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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1929-05-30, Page 2• .eehebit. . , :4- I, deb lest -Aft. AO' wine. - Jeremiah 0- ''• . , , • • . ' agfikg: 00'THE EECILABITES, ••;vglaft.;.'.40.4mii4:#4.q0. **xi, .To Tat'AfFA .9F .7.7DAK;1*:1549. isireonuelliON--,--k; W411 ;he. ;Peeve,' tee ' josi0 .00.tx,O, te. tho'.tihrone 14. Judah; u‘erk,'•'24.1.Pg'hie,,t,tefekt,toote brother, JehiNktit (t..444114.0); 1010 had:heen taken. eaptiVe to Egypt, • cit, og: 1.0-12;;,,-g Kings '.ga: 3144.... Of Je; • taktra, nothing good m -recorded "He did that whicit was .evil the sight Of the Led." Jeremiah denounces his „ crimes strong language 734.9: . He had A high :'price for his elevation to throne the Egyptian Pliatattlasnechehi rhich he exacted from the "pooliie by. Tit", 2: 1:CiOga 23i 35; 2 Chron.. 36:. While very little is told us of his eivil'#:.the'lbotiks Of history we learn 16#1 frequent deciaratiene of •dere- *nit; whose prophetic Ministry con- tinued through its whole extent; at the old 'practices of 'idolatry which h been banished by ..lolialt•w,ere`restere .with all'their•abisminetioni, that Baal 11114, Ashtoreth were worshipped even :in: the temple " precincts, that infent sacrifices Were pijereds.tasMoloeli in. :the valley of ')4ineolo, And incense wile burned on th4i.hekiige..:taps to the, oakgods. : The people,Jeremjah says, "are' 'tnresid back to • the .iniquities of, their forefathers." So widespread is this evi1/41.;.in the daYe, of jehOlakiiii that he glom again, "For socOrdiiiktethog,:lnen-. "her ef. thy cities ' were. th*. gods, 0; Judah; --and -acording-to-the-nuj oftbe street* of,Jernsialent have ye set up altars . to . burn incense to io,ta..' There was. need 40.0.4./POUlto. be- spoken against tbi� isionatroxis.evil;:and here, In ,the Lesoi1 of today, °,:deremialiTiontrasts Alia fidelity:of the Realisitlites to theirl ancestral tradition' with the apostasy ef, the ieeii of '...Indeh from the pure :!•-seralee-er the God of 4heir fathers. 1. TEE AlcuTPIC• Tigg •••RECHA•BAYEsO The .1teehribitee. meta.: dwellers tette ./8t„ e.thd• wilderness ' They stem Te--: have been a branch of the ...,Ketites. (1 Citron. 2:. 55 with *hew Noses had lived centuries before in ibi'Aindla',_74ifliattAstedinigest41416*, 444.4 who., 'had cones to - live With the judatiaNUM..10: 29-32. They were WorshiPpere. Of Jehovah, and. were evidently warmly and loyally at- tached to the religion and to the .cus- toms ofthe#.1 father's:. Ordinarily theY IiiectnAiteMatt•life, net cultivating the Vads. but 'pasturing their flocks itd. -lierdss". m --opensotocenmedspettelif the -couatry. Obeli :dean was invading the land, they • had 'Orme inta Jerusalem for safety and had, apparently been. permitted to pitch their -tents in some open space‘ within the 'city walls 11.. Jeremiah " is Com:landed Lt. give . wine drink (v. 2). No doubt ! he is svelte mire when he does this that the Rechebites Will not break the law of their tribe. Bet be applies the test . Order, by their example, to convince ' the men Of 'Judah of then- -own' infis • &lite. •'He brings then into the house of the Lord, "into one of the rootna erected round the temple courts,"( mid- gets before them bowls Of wine Their • reply IS. whit he had expected,. "We "SWill drink no wine," vs. - donedeb, the sett of Rechab, is men- tioned 331 2 Kings 10: 15-28 as One of oie who supported Jebu in his revolt inst the kings of, the house. of 13; and who Seems to have aPprov. aihe bloody deeds with which ,Jehu **At; net only to destroy all the king's house, but also.MI the worship- pers of Baal. He shared debit's "seal '• for the Lord," which, according to the ideas' and practices of 'that time, dought to overcome a false religion by deeds of itilOOdy violence. See Ifesea's "Condemnation of these deeds. a hun- dred. yenta later; Hosea 1: 4. .Tonadab's cominands were. no doubt in 'contintutnite of the ancient Custom of his people. They required not only abstinence from wine, lit# also that the people.ahoul&nOt build houses, nor cultivate die lands' They regarded, terhaPs, the. Confined life of the cities and towns' and the hard labor of the fields Si .tt departure fromlhe siaplic- Ity, purity, and comparative health .of the open air tent life of . their ances- tors. (See vi. 6-10.) • , ix. Imam EXAMPLE URGED AS.A!LESso.,N TO Tele MEN alsoan, vs. 15-19. The prophet compares this steadfast . loyalty of the Itechalates with the ifi- glifferefice,of the tnesisof Jerusalem and • Judah, to the:words. of the Lord spoken to them by their prophets. The. pro- phets of Israel and Judah had spoken heath againet• the worships of false herea.thgt Johoiellia,w4g, the seeqOa er Os Ps, „ aasst'stasasksasste pooL rango trOMA the mottet Oelares,- Tet- An, Alie 7 ground,to Ottoolk and Ot.197.:-.Aring. pon .4„ns. 'stone tanks, emaillakes and ntafetiSta " the great Calamities Which lashast In and through the garden Are oteni11.7 foretold) v. 17. And 'Walls,' of *Ole outside the range of the amateur gar:: obedieSee ',God will'hestew such ' ' - in ing linen,. the- ReP•habites thet that. sss-enac" st• es, .howevers tribe shall. eever Wont man to stand to hVO before, him, ,,Hciw yftsniee wee, :PatAgY•94Y: Where s..tiontog: , water is lied; to tl.tera subsequent ch-t-Sta"hle• • • •WCS.TO One•bundiitt 0•.cof 0114 li:there e:iiiirtioilarly •ena fty Ritaftactte Yea.Aii later a mem- molst seifet in .the. Orden, 'thelhaeber s" ieb Nehemia „o*. ltalpecis:li'•taid, Butslaf tribe; Malehigh, the seusitIon:or_ettelt PoOl -le nor to r Rech ab, of .411'14salenjs. $.4h; P.•:..124 :peel can easily Matte' an Sitifietal at:.compara- Thefirsthistarian 4.111:0; tiv n • t, churebI-regeSipinle IttnOted Ise •Euse. e -Y c;Pe*. , there.' .'s'.'ciaYey' • ; ;')";(; ' him). weitiftg in the -second century ,s0•011; *thing further than the Os - A.,, mentions opriesti. 'awl' Sone of 6.avetlen of the P.O.O. and puddling the 11 ; , , - Reabeb:": ea living in New Testament , ibditontsandstsideff withs:ciess salted be times. s ss , s• , . .., s_ , • • done. • It •citii is not present, the. bets .T)w-trIS:OPI of 't,e'sh.a. b, Or Re9hohs tom ana- sides Most be Cemented: In ttes, however,. are those in every age other cases it will be well 10 dig who are Niiii4pg for Conscience' sake to deeply enough to anew of .j1,2 to- 16 . stand apart /rent 'customs of their time, 1 ,__ , • . ' and to abstain from India cesi'aches0 s gocd hodtug loam Wog' , of any 'kind which they believet� be hermit), who preservewithhigh re- solve and pure motive, clean and healthy traditions of a 'past of which they are not ashamed.. e . • • r. 1 • 1 V.1! • , • • distributed: Over i.ts .,,bedssands'flien leave mein for ',a depth of 2% 'feel Of water in ith Centre; gradually de- creasing:1M depth to 9. inches, or less at the sides. A. broad border should euiriaind. the Posit for .the euithre•01 Plants will& love moistiire•bat which are net trulY. equatie. A few large, irregular 'stones partly embedded . in this border will form an excellent roc- kery !vi.-hereen. Moistitre-loving Alpine plants may he :growls 11 :desire. Smell sashes:nate be 'Inserted in the pool con- taining- illy roots, so that they. may twiny tereintried, for *toter. Storage., ..few 'goldfish in ibe .pool *111..cid -okanit-avrprpiwrie tho'pool from be coming a breeding ground for the mes- quite.. Ofcourse; some PrOriation Must be nincle tor the • supplying ,of kiresh Water to the: pot:4.-84,11as° overflow pipes -to-ear .Miniature Soli. Alas' be forme by S*Iting.'halves Of • large barrals. in the -ground, and ft a few .nails are ;driven In neer their topsand lumps of coke, stones uilulterS covered ', Withce- ment are attarited there, :pretty lit- tle decorative ,pools may be formed, (Rev.. 0. W. Tebint; 'before the,. On- tario. Horticultural Association.) I • , • e The illustration Stations- • Answering' a question 'about the operation Of the Illustration stations supervised ..by . the Experimental Parma Branch, asked 63,.• a .member of Parliathentsin-sihts-kouvesofspemeonss the • Hen De.. Motherwell, Minister of Agriculture, explained that. the Gov. ernnient does not operate the'196 ,luotration sstat iees distributed •.tiver. #tada. but the Department Ocoee give the operators some assistance. .He ,` • 1 , '.'eanadas..in'ProPertion•:t0 ter•Sizei is inaking'graater praetical use of air-. raft tto any other country and :the '"work"...17V.Ordg Canadian airplanes' are regarded ..as :even: more important., contributions,te the • advancement of aviation than the ',endurance and, other sinnt. athierentente of other coutftriefts Canada's latest and most linDreesliepr'actical record in -air is- In peedy delivery, of•air, mail' and Capt D 8, lifenderantsPitot tor Canadian Airways, as a r.eanit of a recordffight. between Toronto and Montreal, now holds. the Worl&ssaii• Mait speed record , • • ..; • ° .',Capt..'Renanratit,. Brag a taireltild.,"71", powered by a Pratt & Whitney "Weep engioe,'on March. 21st .covered ilie ;340miles from ;Toronto to Montreal •Itettst One hour and forty four niinuteo,'aadt!liti has now been natal/flayed VI the World's frilliest • air, .nsaii•gigat' • ' • . • • • • • • • . • Remarkable :entitle- time is. Capt. BOaduratit woad have bettered it, but for fogsencoentered a little Over 100 'elliee• front Montreal. Up to this Point 'he had fbatira-7215itit1ailliftiet IlialiteiTtrialtifilitiffea,ispeed: of over 5A. • • • t. • s • , Miles aSniitidte. • • ' • • • , Throughout •the rtlectriti7hreaking,. flight Capt. Bonsiurant repOrteti„perfect ,performance from his plane ..which • was fueled with. Imperial Aeroplane . , , .1,1 I A .441k• t• 111 0 Gas Ripens reen-Fruits In - Time -Ar Dipne e: Substance .VQIve4. by V. hite ' by Ba lnQfld sts Can Be Used KntsteThis 13.Canadln°;ueJ for Airships :.rnien' .problems 13. preseiitetI at In :4°::::(cy;eee.111;s:r. :7;",yr, !c*Fi;" yIdoiicu. (f what :wins .1.00x 71.414..';'teil;k6-,443:92 heights! Pak' •ft..18. •air',u?sSti.shtea;,..Sitstt:tialsa, nit; ittisi nd f9drei;lepitiollto; :atilaweeehdt.6'11.dee'llin*"!thnie irgalintisalof '.°thlieee%sabt,a1;2'iting f.1‘..t.1.011'', 1p16614.1te'''i' anportent 'WSW'S ' and' 'pat sot t trti ice '.oltest twaltOu'ra4beffire.:. secoiaitio nes. t.7144#1 -014•,..93's &osier; and 'have" it; reit& to eiit by he wilt prehablY.hioe•td Wait' for. teV4 the time the; meal is' :servde ". 'The - ,dietinetheS . "''' '., • S.,' • • •-• Prpoese can ftlso.'lleSt..911,00..• to 'the..., , . • • . Tiiiiihel7sCi.arreelt:a4IstabUrl:ItAh:tehlivIThitrhall-t.,. :,1‘,•1414,-,1"feli:lai'IitiCtscitiiiPael,t7s.Ctahlie:':01)ne'sit'isfi''efol.. „3.1.pening roge,tablas,, A. edema. : The hook is easeatially tragiCslt deals 'Are ineyftehlyretilatentolis: Chap- .orpoaaa. „..„. 2. seivarde but one, logical .cOnclualon. ter by :Chapter •the story' gape, forward .coAna: .:sba)1,,Iillira9a01,:t•yloast ii„t;alt :.nalsa; .!bairanedhe.tri. Knistar pointed this ,out in every see fats"' -at • the expositiot nd disclosed tence•hif petolifit.ffliviftly, :the story that ' 115 Products • .are . net* • being , unfolds; the: dramatis 'interest "grows saaausastissext .ssem the pith, husk, to the point of tensity. • The test Chap- cobs and•stalks. • - . • A • ivtdo. variety or. products, ate. basis of which is 'cotton Seeds,* are , shown At the exposition. They r,enge, risen artificial leather to pits for use in :palate's:1nd explosives.. They also. furnish the base ,fOr •thesmanufactureof tt,llet wire,. The cbeipist a: been ...elite "to CouVart the.finnes and smells of soft 7-61iniff6:11711TrAirdr-41- 4147:0 thelarns, • er,' one product tieing la. sodiuin ..00m - ,pound which . will • speed an • the ger- that lire !eager, than their itu, .silliT:ilbatrio°ungit!r•tli'leatrisat;etes. Pr.OcesS. a .forin b lit Making • parchtneet ' lamp shades, fiber trunks and in giving a luster to potton. An • ammonium compound,. . also is. Procured from • the- smoke ". fables and. is Ased for .1mparting '.briniance • to •artIclea manufactured 'F•RILS.,' etc.,. .Presideot Cenadian from metal atid flynthetie ,coMpounds, Social Hygiene: Council, ..Published Letting then apearly luster.... It s• - ;ski making.auOstittitea for utt- Price, $3:00.)•' • . tiliatteraisle plate 'glees. . This, the Most recent literary Welk ' • .• .-•• • sof the dietinguiehel And: versatile , •-• 'Justice.. Riddell 4tePropr. atel dedl .t0 a. ke. cated to 'Tin 'Cordon, Bates and the -t ter ie a cOtailete let -down 61 every- thing that •precedesi , It is a herd thing to "understand why 'Icnieter tacked onto his story a hippy, ennveitional, 'mechanical' conclusion.: tlf f,is• nearly inconceivable that •sthe Man who wrote as he.'"Writes• and cops ceived the background and. characters 6e !White Narcisses" could mike suck asmistakess-- •The beok Sprqv.es, however, that ,Kniater'is a writer or unusual calibre. It promises that he Will write books . • . , . adminsCstered by the Department Of!in-actiees :tor control are described in Agriculture at Ottawa, reetdre that, the pamphlet Which --shews, by illus; they slionkl again: be graded when ' tratiOn the appearance rot as. dieeaset theyare breught from the storage bulb ,cut ,crosawise and lengthwise. chamber to gls inte coMmerce. (bailed by the Director of publicity, " The usual egg cold gtorage in . Can- Dom. Dept of Agriculture, Ottawa; ada 'is what is !misuses( sari sold eforage.haci which eggs are Placed in their natural state. In Western Can Ulidesioble, Immigrants fade many of the eggs are Put through a. Winnipeg Liberte :.(Inds):. (Central 'auadtitional riremes before .,being 4., European imnagr:. ation in the Weat it Placed in the storage quarters. The. , isalc .'The illustracion area of nian's Designed. it sizes 14, :1:8 t-fAtm theludes, only that Dorf of • it _3„92yea.,..and. 36-43,-40 and 42-itiches troliTinCliii-17-eTeff-travelled `road, and bust varies sfn area, from eight or 'ten to HOW TO ORDER .pATTEANs, forty acres. For the privilege of sass Write your namesene address plain- , ing what &ens shall be gTown, What iys giving nurn7.ter apt( ,size such! rotation ellen' be followed and hew patterns as you want Enclose 20c in 'and when cultural operations shall be stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap perfermed, the Department' paya he it carefully) for etas itueil3ets "Ond (Wife -For Operator a small &Mount ($5 addresi your. order to Wilson Pattern per, acre) each year. The purpose of Sereiee. 78 West Adelaide St; Toronto. these ',options is to demonstrate, the , Patterns sent by an early mail.. varieties of the different crepe, the • ' • • cultural metheds and the rotations ,The wo.toedo,fi.i.riner. 'that bast ,been found to give the beat ; results on in .erperimental farm or Quebec Soleil (Lib.). It is •false station Where conditions •are judged say ihat-agricelture doesn't gay, when e s ar to those which mentatn we compare it with other occupations i'on the illustration station tfnder profeseiona. •• .belieVe on the I Consideiation. • that . e mator has had , •"The crona haryested eft these it. atations are,, of :course; the a. gond fear, * An aftAl. haVing brought UP' and educated chileren, • 'Propene of the niSni operating thent.": he has something lett' at- the eniti , Very few salaried people. can• say -as ' Storing of. Egga • ninch. We will not go so- far as to This is the season otleavy egg pro- • . daction when stecks not required to meet the dal!- demands ate. going Into cold storage to .be brought ont for use When production. is low. The storing of ieggs is greatly improved in .recent Tears -Se 'inueh so; indeed, that stored eggs are to longer lookedliport with suspicion and 'doubt.' Eggs that gti into storage have t� be .submitted to the :candlitigfproceet •deter - Mines 'definitely their.. quality. Only those that. are prinie.condition are • . e%er put ewe!" storage quarters, The medern‘ cold Storage. for eggs is highly '.sanitarY place. net only th , its ceanliness. but also by reason :of the manner in•whieh it is inelotailsed. The temperature is held at all tifttes close t� the frost line and of 'such con- sistency with respect to .moisture as te redttee evaporation to the smallest degree. Not only are the ,eggs graded whei put in, but. the-fegulatiOns-got erting eggs. • 6s -retied by the Live Stoch and Live Stekk Products Act, .say that farming really makes- an' bode rich, at least in the East :of Cans, Ada; but we can statethat, in normal times, it ,gitaa a man COmfert and security. Thouisands Of our farmers Who aonsetimes complain of, their lot are much more cornice -tally situated, though • they may not know it, than- • four-fifths of the rest Of the World: ' , • ,Grain SutPlus , . Le bevel': (Ind.)... During the War an abundance of Wheat was .blessed by everybody.. •, In, these days some • people consider thet It hasft Incon- veniences, from the point :of view of the price. •Man is never content: either it rains too ituch•or it doesn't slain enough; either the harvest is :poor or it • is too good, which doeS •'net prevent, in Malty In Britain, in :tha'mining thousands of PeoPde • auttering- from htInges, despite the huge crops of the I last twelve Months. • • • fresh e s ire immersed n -for a.n Ise c4"cating an undesirable element in the urban centres.) We are faced stant in hot oil which not only stern - resa 9f, Canadian letters, such as tbeir, are, ahead. read 'White' Narcissus." "fliercinymus. Fracasterles. and His • ,•Ptieticai and Prbie Works On Syphille," by, tae Honourable Wil- -jiam Renwick Riddell, LL.D., D.C.L., lies but Beale up the Shell, preventing • 41r::- ' ni-e-tas on these. daegeroas souPS• .and to fft) a,ca*.ele. eVaPeration from within and cot - transform' thent.' into desirable els- tamination from vrithota. . After treat - !nett in this stay the ' eggs are. Ps+ tient& Now that we have been sub - through a sandblast ,machipe, whic"i; :jected to this type of immigration, we ninst ihidrb it, and not let 'ourselves removes the eiCe0 oil and ,restores the bloom of a fresh egg. They are. be. absorbed by it; it is inetmilent s.s.....„:,...on • ns p. communicate , our sense. of then mild attired- .tn thesusual:- wi . :,...t.4e_mailge.t44g, ilt.. 4:51.1.17, gr;.7e/d._ Oder to .11; ititead-:of .Allewing isers firms, 'eels -ea -id he dragged fiTalig-ifFtlidir eg , whether fresh trims the disorder; we"meet make, them mister- s:1r out of storage. the losses frOni bad ' egg merchandising..hethisPheree they also changed tl3eir atmoaphere. Too tnany coloniata • A, Disease of the .Hyacieth • The hyacinth bulb 'is subject• to a' disease that, when" once • admitted, does much ,damage to the • Plantation. It is especially important in eatemer- , dal fields for its eakeedingly destruc- tiee effeet upon the plants. Under fa.: .vourable cenditions it spreads from • balb, to bulbuntil the whole planta- tion is des eggs has beau aimest elinonted in ;stand that when they cha,nged their Make the mistake; when they ornate Canada. •of Wing to bring their coun- tries with •them, instead nf accepting Ours. The Return of the Exiles Le Monde Ouvrier (Ind.): Why all the weeping and wailing over the lot coyed. The disease known a our brothers' who live Under the as Yellow Disease is•descilited In a sunshine of the Stars and Stripes, and new 'pamphlet numbered 104 Of. the who live better than any of us here Department & Agriculture at Ottawa, do, n i the •land four ancestors? .. ' o - If we sometimes hear of the unfort- . N, - • • ,.a. , P pathologist, Who made i Study of this unate conditions in ,which they live - and other diseases of bulbs in Holland and in k'Ille places they certainly a year Or serego. • know how to exploit them. systemati- The disease appears first as a yea 1 iv' f th t' • i th 1 hi h cally-that. Is . no • reason why Wd ehOuld dry pat on the • housetops that afterwards dry up. it spreads to the our people find life untenable with oer • . . . • s bulb, Which soon fi'eghis to decay at 'neighbors, . that they: live in Misery the. hese, destroying its ' usefulness end would be happy and content 0' either for Planting in- the garden or find themeelvea once again on their forcing in- the nottse. Certain vett; own land in the village. where they atiee ,are less subject than others.' to• were 'born. We adinft that soinetiesea attack. Among the most resistant are -._ s6nie of them .do not succeed as taid to .•ha 'Gertrude; Greet Maitre, they 'should, and that hemesicknesas- 'King of the Blues, King of the Yel- whieth Is their greatest foe -becomes lows and Yellowhammer. The disease a po*e.rful factor in their desire to re - is recognized as a serleis one in HO turn'home but to 'conclude thie land, where is. , Drayton 0 served the that .Canadians would do mUch better means that are used to secure dna ° to retitrn home in a body ; is- far from toll. SPeelally4rained •men, are em- the fact espeCially when We tempera ployed by the groiyeri to inspect the i..f0-. 'the conditions which have prevailed a.r.647ing. seaoon. ofnaistioamtiyoeuariss, ins t.hts ."prosPerous." fields during the . Bulbs showing disease are each I covered with a pot 'without a hole lit ' "Pa, what is a rare, Volume?" asked the 'bottom. end the' plants • near by darence. . are sprayed with a fungicidal solution It's a book _04 &Meg hack after such as a five per eent. strength Of ,you !have leaned it," rePlied P -e.' . formaldehyde. The bulbs under the ' • •• -1------ssas.-7------- - . _ iota are allowed to reniain until the r;Att. Insane peribri Is just like a crop la'harrested when. the diseased Sane one,--enly more so. -;13r. Edna efeTflre destreyedt by burtabg. Other ileihreder. Steff of the ..Canadian Social Ilygient - • Connell." ' •• "L as a, some hat diligent. student of mediaevel philosophic had read the lagged behind Poetna of:,Pracastorius;" the . author steer countries fist. maey years, Great stated :in his preface; "and had • ry.d- Britain Is ne'w- takifig up, energetically • mired his Mastery Of, Latin •and Si) task of• making isuoWe its . ettraes skiil in medal* the uncouth tennis. .tionii Os visitors. • • • ology • of early: fliedicine and , ell i legs- s: salsa. Tra set lAssecia t ion of _ ...Great phy..ss'•into smoothly-fiewiness,besass Bsitain • foul jrciana • will _he incorpors,_.: ,• • . • • met.ers; but I had not se.ea .ank. ads' toed this • Week..f"and already euhscrips. . • vantage. in. payieg attention . t.O. the 1 t toes of oVer .$$5,606 a year'. have been. coetent rather than the form,. 'Read-, promised by .111.e. 'COVOr.innent,' the' ra4i ing his ooetry, S thought • it 'welt to way. anti Steamship Companies, hotels' read his' prose is welt and, to :eel others for a. grea t , " COme • to Bris. my. astonieliment, I found 4. tuine-of .Min" campaign. • . • ' • entertainment in his. prose works also. ' in order to berpree ,first• director of; The sitresvd guesses and practicelity the 'organizfition. Loots. • Beale ..has • .of • Fracastorius must strike; every been withdrawn ';from • his ,pest is reader; while, ne student of the. his- Trade Commissioner in New Zealand: tory of Medicine can afford to leave • Mr. • Beale. has. travelled [hi every him' unread.' • ' ' ' • pert of the world excetit South Anieris . "If Yoe Know What I Means" by Jos. 'ca. and South Africa: Ile started in :eft t ' Raton McDougall.. (MacMil- • business in Kent; he -told a reporter. lee's, Toronto . $2.90.) ' . ' • Seine 550,0a0. visitors came each. year MacDougall,. tia • the. editor, of "Cori- for pleasure: as compared :with the lie," is no stranger to the Canadian 1,900,000 who go to ,France; incidents . public but the MacDougall who pre ally briugievbetWeen 1375,000 • and rents the samosa in • this. volume id $500,00a profit to France. ' . . • far more refreshing than we believed '. Mr. 'Beale indicated, .t.lzef Ithe As. • anyi.Canadian writter to ' be., • Books sedation had le hand such matters as • Cof Verse, it is tuiderstand, are not .uste passport vises and cuatonis examine- - ally • profitable, commercially, but tele tions. . ' • ' . • one deserves, •afid 'will prollablyhave, .Among the ideas he is- considering a. Wide stile. . .' - • , - . are: •. . 7 ' . Thera te no Pretense'. about either Lectures and film displaya: • • . , the book or writer. - The:work is de Ilrdadcast talks by eminent ,English• - • scribed on the cover as "nonsense men and Irishthen, visiting' or living. . Verse." Itis that, of course; but more; in foreign countries, Some of the rhymes are decided ly I, Advertising . , the range of ' sporting ' clever'. • All but one or two.ote witty events held throughout the year :'• • and. MittloteroSaking. A number are • Publishing a- aerie's of booklet. deal • exceptionally Penetrating and chatain ing with specific ;subjects. S • comments of st pungent .flavor 'On .the "1 .rim assure' Yea": be. said that• . lighter side •of human endeavor. the world knows very tittle of the true . . • , . Its. histork and tradition bettute and charm of 'our land, or or . . . . Smilaii •• .., . • "we ',two to • Make 'these • 'filings Will you smile' and. 'make others !mown." • happy, or be Crabbed and Make every- . 'flowers nd singing birds if vou •will. body miserable' You can live among . 7 .0- Etnp.ire , 6o-o.p-eration . . . . The Am lint, of happiness' whieh you Mang:heater DC -ally Dispateh:- Wit, tan produce teincalculahle,g' . e Empiro-45-1tOppinc- l'%•e•Oli in Ellig-: . 1. tiVity: eannot be led to. goad. • ..et6tielstieet4irtvreards.silin! -t-saPe, Etitd '"eak tili.alittriiutileiF'q.ler):t!iviaiteti•ktlITist.feift:tgitatIlit:Leonatprdoe.:f:rit'i'StiosVnens.i'n.teviedee. , ' Activity. may lead to evil. hilt luta . . . ss_...... --a.--,..--- . believe the egnil'alei.it to' he possible . if oniy a s Jong lead, were given by . tile 6nyer1t re. e t. -, We" an Kcircely a AND,Ad FisherIAWar n a JI(-oFF -r . . l. .., O.oi_',• ttt•," B-,u___. W.vsNf •. • AKa-4 •." r, r(:.-:0'.. .K. O, t' "E,:#OtsAf.1..'.4:1'*• 1/4 ,•.4 AI.N4.(;;f.. ?.. t T'O,k -tiM< l••Il_-#'m._iI:t. 1 ;. 0Z:t'•C:0C.:.l.A,S.,Ae l:. IIA'ttA•o U.COt.-+S 6,'. *oi. ..,-.S''.u.' C',-',,.,. ,t.a,.0..•..Ntt)fi. Tt. 0'-€ 0,Ii, •,1: .,-.- tg: t' 1N.11.4,1ci' • _ 0A4• r% • ; 5Ms'e.O M+•-7,,.-- o.s '14LSrat,l ..AA'.„B rt.o,.6 ."A'‘.f' I.-..Kl,,, F ,t' . •! .0K..•'. t, iIAG•v) Mt . •s .Oe-•A •0t ..-.„........a.....,_.....A. -.5.,,,. .y-1ffis4i_R . ...:,'*'..- e, en ..- • 2.-. . -.,. -'..Pr•. •iA -;.,.- .: -' 0...'.. ..-.e", . .7.r. .,, . '9 -.tt- ') '- .b,,e.--T ,.. ..t.",. ,,Aif' .,N ...-. .A,-C 'E t tN.lk ,iO••t "k.1aNe rj."10-. .,T7 - • „Y. 1 .. .,,'', '•- -.- . . ', .1b.:. • , .J4o'-A,1.s. 4.-'- .•„• •OI.....P'1 ,'.,nd I- -'...,l. ,* ;" ''. ,F• 4N-i ,,,A1ti..wt . ,..'E,I..k..7 ,4 ., ' _ . . m . .,... .. .-s.. „•:...p .., -s,La,. .,• . . .',F.-•. • . ;,•,- .• .e(:.4 .°• _.-r.-.,-n A,•.- -,t1.7.e _. ., s ., . 1. e.e .-.. /1y$ .i.) 'aI . , ).: -- , , . 'C''--:v4.sv :'. •- 4- .P,t : -"'-P %• 1 . .r.5St4eak •i .p.N "n0 6,s.5 ..n ,*.,•. „' ,.. .. .. \•i.V ...:. .y•, .•,.- -':-_s. .r ,Ci.,.4.i.s/ _ • . ''. 44 t 11 'Stre^ ett t. 4 expect even the • best, intentioned tve arogiwt nntolois1171etic ((1100 smket1 camassan Imo. begin in Leiden. The driving power Must he there,. -0 iven that... we ran fln ent how for the. good 'will arta Resistance' of t•lieDo- entortricio.ifs;uetllylliitlio,c;IRery then in the spirit. Rural Depopulation isa. • trie -(i'ons.ri tutgratioit P of ravel p-6,nufaiFfous, to urbaii rdii"Efea• •tzt ttitti" fo reette causea elgi.„oreeta___ inSlise.'ssallie7Thilditlic7"ni"."Ai 10 .the Cut .fsel Statat. COttt •ittgo" ft ttlth tlio tittitOM,..fferppityt10. -Anterftritit'.'Wr-r ct,iltiiif, Agriculture '• goos se-ief-tivta,a00 kt it a Sign.01, vintifiY 'end progrrm'..ft...116 Oka a• Ayttrtt (yin or thee tieeay of agricia t are. . • tit Canada, err the migr,..a.• • 1.impifeel 'as 'With The ledve4( analsoystel C.V6 ivAnt at elf- costa te- pat.. an 0hdy It. .Wit e haP the arto, per perspo:kive on -this limiter,- .our --- sfeicitharesssesoareelveal• • • Allity Pest " drawitig, .trst . ,