Catynenr ^ KATMttW NOftW Sisfe KATHLE NORRIS had driven thre^ hundred miles in the anti she fiatefTTo control~herself. Shia superintendent’s car; she was pre- had to economize when poverty po^ paring for a card party. gessed neither picturesqueness nor In ¬ terest. They were always several weeks behind in the payment of do westic bills, and these recurring re minders of money stringency mad dened Cherry. Sometimes she summed it up, with angry tears, reminding him that -she was still wearing her trous seau dresses, and had no maid, and sever went anywhere—! But she developed steadily. As she grew skilful in managing her little bouse, she also grew in the art of managing her husband and herself. She became clever at avoiding causes of disagreement; she listened, nodded, agreed, with a boiling heart, and had the satisfaction of having Martin’s viewpoint veer the next day, or the next hour, to meet her own secret conviction. Martin seemed satisfied, and all their little world accepted her as a matter of course. But under it all Cherry knew that something young add irresponsible and confident in her had been killed. She never liked to think of the valley, of the fogs and the spokes of sunlight under the redwood aisles, of Alix and the dogs and the dreamy evenings by, the fire. And es pecially she did not like to think of that eighteenth birthday, and herself thrilling and ecstatic because the strange young man from Mrs. North’s had stared at her, in her sticky apron, with so new and disturbing a smile In his eyes. “Think of little old Cherry going off on week-end trips with three men!” Alix would say proudly. “Think of Cherry giving a party!” Anne per haps would make no comment, but she often felt a pang of envy. Cherry geemed to htve everything. Suddenly, without warning, there was a newcomer in the circle, a sleek- headed brown-haired little man known as Justin Little. He had been introduced at some par ty to Anne and Alix; he called; he was presently taking Anne to a lec ture. Anne now began to laugh at him and say that he was “too ridic ulous,” but she did not allow any one else to say so. On the contrary, she told Alix at various times that his mother had been one of the old Mary land Percies, and his great-grandfather was mentioned in a book by Sir Wal ter Scott, and that one had to respect the man, even if one didn’t choose to marry him. “Marry him I” Alix had echoed in simple amazement. Marry him—what was all this sudden change in the household when a man could no sooner appear th^n some girl began to talk of marriage? Stupefied, Alix watched the affair progress. “I don’t imagine it’s serious!” her father said on an April walk. Peter, CHAPTER V. So winter passed at the mine and at the brown house under the shoul der of Tamalpais. Alix still kept her bedroom windows open, but the rain tore in, and Anne protested at the en suing stains on the pantry celling. Cherry’s wedding, once satisfactori ly over, was a cause of great satisfac tion to her sister and cousin. They had stepped back duly, to give her the center of the stage; they had ad mired and congratulated; had helped her in all hearty generosity. And now that she was gone they enjoyed their own lives again and cast over hers the glamor that novelty and distance nev er fall to give. Cherry, married and keeping house and managing affairs, was an object of romantic interest. The girls surmised that Cherry must be making friends; that everyone must admire her; that Martin would be rich some day, without doubt. Chery wrote regularly, now and then assuring them that she was the same old Cherry. She described her tiny house right at the mine, and the long sheds of the plant, and the bare big build ing that was the men’s boarding house. Martin’s associates brought her trout and ducks, she wrote; she and Martin "My dear father,” the girl protested. ‘Have you listened to them? They’ve been contending for weeks that they were just remarkably good friends— that’s why she calls him Frenny!” “Ah—I see!” the doctor said mildly, as Peter’s wild laugh burst forth. “But now,” Alix pursued, “she’s told him that as she cannot be what he wishes, they had better not meet!” “Poor Anne!” the old doctor com mented. “Poor nothing! She’s having the time of her life,” her cousin said un feelingly. “She told me today that she was afraid that she had checked one of the most brilliant careers at the bar.” “I had no idea of all this I” the doc tor confessed, amazed. “I’ve seen the young man—noticed him about. Well —well—well! Anne, too.” In June came the blissful hour In which Anne, all blushes and smiles, could come to her uncle with a duti ful message from the respectfully adoring Justin. Their friendship, said Anne, had ripened into something deeper. “Justin wants to have a frank talk with you, uncle,” Anne said, “and of course I’m not to go until you are sure you can spare me and unless you feel that you can trust him utterly!” Anne’s engagement cups were ranged on the table where Cherry’s had stood, and where Cherry had talked of a coffee-colored rajah silk Anne discussed the merits of a “smart but handsome blue tallormade.” The wedding was to be in Septem ber, not quite a year after Cherry’s wedding. Alix wrote her sister pages about it, always ending with the em phatic declaration that Cherry must come down for the wadding. Cherry was homesick. She dreamed continually of the cool, high valley, the scented aisles of the deep forest, the mountain rearing its rough sum mit to the pale blue of summer skies. June passed; July passed; it was hot at the “Emmy Younger.” August came in on a furnace breath; Cherry felt headachy, languid and half sick all the time. Martin had said that he could not possibly get away, even for the week of Anne’s wedding, but Cherry began to wonder if he would let her go alone. "If he doesn’t, I shall be sick!” she fretted to herself, in a certain burn ing noontime, toward the middle of August. Martin, who had been play ing poker the night before, was sleep ing late this morning. Coming home at three o’clock dazed with close air and cigar smoke, he had awakened his wife to tell her that he would be “dead” in the morning, and Cherry had accordingly crept about her dress ing noiselessly, had darkened the bed- room and eaten her own breakfast without the clatter of a dish.^Now she was sitting by the window, pant ing in the noon heat. She was think ing, as it chanced, of the big forest at home and of a certain day—just one of their happy days!—only a year There was a shadow In the door way; she looked up surprised. For a minute the tall figure in striped linen and the smiling face under the flow ery hat seemed those of a stranger. Then Cherry cried out and laughed, and in another Instant was crying in Alix's arms. Alix cried, too, but it was with a great rush of pity and tenderness for IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL »^#ee#O00^##®>^^W^©Wl “I Don't Imagine It’s Serious,” Her Father Said on an April Walk. Cherry, novelty “Emmy frankly Alix had not young love and to soften the outlines of the Younger” and she felt, as she wrote later to her father, “at SundaySchool ’ Lesson' (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D., Teacher of English Bible in the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) (©, 1921, Western Newspaper Union.) A GUARANTEED INCOME ago, when she had lain for a hour on the soft forest floor, up idly through the laced branches, and she thought of dreamy staring fanlike her fa- therewith his mild voice and ready smile; and some emotion, almost like fear, came over her. For the first time she asked herself, in honest bewilder ment, why she had married. The L^at deepened and strengthened ^fi increased as the burning ./ore an. Martin waked up, hot headachy, and having further tressed himself with strong coffee day and dis and eggs, departed into the dusty, motion less furnace out-of-doors. The far brown hills shimmered and swam, the “Emmy Younger” looked its barest, i^LJ^Uest.—its least attractive self. tramping beside .them, was interested but silent. ^^7. Camels are made for Men who Think for Themselves Such folks know real quality—and DEMAND it. They prefer Camels because Camels give them the smoothest, mellowest smoke they can buy—because they love the mild, rich flavor of choicest tobaccos, perfectly, blended—and because Camels leave NO CIGARETTY AFTERTASTE. — Like every man who does his own thinking, you want fine tobacco in your cigarettes. You’ll find it in Camels. And, mind you, no flashy package just for show. No extra wrappers! No costly frills! These things don t improve the smoke any more than premiums or coupons. But QUALITY! Listen! That’s CAMELS! Camel IL J. REYNOLDS Tob.cc. O. WivtoB-Sal.^ M.-C. last convinced that there is a hell-!” The heat and bareness and ugliness of the mine might have been over looked, but this poor little house of Cherry’s, this wood stove draining white ashes, this tin sink with its pump, and the bathroom'with neither faucets nor drain, almost bewildered Alix with their discomfort Even more bewildering was the change in Cherry. There was a cer tain hardening that impressed AJix at once. There was a weary sort of pa tience, a disillusioned concession to the drabness of married life. But she allowed the younger sister to see nothing of this. Indeed, Cherry so brightened under the stimulus of Alix’s companionship that Martin told her that she was more like her old self than she had been for months. Joy ously she divided her responsibilities with Alix, explaining the difficulties of marketing and housekeeping, and joyously Alix assumed them. Her vi tality infected the whole household. She gave them spirited accounts of Anne’s affair. “He’s a nice little aca demic fellow,” she said of Justin Lit tle. “If he had a flatiron in each hand he’d probably weigh close to a hundred pounds! He’s a—well, a sort of damp-looking youth, if you know what I mean! I always want to take LESSON FOR SEPTEMBER 11 PAUL IN ATHENS. LESSON TEXT—Acts 17:16-34. GOLDEN TEXT—In him we live, and move, and have our being.—Acts 17:28. REFERENCE MATERIAL-Luke 4:15- PRIMARY TOPIO—Paul Telling the People about God. JUNIOR TOPIC-Paul in Athens. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC —In a Famous Greek City. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC —Paul in a Center of Learning. Being Driven from Berea, Paul Fled to Athens. a crash towel and dry him off!” “Fancy Anne with a shrimp that!” Cherry said, with a proud at her own man’s fine height, sounds awful to me.” “He’s not, really. Only it seems like look “He that he belongs to the oldest family in America, or something, and is the only descendant—” “Money?” Cherry asked, Interest edly. “No, I don’t think money, exactly. At least I know he is getting a hun dred a month in his uncle’s law office, and Dad thinks they ought to wait until they have a little more. She’ll have something, you know,” Alix added, after a moment’s thought. “Your cousin?” Martin asked. "Well, her father went into the fire- extinguisher thing with Dad,” Alix elucidated, “and evidently she and Justin have had deep, soulful thoughts about it. Anyway, the other day she said—you know her way, Cherry— ‘Tell me, Uncle, frankly and honestly, may Justin and I draw out my share for that little home that is going to mean so much to us—’ ” “I can hear her !” giggled Cherry. “Dad immediately said that she could, of course,” Alix went on. “He was adorable about it. He said, Tt will do more than build you a little home, my dear!’” “We’ll get a slice of that some time,” Cherry said thoughtfully, glancing at her husband. “I don’t mean when Dad dies, either,” she added, in quick affection. “I mean that he might build us a little home some day in Mill Valley.” “Gee, how he’d love it!” Alix said, enthusiastically. “I married Cherry for her money,” Martin confessed. “As a matter of fact,” Cherry con tradicted him, vivaciously, animated even by the thought of a change and a home, "we have never even spoken of it before, have we, Mart?” "I never heard of it before,” he ad mitted, smiling, as he knocked the ashes from his pipe. “But it’s pleasant to know that Cherry will come in for a nest-egg some day!” Presently the visitor boldly sug gested that she and Cherry should both go homS together for the wedding, and Martin agreed good-naturedly. “But, Mart, how'll you get along?” his wife asked anxiously. She had fumed and fussed and puttered and toiled over the care of these four rooms for so long that it seemed un believable that her place might be vacated even for a day. “Oh, I’ll get along fine!” he an swered indifferently. So, on the last day of August, in the cream-colored I. The Idolatry of the Athenian# (v. 16). Athens was the Intellectual metrop olis of the world at that time, the home of the world’s great eloquence and philosophy. Paul’s spirit was stirred within him when he saw the city wholly given to idolatry. II. The Parties Concerned (vv. IT- 21). True to his usual custom Paul went into the Jewish synagogue and entered Into earnest argument with the Jews. From them he turned to such as were found in the market place. Here he came into touch with the Epicurean and Stoic philosophers. The former were atheistic materialists. They de nied the doctrine of Creation. They gave themselves up to sensual in dulgences since they had no idea of future judgment. The latter were pantheists. When they heard the (preaching of Paul they desired to know what new doctrine he preached, so they invited him to the Areopagus where he might speak to them of his new doctrine. They inquired as to what this “babbler” might say. The word “babbler” means literally “seed- picker.” III. Paul’s Address on Mars’ Hill (vv. 23-31). 1. The introduction (vv. 22, 23). He did not accuse them of “superstition” as the A. V. would make it, but as in the Am. R. V. he introduces his dis course in a courteous and conciliatory manner, stating that he perceived that they were very religious. This he ex plained by stating that as he was view ing their city he beheld an altar with an inscription “To the Unknown God.” This was his point of contact. He proceeds at once to connect it with the idea of the living God, implying that this altar had been erected to silk and looking, like the she and the expensive hat again, yet Alix thought, strangely un bride that had been Cherry, her sister happily departed for cooler regions. Martin took them to the train, kissed his sister-in-law gaily and then his wife affectionately. “Be a good little girl, Babe,” he said, "and write me!” "Oh, I will—I will!” Cherry looked after him smilingly from the car win dow. "He really is an old deac! b she told Alix. CHAPTER VI. But when at the end of the long day they reached the valley, and when her father came innocently into the garden and stood staring vaguely at her for a moment—for her visit ‘and the day of Alix’s return had been kept a secret—her first act was to burst into tears. She clung to the fatherly shoulders as if she were a storm- beaten bird safely home again, and although r,he immediately laughed at herself and told the sympathetically watching Peter and Alix that she dion t know what was the matter with her, it was only to interrupt the words with fresh tears. Tears of joy, she told them, laugh ing at the moisture in her father’s eyes. She had a special joyous word for Hong; she laughed and teased and questioned Anne, when Anne and Justin came back from an afternoon concert in the city, with an interest and enthusiasm most gratifying to both. After dinner she had her old place on the arm of her father’s porch chair; Alix, with Buck’s smooth head in her lap, sat on the porch step beside Pe ter, and the lovers murmured from the darkness of the hammock under the shadow of the rose vine. It was happy talk in the sweet evening cool ness; everybody seemed harmonious and in sympathy tonight; There are investments and investments. 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He gives ex istence, bestows needed gifts, and as sovereign directs all things. (2) Declaration concerning man (vv. 26-31). (a) His common origin (v. 26). This was a blow at the foolish Athen ian pride which supposed that they were superior to all other people. This proposition he proved from their own literature (see v. 28). If men are the offspring of God and bear HisUike- ness it is utter folly to make images as the senseless idols were, (b) Na tions have their place by the sov ereign purpose of God (v. 26). The position and mission of each nation Is of God’s'appointment, (c) Men should seek God (v. 26). His goodness and grace in supplying all our needs, and ordering even the affairs of the na tions should move man to see and seek Gbd, for He is indeed very near to every one; so near that our existence and movements are all under His con trol (v. 27). (d) Pressing obligation to repent (vv. 30, 31). This was his supreme message. 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