fl I _ l7 I l» i health. i m: QBIIARLDTTETOWII GUARDIAN Morning Daily lFoundezl 1881i .», President Lleul. Col. W. Chester S. Mcbun _ - Vice Presldcnl. J. ll. Burnett. F. J. l. ,-lllit0r and lllunagnn; Director J. B. Burnett. I. l. l. Secretary Licut. 1.2.“. D. A. MucKlnnnn, D. S. 0. Assocmte tldiotor Flank Walker SUBSCRIPTION RATES 85.00 per year (In uovame; deuvered to City “.00 pct year m umancc; ma: cu to P. E. llllllll ‘.00 per yuu uu LLJLIIIIR) maucu l.» pang... gnu U5 Members AIULI. Burcau o1 circulations “The Strongest Memory ls Weaker than the Weakest Ink". THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1938. Good ‘Friday’ Surely hu hath harm’ our gricfs, and carried our sarrhrlal". .yct we did esteem him strivcvtt. slur/tun of God and afflicted; Bu! he was wlntntlvd for our transgres- Jlttllf. . . He was lwwisvtl for our inn/titties: The rlzastixvttivti/ at‘ our peace was upon him, And will: lll.\‘ stri/u-s 1w are healed. xlll w.‘ l Kw;- s. ltaru‘ t/uttt‘ ll.\'ll'tl_\'f lVv ltazv tnrtilvt .':'.'t'\- UllC to his own "way: Amt tho Loni hath laid on him the iniquity of us all. Hr was t-pfrrssuul and he was afflicted, Yet hr afctiull not his anoutlt: He is [voila/it as a lamb to the slaughter, And as a sharp before his shearers is dumb So he o/uvtr/lt not his mouth. He was talcen from prison and from judg- tncul: And who shall ticclare his generation? For hr was cut off out of the land of the tiring: For thw transgrrssioti of my people was he striclcvtz. i i i i Set not tnztch liv this—'u'lto is against thee or with thrc lat! so do and rare that God he with that‘. In crcrv Ihino that thou dost have a good“ cansr/lwtrr and God shall defend thee: for him that God will help no man’: mar/thwartnnvs shall tic Hlllfl to annoy. If than ranvt h." still and stiffer thou shalt M!’ fuilltottl any ttaulit the hclp of our Lorll; hr lctttlru-rth tho time and man- ner of ltrl/‘itir/ thee, and therefore thou ouohttxrt to rvsrroe tll_\'.rc‘lf for him. To (Tad it lPluttaP/h to hclfv and to deliver from all ronfusitm. If it srcntctlz to than that thou knowest many things and art understanding enough, yet are there many more things that thou knowcst not. Think not hit/lily of thyself but rather ac- huntulrtlge thins ignorance. Why quilt than frcfrr thyself before any otlmr, since many other are found bet- tcr lmtrncd and more wise in the law of Gad than thou.’ lf than will horn and kitow any thing pro- filahly love t0 he unknown and to be accaunlcd as azaught. Thou contrast to scrrr and not to govern: know rcvll that thou are rallcd to suffer and to labour and not to lic ittlc and tell ldltlf. Herr‘ arc tnvn frowcd as gold in the furnace: lmrn tnay no man stand IHIlCSS he “will httntltlc ltitttsl‘l_f with all his heart for (lad. He hath orrat lrattqttilily of heart that sat- trth not/into hv praising/s or blantings He whose (ottsrirttrr is clean, he will soon he contra! and lilrasrtt, Thou arr not Ito/tor thauylz thou ho praised nor thr’ more rill‘ lhattglz thou lm blam- rd or tlis/w-aisrtl. lVhol than art, that thou art," that God lenniwth thrr to lit‘ and thou cans! be said to hr no orcalrr. .. (f thou Ialrr hrvd ruhat thou art coil/tin thou shalt not rrrlr what man sav of thrc: man loolcrlh on th." visor/r’ and (Ind on.. thr ltcnrl; man ronxitlrrrtlz lhr‘ llPCIlS amt (Ind ffttiA/‘l/t Ihr lhouf/hls. Study to lirw" so nor.‘ lltal thou ntav in lhfl hour of tlrtz/lt ra/hcr rrjoirr than dread. 'l“/1c Imitation of (‘lu-ist Ontario's Mental Health Programme Thrcc milcs muth of St. Thunms, Chtlzlrio, says Th1- L tltltttltttll lillt/IHFFI’, 1,100 ucrcs of farm land are bciugg ll‘illl*l(ll‘l'l'l(‘ll into rm urea that wlll contain ouc of the largcst hospitalization projects ever uudcrtnkvu in (Taunda and which, with an expenditure of npproxinultcly $8.000,00o, con- stitutes the lnrgcsl ctmslrucliou project now undcr ‘Way in the l)('llllllll0ll_ Consisting of thirty-six buildings, "eluding ' the administration lmilrliilg, (liognostlc clinic and __ aboralorics, rccvpllon building, medical and sur- 9- 'cal buildings, central (lining hall and kitchen, 0- mfirmarics, [mvlllions asscnlblv halls, residences for doctors and mlrscs, nllCllflilfllS' homes, power f. plant, wnlcr tower and farm-building group, the . Ontario (lava-rumour lloslvital for Mental Dis- eases at St. Tllmnilg is thc first in a probable ro- framme of three such provincial projects. he ocations of lhc ntlu-r two under consideration are ,1‘ Brampton and Port Arthur. When completed, the new St. Thomas hospital -' will reprcscnt the most advanced methods and 7 practice in hospitalization planning, layout, {structural design, architectural treatment, land- scaping and building oricn1atlon_ This is the (Mun-in (lovcrnmcnfs idea of dis- charging properly its responsibility for mental A t’ cw yours ago,‘ such a scheme would Ibc (Ilflmllflffifl as imnrncticable. What has 0c- . ‘curred to charm: public opinion and rally It be- jflfld such a policy? ' v . smwer was given lha other dny by Lord - "'r In his address before the Canadian =Cqmnlitlec for Mental Hyglenc. “In 4 + '1 ‘t a this Dominion," said the Governor General, “there are more hospital beds for the mentally af- flicted than for all other types of illness put to- gether. Out of every hundred children now in our schools, four, under present conditions, are doomed to suffer from mental ailments. There (‘can be no doubt about the urgency of the prob- cm. mental ailments can be cured. With proper treatment, under proper conditions, a great ma]- ority of affcctcd individuals can be made at least partially self-supporting. As His Excellency expressed it, “there is no field of therapy in WhlCll more tangible, definite and demonstrable success has been accomplished than in that which covers the treatment of mental diseasés and the cure of mcnlad disease." It was this conviction, based on his own exper- ience botb asa doctor and as a former acting superintendent at Falconwood Hospital, which inspired Hon: Dr. W. J. P. lylacMillan to attempt to do something in the way of providing modern facilities for mental treatment in this Province. “Extravagzmce". his political opnoncnts declared; all that most of the Falconwood patients needed was “to be kept warm-they don't need treat- ment"; and promptly after their election these same economists called a special session to get authority to borrow no less than three million dollars. I Editorial Notes J l\Iaundy Thursday. x x Tomorrow Good Friday. x x x x Another pied-piper is wanted at the dump, otherwise we may have a rat disease plague. x x x x An opposition to be effective must stand its ground; if” is not sufficient that it merely raise its voice in protest. x x x Herr Hitler docs not need to seek new terri- tory to conquer-he has it at his own door and has just to exclaim “ho! presto" and it is his. x x x x One of the main troubles of our present legislators is that they do not know their plat- form and policy, and some of them even their past record on the questions at issue. There can be no representative government when the powers-tbat-be, as here. can manipulatc the public accounts to suit themselves, and with no public control in the legislature. i i‘ * The two-voice Government permits a paid official to stand up in the House and advocate what the vendors have been doing practically since the abolition of the Prohibition Commis- sion—-scll beer and wine for refreshments What the Public Accounts do not contain in the way of undetailed expenditure would fill many volumes. Even had the Government fol- | lowed the practice of giving a line to every re- cipient of its bounty the Public Works report would have been in two volumes instead of one. x x x x Was there ever in the Island’s history such an extraordinary session of the legislature as that now coming to its Easter recess. It has been marked by the gravest parliamentary disorder, with practically no responsible person in con- trol. It is surely time such chaotic conditions should be wiped out, x x x x The City Council is evidently “up against” the experience of new legislators-being call- ed upon to meet expenditures incurred but not accounted for by their predecessors. That is wbcre the absence of an outside auditor gives the powers-that-be their opportunity for misrepres- entation of the true standing of province or city. x x x x Saint John has always been recognized more 0r lcss as Sleepy Hollo\v, and point is lent to this descriptiou- by the facts that a burglar who en- tered a store to break open the safe fcll aslccp on the job, that the proprietor in the morning dis- covered him asleep and allowed him to escape. and that the police, though they knew his immc and who he was, permitted him to evade their clutches. x x x x “If I am asked what l think are the chicf aims of education,” said l\liss 'l'hchna Cnzalct. M.l‘., in a recent speech, “I would say :-“\\’h:\t we want to do is 1o keep children lung cnough at school for them In rcalizc they lmvc not star‘.- cd to be cducatcd. Thcil they will go into lifc with a burning desire to do nlorc. Thcrc S(‘L‘Ill\ to be a lot of trouble in the world today but, as an American humorist has snirl, ‘It ain't so much people's ignorance that (lot-s the hurm; it's lhcir knowing so many things that ain't sob" x x x x Saturday is Hospital Flag Day. Cicero is quoted in the forcward of the book about the New York Hospital as saying that “in no other act docs man approach so ncor lhc gods as when he is restoring the sick to 1hr blessings of health.” There should be put wuh this quotation what Elizabeth. Barrett Browumpvl made one of her characters m “Aurora laugh sa : I think it frets the saints in heaven to s_ee How many desolate creatures on the earth Have learnt the simple dues of fellowship And social comfort in a hospital. x x x x , The dates for the Conservative Convention in Ottawa have been fixed for July 5 to 7. The committee in charge of arrangements have fixed the following basis for selection of delegates:- All Conservative privy councillors who now sup- port thc party. All Conservative Senators. All Conservative members of the House of Com- mons. All defeated Conservative candidates at the 1935 general election. Members of provin- cial Legislatures who support the Conservative party federally. Four delegates from each fed- eral riding with four non-voting alfemallves. All members of the national convention com- mittee as delegates at large. All former Con- servative lieutenant-governors. As many dele- gates at large from each province as that pro- vlnec has ridlngn. Special delegates at large re- ng the youth of the pustyfiulxie "E555 from Quebec and Ontario and three from each ottbcolbcrprovbncea, ‘ Added to this is the fact that in many cases i ___ m wtsxnoatrmww Guano-AN i?» n.-- hlorzs av m: vnw 5UP! Toward Temperance: ‘The Pmvlnclsl Liquor oomml-slon ha: made two lmpcrmnt decisions. It fc-rbldathen1“~‘-of.. t0 taverns, and Inns all games, am:- vlcfory and the authorizes seem 00 have decided to enltme the Oommbslonis decisions. “But elf- lzens should also do their par: In mine that the regulations am ob- served. Any transgression should be lmmedtlsfciy rvpoma to the Parish Corrrmlttee of Cathollc Ac- tion. which wlll 1n turn make the situation lmown to ‘he conunlss- Ion. “Them are nufnlsrous vola- bons, especially 1n cmneotlon W1 l1 the selllng of liquor 1n hotels. tav- ems and clubs. Sunday Infre- tlons are especlsllv numerous but the energetic efforts of Oatho“c Action groups may pmvlde the de- cldlnyz factor 1n the svrurigle." - L‘Ordre Nouveau Moritreal, The “Young Egypt." party mael- lh’: st A‘-_=x‘"‘r'" lav‘ wflr-erd reputed 1n somewhat serious rol- lmZ. whon Vfefd srprvrers frrd l" brerk up the gs-herlng. (‘one Maln the pr2sl"ent of th" "Grwn Shirk." made a pout of Irwludmg extrviivnt anY-fortfirn prpa garda In hl‘ spasm. He also nqwl‘ brought 1n the que='l‘"n o‘ rellz- lrm. tho lwrvrl-w of which 1n" elcdlnn camrwfznlng l; rfW m'r-= 9'14 fvvwu, fv~~~-"v1‘ rmv _',.~-~.~»-q~ 1o wrrk up rsbzlous feebng srlu t 1h? Walt‘. becavr‘ ‘flak rm ""‘"~l" "who bayoai" t" b’ a C ct ha“ has-u cammsrle‘ on nwvlourfy ‘v they. columns 'I‘l:~t i‘ ls c*'s1"1r unvslncss among the Cont" ls i1“- narcnl‘, In fact. we- have rmrlvc“ communcwllrvm whfh Indicate- lhst. some of them "re bv-nrrln-z seriously alarm-ed. ‘The G-vern- menls. one fmalrlncs. has vr-wrrs t“ prev-m nubl1~ npe=chcs which bend to stlr up rellglous hwtred. and some action on their part to stun such a campaign wmfd, we feel ‘urc. b“ ws-‘ootrfld bv Moslcms as wel‘. as Copts-‘The Sihlnx, Calm. In the millennium you wlll p! waited on 1n a. hurdtware store WlLhln fen mimres of your entry; drugs-ores wlll use enough Ink on cash-regilsfer soda-ft-untaln cheeks so that purchssm can read them; llnen shops wlll not have Must- Vaoale Sales; taxi driver‘. w“l have change for a. grcat big one- doVnr blll: rcsloururfls wll know enough to advertise No Music. N0 Rarko, No Other Err-crtainment; the munlcloal subway will equlp statlons with enough signs to tell a first-Luna pa-s-enqvr what. t/o do; ash-fray arms wlll b" at least. fi square Inches; postage slump wont. curl n“ in war.» weatheri fhcalel" curlaiu- will ‘re wlthlu five minulw rr-l m‘ :-di'cv"'s'd time; authors wl‘! refuse 1o be cocktail parted or pups wf-hoxxored: them wlll be no nwnrvaprr syndicates- lf you want V» rcwl X's stuff or see Y's drawings, you wll‘. have to gel; Lhie paper ln ‘which his stuff exclusively mppearsi and nobody wlll fell what l1e'd do 1f he were dictator, or what mlglht happen 1n t-he millennium. — F. P. A. (Franklln P. Adams) 1n the R0- tartan Magazine . The theory that a. llghi lunch spells an efflclent afternoon- sclenoe says It's sound. Dr. Don- ald A, Lalrd, ‘experimental psych- ologist. recently conducted tests whlch led hlm to that conclusion. He described them 1n the current R/oturlsn Murzazlnc Elght young men ate 1n Dr. Land's lalbsrafcry each noon for a month. "We told than we were makim sludles o1’ air conditions," he says. “Ilf they had lm-own that ll: was the size of the noon lunch we were studylng, their bias one way or the other would doubtless have shown up 1n the results. “To make thls defep- tlon more effective, and keep the men convinced that we were sfrudy- lmr air candlrlondnq, detailed rec- ords were kept of temperature. humidity, alr flow, and barometric pressure From tlme to time d11- ferent odors we're uprayed Into the ventllatmg ducts just to clinch this scientific decoration. "On half o‘ the days. scsttvrerl at random through the month, they were given s full-slzed mes‘. wlth trays of brood and platters of ‘seconds’ on lhetalblcln trontnffhlsm they cruld ea‘ alllhey wanted. On 1h.“ who: half cf the duyshowevsr. they wrrc glven a dairy lunch of svrvwhat restricted pfrlnns. or!’ wllh no oooorttunfy for srcc-nd hclowr-s. “Thu-l "tcrdnq at 1 (Yclcck In the afternoon we gave them tests to find out. how much more capable of dolng mental vmrk they were on the davs ‘hey bad eaten the llght meals. The results were al- most socctaculwr. and more than vlndlcale the habit of those bus- ln-css nnrl prnfcsfona‘ pcsons who ate llzhlly at. noon “In corrrctly teculllng ndid~rcls=r= memcrlzsd uTllY :1 hmlf hour prevlnusly, for 1n- olmncc. lhtse men were 22 pet-Sent ‘wetter on thc lilzht-mcnl affer- ‘IOOYW, Accuracy 1n purely mental addlllon, wllhcul Ihc a‘d of rrnprr 1nd prncll. wo: 25 pcrcen-l hrflu‘ xflsr ‘be Vght mo" than after the ‘wavy one. After lb“ hcuvy m"‘ls. "lbenllon flrcluafr-d olmmt '70 pa"- vcnb mrrc." The strmacb ln a TOTEZEfI slatua Dr Dalrd explalus. <u':k= blood nway from the bran. "rhlch ‘llorves ‘thr- hmd 1n no con- dlfllon to do much eke than sleep _n.= many persons know f/o thelr sorrow early In the afternoon.‘ Perhaps It's u belle! In Che sly- lng 1l:’s llllle things 11ml: count. l"erha»ps It's only that well-known Flemmn thoroughness. Anyway. latest conftrlbutlon of Nazl regula- flon ts t-hat hereafter the musical nOIQ “A" alt-all be the product of 435 oeclllatlons, and musical 1n- slznlmenbs whose "A' exceeds 440 osclllatlons may n9 lo r be ploy- ed 1n plhllc. ‘Listen 0 the Ger- man band. themuaids ground: they oscillate. an ‘standard robe-f’ fiederlobotl Gleaner. Next lesion. lo the New York hair-drama foretell. 1Q. wlll be fashionable to; women to hm ventlon of master colffeurs, why a beautiful. woman should not - hence her lovellneu by a ed effect somewhat rvescnmllrlg an u- oloslon In a paint fwwry. This 1a the ldcnflcal argument, no doth. that aborted the Congo vogue of waning a chldnen bone tn the nose. butdmmlees whmtkmbmlatobo. we may my hctpc that the afflic- tlon wll soon run Ila course. -- porlland Oregonian. G ooaon Iln ppmuh Pgnlrmcl: alleneo they pan ohm lhebomlnlonnovemmm mdlllenovlmvaofqlebuuhovo chili-lad u bird nnduu ‘QPUBLIC FORUM ‘Ihll column lo opal for fin qllguuiu by oorronpondonto of questions of literal. Tho Olav- n Gunilla doc: not no; , t . u wrnlponrlenfc. s. r. c. A.‘ bum/u. sun-m the Iaeglslature 1 see Mr. MoPhee stalled that I had Inter- fered with a farmer hauling a hay Dress two and 88W lug down" for beatlnn the horses. Thls la nlsolutely untrue. In the case referred b0 I went to the help of me farmer with my car. and Instead of flndlng fault, with hlm for beating hls horses, s eslcd he should apply the wh1u_ one of them. The farmer's may was “If I beat the horse It wlll make hlm stlll worse." The tanner and other witnesses wlll bear this out. I am, S11‘, etc, II. W. MCLEAN Inspector S.P.C.A. can. nuluis nun-fr- Slr,—Was report of Mr. J. Wal- ter Jones‘ speech 1n your April 1st. 155119. Intended as an April Fool Joke, or dld he actually suW-"Th-e crew of the ferry work under ral- w_ay rules on an eight hour day, with double pay for overtlmc." If he clld? Then I agree he hal "a_bg Lose of Latin and Greek, wh.cl1 did no! do hlm any good" and too little "mathemallc. uhch require. a curacy." Most of our crew work a gen hour (my, s nu: as high as fzur- teen burrs without. uverllm. therefore as an authority on this, Mr. Jcnrs ls a 300:1 I-Io's.c1l1 Breeder, because none of us go: double time for overtlmc. SO. "the promoters of the Wood Island Ferry were hopeful thls pro ect. would force the Railway out orules to place a modern ferry between Borden and ‘Ilormeutlne. The present steamer ls not eco- nomlcal." The Rallwav authorities operate the Ferry, but 1t ls the Dominion ("overnment pays for them and places them on the route and 1t would be ve lnluaatlng to learn by what me 0d of reosonlng he could posslbly hope. that by Bet.- tlng the Government to spend sev- eral hundred thousand dollars to bulld termlnals for A lvstely owned auto ferry at. Woo Island, It, might. force the same Govern- ment. to spend an additional three or four hundred thousand dollars to put another ferry lsteamer on here, especially when the one we now have. can brln autos to the Island about four tines as fast as the proposed Wood Island Ferry could posslbly get them away? Apart; from Sunday, which should be a day of rest. we can handle about 90 automobiles ‘on each round Lrlp of the boat, for l7 hours a day, wlfhout any oddl- tlonal cost, of operatlon, whlch proves Mr. Jones’ statement, that. this ship ls not modern or eco- nomlcal, requlrm further consider- atlon and correctlon. Mr. Jones must have had some lnslde information, whlch ne con- siders relluble, before he sold, she was to be a. diesel driven ferry and: “It. would only rcqulra a crew of five." One of these posslbl would be the Master, whose duy 1t 1s t0 oversee everything. One of neces- slty, r ulred by Law. would be the Eng eer, w ose duty 1s to re- moln by his engines and let us say a. stewardess. Thus two, certainly not; ever three at the outside, would be left. W111 Mr. Jones explain how these two men are golnlz to take care 01‘ things In bad weather or whlle docking wlth one man for each end of the shlp? In case of colllslon, who would launch the life boats (she would have to carry at, least. four) and 1001: after the salelg of the 150 passengers. Even 1f e Master and the Engineer deserted their posts to help 1n this work whlch would be the worst. of ba seamanshl and might well lead to disaster, f would mean there would be one man and a. quarter of the slaw- ardess to launch and handle each boat which would hardly satlsfy the requlremenm of our rigid reg- ulations m safeguard llfe at. sea as administered by the Board of Steamshlp Impectlon. - Next let us eonslder the type of boat to be placed on mu proposed rcufe as ou lined by hlm. when he salclz-“Carlbou was found sabls- fucbory. It ls not. deep, but. a dlesel ferry draws as little as 4 1-2 feet of watar and a depth of elght feet at any point. ls enough for If. to operate.” Rcferrlng to Adult Education, Mr. Jones thought 11: was a little too much 1o throw on the Department of Agrlculfure, because:—"After all they are not. educaflonlsts." This sounds loglcsl on the face of it, but the Dapuly lvllnlzter, “as and still ls an educatlanallsf, and quite capable up b0 a certain polnt ut least. Fbllowlng Mr. Jones llne or re- asoning, would 1t not. be much nearer the truth to say. that ll; 1s a case of "the bllnd leading the bllnd," when he undcrlaks to tench the House on matters per- taining to shlpplng, becaus‘, uf.er all, he 1s not a seaman. a ileslgavr or even an authorlly on mu tcrs of thls kind. and u lttle Adut. Ecl- ucallon might not. be arm's". Anyone. with even s11 hi experi- ence, knows from observation t s. when the wind and culrcnt. 1s g:- lng 1n the some dlrectlon, there Ls lam sea than the wlnd would war- zrTContmued on page ’5.»Col 1) 7 nmy sall wlthln close range of this famous blnl city and afford u Hfilllliiylnlon. Ind- hfid Blqnholhgul B... Alumni-Ethno- ,'"'~" Hill-III»- -' ‘ to av Jamal w. Barton. mp. , A GOOD I000 CALOBIE RE- DUCING DIET It. ls very glut-flying to see the lntemst with which physicians now tackle the problem of reducln8 welght. Thtls ls due to the know- ledge that overwelght ls respons- lble for many derangcmems of the workings of the heart. 111°31'1- vasscls kidneys and o.her organs. Instead of slmrply advlsln the overweight toeatlm f .1119 physician goes into the hlswry of the patlen, and of the patients faml y. studies the shape m‘ f e of the patient. to see 1f over-we ght and underexerclslug ls the cause of the ovcrwclght or whether ll ls clue to she lack o: some gland julce. If the hlst-cry and buld of the patient show that the glands are producing just vibe normal umunt of julce and there ls llttle or no organic dlsease pre en‘, the phy- slclan advlses less rest-outing down by on-e hour or more on the sl-scp or nest. erlsds-a lllltle mfrc exercise-slat ng the exact, amount. 0f walking or other exercise to be ~aken.-and than outllnes the ex- act. amounts and kinds of food hhaf are to be eaten until the pallent returns for another examination. In the Journal of the Iowa State Medical Soclety Dr. W.C. Wheelock states:— "ll! the patlent wlll keep strict- ly on a 1000 oalorle diet. medicine Ls unnecessary for reducing weight. If welghl. ‘oss Is too rapid ll, may be that a little more llquld~water or other fluids-are necessary 1:0 malnftaln a better clroulatlon It. 1s rSSCIIIIM to point out the deflnllc benefits wluoh wlll result. from a loss of weight. There ls eventually a. return of beauty of figure and grace of movements. Many have pmfemed a. greater zest for llfe and less tendency to fatigue." Dr. Wheelock outlines a 1000 calorle dlet for those who are greatly uvcrwelghf after examina- llon shows that. reducing may be safely done. Breakfast: l medlum serving of oranges. peaches. pineapple. or grapefruit; 1-2 teas-poontful of but- ter; 1 gloss skim mllk; 1 hhln sllce of bread: 1 9B8; 1 1-2 rounded hatblespoormftlls o1 cottage cheese. 2 medium servings of asparagus or celery or Izomastles or staring beans or cab- bage; l, mcdllum scrvlng of lean meat; 1 thin slloe of whole when! bread; 1 medium sewing of‘ es or atprloots or pears or es; 1 glam aklm mllk; coffee or tea mtéplow sugar or cream) or clear Suppeczlmcdlumservlxigofany ofabovevegef-ar‘ ,2eggs;1thtln sllceafbrmd; 1 glass skim mllk. The Lonesome Trail (By M. M. Murphy. I“ flollolown P E I Easter was approachln and the weary Wayfarer was song home after a long wanderlng, earnlng hls llvlng by the sweat. of 111s brow. An unkind fate had kept him sl- wa s poor and now he had pas- se the three-score mark and sll- very locks replaced 111s once brown halt. Hts hands were rough from toll but what mattered 1t; for he was now on the home-stretch, going down m the end of the troll. From his little shack on the outskirts of the town, his gaze had often rested upon the distant horizon beyond the towering mountains whlch In- tervened and he had yearned for the loved ones at home. He had taken the troll which stretched out through the wilderness for miles after leaving the town. At flrst the mountains on elther side seemed fur apart, but they gradually 0on- vergc as they approached the c111! and finally came together with just crevloe enough to permit the pos- slng of the troll around the bend of he c1111’ and out luto the open country, beyond whlch was home and friends. The trail was rough, hls feet were torn and‘ hls body weary, but was the utter loneliness and desolation of the wilderness which slapped his courage and endurance to the breaklng polnt. No one was near to know how tired he really was; no one to give hlm shelter 0r bld hlm rest awhlle. Nothing 1n "lght for miles but shrubbery and a tree here and there. There was not a sign of llfe or of a human hubltntlon since leaving the town and starting out across the wilder- ness, but. ‘he was golng home. The mounlulns on either slde had now convergcd so that onl a small spicy qgglggiay at elt er side of .721; ..lr”” ficr/lZlQm/tiipl SPRINGS SUNGTIME ("The time J-slnglng has come." Cont. 2.12.) Dear feathered lrlends Whose worullngs ram, We welcome back Wlth clprlngfls soft, all‘. Val-led their notes But all sound good. After cold Wlmcr’; Bllent. . Busy are every - Beak and wlm 11hr blrda must.’ work As well as slug. Their veaners sweet Greet. sunset. skis.‘ From tho old orchard‘: Gnorlcd Blnzwlmtlm OhflflMml-IUI hilq. Inn‘. Manual. m; ‘APRIL _14_. 193s “ “i n the trall. As he gazed around, hls courage failed. Raising his arms w halal/Elke he fellby the slde of the hid n,‘ heavenly dream. Chou-g of Insets were slnglmz and comln to W him contort. and as they be heard thelr voloes sayln ; "K p 118M on to the end of the mad; gen rig-ht on w um 9nd. Though ° WHY may be 104g, let your hem 85mm. keep on around tho hen Awoklng wlth renewed courage, he arose and kept on around the bend 0f the cllff and found hlmzelf 1n the open country beyond which was home, but now 1t was dusk and he could scarce see the troll. He grayed for s kindly l ht to lead 1m on amldst. the enc 1111513100111, The nlsht. was dark and e was far from home; how he pra ed for that klndly light. to xulde h foot. steps. last he stray. Suddenly a great brllllance seem- ed to arise 1n the East and Illumin- ute the unlverse even Ink) the West. It was the Christ srlseu from the dead. Tne stone had been rol- led back from the tomb and He had emerged glorlflecl while the angels sang “Alleluia, allelula." 5551118 the 118m. our uayfarer hastened on. all fpflgue now tor- EOI-ten for home was just ahead. JOWus bells rang out to herald the Easter morn. callln mankind u» sins the raises of t e risen Christ. Our wa. a er had reached the end of the m . He was home at. last. (Natal-The theme of the above sketch 1s based entlrely upon lmaglnatlon, but the scenery l; true to real llfe In the Hawflan Is- lands. I have described the wlldar- 118$. troll and mountains just a; 1 saw them twenty-five years ago. It was on Easter Sunday, March 3rd 1913. that I landed 1n Honolulu, where I remained three months. Someone had bold mo that. I must see the Nuuanu Pall (one of the mountains of whlch I have s 1:. en). before I would leave on- Olulu as 1t. had a history of Its own. A1; one time the troll ended where those two mountains met on the cllffs edge, and ll. was ln those days that King Kuhmemeak drove hls troops ahead .0! hlm, over the cliff rat er than be taken by the enemy. In latter years. at great ex- pense and at great. peril to human lfe a troll was out. on the wall of the mounlam around the cllff whlch affordad a contlnuunce of the trall whlch led from Honolulu through the wlldemeas, out, mm the open country on the other alde of the mountain. There is also another characterlstlc of that. spot where those two mouutalm meet at the cliff. Al. oertnln times of the year. the wind 1s so sugonlz that. 1t has even been known to salsa an auto- moblle off the ground. However, this 1s not llkel to happen be- cause, at such es. the wlnd has such a terrific w sound which can be heard long before they get. to the cliff, and-means o. wumlng to all travellers w keep a- way from the c111‘! untll the wind has subslded. One would have m see thls spot. to understand the force and power of the wlnd as-lt enters the crevice between these two rmuntaums, thousands of feet high. Incidentally, I would llke to mentlon that 1n Aprll, 1913, I vls- lted thls s t and shall never foc- t 1t. Wls Ing w get. my vlsll; over fore the heat of the, day, as the sun ls qulto hot 1n the troplcs, I arose at 4 a. m., breakfast. and took the electric oar to the end of the cal-line after whlch I had just four mlles to walk to reach the Pall, the In: of damnation. I star off with a. ll hf. heart. but my heart was not q be so light when I found myself In the heart of the wll lng thing or hsbltatlon a; far as the could - However, I was otermlned to ace the Pall. so I kc, on. but. I lost no tlmc In banal . when} 3012 f0 where the two mountains meet and end 1n the cllff, I dld hot 800g even then, I just book one look an shook a "day-day" at. both moun- talus and turned on heel and walked the four miles k to the car llne and took the" car home. I had walk the whole elgllt miles without even stopplng oncq and was home 1n my room at 10 a; m. That sure was a long, long troll and n. lonesome one. M. M. M. The Civil Service (Ottawa Journal) when Mr. H. H. Stevens sold In Parllamcnt that the Government. should seek mom sdvloe from clvll servants llke Dr. R. H. Coats, - mlnlon SlaLlsflclsn, Davld 51m, Commissioner of Islxclse, Fraser El- liott, Commissioner of Income Tax. and Watson Sellar, com troller 01 Llbe 111%; o n1 wrote a no.- ed book on e Engl settlers of tam came to Elliott. orlulnally Liberal or a Oonlgrvotlvc, we d: not know. Mr.“ Tea Pot! Says: For a Delicious Cup 0t Full Flavoured Tea U86 BRIHMIN Orange Pekoe Toab - Lenten Homilies y"r<.§§ u§ 5 §sa§§§ 3s i é. i i. é i.” f t? g . W?! mow lonll Glvll MK (I'M! c, ‘w "WE ALL DO FADE" RAV- F-E- lllfle, M,A_ watch than brill! i? r555“ Egg? sfgl 222$ read Dale's Ilectureg on‘ Preachsl; I should probably have been frighb ened away fmm ever abtem blllg K try, when the fern hh hll ' the woods below wgile 15 ind f??? 5 5 ti? gm till? “mm-arm Atndlluidmedown WORK! BLIlIlll F000 FOR PALE AND THIN PEOPLE comblnallon A valuable In the treatment of flame also ‘when their Ia truce h . a ‘in ed corhlltllon of ll" One of the realest remed- Ieu In the Iron mcnt of Rheu- mcllum. 1 For 1.11m. vthghlgte M“ I091 pane the restor- “In. GIT A BOX NOW 50¢- Mlll Orders Allende! to. ##1## MAIFS FILE DIIITIIEIIT ulok Iolhf In Ill Inland onl! Extor- gum’ t ed! 13A t???‘ "all “Emmi! u I 0 Itohlnl. III. Promptly .b mum utnlsnslaeadperslstlnnoy: n compo; of amateurs 1n |§uv ent, and not nlwnyl wlth tgood ; an evun mil-WI‘ 111W at have people 1n lloment no ass that they can only think o such public sen yanwaarols be eltlm mm" on Works of true merit we seldom and menorfgvemma-mfflae vldcilzfm that arc far In advance of their com- Ule mun-d‘; m- blten. cspeulully to III Im- d II.- “, °n f plleu anlll