EBRUARY 1s. 193s Valentino Skate Tonight Only-fie. Valentine Gift to every skatcr. Band-ll numbers of appealing music. —-25c.— BOWLING WRESTLING HOCKEY NEWS or nit _ CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN SPORT WORLD BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT Night. i (Canadian Press) NEW YORK. Feb. ERNIE sciiiii IN siiiiiius tlillllllfll scious As Result 0f K.0. At Hands 0f Carnera. Friday 12—ETnle g ronun nnnouncrnrni Moncton Hawks-Ab- bie game postponed un- til further notice. Next game, Wolves vs. Abbies Friday night. All tickets purchased for Hawk game good f0!‘ Friday night's match. Any person. wishing to have refund on tick. ets, call at the Forum Box Office. Present plan will rc- main open during the LOOKING ’EM OVER m: "rec" "Tough Luck” Local hockey fans were disap- pointed last week end. They miss- ed their P68111111‘ many night "B13 Three" hockey treat. The Forum management anxious to give said ions their same. made what they thought tho necessary arrange- ments. at extra expense, and clear- ed the decks for the postponed same to be played on aturday night. But once again o1’ nian weather took a. hand and as a. re- sult Saturday night came and Went. and no game. In the first Place it was icé in the Straits Abbie-Hawks game did not come off on schedule, the Mum man-i I-Soment nevertheless, are to heartily commended for their tire- 1985 efforts in endeavoriilg to have ti" 81111111 Played. Anxious to please has been the motto of the Forum officials since thc opening of this fine structure, and last week's ex- llcllililt and whole-hearted gesture “Ward the hockey loving public is another feather in their hats, 811d will not soon b? forgotten. Gentlemen, to you m] m do“ om- silk cllupcziiis. “cheer vii. Fans, Wolves wiu Be Here Friday." liiiuiiiiii sicii THE PERSIJNAL ELEMENT IN Dr. A. H. Gordon Urg- es Medical Golleags ues T0 Remember That Patients “Are People, Not Cases.” The following report of the ad- week. All present reser- . Hockey The P. W. C. co-eds and the Com- ercial Boys of F. W. C. played an ion-sling game of hockey in the ucnu on Saturday. For the Co-cds we have Patter- , McKle, and Prowse, who were __ ndlng, skating fast and back- ng nicely, roi- the Boys, the front line of nlpbeli, Beer and Fraser, also the lid line which consisted of Pep- , Leigh and Dixon all played ndcrful hockey. Some heavy checking was handed tby the boys’ defence of Cotton, cly, Cody getting a 20 ‘minute nnlty for an illegal check? . _ Hume Keefe coached the Boys Of Mme publy. Last but"not least we have Joe eiislow who refereed to tilt- satis- ct-lon of all-the girls. Final score being 6-2 in favor of e Wimmen. A return game is scheduled in the- Schaaf heavyweight who suffered a severe iniury in his losing bout with Primo Carerna here Friday night was able to recclve visits from his mother and sister andj from his manager Johrny Buckleyf today, but a hvpltal bulletin re- i ported his condition 8.5 unchanged. Sohaaf has been in a semi cons- cious condition since he was ad- mitt/‘d t0 the hospital. The injury has been diagnosed as an inter- cranial hcmhorroge. Buckley said The Boston boxer seemed able to reoognlze the voices of the visitors but “stared blankly" at their faces. In meeting Mrs. A. J. Hunter, a pretty. yfllmfi woman who is on vations except season ticket holders will be cancelled unless we arc notified by Tuesday at 5 p.m. PRGGRAMME (Continued from Page 1) Board of Education Hon. W. J. P. MncMillsn, M 13,, Minister. ‘Hon. J. D. StCWflPt, K c. lion. c. srclt-n SlliWp lrn ll 1-". McPlicc, I3. A., Hon. H, 1)_ M“, Lean, Hon. Adrian Arscnauft, 11 A., Hcatl; Strong. K. C. Advisory Board which held up matters and on the second occasion, a snow storm sud- denly arose Saturday afternoon and_the second plane trip to the Island which was to carry tlie re- dress delivercd by Dr. A. II. Gor- Local and provinclalhockey fan- dorn will answer to the call of bat- tle on Friday night next when Ab- bies and Wolverines clash on home 1 maining Hawks over had to be a.- hviidoy in Melbourne. Australia, you would never guess that she is the s. N. Robertson, M. A., 1L D, H. H. Shaw. B. Sc.. Rcv. J. A Murphy, D. D., Elmer Pineau, Mrs. bandoned. Half‘ ihc ‘personnel of the lineup arrived about noon. namely Coach Percy Nlcklln; Jimmy Fflftcr, Bert Connolly. Bill Miller, Aubrcy Webster, "mid" James end Bill Walker. and hop- ped off ytrterday morning at 10 o'clock on return in order to be in time for the train which will carry them to Halifax where they have an important dato with Jack Colin's Wolvrrines. It is expected that the postponed Abbie-Hawk immc wlll be set over until the end of the regular lParrui-i mhedulm Sifr-r-rlfill Although the alnvc mcnflongd' “A i i Export Outlook Brighter ioe in one of the most important‘ hockey league fixtures in the hisiory of these provinces by the Sea, 1n ‘ the meantime the Red Shirts ivilll get in plenty hard practices be- tween now and Friday night and at the same time not forgetting to keep their weather eyes on the doings across the Strait, the results of which will be awaited with mush interest by all and sundry. , I _ Practice At 11 This A. M. i “Chick" Williams will send his second Abblcs into action against “Chuck" 0'Conncr‘s senior crew this morning in a practice work-out from ll to l2 o'clock. QUEBEC don, brother oi Mr, J. P. Gordon of this city, appeared in a recent Montreal exchange: Just as most poisons have their antidotes so the American College tors gave them stones they turned to fetishes and incantatloirs, and many got from Christian Science and chiropractic the relief that scientific medicine did not give because it grew so scientific that it leaned backward instead of downward. "But a. great change is coining over the medicine of the last few years and the ‘person’ has again come before the footlighis where for years thc ‘case’ had held atten- tion. "The first aim of treatment is to prevent death. That was one of the pregnant sayings of onc of McGllYs great mun, the late Pro- fessor James Stewart, and that 1.. the patienifs Maglla. Charts, when as a. person he is put into our hands, and that, maybe, would sometimes prevent on ill’: one hand, the dramatic resort to sur- gery or, on the other, the pm- ccdure for our own convrolllences." of Physicians provided this after, noon an antidote to the terrifying array of medical terms. that iliry have Iiecn using during their con- vention at the Windsor Hotel throughout the week. The general public who have been reading of the discussions of common and ull- common diseases, may have got so fearful for their health that they may have become slisccpfblc to ill- I10"? through lmaeination of Win10 of the symptoms that have been described. So the antidote ivas provided 111 the clnshv: .s"55l0l1 by Dr. A ._ Gordon, of lvfonircnl who askrtl the "serious mlrderl men, bent upon the advvwemcnt of their art. lo give up a. quarter of an hour to consideration of the patient as ii ‘p8l"0!‘.’ and not irrrely as B, ‘case’. al- future. cs-cds-Goal, Bennett; Defence, ticrson, Maser, ‘McKinnon; For- rds, L. Wing, Hill, Rattcnbury; litre, Prowse, Rogers; R. Wing, W boss of a. gold mine in the jungle has been working her own claim 1111i! 110551118 a gang o: native “boys" ilfigof New Guinea. med Mamarem Yet for the past 15 months she Fmmtv of “k1,”, D.,‘. this College ntlcy, McKic. Boys-Goals, Ling; Defence, Cody, tton; L. Whig, Campbell, Peppln; R. Wing, ntrc, Beer, Leigh; 1 er, Dixon. ‘ L P. U. hockey teams made a .-= showing at the Arena rink ‘ Their junior 1 shotsylayed a 1 all tie with tEnd Hawks. This was u fast i; game for juniors, and the iliflil men feel that their kid team ade ll splendid hit against their 1 n‘ ay ovening. avy opponents. ilic L. P. U. senior Wing shots n from the Chislers, the score be- g 7 to i1. Hooker White, who play- - the llPlS for the Union team, had mc difficult shots to handle, us at the lonely Edie Crcck Goldfields of New Guinea. DESCRIBES LIFE Deszriibi-rlg hei- life in the wilds, Mrs. Hunter, who 1.; B, slim tvcunan with athletic figure and shlnglcd hair, sold: "The day starts at 6 a. m. for the boys, and very little later I walk down to the claim clothed for work in shorts and a man's shirt. 'I‘hcii the moment it is removed from the around until it is sent to the bank. “Intense cold throughout the year is one of our troubles. But really, there is so much work to be done during the day, with accounts and I supewise all handling of gold from . _ S. N. Robertson, M ii__ 1,1, D_ G. D. St cl, M. A., L‘Iy l-I. Seaman, M. A., J. H. Blanchard, M- A., J. G. Bennett, M. A, W. J. MacDon- ald. B. A., James B. Bro-w, M, so, J. F. Maalvilllan,‘ B. A., Fdith- Hush, 13.. A., Waucn Duchnmimi B. A., Adelaide Humphrey, M A,» iJ. G. Paterson, M. A.. Lloyd Show, B. A., Lctliia Texture 5.. tc.. Live Stock Branch in a. rcviow of forcefully 011 the cattle market situation. “Dur-l case and Dr. Pierre Gauthier oi ing the wggk ended January 12m Portncuf also dealt with the need 45a came ware 103d“; on ma. s5 of preliminary education. i, Miwhcster Commerce for Bil‘ken-: w, head, Erlglaild, and ii; is undfl-stcod; case of accident also arose. Pierre Pas'more, that regular weekly shpincnts al-c-Gllgmll- MLA- f“ Kalllmmlsk“ “A revival of Interest in good Weights of good quality cutilc for, IDPO-specllvc export is probahly the in a rather quiet market "n," states the MiLKEE In- lce Sci-vice o." the Dominion‘ (Continued from Page l) He askvd them to remember that _ ' after all the patient had luovcn- i able rights to life. liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and that hope was one of the chief factors The objecting members clalmecl chat was first necessary was a cam- ghlgn of education amongst thc farmers. L. J. Tliisdel of Maskinonge spoke that aspect of the The question of responsibility in Eleanor Lowe, Ella M. MacGrath. being arranged for, expansion in the! claim“ that ll i1 light 011 l1 farm- ‘ nunmers 80mg forward bang carrier's wagon wcni. out and an 1106i. prince of “raps Cpcge Munmi tingent upon the ifnppgygnlent m ideal; with a mmorcqr happened, it _ Scclrty Presidmt, Cilarlcs II. B. Long- worth, B. A., Se. Vic" Presidents. l-Iis Honour Georg~ S. Inman, K. F. McQurild. K. C. B. A. Secretary.’ M. Alban Farmer, B. A., LL D., the relation bctwcelrthe home and ,cxport markets in tllc matter of re- turns. Thero appears now to be much more life to the market, de- C.. Mrs. William Brelviui, Arthur spite its unsettled condition. De- mand on sliiispiirg account i5 show- ing a little bctter tone and these might mean the ruin of the farm- ers. Mr. Caron amended the bill to meet this situation, thereby reliev- ing the farmer of the proof in case of accident because tllalight on his wagon had gone out, but Mr. Gag- non and other rural members said that if a case of that nature should iii making the is’ck person well. while fears, often as groundless as the imaginary bear that the sleep- ing child dreamt of, should be brin- ishecl as effectively as possible by the attending physician. Dr. Gordon said ‘that the title, “The patient us n per-Ion" migliti seem to be trite to the point off banality, b_ut in the progress of the medical art a. cos". of ilTni-"s may, by almost impcrccptiblo slag- es, puss from being "person" through the stage of being a "prob- ' 1cm", and end up, in being so much material. The art of mrdi cine was fouridwl upon facts ascer- tained by physiology, and phyrics and Qlirica‘. training equipped doctors chemistry to employ those into ey \\'i‘l‘0 sent in hard and fast. ooizcr said he had 120 shots, but e official tally man said he had , . The L. P. U. junior team are all correspondence to occupy the even- ings and Sundays,‘ that little time to think 0f weather conditions or civilization." ‘Treasurer, John P. Gordon. there is lo. liness, Hard Times Help 1111i; boys, their fathers brig uncli Union men for many years. ese boys are trained in practice ih the senior hockey team. _ IlCK Y HIGH-NECK NIGHTGOWNS ARE BACK CHICAGO, Feb. ll-l-llgh neck ivns for women are back l11 llley are the tricklest new thlflfls the lingerie section of s well- 0m department store. ' Who 1.; buying them Not izrnnd~ ihcr. N0, not by 5') years. Her lllsticated granddaughter-espec- - if she has a good urine-h 11¢- i= fling, at least to see, sales girls art: "Those ncwylckrd locking 1011B lo gowns." And she might mean like mother d to wear in boarding school. But the chances are flhe 111611115 1- new form-fitting variety, remin- =11tof inc stage days of Sarah hardt. 0f tea nose satin, one model dc- ' ded to the floor, showing 0111i’ '~ tips of the toes. It had an Em- ‘ lop of satin stripe heavy chif- li- The sleeves became close fitting "lo elbow and covered the wrist. “in tight, form and curve reveal- likc many evening gowns. same number in black -- of Marie nniolnoitcfmany n "~'- will contain one or moro C lint if. daughter did mean gownli ‘r moihcl- iced to wear in nel- pis- " this, well, they're to be had. ‘ Wort they are. V"? tailored, trimmed perhaps 1 fine embroidery, niece hish ' - 1011i! sleeve numbers are ' lkht and full. Some even have "illness achieved by plaits sci the shoulder. ‘rile-y are tied at ‘ w-nist demurely with ribbon. ‘+—-——-—--_- n’ ‘W118 lingerie has lacs lite-which matches u» silk of ' “l! unseat b from. HELPS WORKERS Often lvirs. Huntcr helps her workers in the actual jcib of shovel- llng. the auriferous sand out of tho mine into sluice boxes, where the and then baked dry. As for the na- ,tivc workers, she adds: "Personally, I have never experi- enced any trouble with the boys, but that is all a matter of tactful hand- ling. Remember that they are hu- man beings like yourselves, and good feeling will result." To reach her claim from the out- side world, Mrs. Hunter must trav- el for half an hour by airplane from the coast, and then walk for five hours to her home, ‘ the surrounding country‘ is too mountainous to permit an airplane to land. To visit her nearest, neigh- bor she must walk for five hours through jungle, over mountains and ford mountain torrents. Yet she states emphatically that she. would yiot change lici- life for all the theatres, race meetings and dinner parties which Melbourne could odfer her. ANOTHER WHITE WOMAN_ gold dust is washed from the sand' s Hort-icultue A note of sped-ill Significance i5 given by the Dominion Horticultur- ist in the annual report of the lvilkilstci- of Agriculture, which reads: "Since the financial depres- sion set in a nlm-ked increase has been noted in the correspondence in regard to ornamental horticult- ure. People scorn to have more time for work about the home and are trying more than in the past to make the surroundings attractive. The experience gained with the ool-_ lections of plants under-test, and methods of growing them, form the basis of the replies to many of these correspondents." . t 5 6 and I am the only white woman who has ever lived in the Flly Rive!‘ region." Speaking of her home life in the jungle wilds, Mrs. Zimimer added: "Actually my home life is for easier than that of many women 111 cities, for servants are excellent, and my cook can produce a dinner superior to any hotel dinner-I pay him $8 a month. "But the cost of living is high. Luxuries such as pigeon, oysters and crabs are our staple dict, but the the honour conferred upon Dr, J, F, Booth, Comimiislioner of Agricult- ural Elconomlcs by the American Farm Economics Association at its Cincinnati, Ohio, in electing him a vim-president of the This is only the Second occasion the University of with a Ph.D., from Cornell in eco- nomics, was formerly Commissioner of Marin-Til in Saskatchewan and was for. a time engaged in economic worlr in the United States. I-Ie was appointed to his present position in the Department of Agriculture in 1929, and he has organized the work Branch. 3111188 are having a stimulating ef- fect ou the situation generally." Federal Economist Honored word 1111i 111st been received of wenty-third annual meeting in association. ince its inception that a Canadian conomlst has been 8o honoured. Dr. Booth, who is a graduate of Saskatchewan, of the Agricultural Economics Canadian Seeds Exohanged A report issued by the Division facts and translate them methods as Simple as may bc, with instruments as few and as portable as will answer the purpo'c of plac- ing the examination o!" sick pco- come before the courts the judges would find against the farmers on the ground that there was a. pre- sumption, at least, against them. Minister its... With Mrs. Hunter is Mrs. C. F. Zinnner, the wife of a New Guinea magistrate who controls hundreds of square miles of territory P0P"- lated by savages. To reach Port lviioresby, from where she took ship for Australia, Mfrs. Zizlnimer walked 130 miles across mountaimranizeo and in grilling hcnt to the coast. and then along a‘ sandy Mach m town. yet Mm znnmq- acorns carriers. saying: “Only tourists suflci- them- selves to be carried by tho boys? "No other white ivoman lives within hundreds o1 mil“ °i "W home," she emfltillwd, "and we vifllt our nearest neighbors by vim“- Y“ I am never lonely il1°"‘- 1°’ ‘l’ is thickly pc-culoica comiwr-‘d will‘ no Fly River district where m! ordinary essentials, such as flour and sugar are desperately dear be- cause of transport, difficulties." In a. comprehensive review of tho export cheese trade in Canada on a recent occaslonll. 1". Singleton, Dominion Dairy ooiumlssioner, stat- ed that diversion from the manu- facture of butler to that of cheese is likely to continue in cheese pio- ducing districts until the price oi’ but- ter bccccnes relatively higheras coni- pnred with the price of cheese; and during the past two seasons, he ob- served, the operation of cheese fac- torifl during the winter months 1s economically unsound under such conditions as have prevailed re- cently, that is, the price of buttcr being two and s half times the "u 105351-11 stationed, F1000! 011080. of Botany of the Dominion libzperl- mental Farina Branch shows that the annual exchange list of seeds. collected in the arboretum, compris- ed some 1.557 species, and a. total oi 4,802 packets of seeds, 159 rooted plants ‘and 11 cuttings were sent out to 110 botanic gardens or other botanical institutions throughout the world. In return 21, 1'11 pockets of seeds and 2i cuttings were rc- ccived from foreign gardens. Spec- ial‘ supplies were obtained, as rc- quired, for scientific workers in Canada. Twenty-eight packets of seed of Canadian wild flowers were sent to the War Graves Committee for planting on the battlefields o‘. Europe. Other activities included studies of the life history of noxi- ous weeds. and of chemical meth- Hon. Adelard Godbout. of Agriculture, and chairman of the committee, dealt with this phase of tho matter and was of opinion that no additional legal responsi- bility would rest upon the farmer in case of accident because of the passage of the bill. However, the committee was reluctant in the matter. 'I'lie rural members gained an unexpected ally in Jos. Samson, Liberal M. L. A. for Quebec Centre, who said he had changed his mind since last year, and was now against the bill in the interests of the mot- orist himself. The mutter will probably come before the House next week to be debated upon all over again. BIDS FAREWELL (Continued from Pagc l) to the rank of a minor Basilica. Two additions had been made to Queen square and Ilcchford Square Schools. Monsignor MacDonald thanked the congregation for co- operation in accomplishing those things, and in bringing the educa- tional institutlons to their standing of the present time. Thanks was also expressed to the boyls, young, assiduous attitude ill beautify the ceremonies of the Ba- silica. High tribute was paid Mr. Bessie Blanchard, organist. Monsignor MacDonald fclt that‘ hc had been appointed to succed a very worthy man in ihc person of Father John B. Maclntyi-o, and» hoped to be able to carry on thc work as efficiently and as success- fully as his predecessor. Ho hoped that the prayers oi the congregation» with which he had livcd so long would follow him in his new field‘ of ministry. and if l1: slvuld not moot them so frequently here below hé hoped that gll would be re- unitpd again at the Master's feet oiled medication. inthefifllfiom. ple upon a sound sceiitifi: without pretending ~_o reach ubso iute accuracy in any individui‘. iri- stance. After gathered ‘means by which these facts are brought together and synchroniz- ed-‘this had been krlown from time immortal as medical instinct o! medical intuition, but tliLs intui- inflnite capacity for servation. human that must not be looked." "and that has been described as the ‘crystallization of thought pat- tern.‘ What a man is today is the basis . - . the was all there facts on’: arc other an ob- tion was nothing more than ilCCllff-T ‘ Another Aspect "There is one other aspect of ihc 0V6!" continued Dr. Gordon. thing that he has been thinking tn the year or‘ decades gone by and those are the things that have technically it may bo correct i0 ggy tlmi; all the phflgfls '0; himlall inherent in these words we life in sckncss or health arc biolo- raises the point. that Foals And llopc llavi- Claim “Besides his rights ii patient as. a person has other claims ll])0. our attention and two of those arei ills fears and llishopcs. Fear is rarely in proportion to its actual cause. Slck humans see in thi- half light “f partial klloivlcdgcthc spec- tre n‘ cancer and paralysis formed from 20m" innocent symptom~the impouancc of that symptom i0 liim docs not rest in what it is but iii what it appears to him V.» lic. “The fatty tumor on the cllt-sb ivall does not disturb the mind nf the doctor hut t0 the ;cns‘tlvl\ woman who fears it is a cancer of thetbrcast it is no less than a3 tragedy and the puffy epic-lids which come from poring over hooks may mean little to the 00011115}, but to the medical student who thinks they mean that he had Bright's Disvase they mean u grea deal. A _minor injury in a person who has a person's. responsibilities may be- some p, maj"r cramity when look- "cl at through that person's eyes. “Then there is fear of the n11- known. I have often. wondered with what mental attitude I should face the fact of being in Prague or Moscow with rheumatic fevcr and without money and not knowing Czechoslovakian or Russian, and being tal-cri from a ivurd into a. theatre fllcre to have my attitude <‘Xll1‘<‘“-’ili'.‘. color and nutritlo" iiatcd L1’ a llulidlfcd cheerful and students, having my joint‘. sol-c my, '3 11.. 0:1 to soc if they wcrc "cild much time spent over ‘it-art which all present seemed to consider very bad. to have heavv hands hammer my chest and c3111 hands push in my stomacll-ivould the fear of what was to come next take hold of me, I wonder? i "Even to the native born there are fears inherent in a hospital. The new discipline, the many in-i struments. the numerous cxaminaa _ tlons, the basal metabolism mach-i ine which suggests an anaesthetic. the X-ray room which suggests I-Iadcs. the presence of strangers and the ab:cncc of friends. Is there not enough here to bring fear to the calmest? "fl-igain fears come not from what things are but from what they seem to be. ‘Ilherc are some other fears which are oflcn forgotten by us when we deal with cases but are real to the ‘persons’ who are inside the ‘cases.’ Medical Tcrms Like Death Knoll "some words in our ianguaizo have come to have with some D60- ple the significance of a death monia, paralysis, liaemorrhagc. Any one of these or like w-ords dropped carelessly into the ears of a sick person may crash down the given him shape as a person. while corridors of his mind with a noise like the crack of doom. The dam!" H5" crastination of a. necessary; pro- i CIVIL SERVICE RIIMDRS RIEE Probability 0f Prem- ier Stewarts Ap- pointment As Chairman Is Dis- l puteil By llloiltreal Star. ’ 'i‘llo hluhlrlril iii Fob. 1U carries the foilouiin: drrspaich from its Ottawa correspondent: "Ito-organization of the Civil Scr- vicc Currlnlission is now llnpencliill: to curry out tlic recommendation oi the Plii-liiinloiitziry; conlniiitrc last session. . "It is learned today on high au- llioriiy that tho chairman, Hon. W. J. Roche, though slutccl for retire- ment. will likely remain for a month or two, giving tn the proposed new orgaiiiznitioii the benefit of his ex- perience. Dr. Newton MacTavisii and J E. Trcliiblny, the other two Commissioners, \vi'l be replaced Charles; H. Bland, assistant secre- IjI.‘ llnry of tho mmlllirx-"lriii, will be m [knoll Cancer, consumption, pneii? ilic iivnv board, with n. possibility that llc may rt-plncc Dr. Roche a: chairman. Br. Bland was highly praised by the civil service invest- igating committee last session. “For ilic French-speaking coili- inissioiit-rslliil, the probable selection is Louis D. Durant, K.C., of Three Rivers, a young barrister who was ‘.110 Conservative candidate there at the general election in. 1930. At least two other aspirants are in contem~ plaiion. Right. Hon. R. B. Bennett, Prime Minister of Canada, is giving serious thought to the appointment of a woman member of the commis- sion in view of the fact that a dis- tinct majority of the civil scrvicc stall in Ottawa are women. As ye! hi: has no one particularly in mind "There is no ground for the report - that Premier Stewart of Prince Ed- ward Island will bc appointed to thc commission." Q (We quote this from the Montreal Still‘, but The Guardian has what it considers good authority for the COl‘l'(lClll(‘S5 of ilic Ottawa Journal's prediction to the contrary.) GRASSHOPPERS GOOD LAYERS In an address given before the University Club of Ottawa. recently, Mr. Arthur Gibson, Dominion En- tomologist, gave an account of the valuable work being conducted by the Entomological Branch for tho Federal Department of Agriculture The losses from injurious insecti amount to many millions of dollari every year within the Dominion. Al a result of investigations conductet by federal elitomologists, he claimed that important savings are result- ing every year from entomological research. Referring to infestations of gras- hoppers in Western Canada, l-ie stat- ed tliat the officer in charge of the fcdcriil work in Manitoba, Mr. Nor- man Griddle, in directing a federal survey of the grasshopper infested areas in Manitoba last autumn had discovered the eggs of grasshoppers in numbers up to 140,000 in one square foot of soil. Unless these eggs are reduced in numbers by ad- verse ivcathcr or other natural con- trol factors, there is every probabil- ity of nn important outbreak of des- ltfllCtiVfl grasshoppers in Western gonictlmcs Canada during the coming summer stop hoping. You may not realise it but the most obscure patient in the public Wflfd in the inatlfi of - llcipo is on your lcvcl. "People who arc ill are more 831C111 Dllolwmona W1? 160011111!" l1" W11" W’? intend i“ n" "um 3m“ 0l)’.‘il to suggestion than {hose who ourselves and by analogy 1n others the “hole iniih hero-nu“ noi-lllllll. are u-cu and the gloomy visage. disquieting lights ‘and shadow: which the biolmy of the laboratory‘ l1i‘1‘8011 illilt a few sirhn and the chemistry of the lost tub" do not explain and. w:- firmly. if vaguely, realise that lllf‘ person women's and men's choirs fol‘ their: called ‘me’ and the 1)'l'.'0l‘l called standing of the word Milling m. ‘you’ llns each about lrinl an liiwlmllllil-‘i 11 Eliwc 811d 11”" .' tangible boundary or an nurn hi‘: which eve-n biological invusfiigo-l W- -7- 310W". choir loader and Miss, mm must nrslfntn before it 0llll‘l“-'.| needlessly burdened nf Ch-uistirmlfv one b)’, "The founder taught and healed people. because those Il‘l"Y‘i il"'i sutl". to save. but later the Ilollso". of ("Pi or Hotel's Dlcli whore 11w sltl: laoxl like tho truth, If I told ml cldcvly n‘ tlli‘ bus". of the lungthot hc lien-- i111“! mania I nm telling the pathil nl truth, but that p0l'5'l‘.l's u: disease. which is not. i“ liuvc in mind and l ivifh iliiul". u‘ fear which has no f fear and the raising of bores arr so important in a ilcctuis that I doubt if any n. ival1c~ his h~p"s. and each patient "B31395 hill/ill! i115 l““'-*"vl1"p""'; was n nurson who cuild not b" dull‘ one, and the Church ‘llrrnuc-‘s tl1"§-"011' Whom vvc have 11$ 11 lYW-"liiliwifocl civil-Ev by any other per- dark ages tendon this ill». of incn has. his hopes and ihr qufillnr. oil so“, ill" air of uncertainty and grave lufvrllo<is stagger; hope and 1'8‘ uiovrs a ‘large factor in the will t0 u‘ ‘.l".‘ll." l1 ~. fimlou onvphnsizcd the im- -r- of illcrozvgli stlldy of the -»< 1i pnisoll and not only wry prolalr-m. maintain- rzavc basis from whlcw, 3/1 allay his fears and ad- this "Tlxrrr i- no royal road into this “"1111! l<"c'x""rlir.". but paflcncc. persever- olhcr of 115* nnvc and obr."r\':1i50n wl'1 carry us been cared for blicamc ill" scat: of functions exceeds ihcm 111 imPOTi", for along thi- gwn rail" of anxiety learning and Scicnro s71.‘ in the ancc. Your patient hopes that hi‘. mid klnrlnoss, Thrrn are manv re- chalr of faith and the slllllfl“ with has not 11 izrnvc diwnsc. than he wards in the run-Mice of medicine. his ills b"ciimc a casr- 1vi'h n'i.1.ll- tropes to improl". then b" well. If mine arc mats-vi" r-lsomc are not. ncss and later still m":‘.‘l"“.1‘ b"- came a matter most!" of sfivlstlcs and of morbid anatomy. And be- lit‘. cannot got. "r11 he h "as won't suffer, l he hop-s family will b1 provided ‘for. ho but tlic greatest which will come 1115' to us. will b" the gratitude we re- It cclve bsccuso at some time, game- cause the sick and the sad and the would be a bad day for you and where, we have treated a Dotlflil iwesk asked for bread and the doc- for your patient if you were tc as a ‘poi-son!” BUMMISSIUN