pretty legend, but not quite
iriany years, one 'of .the foremost game ar
tffiswaq
ful in life, even though it be the life in agreement with facts, for the boy
shots in EnglaTrd, shooting being his „
of & common weed. Such things favorite sport and recreation. From of Egre'mond himself added his Sig-
favorite
i^ speak to us, howemr, faintly we may nature to his m'other's on a charter You Can ����
the middle of August until late in the
understand them, of an awful power con'se'nting to 'the m'onk's receiving then
autumn the King spentd's most of his .•+ko>".
!,'!1 that forms and an ever -watchful care manor 'of Bolton in exchange for ce'r-
Il j that tends them; they are "ftarfully time on the moors, and bags as many, tain other manors. It has been rug -
Your pride prompts you if not more birds, than most keen
�> to keep your hair well and wonderfully thatas made" The ten- sportsmen. This is not because the grated that his have
given,
Subsequent death he Running
derness that was in Jonah, poor as it dtrowa •in may -have ven rise to the
Y >roomed ... then for the bent shooting in England and Scot-
was, mingled with selfishness as it generally received -account of the
i; same reason smarten land is available to him, but rather
was, was yet in its dim and partial be, the King seldom misses. 'With foundation of the monastery. Words -
your dull, unpolished way, an emblem of the tenderness of worth and Rogers each wrote a simple
him it its the man behind the gun thata e r _t_A t
shoes regularly with a , God for every creature 'He has made. counts, not the number of birds ballad upon the •alleged circumstances
glossy "Nugget" shine --Condensed from The Sermon Bible. com- attending the drowning of the "'boy
ing over.
—waterproofs the This year his majesty's Plans have of Egremom'd, the former in his
shoes m it polishes. ItoWORLD MISSIONS "Force of Prayer," quoted' above and ��� ��� A '
The Ministry of Literature. been slightly altered, as between the the latter in "The Boy of Egremond.'
t' yacht racing at Cowes and, his jour-
D'onald McKillop Solanit ney to Balmoral, he spent a week at The � swortht is also alluded to s-
"A mother, a child and a good book Wordsworth's White Doe of Ryls-
Sandrungh'at-u, the home in' which he „
is one of the 'greatest forces for the is so truly happy. 'Once he was heard tone, the scene of which lies in the the ��
churchyard of Bolton Abbey.
spiritual welfare of the nation."
observe to aii' old retainer tbat the a It is 'amid these surroundings of
Only just the other day I received only place in which be could consider
an application for membership in our himself to be an ordinary, un'disturb- legend and spend
a that King 'George
��® POLI
�� v Reading Club which contained infer- troves ba mend a• fen g quiet days in
. �� g ed Englishman was in his cabin' on the summer shooting grouse and
i o x, mation of •a thrilling type. The ap- the -royal yacht. At Balmoral the turning over the old records of Dol- i4 r
plication was from a widow with four King does not enjoy complete privacy,
' Q
children. se she says: "I his weekly ordeal ton and its history. Moving
hildOf thekldl being the visit to freely
among the villagers, many of w'h'om
roM'. ■//tp �{IpjLj �/ want the children as far As possible, the local church on Sundays. Here, the King is read- �(� THY not have it so instead of trudging to
f•^' NU66ET
BN _ I_ = _ WUSI f1 he knows personally, V V
to have a knowledge of the best read- boo, eager crowds of tourists are ly at home and far removed from af-
f ing of all times." Wbat a revelation wont to gather in the churchyard and the old hand pump? An Empire Duro
of a mother's constancy! fairs w state 'at(d routine. From his <
press around the royal party to get windows at Bolton Hall he can gaze water Supply System brings the water
' - Around such a desire as, that, which a close-up vi'erw of the different mem- right from the well into our home.
is latent if not expressed in the heart bei, out -on the abbey itself, of which, un- g y
is
every mother, lies the fortunately, there is little left. That With it you call add a bathroom,, but be
greatest possibility for good for loll- little however contains traces �of the sure it is Emco equipped. Emco Bathroom
various styles of, architectux that fixtures are of the best possible cgiLstruction
i vidual life for church life and for the P +
prevailed .during the' centuries that guaranteed to give lastingsatisfaction and
tho highest and gest in national life. Bladder Weakness g
*' What could be finer than th.s age- intervened between the foundation' and' service. Chromium plated or China fittings as
'i. old desire of mothers to see the chil-• the the'su'ppression of the abbey. The P g
Getting -Up -Nights cowentu'al bu'ildi'ngs have nearly all desired.
1 dren well equipped for life! And
one, the -ruins that still remain' beingEmpire Duro Water Supply Systems are made in,
world's most popular Corn here it is, the desire for character- Qidekly Relieved ! principally 'of the church. And they several styles—suitable for deep or shallow wells,
„fitting which comes from companion -
flakes are made by Kellogg in ship with the choice, daring and ad- are a mere shell, with the exception Cisterna or springs, and you will be surprised at the low
venturous spirits who live in the best Pleasant Home Treatment Works, of ithe nave, vbich at the Reforms- J initial cost.
London, Ontario. They have a tion was preserved as a Protestant -
literature. .
literature. Herg one finds worked Fine; Used by Doctor For c
flavor and erishurch. gQr Sale by
ness no others out the great principles of truth, Many Years.
Thr p honor and justice and that rare What a wonderful comfort it is to 13altoti' Hall, where the Kin stays,
equal. Taste them and you'll spirit of urbanity which cannot be sleep all ni'gh't and not get up once was originally the gateway tothe ab- r
els part of a life without a sound spirit- from Bladder Weakness and, Ixrita bey. The Earl of Cum'beTland, anw��
s°i + know why they are such ual background, tiq>tr whom Henry VIII. bestowed the can- eO .A.SIDS Son
A; The picture before us in that of a he daily annoyance, restless nights fiseated' Property a few years after
e
y�^ mother with here four children, and of misery, backaches and nervous it -'tile Refohmati'on, t'1'ansformed -'tittle. �
her desire to .read the best to them. ritability that reSLYlt Exam' functional gat erway into 'a sh'aobim9 box, and the
o To many who read this there will Bladder Troubles are wrecking the Dicke of Devonshire uses it for the
come back the memory of just such a .;lives of thousanmd3; whomight other- same purpose. The outline of this,
mother wh'o would sit down after leer t,i^e be in the hast of health. the i-tairi entrance to the, abbey,, is
long day's work and read, and read, To be 6p your Wit, you must have famvliar lit most •Englrsh names frau
' ,, m , ; and read:to us•., a Bible story, it story r teftil,'hcal,:�-g �"intg sleep and free- its representatibo, in L�tvdae'ex's ne'le `
1, " : of adventure, or a beautiful poem. dam f: 5m daily :.r „ation—that s why bTate'd painting, Bolton Abbey in -the Prat 1 re.
How thoughtless we were of 'Ler 117x. Southworth's 'URATA8S give dl'dee3n Tithes, the original of w1lith % �,rrrl iM
weariness and how unconscious we, stieh wonderful 09tisfaction. in the fluke of . De'von'shir0; cotifitry � . '�•
were cid the wealth of purpose, and '1GIad� from a Spe'ci'al formula a%n ho'u'se at OhatSwortli.,,• , i 1♦ '' i
u of character rmlues, that were b#ivg used 'by the Docile- $or many yearn-•- One of King Gebirge's i+avariFe rope%ks ar s
M , of of ei*e in is to stroll. } �:,ttti`4f�1ClL}7 1
built into our minds. Ui1ATABS, now tlitaiflablA from ytltrr 'it, lite co tie ti r. Y•
t
:., •<., :. While those are now only, -me-mor- draggist'-for in Ansi ve ' home use, do�nn ithtotug;)ir the :abbey gtouindn' to,
..
a
a fa remains tAat '"a �hav'e brought �'hel and comfoY`'t file pie 'Ep Stan in' elle d�i�t`
:: ies, . the
great et g qui' P P h ,
?F 1 `!'Fere 4tre 'G7 of thee _ hi , r ;
,1 , i'::,,,� ,:.' •.. �.. , - molh�r, a Chfld and a good- bob f�', to, many thousandO, s, . •.,. � gf
u i
a a the; atter tvhitts ur 'a a :Erie "fie rxs' ixra btlneia1tagero y'
«v one of the realest forces f 10 m? +
w � .'9'o g y q
a f.. e;7
',:. _^`E ' ��•:�� Tom-
�i.. d•.f„ sC . , 'the e� ' laced i �e're • : ,
r�, .•° Welfare of t'henatioYi', di � mean m�c1t' "nes you 'h"'arre 'ups- knows .wi�h�xti yt 'W' pt E' ,I 'k
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