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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Star, 1929-12-05, Page 7MSAVr Dills Mw. t HBe-whir-AndWomen Too, --by Reck (By N. Baerl- 1t eratw .... v '4 era te Matto, er e�eew Mir*plc aro im it --oath Simply h the church. where they ire learned to 104110 7711 wr, all is __- day save learned to leans is leading them ua. is festering ammo tee* eyes. tie tale* aaaad sanderd of eallvatiwt ia, lied tIYro and by. serumal sgratifemtisa, heasna effort in goodaees, sad the overlain. ing diet -dame at raking money, evety Bair breadth of woke& our Saviour putatively, emphatically de- clared as abhorrent.* to Musa. For the tut several years 1 nave been doing even Hart. reading than has bon my Busters, and mow many author theme do I oleo read litany thug's+ impede throughout the aye.. i of our laird, even to Gaderiice, Clinton, Benauiller and township* and villages round about. Now, Mr. Emil. tor, I am coming to a point where you ears scarcely fait to see why I am not proud of my church. Ohl there are Oh! foolish Canadians, who hath Now, Dir. Edgar, I am well aware so many people hereabout, in the bewitched you? You, who have that the Closing remarks of my las pulpits and in the pews of our chute been privileged, rightfully, to the in- installment and the commencement of rhea. who scarcely know whether to • 'heritance of sororities in Jesus Christ, this one are not just of the kind (if .give me the hand of fellowship or and the many golden opportunities of any of them are) that editors, or not. I am being looked upon by veritable declaration of that kinship readers care to waste much time up• many as snare or less of a scene. lima gone yard bartered away this on, and: that there are ether phases *race and more fitted for somewhere blessed privilege for the vein glory of life, and conditions of life which else than a new in our modern church of sensual pleasure and rotten show ere mush more assuring and palate so that I have .to give a aresson—a of talent gratification—until heaven Ole to the sensual parts of our hum- suet and hnneet rause for my entrant hu withdrawn much of the richer an make-up. gement. and I have referred to those, inspirations that haloed the exper- But I went to assure you that those chin eh reports as we get them. and I knees, empowered the efforts, sur- rumnages are not written just upon do not want you to imagine, that I tanned the courage, ennobled the the spur of a moment or considers;- read °illy United church reports. No. Wes, vindicated . re faith ` of the tions of a day, but are rather. the • sitereel But ill be frank to admit, faithful few who blazed the trail for .?ringing together of observations there ere some other cliques; in wort.• the generations unborn, who brevet, and studies of a life -time (of fair ship of God where my conscience the pioneer; life to, ?dant and, water length) in et mighty frail and .poor poises more Peacefully than it does in and nourish the seed, who atrugglec .ttempt. in . God's service, and that I my home algid or the poemhard to erect protec seed., to the grow im making many comparisons be. church. But. *II of this aside. it's a • • $ ingcrops, the resulting harvests o. wenn the God service of forty, positive disgrace to intelligent hum. wich fifty, you have been vain enough tc ixty, years of my personal observa- ankind (if we are intelligent at all) squander and waste and ruinize, Vat' _ .ions (and many, many times multi- that there should be well on toward you might, with opennand ncatterPU Plied in stud observations) end hundred different c1i uei of f thr th A weed -seeds air damnation lied service of the twentieth Dentary, or pretense of faith, upon the ,Anieri- - . _ throughout this nage lasrtil, And quite recent yeara, even the "nen can continent, and all abased upon the "•-- -- ------ — —.Solon-" period,..s parison which do one Book and, at the same time. it's ,...;.... not reflect as being creditable to the one greetest -dishonor toY od'u """"'"'""" hwnankind. of •today, and which are holy name that humanity could ever IF YOU, NEL ► emphatically robbing God. Not this 'unfold. is not too strong language, for in But. to get !back to niy topic and every age of this world's history, bib. those reports, and you need not take Beal or secular, it has taken the hand any word for it, just wed them your - New • and power of God to keep humanity self. and keep your eyes open, you within the boundaries of her own ter- will see that searcel one in Yawls B�t��re y a a e a ritory the one of subjeetion to His year but emphasizes, most mightily supreme will and acceptance of His emphasizes, much prosperity. Now, ,of Any doecriptwn free, boundless love and grace, Rum- .put on your specks and look again in anity will err, will persist in work just what that prosperity is said to SEE �+� V*Sw' ' Fi*R T ing out some plan to:put herself up. consist. Just take notice chow 'new • on an aqUality with God. From ourindividuals are partitioned off to take _. very firastt records has rhe striven for care of and bring in those various re- we Poli ti el save you it. Primitive and hews ancient : his- ports from the.many,. many branches tory declares it. Modern -trend rote .of labor. and effort and finance, to eibly substantiates .it, and if it were 'keep the cogs of the whole machine only manifest outside the pale of the oiled up and dust brushed oft. Then - Christian church, the, calamity would .Put on ; your hat" and, umbrella in not be so disastrous, but the church band, go down there on Sunday morn. HAROLD BLACKSTONE'S is not by a long reach in the exemp- ing to service and see how mush in- tve class, abut is, rather•, an ambitious spiration you get from that . very FURNITURE EXCHANGE factor in •promullgating ' a. trend in prosperous church. Now. you can g'o 6 19 N11u sensual gratification, : which: in God's to •city, town ole' enuntry, it's just AGe11T io* MAa$HALL 11AT'rneestS declarations are a . stain upon her sthe same thing. Once in a while we �. character, end are. keeping her back I listen. to 'a,good sermon, if we could ( from the +blessed unctions of the in only come away carrying it in our `'`'-'- spirations of the Most High. Those heads and hearts, without its whole jj,,. are facts that are ria lie. There is force and power being crushed out ,little or no inspiration goes with the with • the : ponderous weight of the general run of Canadian church ser- machinery which our.;church pas out vice, and we are also _upon .'solid a mighty lot of her refined gold tor ground' when we declare ---like thous- until she has very little left to enrich ands of'. Canadian people, declare, the souls •of the few who sit in her. every day, "our church service is not pews, and they are but a . paltry few: the half of what it used to be." We 'There were more people, per caps, know what we are talking. about, Mr, ta, attendant upon our services of Go Editor 1 .It's- the pew that knows it. d -worship fifty years ago than andit's not the pew of yesterday, or . there are today. And. this . applies to Yester-year, , or yester-.decade-not +city, town and country alike. Now, much! • 1It's the pew which has stood is it possible, . or evenprobable, that at the same angle to. our pulpits for that.gospel is less efficient, tests eMca- A fifty 'to one hundred years: , Those cions Y . No -no I --it` cannot be -thus the easy,' are the pews to whom come the rem- entertained for a moment. "If I be pleasant way. Easily lization of our being adrift with the lifted up --will draw all men. It di`estedatidretained, -- anchor gone. Our church has lost hinges in its entirety upon us,: as S„S•.Much of her.ballaat .and seems to Christians and as Christ's church. ,',a care little about taking on some more. This gospel. What does it consist EMULSION ;it does not seem to worry captains of? What is included in it? How is atnor crews in, the least degree. ,,She it -made :up? Why! just in the one, is hopelessly married to her skill and .simple, plain story,' Man's fall and . talent, exultingly shoveling in the man's restoration (women included fuel (money) and pulling wide, the of course); man's Sin and man's sal- ' throttle (self -praise)., while any nue. vation; man's curse and man's .re - Money. if - Pro't WHEN baby starts t .alk, bonesttiustbe�on - and "straight. Cod- liver oil, helps build _ than right. Give it a Istittoes erne/ono' notar*$•- dor this Christmas —the lift of Gifts A' THOUSAND GIFTS IN ONE ... the music of World masters , .. speeches,sermons .sporting events .. vivid and colorful word pictures... Kotster brings them to you with a clarity, a brilliance that dwarfs ell previous conceptions of radio per- formance. There is a Roisterdealer near you.. A defnonstratlon will prove why 'Colder is radio's greatest value. CANADIAN BRANDES LIMITED Toronto, Canada oeteotee t't es ) .a. 'Invest in **vomit ... say "MERRY CHRISTMAS" with:a Kolater Radio. : KalstcrAII.ElsetricMedels • are available Inns 1188 and memo, lest tubs RAD 1 0 "Wholesale Distributors --KENNET ELLIOTT, , Ltd. Van** o elet�4.0= "Zle "VA anditissay �y� nay aerwd child. la teen ism,. 'lair awy have .fir has. +M eadsr.tand .aeugh *eerily now imam ante aet.wsb . d t►. C rist aseneworat to rely open more expea.iv. Indies, nMswit is mad be d. There are, of tato naw le mw.. tato a be4droa armorer, *ear tliage to learn as we thing,* cart iri duan *IMaoaet, 1111011" wow older. '1n tact we will never ('aaaadiaste weer largoly .loan isaraiaR stuaethiag mew stein United stows atarkot .ps�naaaiai or- seam Gad amid Christ, so as we remain ai great number or theca loot lion$1y is .hie world and are still unperfectn. there. Itt addition securities listed t od. And the whole Bible story is ea Celtadian exshaaate* drupPetiytacr'- ,just an uar.veliag of »tan's wayward- haps; a 11,IN)P,000.0iJ0 in the tisbaele poll, and God's gaodnees, justice, long ,The share valht of Interaati.ai aut.riaag and free grace, through : Nickel alone fell nearly $400,000.000. Christ. 'nee 'chole history of God's It is self-evident that many nail• swNo ana.d d noiod'a people, as give lions of surplus cash which would oa tour Bible. is but a counterpart [lave teen available to keep demotic cot Hie people, and non -people.` while :trade humming has vanished. What this old world hangs upon her pivot 'the net result will be on industrial But the faiths, the hopes, the long- activity and upon employment ran hags. the *eine, emblematical. fig only be conjectured, but it cannot be unitive, symbolical, or aught else, of benefii<ia1. the old have all found their fulfillment their realisation. their perfectness and TYPEWRITING NOW 14L3PPI,A rampietenesa inour ..aviour Christ, SCRIPT IN k1NDII:it4,.tkTIL $ And white the faith of the old wee a I Toronto, tint. Nov. 30i (Special Sim le faith in God's promise. the to The •Star), - Ys bile there is es ye TS Salta of than new or our faith is an no disspo' 'tion to follow the experl- equally simple faith in God's fulfil. inent in practice, oftkialss of the de-' runt of that promise. But in either pertinent of education are watching erase. there was, and is, a justness, an results in eighteen united States exactness, a trueness, a Sincereness, cities where kindergarten sand ,prim - in our Moat high and holy God, Haat are grades are allowed to use port• had to be, and has to be, met mid table typewriters in learning the tech - complied with, by His creature. mai;, nique of writing rather than follow "God is not me ked" is a veritable tie- the usual muscular ,system involving Gree today, as it was in any presage, the mastery of seript, but our ehurch today emphatically The experiment was first introdu (in effect) diaregarda it, as is being ed , et Teachers' College, Colunibi evidenced wherrever we a; -o, University, and an interim reran Now, is it not honest reason to be- gays in part: have (and act upon it) for no belief :The remit* so far have •been grati tai worth a pinch of snuff that has not Tug and may ih the future revolas practical enc y and ef1'art to put it tionize the system of child educed into effect. That what heaven for• in respect to writing. Children a bade and denounced in the old and not inuneularly adapted to the present whettraining Christ itea "t introduction o a yeaHisn n and he ntrod stn n of th t olife t andg eu labor and teaching here upon this earth, even typewriter may cause the learning of much more emphatically denounced,. script to be deferred until they are in tho new dispensation, again, 1 say, . or 10 years old. fa tai not honest reason to believe that I Questions raised at once are; Wil Mich so called service is little but a . children learn to write more rapidly arse-and-a-moekevy_.unto-rho-God-we inns 'better if they write en the type profess to serve. it say positively,) writer?- The -typewriter, which-ls a it is nothing else, far as the revels- machine, will insure legibility Mid tion' of St. John declare it, in positive speed in writing. But would children 'effect, a church may raise money, ,do better if they first wrote on the make show, pride herself in }her machine and then with their hands doings, exalt herself to this skies, made the lettere 2 while in God's sight she 4s as poor as Psychologists have known for years dross and neither cold nor fiat, and fit that children fn the 'kindergarten Indy atio be cut off front heavenly in. lar' ease !the eo to write veru nt e - If our Christian experience is to be wired in long -hand. , . maintained and sustained by tome of So far the children show great tag• the kinds of quite zing, precept and So and are writing more in .quan- threu ce, in quite common vogue tity than they ordinarily would do in .fir rtghout this land, why, within long -hand. It is rather interesting amnion reasoning (when railroads,' to note that: they even prefer to do businesses, corporations, schools, pro. their arithmetic en the typewrite fessions, farming and much else, are They 'write more freely and with les either merging or eonsidering it, un- effort. +wsm til • there is sh arcely individual con- The outcome may be • that in ver' tegl or say s an hutch) again why taught the senough.chiildrenitinll in et. we.not e a church h tome or our g� fensual propensities with tomo of out the first three grades to enable them ttfilli°>I dollar concerns and indulge to to write their names. The remainder our• heart's fullness. If some is good of their writing they would do on the and right, most certainly more would typewriter. A postponement of hand- be'better, and :many People could be writing as a feature of their educe - Wert, Wert, ,. loaas into other channels of tion under that circumstance might effort, for as a people we are keepin8 'be deferred until they are 9 or 10 years of age. 'Such an experiment is undoubtedly a development of the machine age --- a carrying of the machine idea down into the. first grades of one's educe. tion. A mechanical device presents advantages . of writing to children Who -need to write but are physically too immature to write well and to write legibly. • A child in the first grade' can write itt long -hand six words a minute, In the eighth grade he can write 18. nye: • Thorndyke showed years ggp that 40 hours' practice on the type- writer enablee the individual to write more rapidly than he can in long- hand. . A 1 t rATION MOTORISTS have iaalagaJ a HotWaa.r Cr Wallear, P year ear away ,l.m, It wig pay yea te prawerve your hair . G..tiyee, ;Woe Claus to flit your cawat weedy reeitacoal pekes. SPECIAL '" lit Plate Batteries $7.50 F. R. MILLER SERVICE STATION Coo. Elitist Ave. and Vicioria St. 'Phone 2$0 W FASCINATED LINKS 04 .*entail' true that the greatest redue. CANADA'S HI�Y tions vo taken place, one might al. most say. in direct proportion the the Instituted with the plan of preserve *-tent of the antituberculosis cue. ing all government reeords which l'"'"'' pertain to the history of Canada, and More and more attention is being 'which are of practical use, the Public focuared + ai the Hemel far early diaati- . nal is. 1n order t ► £ i ensure a a -r F tares, contain many collections of tart- be ?tatted in the early stages of the teles of intense• interest. disease, In order to central send.pre- e. It is neaesaary to delve int, the vent tho spread of tubemuloaia. 1t is a history of the formation of Canada to necessary that cases be recogaixed realise the manuseripta and docu= early and that patients be educated ments which are of importance et the and trained so that they will not' pass Archives. originally what are now on the infection to others. To ettain • the pravineee of Ontario and Quebec these arta desirable maims, it is nieces - on formed the French colony of Canaida, Bary that early diaagtiotia bo made. re aye New France, and those o Nova 'phis fart hag been recognized, and Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince seeattered aeroas Canada, are. genteel; • F, w d'sa air 'Island h d nhteF h. leen* Colon et e y where . a e ear ntinati n. 3A U re read and this Acadia.. What are now the ;western disease detected in its early stages. !a provinces eo far as they had any ad- This. is desirable not only for the case, ministration, were under the control but for the public; batrause it means I of •.the lludsan limy 1• ornpany. In control of the spread of the disease 1791 the provinces. were ivided into and •public protection.' These dreg- . Upper and fewer Canada and in 1840 nestle clinics are maintained by some it was officially declared to bo the pro- provincial Governments and by the vinea-of•Canadae--------•----•-_, --- . _ tulerculosia. sanatoria•. -_Likes every. Many papers of state ware lost. in thing else of that type, the eiinleei - . - this Period and others were taken cost money to equip and maintain. A back to Prance. The original papers .seasonable opportunity to assist tho of the regime of 1780 are in Tarim. sanatorlit in this work is provided Lgeal records. of judicial, seigneurial through the Ohristmatt seat tale, - and niinor a administrative eharaetcr' whir+ is eoinmended •to our readerag. • are nn Quebec. Questions, concerning health ad. In 1871 a petition signed by saw..dressed to the Catwdian Medical As - ars and welters was presented paella. soclation, 184 College street, Toronto, anent asking access to the historical will be answered personally by latter. records of the country. The ollices 'of the Dominion Archives were .then A Reamedy for Earache.—To have• erected under the Minister of Agri- the eariaehe is to endure torture. The. culture. ear is a delicate organ and few care r. Lord Minn), governor-general of to deal with it. considering it work Canada, in 1903 showed .interest in for It doctor. Dr. Thomas' Eelectrie Jess the compiling of records and it wee Oil effete a simple .remedy. A: few due to his zeal that the presentbuild, drops upon n piece. of lint or .nieditat- ing was • erected.. Through is in• ed cotton and pieced in the ear will do fluence a very important collection much •in relieving.pain.. of early papers in his secretary's of- fice were deposited in the Archives. • The original stats papers are now Shah' Pirod Two. •Boilses housed there and records of histori. et ware a heere. job skint art* at cal importance in the possession . of the apertwaent Mow. because ab. i,� the Dominion Government of eatrlier �'�htliwwmor suisa' Ct antnt.aioe°leen date than a18fi7. .The British Gov-• burbled et. permanently hti.sbtoe. sa . Archives of await*. situated in E.at- than" for recovery, treatment must up a mightily expensive luxury from the financial point of view, while from the life and soul,inspiration point of view,'not a luxury et all, in any. sense or view, not nearly the results that were /given us by the church of half a century *go. Now, Mr. Editor, T am sort of sorry, that E should oblige` you to use away so much, of your costly ink and also tend to Make less presentable some of the •paces: of your goodpaper, but I have not. exhausted, not nearly, "Men Betwitched" °aiird of,course, "women too." So that 1tt will either have to eotne; again or you will have to say, "enough. said." It is a hard matter for an unwise person . to say, or put nets into just such a proper pleas- ing so.that the more wise and above WEEKLY LESSONS common intellect may thoroughly un • IN ENGLISH deratand and grasp the reat meaning. (By W. L.' Gordon). So'• that,. with your permission, I Y-�- would like to spin out about hell' a Words Often Misused. dozen •yarns* positively true yarns, Do not say, "/ didn't see no chit. afforded through and by nay own per. dren." 1'hie; is a double negative.. so#ial observation and experience dur- ing the last two decades of time. or less, Witt -this time I will not go away so far as Toronto or Hamilton. In fact, I will stay wiithin. fifteen miles of ane home, and they will ail tend to bear -out and illuminize upon the Points at issue in ; some of the bob - Iodized production of any narrow brain ' and .badly worn pencil. So I wouldthank you sincerely for the spare you have already given to this rumination: N. BAER. (To be continued) Exhausted from Asthma.—Many who read these Words know the ter- rible drain upon health and strength, which comes int the train of asthma. tic troubles. Many do not realize, however, that there is one true rem- edy whichwilt usually stop this drain. Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Asthma Remedy is is •wonderful check to this enervat- ing ailment. It has .a countless re- cord of relief to its credit. It is sold almost everywhere. "LUXURY" MONEY LOST IN CASH Ottawa, Nov. 30 (Special to The Star).—Oilicials concerned' with Gov ernment revenues as well as those of the Trade and Commerce and Labor to the frusta of keenly concerned n 1 No enia Beethoven (German compand s r) �tIto- leer collapse of stork market values, late; s, not z. Peel (skin) peal (loud Obviously the great descent of pri- sound). Scintillate; .double I. Bay. res must fie reflected in next year's onet; note the o. income tax returns. Quite as ob. Synonyms viously it must exercise a great in- fluence upon public demand for lux cries and for many of those items which were a short time ago regard. ed as luxuries, but are now generally considered necessities of life. How great will be the depression of nublie revenues and how severe the rndus- °trial reaction and consequent reduee then in employment, are the problems which ministers and officials are at- tempting to solve in advance. If market authorities can be mew cepted, more than $100,000,000,000 have been shorn from *tock values in the succession of Janice at Now York. If that be true it can be estimated that the dortietof other exchanges throughout thio continent have hi the aggregate witnessed reverses of al- most corresponding volume. In ,countless thousands of cases people tylia were rich in September were in debt in November. But in even more instances, where Say,, "I didn't see any."• Do . not confuse "solicitude" and "solicitation." • We feel -solicitude Omit ' our friends, we speak of the solicitation of Bunds. Do not say,'"He has .some money, not, however, a great amount." Say, "He has some money, but not a great amount." • 1)o not say, "Ile itt in a well state of health." Say, "He is well," • Do not say, "He was very clever,. so much so that," etc. ; Say, ''He Was very clever,' so clever that," etc. a Do not say, "The event was a sen tuition," Say, "It was a noteworthy event. •. • Words. Often Mispronounced ;• Annie. Verb' is accented on last. syllable, noun oft first or :Inst. "odd," o. as in "soft," not as in odd, Rapier. Pronounce ra-pi-er, first a as in "ray," i as in "it," e as in "her," accent first syllable. Marital; both a's as in "tit," i at'; in "it," accent first syllable. Annihilate. Pronounce an-ni-hii- at, first a as in "an," :first i as in "ice," second i as in "it," last a as in "ate," accent second syllable. Rathskeller. Pronounce rate-kel- en, a as in "arm," first a as in "let, accent first syllable; the h is silent. Words Often Misspelled Acknowledge, admit, confess, avow, certify, Concede, grant. Master, leader, owner, bolus, chief, manager, proprietor. SAC,rament, communion, ceremony, rite, service, observance. Sad, dejected, depressed, despond- ent, disconsolate, distressed, unhep- pY, downeast, `melancholy. Acquaintance companionship, 113C0.elation, friendship, fellowship. Arraign, recuse, charge, indite, summon. Word Study "Use a word three tines and it is yours." Let us inerease: our vocatabu- lary by niaasstering one weed emelt day. Words for this lesson f t7nequivoeal; understandable in out ly one way, plain. "The facts Ara clear and miequlvoeal." Import (noun); meaning; nitfnifi- ewe, "I do not understand the inn o I)ireard;a r to reject;ns ;mdisease. "We frust discard alt bitterness toward* fists/ r�T�� them," Convey; to eaarry, transmin a.I ap- preciate the hills eemplitnent cos - Por Wats and Childrert veyed." IN Use ForO'Y.N" 3Oirars s3olicii at n o°"Ile gas os 'eianeii ! en Mo. Always sears elope with bitn," the (oniidently; with confidence. -I illigaatnre of say it meet e.oaadently that I, krtrvr we Shall &iecct °t ernment contributed : the great bulk bad coal leas the last Wow that of headquarters papers of the British broke dowrn her weak,eed cip.tltu• army. in North Amer�ca from the end the Toronto geitoapittal f reCueaumm of the. American Revolution war to trate.. tor tub.rcuto.aa woo *tow her the withdrawal olf the British forces truubl c. "u.n enr*negt the tong sting• from Canada in Xtl?0. sib bake +*mobs, Nut au easy nae tar an elderly awn. • Not least important among such niso .wsakrned. watt+ rear■ .at hard historical sources available ie the eat• nut at. et hoot .ea Qat ti ole. tut lection of pictures, paintings, drew- 4tteJ Itt�udideocto to ao n tioamrouuu ing and prints which was really cent. months Ips wart discharged, uraeti- menced in 1906, There aro lamer/tit= 1G01) Cauy herr r et. oto ebae to roar. up fronted pictures, " 9,000 unframed the +amen ota`bit laua.4a►nd s auoport separate pictures, and in all ; they _ °nTht?ha "Pitot 1a aare&tly, in need of number some '30,000. tense. '%Viii you help by sanding e. Manuseripts,=•of-•the .Froneh and :,r- Hort,anti >o 1v. a. c,hnrtco,a .aa �► tee. es 7tlai emit*y;a 14treet, 'aro. English .period. mapo and charts, . rogtµ s. hand -drawn, either the original copies --.....,,,.....,...we »...: or prints,, aro among the material as. sembled which proves invaluable to writers and historians. War posters collected by Dr. Doughty form a very interesting lection. The library has some .40,000vole times as well. as 6,000' Pamphlets, newspapers and periodicals many of them rare and original editions. Let- ters from men who are known even to the youngest child student ofliis«. toryr such. as Brock, Montcalm, Sir Wilfrid Laurier and Sir John A. Mac- dQnald form an interesting section. .. Dr. A. G. Doughty Is the Dominion Archivist and Dr. J. P. Kenney is dir- ector of historieal research and ,pub- Ileite. • TUB tCULOSIS DIAGNOSTIC, CLINICS Health Servieo of the Canadian. Medical Association A••'consideration of the problems growing out of tuberculosis is defin- itety .encouraging and should be satin- tient stimulus for greater effort. En- couragement comes from the fact that while this disease continues to - take a heavy toll of human lives-- over 7,800 in Canada during 1928-4t has been conquered to a considerable extent, and year by year its taupe are being lessened. A 'resolve to per- severe, and determination to make a greater effort have tome as the result of seeing that past and present efforte. have been and are effective and that the only limit to their effectiveness has been the extent to which the work done has been limited. While it is true that many factors have indirect. ly contributed to the reduction which has occurred in tuber:tiloat a it is ' Every time alin cack- ,Ies, she is askingfor more of this Wonerful Egg -Producer- • - i►Klraitaiaii Mobs Lay More iters told by.U,ksfeir Virko iMh.tt.Pwakry$..I4.riow MAW FOOD Ma Collor :ca."a1:Hatoi Lt. 7 he Goderica l Star's CLUBBING LIST The Star and London i red Press.. ' ' . $6,50. The Star and The London Advertiser 6.50 The Star and The Toronto Globe.... ..... , 6.50 The Star and The Mali and Empire 6.50 The Star and The Toronto Star.... 6.50 The Star and The Farmer's Sun.... . ........ 3.25 - The Star and The Family Herald and Weekly Star 3.00 The Star and Saturday Night.... .......•. , . , S.Se`i i The Star and Saturday Evening' Post 3.90 - i, The Star and The New Outlook 3.90 The Star and Canadian Homes and Gardens.4.65 The Star and May lair.... ..... 4.65 The Star and The Youths' Fair...._ 3.75 ▪ The Star .and The Catholic Record 3.1S • `Phe Star and McLean's Magazine, ... . , ....c 3.75 `file Star and Rod and Gun 3,85 The Star and Montreal Witness ii3.85 The Star and World Wide Special Clubbing Rates with other Periodicals may be had on application Call at the Stftr (:)1'fc�� or °Plione 1 for atiy ela%arfa Mi`oiao o . ~ .,...- _. ,. r, ler .-- - '-�' — —n 1