“ Chat Evil? l snows” Biufirwiiy‘ Sum-ups The Public Forum ‘ Woman received e This column. Is. open ‘for is _l p v , . _ Parliament on Friday last when the the dleoueelon by "PM!" j “Pristine. w. ‘gs-nu martian‘;- ‘mo-n. llenetti M" ‘muting voting privileges to t ponds-nu gkeuafioagnxo & Idler Isl-git. I Apeelste like!» D. ILOnnIe- women oi 21 years passed its sec- n 60mm." d“. M. “u”... ‘i A '9 "t ‘I-epleellitltlvs-I-III-J-k. m” "m! Nadine by a vote 0i 288 w 12- lly endorse em opinion ex- ; < ‘ it may not become law at the pre- grossed by its corresporr '_- - - ‘ +- =< i. sent session owing to the great "l l- 5 _, 5, 1924 presurs oi other business. but this u i ' ' u i will be but a temporary delay. The BIA/zgzoz‘; B.‘ NA 1'! ‘ ' . MPARISO _ l; THE COMING SESSION on the Premier. Mr. Crerar. how- 322:1] b';'::‘::.::.:;Zgbglgllzsnzg. THE DANIsH WAY w‘ _._. ever. held a dliierent view oi the is that n rofldea m t n W0, A medical writer “Bed an express‘ Sln-Reiorring to your article in t The Provincial Legislature is ' . ‘ do p a you g m" some "me 85° m” w“ 5” the Guardian oi.’ the 28th oi Febru- f‘ v meetill! lndv 591°“ 96V I18 men may vote at the same age as apt, that I thought I would pass it my "The Denmark Way" the iollow lllmmmmd m meet w°d“°‘d'y' m“ city, he made it distinctly clear young men. - Hitherto only women flllgls- d m; extfacts (mm "Den Danske - 12th instant. ' Nature"! ‘t 5°“ that there were certain things he °f thirty years and upward were a “I m“ m” thymld 31nd l“ Pioneer" (The Daniel! Pioneer) 1-. -$. -_—‘;,-:..‘-.::: restarts: “witba diminished revenue will nec- .vlnce will permlt- One " to what extent is a matter ior the ' the sossionby atdeast three weeks - id ltltendancs and the long periods . ‘i ‘ii- . . "l u m be number-mi um. some fkgqj-ffqrepslvs inn». visited 0t- .. magma‘ icing...» elm‘: but» -- ma: to which. st u» sham Haltimstuni. The I _ deal oi interest attaches to this. the iirst, session o! the Stewart admin- istration. ‘Premier Stewart has be- hind iiim g, large following, a inni- ority but rarely paralleled in our history. ;Ai§ong his followers are several veterans oi iormer legisla- tures. men oi practical experience in' public aiialrs and also in private business. There are some new men, new, that is, in the legislature but elected by their constituents. we may assume. because oi ialth in their administrative ahillty.their honesty and integrity. The Opposition is numerically weak. live in all. Their leader. Mr. A. C. Saunders has had some pur- liamentary experience having re- presented the Second District oi Priuce during the last two parlia- ments.‘ His iour supporters have alsomerved in the legislature. PreirilerStewart and his collea- gues admittedly have a illiiicult task beiore them. With a revenue very materially depleted by the tlis- continuance oi the iederal grants ior roads and agricultureand the abolition oi the poll tax, with a large deiicit leit by the late gov- ernment, they are called upon to make good heavy losses sustained as a result oi the disastrous _storm oi October last, to complete road work begun by the late government and abandoned without notice ini- mediatcly aiter their defeat in July. n work made impossible owing to theiact that the Bell government was unable to complete its exit un- til September when it was too late in the season to do road work. In addition to this the ordinary house- keeping oi the province must be maintained. ‘To meet rm; .-ii the increased outlay essitate a reduction in expenditure, a literal paring t0 the bone. This also was promised by Premier Stewart and we are quite sure the promise will be kept as iar as the unavoidable necessities oi the pro- ‘ deiinito promise in this respect was made, a generous promise oi seli-sacriiice on the part oi the Conservative candidates, ‘namely, a reduction in their sessional indemnities. This ‘promise also will be implemented. members to decide when they meet in the legislature. The iact. that the pruning kniie is to be applied first oi all-to their own personal allowances is distinctly to their credlfandnwe look ior as generous a reduction as the urgency oi the needed retrenchment demands. There wgslaivery “general outcry againpc thgilncreaale oi the session- al indemnity under the late govern- ‘A 'vd._' notwithstanding the ad- mittddiyfllfihhe: cost oi living in the city, the psrtyfwould make no. mistake in approximating as nearly as possible the ifitiaftlme indemnity. The lossto members could be con- siderably minimised by shortening which ‘is both possible and desir- able. . We ieel sure that Premier Stewart >w4olow up in the legis- lative sessions the excellent ex- ainple.ho..h_u set in the diiierent government oiiices and that he win; pot tolerate the irregularities or idlsliils‘ that have characterised . . . ,. tensions... _ frns caunan-Iutriuaruu Znaostijs ago-whdiplr- an»... torm- ifawi eh the iavititton oiPrimidr LVQI‘ ' nnoe between basin ma; and in- Ore- new.‘ '1 c. wanted on behali oi the Progres- sives. These things he made pub- lic in an interview with the press- He further stated that he was leav- ing Ottawa by way oi New York and was not coming back. The ul- timatum was to stand as he had leit it and there would be no op- portunlty to change It.‘ The ultim- atiini simply meant that ii the King government wanted ' Progressive support, these were the terms on which such support could be had. The terms were stlii and not all in conformity with any oi the vari- ous policies oi the King Govern- ment. They included tariii reduc- tion. branch lines oi railway, and such a reconstruction oi the cabin- et as would make it reasonably certain that the Progressive de- mands would be carried out. The ultimatum doubl careiully considered by the Prem- ier and his cabinet. lt was: mat- ter oi liie and death. The cabinet ylelded- The Speech irom the Throne intimates that, the Branch Lines Bill passed by the Commons at the last session and rejected by the Senate willlbe reintroduced; that there is to be n reduction in the tar-iii’ especially on “implements oi production." also on other lines, just as the Progressive ultimatum demanded The 1.100 miles of branch rall- way lines, every inch oi which is political and intended to buy up a constituency ior a Liberal candl- date, will cost anywhere irom iiity to a hundred million dollars and the government dares talk oi econ- WES no entitled to vote in Parliamentary elections. Labor-lies and Liberals made up the bulk oi the majority. Two oi the lady memberinthe Duchess oi Athol and Mrs. Phillipson, 'botb Conservatives, .voted against the bill. the chiei objection being that the addition oi this large class oi young women to the voting lists would make the total oi women voters in the Kingdom considerably greater then theynumber oi men voters-the latter having been much reduced by the war. it is stated that iully one hnli the votes cast In iavor oi the Labor candid- ates at the last election were those oi women- Home new: from _ahroad comes In the shape oi an Ottawa despatch o a Toronto paper. it is to the eiiect that the Government oi Prince Edward island will insist on the Do -lnion Government rein- burslng the British Army Oiiicers who lost their money through And- rew Fraser Mitchell, the Immigra- tion Agent recommended by Hon. John E. Sinclair. The despatcli states that the amount involved is 820.000, and Mitchell's counsel in London claimed "that the greater part of this sum was sent to Can- ada to prominent men interested In the deal lt is iurther stated that in view oi Mr. Sinclair's con- nection with the afiair and the Dominion having paid lliitclielrs salary it is expected that a sum will be placed in the estimates to repay the oiiicers. The annual msstlnglof the Pro vlncial Dairy Association was a cheering one. .'l‘lis past summer to the human body what draught is to the ilre thyroid does for you. es gsems to have the power as it were. - They absorb it into themselves and thus use up material already stove does exactly the same. The coal combines with the aid and so you get heat. Now in a iurnace or stove you have just the right draught. or you have too much or too little. ii you have too much draught, the iirc burns iiercely. there is too much heat. and your fire is soon exhausted. Ii there is not enough draught then the coal burns only partly Similarly in that body oi yours. Ii your thyroid gland is secreting loo much. then as it goes to the tissues it stimulates then to do too much work. The heart is beating nearly twice as iast as normal, your nerves are on the jump, there is trembling oi’ the body. everything in iact betokenlug haste. You cannot wonder then ii-you are easily exhausted. And what ii your thyroid is not nianuiacturing a suiiicient amount oi secretioni’. The same thing as the stove or iurnace. Your tissues do not take in suiilcient sir as it were. to burn up th-e iood stuiis properly. And so in persons who are un- usually iat, and always have been fat, the trouble very irequently is due to the insuiiicicnt secretion Thai. many oi these stout people have been helped by small daily doses oi thyroid extract has been amply demonstrated. ' Where the diiflculty and danger aria-es is that only a physician knows where it is like!!! t0 WOTR prnperly,.nnd to watch its eiieots daily. l And so In a normal thyroid gland there seems to be just enough oi the right kind oi secretion to help was one oi luxuriant pasturage, the dairy {erds have been improved. and the production oi milk, butter l omy and paring to the bone. Iii protection we now have will menu a iurther ilooding oi our markets with the products oi pro- tected industries iii tlic United States, a iurther ilooding oi iuir pork and vegetable products. it will also inevitably mean that many thousands oi Canadians will iollow the thousands oi Canadians who during the past year have been driven irom unprotected Canada to earn a living in the highly pro- tected United States. This is the cost to Canada oi prolonging the liie oi the MacKen- zie King government by a purchas- ed transfusion oi Progressive blood. ls the King government worth it’! is there any one thing to its credit that will minimize the cost. -—---¢-e-§_____ THE PRESENT DOLLAR The present dollar has been the ruin oi many men and many instit- utlons. For the sake oi the dollar In sight hundreds oi future dollars have been sacriiiced, A boy leaves school with an education that is worth little or nothing to him ior the sake oi a job worth a iow pal- try dollars and thus sacrifices his iuiure. An apprentice leaves bis hali learned trade ior a job that gives him a iew more dollars and as a result he never becomes a tradesman. Examples might be in- deiinltely multiplied to demonstr- ate the iolly oi acting without reck- oning with the iuturo. The iarmer understands this when he refuses to be tempted by a big price ior his best cow. his best brood mare or sow. The merchant understands It when he reiuses to accept more than the regular price ior an art- icle ior which he might get s big- ger price by cheating his customer and so losing ilim. We must ever reckon with the ‘tntnre The present dollar. the present advantage, tbs present pecan oi sppleu is worse than worthless li it means tutors loss or iotnrs pain. The present at but is but s inundation sad all taturn ‘u . ‘Wiener markets with American eggs and must be built upon it... ii the inund- qgi t!" ‘up; no mesa u faulty, it mass tutors iaii- "' was uni it-yellsbd truly laid It ins A|and cheese were alike conslderablyl I i’ th iurther reduction in the meagre tar-l- “ excess o e I previous year. Belling values were also compare‘ t-lvely good. A gross value oi $891,‘. 931 in cheese and butter was pro-l duced, showing an increase oi overl 8150.000 _over the production in 1922. in these days when them is much complaint among the iarmerii l-llfflllxbont North America as to bard limes in thcir culling. it is gratify. lug to uotc that some branches oi (arming such as dairylng and grow- lng seed potatoes are still upon a good paying basis. When men rise suddenly to high stallion It is surprising to note the many pleasing things that can be said about them. Premier [tam- sny Macdonald aiiords an instance in point. lie has had tributes paid to his ability. his courage, ‘his glit oi‘ leadership and so on. One writ- er mentions that he is a. cigarette smoker and his elevation has chan- ged the smoking habit in Downing Street. The_ run is on cigarettes now, because the Premier smokes them- Stanley Bald-win. the late Premier. was a pipe smoker. Prehi- ier Macdonald is so democratic about his smoking too! Buys his ‘like. twenty -in a package. ior a shilling. instead o i by the thou. sand. and doesn't employ a ilun- key to hand them to liim on a sil- ver tray. Better still, Premier Macdonald dresses with care and neatnsss" and Is a good goiter." li there were an international championship ior goliins statesmen it would easily be Wfln by Ramsay Macdonald, we are told. l-le is the best golier that ever held the Premiership. Lord Baliour was a good golfer and Lloyd George is a iair hand at the game. but Ramsay Macdonald “could give either oi them a stroke a hole and beat h-lm beiore ‘the turn." He has a handicap oi seven. What wonder that "Labor conquers l“ l-lllllsl." in these twentieth cen- tury days? MARCH 6.—The most Important months oi the. your ior you are May and June. and It would be well to begin all great, undertakings dur- ins that period. You care s~ great aesi ior showand this mm. You» srs tar-sighted. a good maul». n ardent lover. and a iaitiiiiii trund- Bewus oi lousy. an dlearn to‘ "give and f’ , the tissues to burn well. to func- tion properly. sea-eye- ? t We Forget? WEDNESDAY, MARCH JOHN CABDT (Giovanni Cabotn) Italian naviga- tor aiid explore received from Henry Vii oi England a commission to search ior a Northwest passage to India on March 5. 1496. in pursuit oi this venture. Cabot skirt- ed along the hitherto undiscovered: count oi North Ariierlca. . CORREGIO Famous ltalian painter oi the Loinboard School. noted ior his “absolute mastery oi the diiilcul- ties 0i ioreshortening" and more especially ior "management oi light and ‘shades as distributed over vast spaces and aiiecting multitudes oi people," died on March 5, 1534. ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING English poet. who was destined to become one oi the ioremost women oi letters oi her time, was born at Coxhoe Hall. Durham. England. March 5. 1806. ULVSSES S. GRANT Eighteenth President oi the United States, aiter having been commander-in-chiei oi the Union Armies in the Civil War, becoming aroused by the spread oi the night- riders' movement in the South issued s proclamation against the Ku Klux Klan on March 5. 187i. KINGSTON Kingston. which has been twice the capital and twice robbed oi that honor. was iceling the pangs oi political disappointment at this time in 1884, over the decision to remove parliament to Montreal. Blmcoe had organized the iirst government, oi Upper Canada here in 1792. and here Sydenham hail or- gnnized the government oi United Canada. in 1841 Kingston was then chosen as a site acceptable to both French and English. as it had oom- bined so much vital interest to the history oi both. Montreal was a city oi 40,000 people. and 5t. Anne's market place a hugh build- ing 350 ieet long and 50 ilest wide. was converted into a House oi Parliament. The legislative hall had gallery accommodation ior ilve hundred spectators. The cailllll moved at various times to Toronto. Niagara. Kingston, Quebec and Montreal. until Queen Victoria sel- ected Ottawa in 1858 as a perman- ent slte. ' LONDON. Mar- S-Premlsr MacDonald. answering a quee- tlon In the House oi Commons today se to whether In would uni can m stem think the Yfir sigma. o 1,1 biooostpae. W‘ "and! '. or also... our _ _ s‘ l g - ‘Touri ‘ ' _ 1| Iubl ta f tw..."'...i.".. t. 1.; await Developments. ; the And that is exactly what your The secretion that it manuiactur- t0 make your tissues hungry ior air. in them. and are ready ior more. The draught in your iurnace or thyroid» may be oi interest to our island producers. From iniormatlon received from the Chambers oi Commerce the ex- port oi butter during the year has increased 20%. The export to Eng- land alone has been close to 100.- 000 tons. Against this.the expected new markets have not materialized. as the French and Belgian butter markets have gone down to a min- lmlllii.,'l‘he exports to the U. S. A. have increased considerably. in order to iurther enlarge the demand in England the Danish Producers oi butter are now put- ting up their produce In packages oi specially prepared paper. in or- der that the shipment can be ready ior delivery to the consumers im- mldlately 0n arrival In England. thereby doing away with the delay and expense ior re-packing it. The organized stock companies, (pork packing) have, during the year. butchered and exported, in diiierent iarms, 28 million hogs, the largest number since 1913, oi which the largest company, iibe “Esbjerg-Struer" Stock Company. during .the iirst 10 months oi 1923. packed 210.000 hogs. making a turnover oi 33 million kroner. or. approximately 5 1-2 million dollars- —Go to it P. E. island. l uni, Sir, etc, Subscriber. Charlottetown, P. E. l. 1-3-1924. Lenten Lectures Continued From Page 1 many oi‘ them also are here. it is Jesus‘ ideal oi what n christian should be. Have you sometimes wishes you could have a few minut- es oi’ quiet talk with Jesus? l mean iace to iuce, as two oi us might sit and talk together. You have thought you would ask Him to say very simply and plainly jllsl what He expects oi’ you. Well. I [IB- llevc lie would answer in words something like those of this- sevenili chapter oi John. it was ntl |the time oi Feast oi Tsbernaclesu ffliere was a vast multitude oi {Jews tbero irom all parts oi the .world. it was like an immense con- Lyeiition, but largerlthan any con- ‘viantlon we‘ know. The people were not entertuindl in tlleliolnes, but .'ll_\'cil for seven days in leaiy "booths made oi branches oi trees. lt ivus the last day oi’ tlic least. Holy Spirit upon the nation 0t Israel. Just then Jesus speaks, and anilil the silence oi the intently watching throng His voice rings out; "it any man thirst let him come unto Meand drink; lie that believeth on Me. as the Scripture saith. out oi his‘ belly shall ilnw rivers oi living vivater." Mark that significant closing clause. oi what a true christian down in this world should be, and may be. Every word is iull oi meaning. The henrt oi tho sentence is in the last W0i‘(-—-"Wllt0I‘." Water is an essential oi liie. Absence oi water means suiiering and sick- ness, dearth hnd death. Plenty oi good water means liie. All the history oi the world clusters about the water courses. Study the his- tory oi the rivers, the‘ seashores. and lake edges, and you know the history oi earth. Those men who heard Jesus speak would instinct- ively think oi the Jordan. It was their river. Travelers say that no valley exceeded in beauty and iruit- iuinesg that valley oi the Jordan. made so by those swiit waters. No hillside s0 iair in their_ green beauty, nor so wealthy in heavy loads oi irult as those sloping down to the edge oi that stream. Now plainly Jesus is talking oi some- thing that may, through us exert as decided an influence upon the lives oi those we touch as water has exerted, and still exerts. on the history oi the earth, and as this Jordan did in that wondsriul. historic Palestine. Mark the quant- ity oi water-"rivcrs." Not a Jordan merely, that would bo wond- eriul enough, but Jordana-m Jordan, and a Nile, and a Eu- 'Daily gelections Guardian Readers SHE GATHJERID BEAUTY She gathered beauty as noisseui Oi precious painting; searches iar-oii lands- Who knows the master irom amateur- And wove It round her heart with greedy hands. I 00h- tho Because liar eyes saw beauty in 1| h place n“ |mm“m:;|m::h|'g1q.p=e who‘: others see but ugliness ' dl ‘ mm. onetime that iinvlm- ' m g1 flquehg Mani. The lingers oi the years touched randy doused the matter - not her moo Anil beauty shielded her with sweet repose.‘ ‘ Aidan iii-mic. a l. Thames. and u, Hudson and as they use it. the pipe. It depends on your own fancy as to which form you prefer. The Plug is for those smokers who like to slice their tobacco right off the plug The Cut Plug is for those who would enjoy the convenience of buying their smoking tobacco ready sliced for Whichever you choose. you are sure to get an extra choice pipe tobacco- . mellow, rich and tasty. Manufactured by Imperial Tobacco Company of Canada Limited ‘ ,1 .- i- stool g1 sT-‘ifh pqstE-rx_'YV'oi-a"“ Hi5 \ plirates. a Yang Tse Kiang, and an Olga and a Rhine, a Sciuc uiiil 0hio—"rivers." Notice. too, k-inil oi water. Like this turbulent, muddy Jordan? No. n02 "rivers oi living wntcr." "water oil liie. clear as crystal." You reiiiemb- ‘ er in EzekiaPs vision which we. read together that the waters con- stantly increased in deplli. and that. everywhere they went them nuns} healing. and abundant lilo, unil pro sperity. and beauty, and icoii. and ii i lllgifill-fo “Plilstlltzifiglrgfn “.’,','.§.°“o'."'° tgficontiiiiial liiirvcst iin» yiilll‘_.l‘(lllllil., a ' ' ll because oi tlic waiorw oi‘ temple areas; not women, but men: “ml u _ , H x _ no. Emma, but standing Up tiifterllvegf. ‘Tflécy uoii. vcrlinblc younder stand the priests. pouring 5 ‘ will!!!‘ ill-ll- "! 18MB 1875. l0 Now inurk that little, hut very symbolize tlic outpouring 0i the gignmchrm phfage--"0\|[ 0px. not into. but "out oi." All tliv illiter- encc in ilie lives oi mun iii-s in tliu diiierence between these two ox- presslons. "lnto" is tlic worlds preposition. Every stream turns in; and that menus n dead sea. Many u man's liie is simply tho coast line oi a dead sea. "Out oi" is the Master's word. Hi5 thought is oi _ Th"! others. The stream must rlnw in. necks into a sentence Jesus ideal and must ilovv through, ii it is l0 flow out, but It ls judged by its direction, und Jesus would turn it outward. There nlnst. be good con- nections upward, and ii clcni" clionn-el inward, lint the olijcctlvi point is outward toward a parched earth. But before it can ilow out it must illl up. An outilow in this case means an overilow. There must be a ilooding inside bciore there can be a ilowlng out. And let the incl be careiully marked that it is only the overilow irom the fullness within our own liven that brings reireshiug to anyone else. A man praying at a conference in England ior the outpouring oi the Holy Spirit said: "0, Lord, we cairt hold mucli, but we can ovcrilow lots." That is exactly the Master's thought. "Out oi his belly shall ilow rivers oi living‘ water." Do you remember that phrase in the third chapter 0i Joshua- "For Jordan overiloweth all its banks all the time oi harvest.“ When there-was a ilood in the river, there was a harvest in tho land. Has there been a harvest in your liie? A harvest oi the trult oi the spirit-love, loy, peace, long- suiierlng: a harvest oi souls? "No." do you say, "not much oi a harvest. l am airald." or it may be your heart says "none at all." is it hard to tell why? l-las there been a ilood- tide in your heart, a iilllng up irom above until theblessed stream had to iaid an outlet somewhere. and produce a harvest? A harvest out- side ileana a rising oi the tide in- side. A ilooding oi the heart always brings s harvest in the liie. A iew years ago there were great iloods in the southern states. and the cotton and corn crops iollowing were un- prscsd ted. Paul reminded his Roman ends that when the l-loly Spirit has ifee swing in the liie "the love oi God floods our hearts." Please notice. too, the source oi the stream-J‘ out oi his belly." Will you observe ior a moment the rhetorical ifiure here? l used Io suppose it meant "out oi his heart." The ancients, you . mb- er. thought the heart lay down in the dbodininal region. But you will iin that thil book is very exact in its use oi. words. The blood is the liie. The llesrt pumps - the and. Eggs a have given Prince Edward island a ‘Dominion-wide reputation as a leader in these products. it. iurther demonstrates that the solution of the Farmers prob- lem today. in all illne: of Agriculture, la not alone higher prices but In more Intelligent and efficient pyqflugflgn and marketing. All citizens should visit the Poultry Show this week at the Technical School and this will hslp them to appreciate what the ' Poultry Farmer is doing to make P- E. lelilld time“! and prosperous. This space donated with compliments of HYNDMAN G CO4 LIMITED. The Oldest insurance Agency in P. E. I. SR. 0; M. Lampson & Go’s Spring Sale Will Commence ON MARCH 27, 1924 Fine iura, such as Fox of all kinds. Beaver. Otter, Lynx. Fisher. etc. Intended for the Spring Bale. should be in New York not later than the morning oi March 7, 1934- Staple articles, such as Skunk, Opossum. Muskrat. Mink. Raccoon, Bear, Wolf, etc.. reaching New Verk b)’ the morning oi March 14. 1924. should arrive In London In time for Inclusion In the Sale. Messrs. C. M; Lampoon 6. 00.. expect that January Sale prices wlI-l be maintained at the Spring Sale. and they recommend the shipment oi‘ Skunk. Opossum. lmllkv Muskrat. Raccoon. Woli and Fox oi all kinda- Meurs. C. M. Lampoon A 00., report that deliveries from the January Sale have been excellent. which ll In I Indication oi healthy business conditions In the European market. . . 11-2041’. see a wonderful network oi lines so “he that bellsveth on Me"——thal spreading out in every, direction, l, the vital connecting link Wm‘ but all running ,through lighter the great origin oi this stream 0i lines Into heavier, and still blacker. liie-out oi the very source 0i illc iinlll every line covergea in. the within him shall go a ilooii-tldv 0' grout stomach artery. And every- liie, bringing reireshlng. *""'_ where the blood goes there is liie. cleansing, and beauty. and "w" Now turn to a book oi physical everywhere within tho circle 0i’ hi“ geography and set a map showing liie. even though. Jilin the w! the water system oi some great streams and the wife streams. h" valley llko the Mlaslasipvi and you be iiucnnloiouo exit/q. . will iinil a striking reproduction oi ~ ' . , , ' the other chart. And ii you will (Te be Bedllvltlied shut your eyes and Imagine the reality back oi the obart. you will see hundreds i cool, clear sprl ilowlng suc essIvsiyJnto runs. brooks. creeks. larger streams. river branches. rivers. and iinsily into the great flVOP-“HIO reservoir oi all. And everywhere the waters go there is liie. The only dliiemnos between these two streams oi liie is in the direction. The blood flow‘ irom the larger toward the smal- sill; the water ilows {N711} the - smallest toward the largest. Both bring liie with its" scoomppaj-j ments oi beauty iinii visor c an! i blood. but the stomach makes it. The salt oi is uotJn tlirlieiirt. butilbla‘ is! down . . raga" irultiuinessflrbere is Jesus‘ plot oi the Christian down in the wed? A: the resihstmmriiown. out . I ' mpellbirw (prawn in " marvelous a ken liie