Sunday at Fort Churchill. 



131 



earnest. Within, the scene was one of the greatest interest. At 

 the entrance was the plain comfortable-looking box stove ; on either 

 side were rows of benches, ten altogether. At the upper end, fenced 

 off from the auditorium by a neat railing were the table and desks 

 covered with red cloth. Behind these, on the wall, were four tablets 

 of sheet iron, upon which were handsomely painted, in the Chip- 

 pewayan language, the 



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Apostles' Creed on the 

 first, the Ten Command- 

 ments on the next two, 

 and the Lord's Prayer on 

 the last. On either side 

 of these was a small 

 picture, unframed, and 

 tacked to the wall : one 

 the scene of " Christ 

 Cleansing the Temple," 

 the other, the " Return of 

 the Prodigal Son." Un- 

 derneath the whole, in 

 large letters in English, 

 were the words : " Be- 

 cause Thy loving-kind- 

 ness is better than life, 

 my lips shall praise Thee." 

 There were unframed pic- 

 tures tacked to the walls, 

 between the windows, of 

 "The Sacrifice of Cain 

 and Abel," " Moses saved 



by Pharaoh's Daughter," " The Brazen Serpent," " David and Goliah," 

 " Christ Feeding the Multitude," " Christ Healing the Multitude," 

 " Christ Announced to the Shepherds," " The Worship and Offerings 

 of the Wise Men," " John Preaching in the Wilderness," " Christ 

 and the Woman at Jacob's Well," " Death of Annanias," and other 

 appropriate decorations. 



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" APOSTLES' CREED " — CHIPPEWA YAN. 



