The Seaforth News, 1928-05-31, Page 2June , Leeson X---Jeeua Facing Be
treyei .and Death, --Mark 14: 17.26
3246. Golden Text—Not what
wifl, but what thou wilt.—Mark 14•
86,
ANALYSIS.
L The SON OF GOD NOT ONLY RETEOTED,
Dae 3ErRA'YED, 17-21,
II. JESUS MAKES 'Me LAST SUR100NUPR
TO 000, 22-25, 32-36,
INTRODUCTION—Hie rejection by, the
elders and the chief priesta and the
scribes, thoghinflicting a deep end
awful grief on the soul of Jesus, was
not the bitterest ingredient in the cup
which Jesus had to drink, "Sorrow's
crown of sorrow" came to hint when
at this moment one of his own chosen
followers, in whom he trusted, went
over to his enemies, and betrayed him.
It will always be a mystery why Judas
stooped to so inexplicable a crime. His
act, whatever be the explanation,
thefull culmination of the
deetreshet, thehpointsc s�ceM wi eree thy'
can no longer share the awful expo*
once on whieh he le entering. Ito
'wears the Anteet:of one "sore amazed"
and in terrible distress, Saying, ".My,
soul ie, lnortally, stricken with gleet,"
he leaves them and passes on into the
thickenin shadows of the darkened
garden. There at last the final sur-
render of the Son of God takes place.
Flesh and blood cries, "Abba Father!
Take this cup awayi" But the spdm0t
triumphs; "Not what I' will, but what
thou wilt," These wards are written,
over and under the whole life. of
Josue,
Asparagus Hints
New Ways to Serve This
Splendid Seasonable
Vegetable
Aeparagua With Egg Loaf
To 1 cupful of medium white sauce
add 2 hard-boiled eggs put through
a sieve, % teaspoonful of salt, ,tea-
spoonful of grated,nutmeg and 1 tea
s0Ooefui of grated onion, 4 beaten
eggs' and 1 cupful of cooked asparagus
cut into email pieces. Have ready a
bettered mold lined around the sides
with asparagus tips, the tops down
The Great' Banks ward. Turn the loaf mixture into
this and set the' meld hi a pan of hot
water. Bake about 30 minutes to a
moderate oven until the loaf. la flim
in the center. [Tumold on a hot
serving dish and serve with a Hol,
iandaise sauce,
Hollandaise Sauce
Mix thoroughly s/.r-cupful of soft
Perhaps it is wholesome in this period batter and the yolks of 2 eggs. Add
of our rapid (the ILS.) financial growth ,},oiling water slowly to make the
to be reminded that other English• ; sauce of the right consistency. Just
speaking nations possess banking in I before serving, add lemon juice to
at;tutions as large as or larger than suit the taste; also more -Malt if need -
Marked those of which we boast, The news- ed Serve hot in 'a bowl separate
Saviour's cup of grief. papers are so filled with accounts of from the asparagus.
And so we understand better the purchases and amalgamations, and the
meaning of the great surrender which size at our major banks is so tally
Flesh Asparagus,„nd Chicken
Jesus made and blood shrank from . the Supper and in the dwelt upon that the importance and Melt in a frying pan 2 level table -
the last terrible agony of betrayal and magnitude of similar concerns in other spoonfuls of butter; add '1 tablespoon•.
crucifixion, but Jesus knowing that it parts of the English-speaking world fuls of flour and, when well -blended, 1
was the Father's will that he should are but scantily realized, A recent cupful of thin cream. • Cook until
drink the cup, gives up his own will compilation by the California Bank ' creamy and smooth, stirring on-
to God, of Los Angeles of one hundred and , stantly, then add r/ of a teaspoonful
I, THE SON OF GOD NOT ONLY REJECTED, fifty of the largest American, British, :each or salt and celery salt, a dash of
BUT BETRAYED, 17-21. colonial and dominion banks is strik- , nutmeg, a pinch of pepper, 2 hard -
Extraordinary Editorial in Sat-
urday Evening Post Tells
Some Startling Facts
ENGLAND IN . LEAD . ,
V. 17. Jesus had earlier in the day
arranged for this last solemn meal
with his disciples. The Passover Feast
had become very holy and dear to him
•in his earthly life, and he longed for
one other opportunity to observe it
with his disciples, Luke 22; 15, 16. If
this meal was the Passover meal, his
hope was actually fulfilled. But if,
as many scholars think, the meal
which Jesus actually partook of with
hie disciples fell on the evening before
Passover, his wish was not granted.
IIe died, according to the Fourth Gos-
pel. on Passover Day.
Vs. 18, 19. The announcement by
Jesus that one of the 'disciples would
betray him to his' enemies' filled the
company with amazement and dismay.
Nothing so inconeoivable had ever
,fallen on their ears. Not knowing
what this "betrayal” could wean, they
all ludas included—protested, say-
ing, "Is it I? Surely you cannot be
speakieg of me!"
V. 20. Jesus does not name • the
traitor, nor give any hint who he is,
He contents himself with the state-
ment that the traitor is one of those
who now recline with him at the table.
V. 21. He repeats what he had so
often said before, that the Son of Man
has to suffer and die, but he dwells
sorrowfully on the awful fate of the
man who, being his follower, gives him
The Last Time Together
LINDY BREAKS "WE" PARTNERSHIP FOREVER
Col. Lindberg flew his beloved "Spirit of St. Louis" from St. Louis to
Washington, to be placed In Smithsonian Institute,
frying or omelet pan, turnethe Delivered the Goods
stiffly -beaten ` whites. of the eggs,, then
the yolks and the asparagus and cook I .
as any other omelet; set in the oven "I Delivered Your Message,
a few minutes . until tho top is Get, ,
Sir,' Says Vito After Un-
intentional Trip to Sea
"I delivered your message, sir!"
No, this is not quoted from 'Elbert
ing evidence of the banking power of , boiled eggs that have been forced then remove to the top of the stove to
these countries. (through a sieve, 2 cupfuls of diced brown he bottom and eool[the mixture
Ninety American banks have some chicken and 2 cupfuls of cooked as throughout. Fold over and turnout
what more than nineteen billion dol- i paragus cut into small pieces. Bring on a hot platter. Garnish with as.
lars ou deposit, whereas only sixty i nearly to a boil and serve in ramekins paragus tips, or with parsley and thin Eubliard's "Message to Garcia," al- i thetime to
banks in the British Commonwealth or pastry shells. Garnish with a dash slices of lemon. though the determination to "carry plant the seed, and better results will
of Nations have more than eighteen of paprika and a sprig of parsley. Molded Tomato and Asparagus Salad on" may have been similar. It was be obtained from getting these paten
Asparagus Croquettes To 2 cupfuls of strained tomato voiced by young Vito Paulekas of nials started in this way than if roots
Mice add a pinch of a bay leaf, �¢ of Cambridge, Mass., a Western 'Union are secured. The poppy does not take
Make a thick white sauce from 3,a small onion sliced, 1 clove and le
(messenger boy, after returning from well to transplantthg, and where at all
tablespoonfuls of butter, 1-3 of a cuP- of a teaspoonful each of salt and an unintentional sea voyage which Possible they should be planted in
sugar Simmer 15 minutes, then strain Inearly carried hint to Europe and was their permanent bed.'The silky Ice
and add 2 tablespoonfuls of gelatine'the result of his perseverance in "find- land Poppy to bloom next spring with
that has soaked in % of a cupful of lin his man;' the late tulips should also be planted
cold water for live. minutes. Stir fihe S',S, -Karlsruhe. of --the North now. If the weather :• la favorable a
until the- ° gelatine is dissolved, hen
GermanLloydLine •was about to cast 'few et them: may blame. this fall. Give
set it aside to cool and thicken. 'When l og its ` hawsers • at Commonwealth them a well -drained- bed and full sun.'
the gelatine is about ready to set, add.;-pler, Boston, for its transatlantic TOM little Alpine Poppies for. the rock
that cupfuls of cooked asparagus tilos }journey when young Paulekas .came ' garden' may:'also be •planted• at this
that have been cut into small pieces, I aboard, .charged with delivering- a time. As: poppy' seed is very'Rne,-!t is
firm ftll(l u into finger Turn into individual molds to become message from. the steamship ofeces to beat mixed with. a llttie sand and
lengths about of An inch wide, roll' cold and firm. Serve uumolded on I the purser of. the vessel.
broadcast. With this flower, as with
in sifted bread crumbs, then in egg hearts of lettuce and garnish with as- The boy was unfamiliar with his all others, it is important to secure
slightly beaten with 3 tablespoonfuls, • paragus tips and thiels mayonnaise surroundings, and it was some time seed from tested varieties from the
of cold water added for each egg- dressing, before he located the purser. Finally, gardens of reliable 4iedsmen. Seed
white, then in crumbs again. Fry in however, he delivered the message gathered in the ordinary,, garden,
deep hot fat, drain and serve on a hot and came on deck only to find that where no precautions are taken to
platter garnished with parsley. the Karlsruhe was steaming out Into Protect from bees and other insects
Asparagus and Peas the bay.. which mix pollen indiscriminately, is
Cut into small pieces tender green When Spring brings days so warm and A bos'un discovered him, and, tak- apt to produce Rowers of disappoint -
clear ing him for a stowaway, rushed him Ingly weak shades.
stalks of asparagus an(t cook them We know we'll have some fun,
Ger-
in just enough water to cover with to the captain. The captain is Time .to Plant Celery
For Dad begins to look around man. His gutturals broke sternly
an equal quantity' of fresh green peas, To see what must be done. From now until the middle of July
Un -
some shredded lettuce—the outercan exclusively. At length the bet' less about to start on a commerpial
leaves—and 1 teaspoonful of sugar.
against Veto's ears, but didn't mean a thing, for Vito speaks Italian-Amere the celery plants can be set out Unscale, gardeners are advised to buy
-
FLOWERS
and
VEGETABLES
No. 16
,..
Cabby's Lament
"Things Are Not What They
Used To 13e," Old Cab
Drivers Says
Many a cabiman-has felt the pinch
_........,,.r[ of poverty 1n, recent yearn because he
Hot Weather Planting (could not get enough people to drive
Throughout most of Ontario it Is. no In hit hack. to pay for hie daily bread,
too late to plant a number of vege 1t was revealed .In au 1,ltervlew with
tables. 'Chief among thele will be two veterans ye the trade, Thoy' mahr-
those of the squash type. Marrows tarn that they are among the last of
and simmer squeak may be planted that great battalion of 1,000 "cabbies"
any time up to the let of July. The ishiug trade in Mout-
who Plied a flour
Barre Nelda tree for et of J ei0u, Cit- real up; to 10 years age,
ton and muakmellon. With the first- There are less than 200 cab drivers
named group the fruits should be in the city today and every year the
ploleed,,when about half-grown, the nurabar grows loss. This year -there'
flesh;' being tender then and easily are 30 less than last year, it Is stated..
cooked. With the melons it la slinPly William Webb has driven his hack'
necessary to safely plok. The soil for for 40 years. There was a gold mine •
these plants should be -warm, well- in the business' in those early'days,
drained, well -watered, and very rich. he said; while Tetter Kuffmau, 'a Rus.
This is also a good time to plant lima Sian Pole, the other veteran was told
beano,'which will give a good crop it, that a fortune awaited blur In cab
sown before the end of June. Limas driving when he arrived in Montreal,
need richer soil than string beans, and in 1905,
there must be plenty of humus to re- "We luso one horse 'how where we i
tain the moisture. Pole limas give used to use three, said the first cabby, .
larger yields than the bush varieties, because to -day the loads are so small,
and usually do best with the amateur, that the horses have no trouble haul -
They need seven feet of climbing ing. In those days,we used to gleet
space. Bush limas should be planted all the.trains :and the boats, We
In hills eighteen ,inches apart each would fill up the cab and charge each
way. Water well In dry weather with Person 25 Dents. But then the motor
the nozzle off the hose. Soak, do not oar camp in and cut us all put. And
sprinkle, and keep the water pg the we have to depend altogether on our
mountain trips."
leaves. ' The veterans maintained that there
Oriental Poppies, and Others were no more carriages' made, unless
At kthis season one always envies they were made to order. And where -
the gorgeous display of Oriental Fop as one used to pay $700 for a new car -
pies. in a neighbor's garden. • These tease to -day it cannot be had for _leas
huge, globes' of brilliant Dolor may than $1,200, There aro' only about
now be secured in a variety of shades three families in Montreal who have
ranging from almost white to a deep a carriage now, and one of these, Mr.
scarlet This s proper a Webb said, has never had au automo-
bile. -
and a half billions. The live largest
banks are all located In Loudon. Of
the five which come next, one is the
Royal Banlc of Canada and another ful of flour and 1 cupful of milk. To
is the Federal Reserve Bank of New this add 1 cupful each of heti-boiled
York. In other words, if this semi -(eggs coarsely chopped and cooked
government institution be left out, we
as -
have only three in the first ten. 1paragus cut into small pieces; season
Eleventh in rank is the Bank of i to taste with salt and pepper and a
Montreal;and twelfth is the Bank at dash of nutmeg. Some. experts add
a few drops of onion juice or 1 table-
Erigland. Twentieth is the Common -
wealth Bank of Australia, and two f spoonful of grated cheese, Turn into
other Austrian banks are found in the a shallow pan and leave to become
first eighty. A Liverpool bank ranks cold.Cut i t
twenty-sixth. and one in Manchester is
thirty-fourth. The colonies and do-
minions. are not the rather weak
lands which the more ignorant Ameri-
can sometimes carelessly supposes.
Though. it is true that London and
New York dominate the list, the fact
that the ninth, eleventh and nine-
teenth, banks are in Montreal and
Toronto, the thirteenth in San Fran -
up. When he says that it were good cisco and the sixteenth and twenty -
for that man that he had never been first in. Chicago shows that other
born," is he referring to the tragic centres are great reservoirs of -funds.
results produced by remorse for such
an net? What tragedy is so awful as
a remorse which can never find relief?
II. JESUS MAKES THE LAST SURRENDER
TO GOD, 22-25, 32-36.
V. 22. We can only consider the
Last Supper here in so far as it illus-
trates the wondrous nature of our
Lord's last surrender of himself to
God. As the meal went on, Jesus took
a loaf of bread, and after a prayer one. Nevertheless we must admit that
of thanksgiving, broke it, and handing
the Pieces to his disciples said: "Take,
eat." Up to this point there was no-
thing unfamiliar in the act, for such
ritual acts took place at many reli-
gious meals. But now came the extra-
ordinary addition to the usual words:
"This (bread) is (or represents) my
body." Jesus: -means: "As this bread
is broken, so I give my body to be
broken (or crucfled). for you."
Vs. 23, 24. Thereafter Jesus takes
a cup, and the same ritual is repeated.
He offers a prr.,•er of blessing, gives
the cup to his disciples, and they all
drink of it in turn. This, too, was a
not unusual rite, but now Jesus adds
the astounding words: "This (cup) is
Of course it will be objected that
England, Canada and Australia show
up remarkably well because of the
prevalence of branch banking in those
countries. There are in the English-
speaking world approximately twenty-
nine thousands smaller banks, the
great majority of which are in the
United States. Nor is their role in
the financial scheme of things a minor
iu banking there is powerful and
worthy competition in other lands
which speak the same tongue as ours.
Forest Products
$204,436,328
Year 1926 Shows 2.3 Per
Cent. Decrease as Com-
pared With 1925
Ottawa,—Canada's total estimated
value of primary forest products for
my blood of the new covenant, which 1925 is 204,436,328. The amount repre-
is shed for many." Who are the sents a decrease of 2.3 per cent, over
"many"? The many whom he came the estimated value for the previous
to save, but who still remained inipeni-. year.
tent. Jesus knows that his dying for Seventy-one million dollars is placed
them will accomplish the redemption as the total value of logs and bolts
which in his life he had sought to
effect, through faith and repentance, for domestic manufacture, the raw
V. 2g. The solemn warning follows material of the saw -milling an dallied
that, 'before another meal together, industries. These logs and bolts head
Jesus will have suffered on the Gross. the list of products for Canada as a
This supper, therefore, points forward whole.
be reunion in the kingdom of God. i Printery forest production in 1920,
Vs. 32-36. If the Supper shows the according to an estimate in the report
triumphant spirit of Jesus' glad sur- of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics,
render, the scene in the garden ex- invilved the cutting of 2,838,105,611
hibits the cost to flesh and blood at g
which the victory was won. Jesus still cubic feet of standing timber,
Painting Time
When the vegetables are clone, drain
mane it understood stowaway.
that he was amss- plants which will be on sale every-
senger, not a stowaway. where about this time, For a continu-
The moment was opportune, for the ons supply, set out a few plants every
pilot was about to leave the ship. Vito week or two up to July 16th, with the
went with him, and later war{ trans• bulk going in about the latter date for
farted from the pilot boat to an Italian fall storage. Celery can be grown
Sshing schooner Boston bound, He on any rich, well -drained soil, provided
was lauded at the Fish Pier late teat it is not too compact. Well -drained
night and the next morning appeared muck will give the best results. Heavy
in the North German Lloyd offices applications of manure are needed on
With the receipt signed by the purser, loam. soil with the nitrate soda as
"I delivered your message, sir," he during the early stages of growth.
said. Water plants well before removing
from flats, and it •possible have soil
moist Into which they are being trans-
planted. -Plant six to eight inches
apart in rows up to three feet in
width. ultivate early and keep up
during the season. Water when neces-
sary, so that plants will grow quickly
and be tender. To bleach place a
board along the rows on both sides
and hill up wlth earth. Be careful
to avoid getting earth in the inside
of plant, as this will cause rot.
Major Fitzmaurice, it seemed, plug-
ged an oil leak and saved the Bremen.
Well, he came to the right mantle,.
He buys a can of yellow paint,
And cans of brown and gold,
thoroughly and add them to a thick
He says, "Thewalls need touching up,.
The chairs are looking old.
white sauce seasoned to taste with
salt, pepper and a few drops of lemon
juice, Stir in the beaten yolks of 2
eggs, heat thoroughly but do not boil,
and serve on hot toast liberally but-
tered.
uttered.
Asparagus au Gratin
Cut cooked asparagus into small
pieces and make a layer of the vege-
table about an inch thick in a butter-
ed baking dish. Sprinkle liberally
with grated cheese than cover with
buttered bread crumbs. Bake in a
moderate oven until the crumbs are
brown, about 15 minutes.
Asparagus Fritters
Have ready 3 cupfuls of asparagus
cooked and cut in small'pjeces. Make
a fritter batter by beating 1 egg until
light, sifting in 1 cupful of flour, and
adding % of a cupful of milk and 1
tablespoonful of melted butter; beat
until smooth and leave in a cool place
for an hour. Then add to the batter
1 teaspoonful of baking powder and
the sparagus. Drop by spoonfuls into
smoking -hot fat. Fry to a golden
brown, drain on soft paper arid. serve
immediately.
Asparagus Omelet
Cut into small pieces enough cook-
ed asparagus to. make 1 cupful. Beat
3 eggs, the yolks and whites'separ-
ately. To the yolks add % of a tea-
spoonful each of salt and flour, a dash
of pepper, 1 tablespoonful of grated
cheese and 3 tablespoonfuls of milk.
Melt 2 tablespoonfuls
of
butter
in
a
"The table needs a coat of paint,
The floors are dingy too,
Piazza need a trim of white,
I see there's lots to do.
"And Mother's room needs freshening,
Our things are badly worn";
But Mother says 1f things were new
Then Dad would feel forlorn.
He swings a brush all wet with paint,
And colors this and that,
And Mother says perhaps some day
He'll even paint the cat!
But when the house is fresh and clear
With colors bright and new,
We all agree it's wonderful
What Dad and Paint can do!
Canadians in the U.S.A.
Quebec Action Catholique (Ind.) :
Not all the Canadians who go to the
United States go to the towns. To
make a trip around the State of Ver-
mont and see the many Canadians
there cultivating American farms.
There is no more inaccurate state-
ment than to say that our country
people are determined to live in the
town.... Young people may want to
seek adventure there; but a family
does not uproot itself like that. If it
leaves the country it is because it
has been forced to do so.
Camera For Use 30,000 Feet
Above Earth Perfected
New York—An aerial camera with
a range ofmore than five miles, de-
signed to photograph areas as large
as four 'square miles, has been built
for the army air corps, according to
the manufacturers. It will receive
its first tests here within two weeks
and will be sent then to Wright Field
at Dayton, 0., where it will be install-
ed in au army plane for extensive ex-
perimental photographic work.
The camera was made for use at
altitudes at which photography never
before has been attempted, and be- "When• I first came to this country,"
gond the range of anti-aircraft guns.
Picture -taking at heights of 30,000
feet or more will be ;possible, Fair-
child Corporation authorities said.
A parking space is where you leave
the car to have those little dents
trade in the fenders.
confessed a man popularly known as
self-made, "I didn't know a word of
the English language, but by perse-
verance and study'I made myself what
I am today." "But I thought you
were born in this country?" "So I
was. But I still maintain that when
I first cane here I couldn't speak a
word."
MUTT AND ,TEFF—By Bud Fisher
It Seems That Their Landlady Wants Her Rent Money
"Try to buy a horse to -day,” said
the cabby, "and you'll Rad they cost
three times as much as 15 years ago,
They're just not breeding them. We
count altogether on tourist (trade now,'
They want to see the mountain and
there's nobody gladder to take them..”
Ysher Kuffnian, the ' other cab-
driver,•rsays he, does not know ,what
the 'drivers 'will do in a few', years.
Sometimes:=now they sit all day in
their •cabs :and not a farecomes' along.
When he first came to Montreal from
Resale. he was urged to go into the
cab driving business. So he bought
a.hack and :made money hand over
fist. He thought his luck would never
change. "But," he said, "who would
have thought that a Cab running along
without a horse would come, to life
and take the bread and butter out of
our mouths."
The Americanization of
Canada
London Graphic (Cons.) : (Britain.
is blamed for the meagre flow of Brit-
ish settlers into Canada, on the
ground that not enough British money
is invested In the Dominion.) The
British -Canadian is the most fiercely
loyal man in the Empire to -day, The
Xing, the Prince of Wales, the Con-
stitution, and the Empire, mean far
more to him than they do to our so-
phistioated, jaded and slightly weary
minds at home. They are living, burn-
ing truths to him, his vital links with
home and with England. But there
are not enough of .him.. ..-Canada
can be made the most vital and truly
British part of the Empire. It is a
"white man's country," not African
negroes' or Argentinian dagoes'; yet
we have sunk £400,000,000 in Argen-
tina
rgentina and Heaven knows what in East'
Africa,, while our own kith and kin
are being swamped by aliens In the
land that can and will eclipse the
United States in Wealth and influence
—1f we keep it,
Outlawing .Law
London .Dally Telegraph (Cons.)
The Idea of preventing "aggressive"
war by the organizing • of collective
war to deal with that danger is fixed
in the diplomatic mind of France, and
not in hers alone. According to that -
way of .thinking, the idea of abolish-
ing war -without the provision of
"sanctions" is an irrational and vis-
ionary one, to accept which would be
hypocrisy and worse. To take that
view is not to impute insincerity to the
American proposal. Fair-minded
French critics of it perceive that a
temper of tincurbed idealism in this
coneetion ie net"unaccodntable in a
nation whose security has never ben"
'threatened within living.memord
is to -dray virtually uufassailt)tile;a na-
tion which, being with i a' rival in
the great sentinel w' ere it is seated,
hardly undez;5ta';jds theposition of
others• legs•'brtunately situated. i
The Revised Prayer Book
London Times (Ind.) : (The Revis-
ed Prayer Book will be submitted to
the House of Commons as soon as the
exigencies of public business permit.)
A certain number of influential Anglo.
Catholics who supported' the Book of
1927 have opposed the revised mea-
sure. That fact will be interpreted
in different ways, but atleast it serves .
to indicate that the measure now ac-
cepted by the Assembly does not en-
courage anything likely to lead to an
Unauthorized ektension of the practice
of reservation or to the introduction
of any new forms of servicet without
the assent of the laity,
The King of Hejaz has ordered a
special car of bus capacity for the .
members of this herein. Victims ei
back-seat drivers In Catera ',vie,} rand
1,ondnleneos,
ll �l///49 /�
r
yllil
Tliis eeter PRoeLEM (s
GGTTING To Be TERieoBLC;
THAI-% AN6111efe NoTo-PRor-
Tate LANDLADY AND =
boN'T NC'C+D A Fol@TUNC
Te LI ER TO TELL MElisi
l
MUTT, of ALL SILLY TNINee!
Li ee TOTHIS 40fe GROM
THE LANDLADY: 'DEAREST
JEfF: SINCC- `(Ov•lOVet
M'' AND T LOVG You, NO
KNIFE CAN OJT auk.SiIOWINts
LOVE IN TWO. SIGNED -� L
Te STALL 'Ad' OFF AbouT
Ttte, RENT T. -CO is HG2
'You weRe IN Load WITH
elate Bur YOUR BASHFULNESS
pRGUENTED 'Yeti �ceoa
lT: Slid
-
M5 MAKE LOVG
'THAT OLD .
DVL2gRo?
N0' INA MILLION
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, ,OMeONG (Apse•
L TRUS�C iT'S
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aC-Ft :. COME
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CALLING (N `mu, AG, /
GIVa HIM TIME— /
HE'LL GOT OVCCL �/
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"Try to buy a horse to -day,” said
the cabby, "and you'll Rad they cost
three times as much as 15 years ago,
They're just not breeding them. We
count altogether on tourist (trade now,'
They want to see the mountain and
there's nobody gladder to take them..”
Ysher Kuffnian, the ' other cab-
driver,•rsays he, does not know ,what
the 'drivers 'will do in a few', years.
Sometimes:=now they sit all day in
their •cabs :and not a farecomes' along.
When he first came to Montreal from
Resale. he was urged to go into the
cab driving business. So he bought
a.hack and :made money hand over
fist. He thought his luck would never
change. "But," he said, "who would
have thought that a Cab running along
without a horse would come, to life
and take the bread and butter out of
our mouths."
The Americanization of
Canada
London Graphic (Cons.) : (Britain.
is blamed for the meagre flow of Brit-
ish settlers into Canada, on the
ground that not enough British money
is invested In the Dominion.) The
British -Canadian is the most fiercely
loyal man in the Empire to -day, The
Xing, the Prince of Wales, the Con-
stitution, and the Empire, mean far
more to him than they do to our so-
phistioated, jaded and slightly weary
minds at home. They are living, burn-
ing truths to him, his vital links with
home and with England. But there
are not enough of .him.. ..-Canada
can be made the most vital and truly
British part of the Empire. It is a
"white man's country," not African
negroes' or Argentinian dagoes'; yet
we have sunk £400,000,000 in Argen-
tina
rgentina and Heaven knows what in East'
Africa,, while our own kith and kin
are being swamped by aliens In the
land that can and will eclipse the
United States in Wealth and influence
—1f we keep it,
Outlawing .Law
London .Dally Telegraph (Cons.)
The Idea of preventing "aggressive"
war by the organizing • of collective
war to deal with that danger is fixed
in the diplomatic mind of France, and
not in hers alone. According to that -
way of .thinking, the idea of abolish-
ing war -without the provision of
"sanctions" is an irrational and vis-
ionary one, to accept which would be
hypocrisy and worse. To take that
view is not to impute insincerity to the
American proposal. Fair-minded
French critics of it perceive that a
temper of tincurbed idealism in this
coneetion ie net"unaccodntable in a
nation whose security has never ben"
'threatened within living.memord
is to -dray virtually uufassailt)tile;a na-
tion which, being with i a' rival in
the great sentinel w' ere it is seated,
hardly undez;5ta';jds theposition of
others• legs•'brtunately situated. i
The Revised Prayer Book
London Times (Ind.) : (The Revis-
ed Prayer Book will be submitted to
the House of Commons as soon as the
exigencies of public business permit.)
A certain number of influential Anglo.
Catholics who supported' the Book of
1927 have opposed the revised mea-
sure. That fact will be interpreted
in different ways, but atleast it serves .
to indicate that the measure now ac-
cepted by the Assembly does not en-
courage anything likely to lead to an
Unauthorized ektension of the practice
of reservation or to the introduction
of any new forms of servicet without
the assent of the laity,
The King of Hejaz has ordered a
special car of bus capacity for the .
members of this herein. Victims ei
back-seat drivers In Catera ',vie,} rand
1,ondnleneos,