mfjm V I MlMTIONAL ESSON (By E. O. SELLERS, Director of Evening Department, The Moody Bible Institute, Chicago.) i5 i'i l SDNWSC1I c ' SYNOPSIS. Fran arrives at Hamilton Gregory's homo In Littleburgr, but finds him absent VimiiTins the l!oir at ft camp meeting;. She repairs thither in search of him, laughs during the service and is asked to leave. Abbott Ashton, superintendent of schools, escorts Fran from the tent. He tells her Grejrory is a wealthy man. deeply .interested in charity work, and a pillar of the church. Ashton becomes preatly interested In Fran and while tak ing leave of her, holds her hand -and Is seen by Sapphlra Clinton, sister of Rob ert Clinton, chairman of the school board. Fran tells Gregory she wants a home with him. Grace Noir. Gregory's private secretary, takes a violent dislike to Fran and advises her to go away at once. Fran hints at a twenty-year-old secret, and Gregory In agitation asks Grace to leave the room. Fran relates the story of how Gregory married a young girl at Springfield while attending college and then deserted her. Fran is the child of that marriage. Gregory had married his present wife three years before the death of Fran's mother. Fran takes a liking to Mrs. Gregory. Gregory explains that Fran is the daughter of a very dear friend who is dead. Fran agrees to the story. Mrs. Gergory insists on her making her home with them and takes her to her arms. The breach between Fran and flraee widens. It is decided that Fran must go to school. CHAPTER VIII. Continued. Fran's quick eye caught the expres sion of baffled reaching-forth, of un certain striving after sympathetic un derstanding. "You darling lady!" she cried, clasping her hands to keep her arms from flying about the other's neck, "don't you be troubled about me. Bless your heart, I can take care of myself and you, too! Do you think I'd add a straw to your . . . Now you hear me: if you want to do it, Just put me in long trains with Pullman sleepers, for I'll do whatever you say. If you want to show people how tame I am, just hold up your hand, and I'll crawl into my cage." The laughter of Mrs. Gregory sound ed wholesome and deep-throated the child was so deliciously ridiculous. "Come, then," she cried, with a light ness she had not felt for months, "come, crawl into your cage!" And she opened her arms. With a flash of her lithe body, Fran was in her cage, and, for a time, rest ed there, while th'e fire in her dark eyes burned tears to all sorts of rain bow colors. It seemed to her that of all the people in the world, Mrs. Greg ory was the last to hold her in affec tionate embrace. She cried out with a sob, as if in answer to her dark mis givings "Oh, but I want to belong to somebody!" "You shall belong to me!" ex claimed Mrs. Gregory, folding her closer. "To you?" Fran sobbed, overcome by the wonder of it. "To you, dear heart?" With a desperate effort she crowded back intruding thoughts, and grew calm. Looking over her shoul der at Simon Jefferson "No more short dresses, Mr. Simon," she called, "you know your heart mustn't be ex cited." "Fran!" gasped Mrs. Gregory in dis may, "hush!" But Simon Jefferson beamed with pleasure at the girl's artless way3. He knew what was bad for his heart, and Fran wasn't. Her smiles made him feel himself a monopolist in sunshine. "Love Him? This Is Merely a Ques tion of Doing the Most Good." Simon Jefferson might be fifty, but he still had a nose for roses. Old Mr3. Jefferson was present, and from her wheel-chair bright eyes read much that dull ears missed. "How gay Simon is!" smiled the mother he was always her spoiled boy. Mrs. Gregory called through the trumpet, "1 believe Fran has given brother a fresh interest in life.'' Old Mrs. Jefferson beamed upon Fran and added her eonimendHtion: "She pushes me when I want to be pushed, and pulls me when I want to bo pulled." Fran clapped her hands like a child, indeed. "Oh, what a gay old world!" ehe cried. "There are eo many people In it that like me." She danced before the old lady, then wheeled about with such energy that her skirts threat ened to level to the breeze "Don't, don't!" cri?d Mrs. Gregory precipitately. "Fran!" 1 lOJ 111 i vrm 1 "Bravo!" shouted Simon Jeff ei son. "Encore!" Fran widened her fingers to push down the rebellious dress. "If 1 don't put leads on me," she said with con trition, "I'll be floating away. When I feel good, I always want to do some thing wrong it's awfully dangerous for a person to feel good, I guess. Mrs. Gregory, you say J can belong to you when I think about that, I want to dance. ... I guess you hardly know what it means for Fran to be long to a person. You're going to find out. Come on," she shouted to Mrs. Jefferson, without using the trumpet always a subtle compliment to those nearly stone-deaf, "I mustn't wheel myself about, so I'm going to wheel you." As she passed with her charge into ; the garden, her mind was busy with thoughts of Grace Noir. Belonging to j Mrs. Gregory naturally suggested get ting rid of the secretary. It would be exceedingly diflicult. "But two months ought to settle her," Fran mused. In the meantime, Grace Noir and Gregory sat in the library, silently turning out an immense amount of work, feeding the hungry and consol ing the weak with stroke of pen and click of typewriter. "About this case, number one hun dred forty-three," Grace said, looking u;i from her work as copyist, "the girl whose father wouldn't acknowl edge her ..." "Write to the matron to give her good clothing and good schooling." He spoke softly. There prevailed an at mosphere of subtle tenderness; on this island the library blossomed love of mankind and devotion to lofty ideals. These two mariners found themselves ever surrounded by a sea of indifference; there was not a sail in sight. "It is a sad case," he mur mured. "You think number one hundred forty-three a sad case?" she repeated, always, when possible, building her next step out of the material furnished by. her companion. "But suppose she is an impostor. He says she's not his daughter, this number one hundred forty-three. Maybe she isn't. Would you call her conduct sad?" Gregory took exquisite pleasure in arguing with Grace, because her se rene assumption of being in the right gave to her beautiful face a touch of the angelic. "I should call it impos sible." "Impossible? Do you think it's im possible that Fran's deceiving you? How can ycu know that she is the daughter of your friend?" He grew pale. Oh, if he could have denied Fran if he could have joined Grace in declaring her an impostor! But she possessed proofs so irrefutable that safety lay in admitting her claim, lest she prove more than he had al ready admitted. . "I know it, absolute ly. She is the daughter of one who was my most my most intimate friend." Grace repeated with delicate re proof "Your intimate friend!" "I know it was wrong for him to de sert his wife." "Vrong!" How inadequate seemed that word from her pure lips! "But," he faltered, "we must make allowances. My friend married Fran's mother in secret because she was ut terly worldly frivolous a butterfly. Her own uncle was unable to control her to make her go to church. Soon after the marriage he found out his mistake it broke his heart, tho trag edy of it. I don't excuse him for go ing away to Europe " "I am glad you don't. He was no true man, but a weakling. I am glad I have never been thrown with such a a degenerate." "But, Miss Grace," he urged tlead ingly, "da you think my friend, when he went back to find her and she was gone do you think he should have kept on hunting? Do you think, Grace, that he should have remained yoked to an unbeliever, after he realized his folly?" There was heavenly compassion in her eyes, for suddenly she had di vined his purpose in defending Fran's father. He was thinking of his "own wife, and of . his wife's mother and brother how they had ceased to show sympathy in what he regarded as the essentials of life. Her silence suggest ed that as ehe could not speak without casting reflection upon Mrs. Gregory, she would say nothing, and this fact was grateful to his grieved heart. "I have been thinking of something very strange," Grace said, with a marked effort to avoid the issue lest she commit the indiscretion of blam ing her employer's wife. "I remem ber having heard you say that when you were a young man, you left your father's home to live with a cousin in a distant town who happened to be a ? Bin i - JOHNBraCICENMBGE E ;S i'lit ' ILLUSTRATIONS BY s - v. - c:::'.J teacher in a college, and that you were graduated from his college. Don't you think it marvelous, this claim of Fran, who says that her father, when a young man, went to live with a cousin who was a college professor, and that he was graduate! from that college? And she says that her father's father was a rich man just as yours was and that the cousin is dead just as yours is." i At these piercing words, Gregory bowed his head to conceal his agita tion. Could it be possible that she had guessed all and yet, in spite of all, could use that tone of kindness? It burst upon him that if he and she could hold this fatal secret in common, they might, in sweetest comradeship, form an alliance against fate itself. She persisted: "The account that Fran gives of her father is really your own history. What does that show?" He spoke almost in a whisper. "My friend and I were much alike." Then he looked up swiftly to catch a look of comprehension by surprise, if such a look were there. Grace smiled coolly. "But hardly Identical, I presume. Don't you see that Fran has invented her whole story, and that she didn't have enough "Bring on Your Dragons," She Said Boastfully. imagination to keep from copying after your biographical sketch in the newspaper? I don't believe fihe is your friend's daughter. I don't be lieve you could ever have liked the father of a girl like Fran that he could have been your intimate friend." "Well-" faltered' Gregory. But why should he defend Fran? " "Mr. Gregory," she asked, as if what she was about to say belonged to what had gone before, "would it greatly in convenience you for me to leave your employment?" He was electrified. "Grace! Incon venience me ! would you could . . ." "I have not decided not yet. Speaking of being yoked with unbe lievers I have never told you that Mr. Robert Clinton has wanted me to mar ry him. As long as he was outside of the church, of course it was impos sible. But now that he is converted " "Grace!" groaned the pallid listener. "He would like me to go with him to Chicago." "But you couldn't love Bob Clinton he isn't worthy of you, Grace. It's impossible. Heaven knows I've had disappointments enough " He start ed up and came toward her, his eyes glowing. "Will you make my lite a complete failure, after all?" "Love him?" Grace repeated calmly. "This is merely a question of doing the most good. I know nothing about love." "Then let me teach you, Grace, let" "Shall we not discuss it?" she said gently. "That is best, I think. If I de cide to marry Mr. Clinton. I will tell you even before I tell him. I don't know what I shall choose as my Lest course." "But, Grace! What could I do without" "Shall we just agree to say no more about it?" she softly interposed. "That is wisest until my decision is made. We were talking about Fran do you think this a good opportunity for Mrs. Gregory to attend services? Fran can stay with Mrs. Jefferson." "I have no doubt," he said, still agi tated, "that my wife would find it easy enough to go to church, if she really wanted to go." "Mr. Gregory!" she reproved him. "Well," he cried, somewhat defiant ly, "don't you think she could go, if she wanted to?" "Well," Grace answered slowly, "this girl will leave her without any any excuse." "Oh, Miss Grace, if my wife were only like you I mean, about going to church!" o, BOBBS-MEPeiLLCO.) "I consider it," ehe responded, "the most important thing in tho world." Her emphatic tone proved her sin cerity. The church on Walnut street stood, for her, as the ark; those who remained outside, at the call of the bell, were in danger of engulfmeut. After a long silence, Grace looked up from her typewriter. "Mr. Greg ory," she said pausingly, "you are un happy." Nothing could have been sweeter to him than her sympathy, except happi ness itself. "Yes," he admitted, with a great sigh, "I am very unhappy, but you understand me, and that is a little comfort. If you should marry Bob Clinton Grace, tell me you'll not think of it again." "And you are unhappy," said Grace, steadfastly ruling Bob Clinton out of the discussion, "on account of Fran." He burst forth Impulsively "Ever since she came to town!" He checked himself. "But I owe it to my friend to shelter her. She wants to stay and and she'll have to, if she demands it." ' "Do you owe more to your dead friend," Grace asked, with passionate solemnity, "than to the living God?" He shrank back. "But I can't send her away," he persisted in nervous haste. "I can't. But heaven bless you. Grace, for your dear thought of me." "You will bless me with more rea son," said Grace softly, "when Fran decides to go away. She'll tire of this house I promise it. She'll go just wait! she'll go, as unceremoniously as she came. Leave it to me, Mr. Greg ory." In her earnestness she started up, and then, as if to conceal her growing resolution, she walked swiftly to the window as if to hold her manu script to the light. Gregory followed her. "If she would only go!" he groaned. "Grace! Do you think you could? Yes, I will leave everything to you." "She'll go," Grace repeated fixedly. The window at which they stood overlooked the garden into which Fran had wheeled old Mrs. Jefferson. Fran, speaking through the ear trumpet with as much caution as deaf ness would tolerate, said, y'Dear old lady, look up at the library window, if you please, for the muezzin has climbed his minaret to call to prayers." Very little of this reached its desti nation muezzin was in great danger of complicating matters, but th-3 old lady caught "library window," and held it securely. She looked up. Ham ilton Gregory and Grace Noir were standing at the tower window, to catch the last rays of the sun. The flag of truce between them was only a typewritten sheet of manuscript. Grace held the paper obliquely toward the west; Hamilton leaned nearer and, with his delicate white finger, pointed out a word. Grace nodded her head in gentle acquiescence. "Amen," muttered Fran. "Now let everybody sing!" The choir leader and his secretary vanished from sight. LESSON FOR ARDENT SWAIN Startling Experience Cures Him of Making Love to Maidens at Balls. It happened at a public ball. He was a man of serious intentions and numerous attentions, and she was rich and weddable. They sat in the hall under the stairway. It was a I nook for lovers. There was not a soul in sight and, and he thought his golden opportunity had arrived. Down he flopped on his knees, and clasped her hand. "Dear one," he whispered, not very loud, but loud enough, "I have loved you with the- whole strength and ardour of a man's nature when it is roused by all that is pure and good and lovely in woman, and I can no longer restrain my pent-up feelings. I must tell you what is in my heart, and assure you that never yet has woman heard from my lips the se crets that are throbbing and " Just then a rustle was heard on the 6tairs above them, and a card fastened to a thread swung down and dangled not two inches from the lov er's nose. On it were these porten tous words; "I'm a bit of c liar myself." Then the awful truth Cashed -upon l.hiTn, and he fled. As he went out of tf- "Just like the play In Hamlet," Fran said half-aloud. "And now that the inside play Is over, I guess it's time for old Ham to be doing something." Mrs. Jefferson gripped the arms of her wheel-chair and resumed her .tale, as if she had not been interrupted. It was of no interest as a story, yet pos sessed a sentimental value from the fact that all the characters save the raconteur were dead, and possibly all but her forgotten. Fran loved to hear the old lady evoke the shades of long ago, shades who would never again assume even the palest manifestation to mortals, when this old lady had gone to join them. Usually Fran brought her back, with gentle hand, but today she di vined subterfuge; the tale was meant to hide .Mrs. Jefferson's real feelings. Fran ventured through the trumpet: "I Wish there was a man-secretary on this place, instead of a woman. And let me tell you one thing, dear old soldier there's going to be a fight put up on these grounds. I guess you ought to stay out of it. But either I or the secretary has got to git." Fran was not unmindful of gram mar, even of rhetoric, on occasion. She knew there was no such word as "git," but she was seeking to symbol ize her idea in sound. As she closed her teeth, each little pearl meeting a pearly rival, her "git" had something of the force of physical ejectment. Behind large spectacle lenses, sparks flashed from Mrs. Jefferson's eyes. She sniffed battle. , But her tightly compressed lips showed that she lacked both Fran's teeth and Fran's intrepidity. One steps cau tiously at seventy-odd. Fran comprehended. The old lady must not let it be suspected that she was aware of Gregory's need of cotton in straining ears, such as had saved Ulysses from siren voices. The pre tense of observing no danger kept the fine old face uncommonly grim. "Little girls shouldn't fight," was her discreet rejoinder. Then leaning over the wheel, she advanced her snow-white head to the head of coal black. "Better not stir up dragons." Fran threw back her head and laughed defiantly. "Bring on your dragons," she cried boastfully. "There's not one of 'em I'm afraid of." She extended one leg and stretched forth her arm. "I'll say to the Dragon. 'Stand up' and she'll stand; 111 say 'Lie down' and down she'll lie. I'll say 'Git and she'll " Fran waved her dragon to annihilation. "Goodness," the old lady exclaimed, getting nothing of this except tho pan tomime; that, however, was eloquent. She recalled the picture of David in her' girlhood's Sunday-school book. "Are you defying the Man of Gath?" She broke into a delicious smile which seemed to flood the wrinkles of her face with the sunshine of many dear old easy-going years. Fran smote her forehead. "I have a few pebbles here," she called through the trumpet. Mrs. Jefferson grasped the other's thin arm, and said, with zestful ener gy, "Let her have 'em, David, let her have 'em!" (TO BE CONTINUED.) the door, sixteen girls from the head of the stairs sent sixteen laughs out into the damp night after him. He makes no love at balls now. Marine Telescope. . Make an oblong narrow box out of four pieces of quarter-inch board about two feet long by sixteen inches wide, and fit a piece of clear, clean glass across one end, held In place by brass- headed tacks, driven into the wood and overlapping the glass. Fill all the cracks with sealing wax to keep out the light Then plunge the glass end two or three inches into the water and look through the open end. This sim ple marine telescope Is made on the principle of the more elaborate glasses through which to look at the famous gardens under the sea near the Cata lina islands. Christian Herald. Storekeepers in Difficulties. A number of shopkeepers were summoned at the Gfimsby police court recently for contravbnlng the closing order under the shops act. They com plained that they had difficulty in un derstanding what they could and could not sell. One of the defendants admitted selling soap to a man who was very dirty. "Ttinklng eleanlinrss was next to godliness, I let him h;iv a packet," said thb jefendant. Lo; don MaiL LESSON FOR SEPTEMBER 28 REVIEW. Deliverance and Disobedience. READING LESSON ONLY Nehemlah 9:9-21. See also Acts 7:30-34. ' GOLDEN TEXT "Thou art a God ready to pardon, gracious and full of com passion, slow to anper and plenteous In mercy." Neh. 9:17 (Am. R. V.) The lessons for the past quarter be gin with the deliverance of the child Moses and end with the apostasy of the golden calf and cover a period of approximately 80 years. In almost every lesson there is something pro phetic or typical of Christ, but two things may be mentioned with special emphasis, viz., the passover, lesson VI, see I Cor. 5:7, and the bread from heaven, lesson VIII, see Matt. 26:26, I Cor. 11:23, 24. For the younger classes a most fas cinating story can be told when pre senting this review. Describe Miriam watching the ark, Pharaoh's daughter espying the ark, sending the babe to Its mother and later adopting it as her son. . Tell of the day when Moses made his great choice, of the time he thought he could free his brethren, but failed, not yet having the neces sary power from God. Then the 40 years as a shepherd (John 10:14), the revelation at Horeb, the conflict at Pharaoh's court, the passover, and the flight by night, the crossing of the Red eea, the gift of the quails and the manna and that dramatic scene of the giving of the law. Enough Is hero presented to more than occupy the lesson period. Four Episodes. For the older classes. The lessons of this quarter seem to group them selves into four general episodes: (1) Moses, his salvation, education, flight and call; (2) Pharaoh, his pride, humiliation and the passover; (3) the flight, at the Red sea, being fed in the wilderness, and (4) the law, God's holiness, his commandments and the great apostasy. The following brief review Is sug gested: Have one class member tell of the steps leading up to the Israelit ish slavery in Egypt Let another pu pil present either orally or written, an account of the life of Moses up to the time of his appearing before Pha raoh with his apparently audacious request, "Let my people go." Let that Gtudent not only recite the historical facts but also show God's dealing with this son of an obscure slave. He might illustrate by alluding to others whom God has raised up to "do ex ploits" In his dealings with men, Dan iel 11:32. This will cover four les sons. Another pupil should then pre sent as concisely as possible that re markable conflict which God, through his representative Moses, worked out ' with Pharaoh. This whole episode was treated as lesson V, the text be ing Ps. 105:23-36, and in lesson VI the record of the passover. This lat ter, the great feast of the Jews and Christ who is our passover ought to be carefully and yet emphatically pre sented. Let us not neglect to present the Bible teaching on this, one of the greatest truths ever revealed to man by a gracious, loving, heavenly father, Heb. 9:22. Member as Spokesman. The third episode can be presented if in class by a student, or if the re view is a general one by the whole School. Let some particular class se lect one of its members as spokesman. This embraces lessons VII and VIII and is a gracious revelation of God's protecting care and also his abundant supply for our every need. In this section is another and a most beauti ful suggestion of that "living bread" so freely provided for all who will accept. Coming now to the last great epi sode of this quarter, the events in con nection with the giving of the law, . we embrace lessons IX, X, XI and XII. Before God gave them the various commandments he sought to empha size his majesty and his holiness by the smoking mountain, etc. We then have two lessons on the decalogue, a most fitting arrangement inasmuch as the first part deals with the God-side of life man's relation to his creator and the second part has to do with man's relations to his brother man. The last lesson is a terrible illustra tion of this dual fact. The utter ina bility of the natural heart to fulfill its high sounding promises, Its exceeding sinfulness and the necessity of right relations with him who alone can keep it pure is, it seems to us, the impor tant lesson of the setting up of the golden calf. The two reading lessons give us the true light of the divine patience and the divine persistence. The golden text is also an epitome of the spirit of these lessons. Outline: 1. Moses (a)Training, Lesson I; (b) Fugitive, Lesson II; (c) Called, Lesson III. 2. Pharaoh (a) Commanded, Lesson IV; (b) Humbled, Lesson V; (c) Con quered, Lesson VI. 3. Flight (a) Deliverance, Lesson VII; (b) Fed, Lesson VIII. 4. Law (a) Holinees and Majesty, Lesson IX; (b), (c) Commandments, Lessons X, XI; (d) Apostasy (Golden Calf), Lesson XII.