The Clinton News Record, 1929-03-14, Page 6see -
Sunday :S&hc !
Lesson
II/larch 17, Lesson K1 -The Christian
=Sabbath-5xod. 20. 8.11; Matta 12:
1.3;- John 20; 19; Rev. 1: 10, Gel.
den Text -Por the .Son of man in
Lord oven of the sabbath day. -
Matt, 12: 8.
AiNALYSIS.
1. 'TIE OLD eesreIMI2NT, AND TFIE. SAB-
BATH, Exod, 20: 8-11
I1 JESUS AND TEE SABB-' TH, :Matt. 12:.
18
III. 743E CHURCH AND THE LORD'S DAY,
John 20; 1;, Ray. 1 104
INTI:ODUCTioN-Tile Sabbath ,.is an
institution with a great and honor-
able history, 'It began -with the pm. -
..Pose of givinga flay of : rest to those
who were burdened by the engrossing,
labor of the world. Under ' the new
dls:L.msution it came to ;be the Lord's
Day, on which Jesus rose from the
dea.ct; but the thought of rest still con-
tinued, If this day, is lost, all± the
demands of pleasure and business are
allowed to take it away the result
will be very injurious alike to the
body turd to the sou',
.I. THE OLD 'ills;','; TINT AND THE SAB-
BArH, Exod. 20: 8=11..
V. b, lits is Inc rouse. of the Ten
Cometanuiiients, or trecaiogue, and
goes' pace to early times.
V. P. The Sapbath taw yes not in-
tended to prompte indolence, sing. the
bible Is rery'-uecideet in tt.e way in
which It manes work one of the neces-
sities of rue. Unless a • man work
neither snail he eat. It is generally
recognized that work is one oa the ele-
mefitary COnartiens or happiness, and
1s not' w be regarded as a 0141:30, but as'
a messing. But. work must -not engross
ad man's time au.. e .$y.
V. 10, Tne two objects et this Sab
bath are here )oentloned: (1) It is
C4od's aay;t when man recognizes that
he is a wild of Ciod,that he has a
Lennituai nature, and that he can never
L- eatlsrteu if he gives n0 attention to
these =manes 01 the soul. (2) 10 is
also meant ror therestorationof the
bocy; ariu every member or the home
rs w be incanted, In this the rights
o the .:t, -;:ailed working elab$eS. are
5.. 101111, IfOUS .ymast .not beailow-
ed w ceseive .,ny class of people. In
eensta, .. clay be sail. that the prim-
ary 1".,t in the Sabbath of the Old
'Lw.h.. ....t was pnllantnropic; -but ar
date ..,,.vaned many new restrictions
w ee el:roa eed which tended to con-
ce-.. .e, original purpose. rtegulatlons
rrc-s rormea welch dealt with all
lutes or situations, and. while it must
not be tho1g111 tea, the Jews regarded
tneir eaboacll as a burden, yet' these
new laws were oppored to to prin-
011,1e`of freedom,
li. JESUS AND THE SABBATH, Klatt, 12:
1-8.
V. 1. 1110,0 were few things .tor
which desus was more bitterly
ea man than i:er' 11111 attitude 10 the eab-
batn, It is clear taut he observed 111e
day ser worship aha that he attended
Inc eSrvices et the temple and the
eyi181Oguet but 1k refused to regard
a9 miming all tiles... Minor restrictions
which the dews had introduced Into
the celebration 0t the Sabbath, lie so
treated tnls nay that a new attitude
,to it arose, er.. the {ahristian Sabbath,
theremre, is different from the later
.,ewlsn b21120111. to tills presentstory.
eve see how the disciples plucked the
ears' of cam possibly on their way to
;the synagogue, not because the dies
espies hau taken what drd net belong
;to them, out because their action was
a kind of reaping and threshing,
Which was definitely forbidden.
V. 8. Jesus defends his disciples
with an example taken from the. hie -
tory of Israel, from one of their her-
pes, Davis, In a time of necessity,
took the sacred bread, thus showing
Viet the higher law of necessity sets
asidt the ritual law.
V. 8. Ile also shows how the very
fact of worship makes it needful that
,the priests should do all kinds of work
Oh the Sabbath. The Sabbath is the
Minister's heavies. day. In other in-
stances Jesus appeated"-to the ele-
mentary law of mercy and kindness.
to show that .tindness is to be placed
above mere obedience to a Tule. Nec-
essity essity and mercy are able to modify
this commandment.
V. 0. Jesus now introduces is quite
new factor, and lay., claim to the right
to change this day, He is the ,Lord
of all, and as such' has authority over
the day, The Old Testament Sabbath
thus passes, and its place is to be
taken by the day which is appointed
elm the worship of Christ.
III. THE CHURCH ACID .THE LORD'S DAY,
John 20: 19; Rev. 1: 10,
John 211: 19. The Christians evi-
dently began quite early to keep the
first day of the• week, because it was.
associated with the resurrection of
their Lord. it was felt that a new
conception of .vurship had appeared
and the disciples were so overwhelmed
with the majesty of their: risen Lord
that they associate their, sacred day
with him. It is the day when he
brought new We to them,
Rev, 1: 10. This: is the first mention
of the term, "Lord's Day." John was
banished to the island of Patmos be-.
.cause of his Christian confession; and
on the first day of the week he recall§
the fact that his brethren -in Ephesus
" are worshipping in their little gather
ing. He is present with the. in inn-
agitation, and while he does this he
pusses into a state of ecstasy, in which
he sees the, wonderful things revealed
in Revelation. This is clear evidence
that this had 0con•Le the day .of wor-
ship for the Christians. :The Old
Testament Sabbath had gone, - but its
Spirit passed over into the Lord's Day.
This was another example of she way
which Christ fel 11
ed the law. •
Colonization
La le else . (Ind.): The government
has' made undeniable efforts to`8ri'est
the exodus from the country and to
encourage young farmers to create for
themselves homes in the new terri-
;torie5 or in 'the old centres of ,the
'province, Unfortunately the youth of
.our country, districts do not : -seem to
applociato these efforts and 'permit
• tlremselves to be easily .attracted to
the ledustrial centres where they hope
to find a'.'better existen8e, . ,This
stator of things' is perhaps syptomati11
et modern progress, which attracts
ual'l''populations to the. towns, But
it is also without, doubt tate ,result of
false education; 0f tee "fear of effort,"
•to which the 'president of the Guelph
-Agrlcultnrai College r,eterred• at the
Bankers' Assoctatioli..' . . Mucin, of
Bourse, remains to be;done to' improve
economic conditions in the colonizing
districts. But that wilt come in duo.
eourife,
Rural ; Ontario
Needs Attention
In 'Health Matters
Expert Voices Serious a
Situ-
ation Affecting Villages '
and Country Alike
TIME FOR ACTION
by DFL.GORDON BATES
General Secretary, Cauadian':Socio'
Hygiene Council
Is the .life of a fanner, worth es
much, Co Canada as the life of a
politiciii ''background and has', been
stockbroker in a big cit?y
I think so. -
Then wily is it that so much more
money is- spent on safeeuarditig the
stockbroker's life, and health, than
tho farmer's?
Why isit that to keep Usa stock-
broker healthy, the big city has en
efficient Medical health 111ltc11,"worlt-
ing all day, every working, day in the
'year, and an excellent health depart-
ment, while the farmer has only au
overworked, part-time -country mini*
cal health officer to advise him about
what to do in order to, keep from get-.
ting stoke, o '
Of course, It Is au. eicollentthing
that the city people should have their
big heaiih organization t0 • protect
them against typhoid, smallpox, diptie
eria and all the other diseases that
kill so 'many thousands of Canadians,
every. year, long before they have liv-
ed • out, their three -score -and -tea.
For it has been proven beyond a
doubt that in Toronto,' for just one in-
stance, there would be 2700 more
deaths every year, if it were not for,
the: activities of the Toronto Medical.
Health Officer and els staff, in keep-
ing • sickness down and saving lives
from disease.
But if that is the case -and it un-
doubtedly 18 -then why shouldn't peo-
ple in•the country, and in towns' and
villages share M all these life-saving
advantages? Their lives are .gust as
important to Canada as the lives of
city dwellers, We are all Canadians.
Yet every year, in rural and semi-
rural Canada, thousands of lives are
lost that could be saved, it these
places had the same public health
work done for them, that the cities
have.
The answ r is that 'subtle health
work, though It. saves Lives, costs
money. And, the big cities' have the
money to spend while the rural coun-
ties have not.
But is that altogether fair? Already
many prominent Canadians are begin-
ning to decide that it is not. More
and more, lieople . are beginning to
think' that health is a national assert,
more valuable then goadmines or rail.
ways ,slid as valuable as crops and
rale, and that i; must be eouserved.
Iu Quebec, where people began to
feel this way soate ti:a.e age. they or.
ganized "County Health Units" --
small, full-time medical health depart-
ments. Since then, the counties pro-
tepted by these County Health Units
have had fewei deaths and tower
cases of sickness than ever before,
Their health has improved ant:lzingty.
Hundreds of lives leave been saved.
What has worked in Quebec will
work equally well all over Canada.
Some day every part of Canada win.
hate .County Health Units, J8vo:l
'1010 0. plan is oiling wonted out-
autd it is impel that it wet be adoptol
-'-whereby the Dominion and the pro-
vinces will combine to help 1110 coun-
ties to pay tor. full-time County Health
Uult$,
Some such pian must ineyitabiy be
put into effect. Until it does, valua-
ble lives are being lost each week in
rural Canada -lives that the country
can 111 afford to lose. Lives that
could be Baled, if country people had
the same chance that City people
have,, ,
Canadian Status
Halifax Herold: Just how far has
this country travelled along the High•
way 0f "status" to "complete auton-
omy" -to "sovereignty"? Where Is
the journey to end?? Does the diplo-
matic unity of the Empire still exist?
Great Britain signed (the Kellogg
Note) with certain reservations: Can-
ada signedd', without reservations.
Does that affect unity of . diplomacy?
The Canadian people could ask for
more lieu. on questions of this kind
that go to the very foundations 0f
British Institutions,
The WE$t Indian rade
Saint John Telegraph -Journal: Our
people should not delay taking action
to study ' the West Indian market.
They should get in on the ,ground
floor,, The islands are .themselves
taking steps to co-operate in the in-
terest of .increased production, pro-
vision of cold storage and the develop-
ment of a larger trade. This snakes
the time more opportune for Canada,
and especially the Maritime' Pro-
vinces, to cultivate. closer relations'
with all these colonies ot the eastern
and western groups.
Britain Pushes
Trade . Airways
Seeks Records
Weekly India Service Starts
in April; Plane Tested for
Duration, Distance
Flight
The expauslon of her commercial
airways is receivinig' equal attention
with: the Maintaining of the name of
Great Britain in the r118110u, records
of the Federatioli Aeronautiquo In-
teriiatlonele,
A concerted effort' is to be made by
,British flyers this year to win both
•the duration and the world's long-dis-
tauce airplane record:
The plane that will make' the at-
tempt on the world's' distance record
already hay been built -aloe test flown.
Considerable secrecy has surrounded
the construction of this inane by the
Falrey Aviation Company, Ltd:, and
the test' flights at-C1'anweil. Tho ship
liar a Whig span of eighty-two feet
and a remarkably' thin fuselage for
such a large craft.
It it generally believed that the
flight will.; bo made ' over a course
:from South Africa to. Croydon, ap-
proximately 0,000 miles.
The news , weekly air service be.
trveen Croydon and I±araehi siil['be
inaugurateddariy ih April by imperial
Airways, and will resemble SenteWhat
the air -rail systemswhich have been
proposedfor transcontinental 'travel
in the U,S.A; The first stage ot the
journey will be from Croydon to
Basle, by way of Paris,
Armstrong Whitworth Argoslea will:
be used tor this section, and on ar-
rival at Bessie passengers will travel
by night train across the Alps to
Genoa,. .where they with embark on a
short Calcutta hying boat ter the trip
to Syracuse, Sicily, where the second
night will be spent.'
On the third day they will continue
by flying, to Tobruk, in northern
Attica, via Navarino,. in- Greece, and
at noon on- the' fourth day they will
arrive at the combined sea and land
port at Alexandria, After lunch it
De Ffaviland Hercules will resume
the journey to India, -flying' before
t1Uslt that ' night to Gaza, •Rutbah;
Wells and Bagdad oil the second day,
8ushire-Lingeh-Jask on the 'third ane
Basle Gwauar-Ratachiloon the fourth,
a total of only seven' days from Croy-.
don. The fare from London to
Kernel by tills service will.be about
$500.
Doctor Tory
d
With.. enthusiastic' BLLJ,r.ertetr on
either side of the House of Uommons
and of the Senate, and wit lean active
executive representative of practical-
ly every denomination and urgu11iz11-
tion thi'ougitont the 0011ntry Interest-
ed in the maintenance of world peace,
cite League o1 Nations eooiety ot Can-
ada is entering upon the elgath your
01 its existence. its function is to
intuit= and sustain an interest in the
activities . of the League, and to-
wards this and it has au'eady =come
peened a great deal Presided over
drat by lilt Robert Borden, later by
Sir George Poster, and now by Doctor.
1.1, 118, Tory, it has been ably 1et1,and
the powerful and beneficial iniiusnce
it Ilea grown to exert appears likely
to continue,.
Doctor Torry, the newly s elected
president, es known througltettt Can-
ada as President of the National Re-
search Council, Born in Nova Scotia
and for many years President of Al-
berta University, he is intimately as-
sociated with the east and the west;
and as a student of international af-
fairs and a member of the Society
since its inbeptlou in 1922, lee is keen-
ly .interested in and closely in touch
with the activities of the League of
Nations:
The Society 0t which he 1s now
president numbers upwards 01 sixteen
thousand members, and liar branches
established everywhere in Ctdhada.
Pollowinn the membership drive of
the Society 011 April 10th, "League of
Nations Day,"; it will probably be con-
siderably increased, and friends of
Doctor Tory and supporters of the
League movement in this country,
will joie in wishing lien every success
in the discharge of his new duties.
The Right to Kill
Le Petrie (Cone); ' (An escaping
prisoner he Ontario was mortally
wounded by a policeman.) It re-
quires a considerable effort • of the
imagination to Ketone Oust au ordin-
ary policeman has the authorityto
kill with impunity unarmed persons
tylia are malting no effort to resist
and who are merely accu20d of =nor
crimes, when the law does not im-
pose the death penalty after a hear-
ing 111 court for the most revolting
crimes, Until in• each ease the mat-
ter has been referred to the Gover-
nor-General. e
H GHACEFUL'YACHT IN THE SUNNY RIV)EE1AA '
Lloyd George, his wif ' and a h e
e, d ug y n, Megan, have embarked' upon, tlie Sabrina, :which has just
hg`eeingr at Cantles en' etlete fora 14 re'diterreneall eruile•
slipped her
Bognor Wake .
To
Call of Pipes
Kin 'George's ,gels •Favorite Piper
Sounds Morning:Call at
Seaside Resort"
Bognor, .1rngland.-1Lmg George at
Craigwell house is awakened by bag-
pipes each morning just as at Buck-
Ingham' Palace,
Pipe Major .,Forsyth,; the Sting's
Scottish piper; is included i nthe staff
their maesties have taken.. to Craig-
well House,: and every .maining.
promptly at! 8 o'clock -he will stand
oelow the King's bedroom window and
pipehim h Ilsghland tune as an eye-
opeirer.
"The King has had his fevorite piper
for many years:and.counts en the gage
pipes to rouse him, •.except in wet
weather, when he will not alio* Major
Forsyth to stand in the rain to play.
The major is usually very punctual,
but one morning when the King was
very ill at Buckingham Palace he was;
a little late. Just after 8 a.m. the
]Sing asked: "Is it raining, nurse?"
Before she could- unswer the pipee
struck up and the icing smiled, "Oh;
no, it's fine weather," be said. •
The King's personal pollee;. consist-
ing Of is superintendent and eight ser-
geants and constable, are with hint et
Bognor to control the external ar-
rangements and to guard Craigwell
House during his residence•theee.
Empire Buying
Our Lmpue frim 1,540211031)1 One
of the results of out and out Free,
'era= iu Great Britain is its very ser -
10115 hauulcap upon the development
of Inter -Empire trade. The expansion
of trade =soutane iu the Empire since
the War has introduced another quo-
tient that at the moment is having
a harassing effect upon British indus-
tries, It is coming to be realized that
the world has to be made a better
place to live in, The British Empire
can fairly claim to be taking a lead-
ing Part in practising this democratic
religion, despite recurring strikes and
lockouts, foolishly aimed at hastening
or delaying the process. There is an
all'round and insistent demand for
higher wages and shorter hours .of
labor, and a consequent higher seam
lard of living for the manuals worker.
This necessarily incurs an increase
in cost of Btitish production. Were
all other countries adcuting the same
principles tite coat of production iu
all countries would be more or less
equal, except in so far as the indi-
vidual Worker, ofd@lent workmanship,
first-class material, and good sales-
manship would attract trade to the
fittest and most efficient country.
The man who tapes hp any new
thing after his mental processes are
matured and formed must know the
reason why -have the principles clear
i nets mindbeforehe can effigeve sue -
cess. -Irving R. Allen,
The Racial Riots in Bombay
Truth (Landon); There 10 a moral
to be drawn from these melancholy
events, It 15 the British, who are
above factions, who are called in to
quell the disturbances. Our aloof-
tless from the age -long Conflict be-
tween the various races of India Is
our justification for remaining there.
British administration has no doubt
been guilty of many errorsand. mal
be many crimes, but that is pimply to
say that we; like others, are human.
It remains that if we left India, what
is happening, in Bombay would be the
universal rule rather'than the excop
tion throughout the Country. '
Gover or �e
e
e General
A Health ,Expert
Has Had Long P fx erience in
Work of Fighting Ven--
exeal Disease
HF.I ,PS . CANADA
OttawaeeAn intoredting conference.
between the; Govetnoreleueral and
001. L. W. Iiarrison; 101.D, during the
latter's`'vleit to Canada, illustrates the
keen • interest that Lord Wllliugdon
takes in the efforts being made' to
combat the scourage of venereal -dis-
ease. '
-Probably not -one Canadian in ten
thousapii realizes how tremendously
Isis iilxcelleucy has , aided this work
m•0anada and in England. Not only
by tee weight of his patronage -he 1s
patron of the • Canadian Social
Hygiene 10211011 and immediate past
presidentof the British Social
Hygiene Council -but by leadership
and bard work, he has helped to
break down tate barrier o1 siieuce that
liar surrounded this Problem, and t0
Lester the growing public realization
that Ilene is• tl ntellaee to 116 Laced mutt
combatted, rattier than tin unpleasant
subject to be aebitled•by un ostrich -
eke btn'y111g of the national head In
tars s1111u8 et indhtel'ente..
Cul Harrison is one ot the world's
Outstanding uutturities In this brunch
of medicine, being advleer to the Brit-
ish. 14lmistry of Health in Venereal
Disease and 1)11000ol of the Model
Venereal Disease ' Clinic at St.
Thomas` 130811181, 1101eo11, Englund.
So iu contereleg ,situ lulu, r115 182'
ce110n0y lemma tl tar greater ellpre-
ciation of the inrportahce 0L ,113 Mit
10 Cani(da, than tial the average lay:
111011. - _
•'Und0ubt:luly, this visit wilt prove
most stimulating to all those inter-
acted iu the Venereal 18130130 auut101
schema in Canada", Die uordoc Bates,
general secretary of the Uanautan
hooial Hygiene Council, stated, U0n-
lerences, at whichseveralgovern.
mein representatives were present
unofficially ,discussed the matter is
all its phases,
THE RIGHT TO SECEDE
Bombay Times of•lama: The probe
lem ot tie right of secession, how-
ever, is an inconvenience rather than
a diinculty, due to the tact that the
British Empire is without a; coustitu-
tione The Imperial Uontereace .gave
the' British Empire a deunitron; but
it did not attempt to give it a con-
stitution, Even if it Dominion de-
cided, to secede, there = Lacs at the
moment no established method by
which the secession could be made ef-
fective. The nonunion of 1516 would
Hardly provide a cue, and. Oven when
the definition was matte, it was freely
admitted that administrative, legisla-
tive, and judicial forms were not eli-
tirely in accord' with it,
'the Preferred • Countries'
Manitoba Free Dross: Tne mason
why some countries were listed as
Preferred . and others as non -prefer-
red was that they were regarded from
the point of view of the comparative
1•eathness wills which their people'
would become assimilated with the
Uanedfan popelation. 1t is recogniz-
ed that the people of Central Europe
have their virtues and exceI,in many
ways, but it was 1110148111 that a great-
er racial. difference between them
and the people of Canada would male'
their assimilation a slower pr'oeess.
s
Canadian Leaders
In Mining to Meet
Annual Session of Institute
This Week Will Be' Held •
at Winnipeg for ' ,
First .Time
GovirigentRepresented
ated
Toronto-a.distingiesneu gaCie
r-'
ing of mining men a nu representatives
of allied interests will, meet in Win-
nipeg during'the week of March 3rd
at the thirtieth annual session of the
Canadian Instiete :of Mining and
Metallurgy, which Will be hem for tee
Brst time at the, capital oY ivlanitoea.
Charles Stewart, Dominion ,Minister
of Mines, will attend and reply to the
toast of the .government at the ban-
quet, which_ will concintt0 tee sessions.
He will be accompanled,by 1)r. Chas,
Camsell,- who _ Will. preside at the in-
stitnteluncneon on tee opening day.
Dr. R. C. Wailt.te, formerly Com-
missioner of Mines for Manitoba, past
president of the institute and now
provident of the University of Alberta,
will take the chair at the morning
session of the second day.
Other well-known Canadians who
will attend are J. D. Galloway, Pro-
vincial Mineralogist of British Colum-
bia; Dr. C. V. Curless, formerly man-
ager of the Mond Ntekel Company,
who will present a paper entitled
"The rood Deposit: A Suggestion as
U. Its Orogin," and J. E. Hammitt,
president of Northern Aerial 14iinorals
Exploration, Ltd., a company pushing
exploration into the furthest North.
Five Canadian mining men Have
returned from a visit to the various
mining camps of Patricia district and
express optimistic opinions regarding
the future of this gold belt.
The party consisted ok J. 17, Ham-
mitt, president of Northern Aerial
Minerals Exploration, Ltd.; A. G.
Burrows, Provincial geologist; Regin-
ald E. /lore, consulting geologist,
Canadian National Railways; A. h.el-
scy natural resources department,
Canadian National Railways, and G.
Duncan, engineer in charge of the
Northern Aerial's explorations..
Steam railway, dog teams and snow-
shoes were used in reaching Sioux
Lookout, the place of the plane's take-
off. The flight, made in sub -zero wea-
ther in the face of bitter winds, cover-
ed about 200 miles of virgin wilder-
ness in a few hours. Until recently
the time -roquired to survey, such an
area in summer would have been sev-
eral weeks and in winter would have
been impossible.
Siscoe Gold Mines, the first gold -
producing thine in the Province of
Quebec, reports having made its first,
shipment to the Royal Mint at Ottawa.
The value was about e25,000. The mill
was completed early in -January, but
during the initial stages it teas open -i
ated on waste and low-grade material
and only recently reached a normal;
production basis. The output, though;
satisfactory, thus cannot be considered
a representative return for the per-
iod.
. An amusing story' tells of a well-
ltn0wli artist in the fifties of the last
century who was much upset by a
strong criticism by Ruskin et one of
his pictures. Itusldu heard 01 •this,
and wrote to the artist to say, how
sorry lie was that he could not speak.
more, favorably of his work but hoped
it would make ne difference to their
friendship. The painter replied: "Dear
Ruskin, next time I meet you 1 shall
knoll you down, but I hope ` that it
will 'make no difference to our Wend.
Winnipeg' Starts
Parent Erducatian. M
Recognize That Parenthood is,
Special Job Needing
Specialized Training
A. NEEDED EFFORT.
Winnlpog.-Ono • is so accustomed.
to hearing about the education of
children that it now 1014100 almost aa
a shock to learn that melt Winnipeg
has taken t0 a new branch of study,
known as "parent education".
Popular lectures form the "classes
to w1ieh daddies and mothers come
as pupils. And they have "home.
work"'too-the Most interesting kind
of Homework, for it consists of trying
out on . their 'own offspring, the los-
sons they learned et "school". • And
the, sole and only_ 'purpose of that
school ie, to teach. them how to be-
come successful parents,
"And. why not?" demanded an of• ,
finial' of the Winnipeg Health Loague,
when .asked about it. "In this ago..;
of specialisation, when a professional
Mau Mae to,studysix or seven years
beton beginning to practise, why
shouldn't there be come 5peoiflc train.
iug available for those who take on
one of the most important duties in
society -that of parenthood?"
"We want to teach people simple, : g
sound, commonsense things about
children -nothing faddish you under-
stand, or complicated, Just the good
bread-and-butter :facts that parents/
should Imo: wile Canadians of the next
generation are to be as healthy ,mor-
ally, mentally and physically as it is
Possible to make thein,"
Prominent Canadians from time to'
time have expressed themselves very
strongly"upon this theme. A sympo-
sium of their writings shows time the
trend of opinion amongst thinking
peel= is emphatically in support of
the .lues.
Judge li. 13.. "'Mott of the JUveuile
Court, 'Toronto, says. "Parents are
very much in need of assistance in
parent education. 1 think it should
start before marriage".
Judge 1';mily-Marphy: . "Educate'
parem,a -if yuu 0011. 11: should be at-
tempted by all etealts."
The Most itevereed Arohibishop
Nei1 McNeil, Totem; "A knowledge
of tut: duties 0t parents and the way
0f treating children should begin at
the time U5 marl'lage.".
Dr, 111arguret ratterson, Judge 01
Wtnileu's..6091't, Toronto: "There Is
no queetium regaranig parent educe
tion. rt mould etal•1 tv1tu tn0,glaud-.
parents waceo. 905218111, but certainty
With um mamas as ellilttr'3n;"s
or, .James L. kiu5uea, tomer chief
inspector of schools, 'J'Ol'0nto believe#•
that parent eduoatiou 211011111 start m
high 8t11oo1. "'nue heat cuing 1 eau
sug1051', ,.0 says, '14 Ulu prop/irk.
11011 of a book ,,.0 true unci uevetoli-
ment unit the passing 08 a law tacit
the green' 111 011011 ivarr,age 51111111.1
praduue We !mu. at ills lteuuiug w1t11
his. flame Un L118 title !Alio.'
lion. L. A. Laval, Queeue: "1 be -
'neve taut patent uuucaLIUn should
start 811tur8 marr,u50,'
1:1011, WVlllialu 1, 14011011.1,"` -
former 1111012101' of laeateu for New
Brunswick: "les, at twelve years et
Age." (
Judge J. a'. hal-Laney, of tee Ut
tawa elveu110 court, agrees that pure
eat euucatlon emend. start at twelve.
1'r'etessor ret0r 1auentem soya mut' .
(Pery 1411011.1 aAuuld be u 0111111 peyenU1
beast. "seventy years age 171'OaOdr,
pointed out than we tritium,/ .220918
a5 1t they were never to be the par-
ents of children,' he says.
c,.
niers an times
x� a-an�airnc tight
40 meet t ll 1 8ces
Teheran, J801•sla.--ln tea m0u0llti-
zation of Persia, along lines adopted
by hemel kasha in Turkey and at-
empted by the deposed King Antau-
ulah iu Afghanistan, Persian women
make throo principal demands.
The tlrst and the most revolutionary
of a11, is the right to make the ac-
quaintance of a future husband before
marriage.
Persian women also dein eel the
light to work 011151de their own homes
slid' teat the law relating to divorce
give women equal lights Nitli men.
Cold Lamb -
•
Put about 011e.11011' pound of lamb
through the food chopper twice, Sea-
son
eason with salt and pepper and one.
fourth teaspooufuf of summer savory,
one egg yolk, well beaten, au dtwo
tablespoonfuls of cream. Mix well
and make into _oblong cakes, Dredge
with flour which has a little paprika
in it and brown the cakes in a 'hot
pan, using as; little butter as Possible.
Put the meat in ten oven to finish
cooking while fixing the garnish of
Trip crea117ed hear. •
MUTT AND ,TEFF. -Bud Fisher.
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