fl" ldown from time to time for repairs and goverhauling. Now. according to Dr. Cuth- . lbert Hurd. a director of the above men- Pubhahed at-cry ween-day morning If in Pl'lI.lI:I street. um . , , , Intutown. P.E.l.. by The Tliomaon Company Limited tioiied firm, some of the devices auto- ”C""' '"I” ''"'"i 1-I--4 W" l" 9"" niatically detect their own needs as they .-......”.”.”f.';..f.'.?.'..'Xfl.'T'i....... :0 about itheir work and supply Iranrn culture: at sunuuers.-do. Montagua and Alberu-n nuinn t lYllll0lIl l)Olll8Fll1f,' (0 call f0I' outside help. lzed an Second Class Mail in the Pont Ulffca Department. . Ottawa. This does not meati, Dr. l-lurd says, that i..&.?'.:2:5"'...”'l-'TEfl."2;?.2' ;::;':":::.;t::..::5-;";."e.'."':.i".i-,mot will not be” needed one the "Com- m annum .plete automaton has taken over factory ;operation and maintenance. There will al- ways be need of engineers, at least part- ttimc managers, salesmen, and general workers. But, if unemployment is not to get out of hand, Government and indus- try will have to find some way to reim- burse the many workers who will find themselves at a financial disadvantage in the ascendancy of the machine. this is worked out it is hoped that more and more workers will be released from what Dr. llurd calls ”the drudgery of routine" and encouraged to make greater use of intellectual activities. In short, leisure and what to do with it is certain to become more and more important. both economically and culturally, in the ap- proaching electronic age. "Tlia strongest memory In weaker than the weakest ink." SATIRDAT. APRTILWI. 1955 Easter it is sigtiificatit that the grcatcst festivals of the Christian year have to do respectively with Birth and Rcsttt'rcctio:i. Each transcends all boundaries of races and nations. each has a timeless message of hope and coiifidcnt-c. Between them stands the solemn symbol of the Cross. At this season. in the pause between the departure of winter and the arrival of spring. we turn oitr backs oti the period of ccssatioti. when nature takes hcr long, cold sleep. and look forward to briglitcr things. Thus it was from the beginning. but Clit'istianity added ininieasurably to the significance of these recurrent chan- gvs. Tlirtiitgli the Resurrection, niourning gave place to joy atid Easter--once as- sociated with pagan rites of nature's ro- hirth--hecame a festival of the trite God. 3 new era of growth atid rcgcncration for mankind. The darkest hours are before the dawn. Ind it was the transitional nature of Good Friday that was emphasized in ycsterdavls The Parliamentary Exchange A little belatedly-or so it would seem l-Ixtcrna-l Affairs Minister Pearson has intimated that the Government is giving serious consideration to the Moscow pro- posal for an excliange of parliamentar- ians. No otie scents to know what prompt- ed the Russians to make the proposal in the first place: and that lack of adequate information was probably the reason for rellzlous ccrctnonics. For the momcnt lll9C?lflHdl'(1ll G0VPlinlI”l9lll'5 d9l3.V ln C0”' death has had its trittmpli, but the mo. sidcriiig it. But what does it matter, atiy- - mom is brief The cereiiients will soon be WHY7 If lllt? Rll-Wlan leadelis W3"! 3 f9W of their citizens to see our parliament at work. why shouldn't they be given the op- portunity? They would probably get the surprise of their lives, unaccustomed as they are to any sort of free and open discussion of public affairs: and they would be shocked to hear an opposition back-benclier berating the government for unloosed. the stone rolled from the sepul- chre: the ininiortal choirs will burst into npw soiii:s of praise for the victory over darkness. while the world moves glorious- ly forward into the promise of immortal- lty. Easter is a special occasion for clitirch- going: and participation in hymns of praise. Tliroughout this Province. fhrough- all he is W0t'flt- Blll. 000? lllt? HOV-elly out Canada and the whole of ClllllSlPfl- W01? 03- ll l-'l lmssllllt? lllal l”ll?.V mlglll dom. ,.h,,,.m.,,, mmm-rm... win ginz some see some good in it and be a little less convinced of the power and glory of one- man rule. In any event, it is difficult to see how-they could do us any harm. Pre- sumably. they would be in the country for a very short period. hardly long enough to get into any mischief. of the grandest and loveliest music ever written. touching chords in devout hearts. awakening old memories and recalling. forgotten ideals. Let us be thankful that we have here not only freedom of wor- ahip. btit facilities for church-going which up, denim M mmy people in other lands, As for the Canadians who might be w. should make the most of them, "seek- selected to go to Moscow. it would be :- imz God-S how, in happy ihmhgy lgood experience to see for themselves the dreariness and the ineffectualness of a legislative assembly- or what passes for The Late Mr' Rogers it--where everybody says "yes" and where The late Mr. Benjamin Rogers. senior. 00Itl0mlllIV ls ill? Only S3Vll'lE ZFaC9- Whale ti...-1 hep" in timing health for gomg time soever his party label, each man would and it is several years since he participated 001119 l1a0l-1 Wllll lnCF93-fed fallll l" TF9? actively in public affairs. Yet he was not parliamentary institutions. the type of man to be readily forgotten. and. EDITORIAL NOTES . . I he was known to a wide circle of the pre-. Britain's giant. radio-telescope is ex- aerit-day generation as well as to all otir older citizens. lie combined business ability and pvpcrience with outstanding integrity. lWtl9(l l0 I-'lVP ll” 3 Wmild lead Of l0l"' or five ycais in the field of radio-astroti- oniy. Now under construction at Jodrell and all these qualifications were evident in Batik in Cheshire. the telescope will be a the administration of civic affairs during his term of office as .Vlayor. and in the dis- grcat saucer shaped reflector of copper mcsh suspended between two towers. cliarge of his dutics in the Provincial Treas- ury llcpartrncnl. At that time provincial . . O O 0 taxes covered a wider field than they do now under the Dominion tax rental agrce- 0'19 00llll'lU0US Cll.V- laklng lll The 9”" tirc Atlantic coastline from Norfolk. Va.. nictits. anti tltcir collection was ncitlicr ' ' ea--v tioI' ll”ltttl;tt'. Mstnv will rcrall the fait'- '” P”l'lll'”d- M9” '5 me mm of 3 lzmllp of nm; Ami ,..,,,,..,.5'.. Shmu, 1... Mp R.,.1(.,-S 31 civic planners now talking things over an Hnw: in mi: mnm.(.mm. with an eye to the future. At present, tltt million people live in the area sug- Wcll itil'ornicd on evcry subject of impor- . I . gcsted for the gigantic metropolis. l.'ltlt'tt to tho .-omniunily, his advicc was fro- qticntly sottgltt atid could always be relied . itpoii as living tiotlt sound and (lisinlcrcslcd. lie spokc his mind withotit fear or favour. gavn gt-iicroits support to the political part v of his t'lltllt'P hut stood firmly on his own font on lsstlos of public conccrti. Charlotte- town he rcgartlod as the fincst city in (Win- ada and strove alwavs to promote its in- forests. liis passing during this centcnnittl your svvctxs another link with the past. and O A distitigttislied British newspaper editor says that the Liberal Party in Britain is showing signs of rising strength after a long period of virtual inactivity. Perhaps it is recapturing some of the prestige it lost to Labour in the years fol- lowing the First Great War. This trend may be expected to become more pro- nounced as the divisions among the Social- Iervr-s as another rcmindcr that the true ms Cominm. to arm... A(..uany' Mr. A”. mt-astire of civic achicvcmcnt lies in the toe and many of his Colleague, always Callhft" ”l "W "lll7”'"".V- have been more Liberal than Socialist in thcir philosophy. It' may well be that a ' The Electronic Era ntiiitin between l.ibcrals and the moderate Th? hmmpss worm is ahmdy mu Lahouritcs will turn out to be the only customed to machines that do routine. and Slmsfaclory answer m Bevamsmi in some i'ZlSPF crcalivc. work as well as and a thousand times more speedily than-' the most faithful and competent human hands. Now. in the opinion of experts til 0 0 0 When l'rcsidcnt Eisenhower finally leaves the White House he is certain to .take with him, among his important pet'- the International Riisincss Machines Corp-sonal documents. a letter he received re- oratioii. installation of the "complctclcently from .11 yeaf old Carole Ann Stev- automaton" for factories and offices islenson of Memphis, Tenn.. who wrote: "Fm only a nucstion of time: indeed. they S00l'l'lllVOl1dCfll'lE. Mr. President, if you are going to think that if is already fheorcficallyito run again in You should, for the ssible and awaits only the finishirtggcounfry needs you!" lmmichcs of the scientists and engineers. Aflhower replied in his own hand: "Thank the present time, and as an indication oflyou, Carole Ann, for your nice letter. You what the future holds in store for indus- may be sure that I shall consider what try, one of the big automobile companies' you say carefully. Incidentally, you are has an automatic. assembly line in opern- .n very persuasive young lady. May 1 tion which performs 540 separate operti- thank you for your support and confl- tlons and turns out 100 engine blocks anldence?" It was a gracious thing to do. hour-all done" electronically, with the aid surely. The politicians, ' t man, who hope he will run and those who inc all ma devices requqh-ed don't--will not be able to make predic- - to ba dowad tion: on the strength of it. them i Once. ' To which Mr. I-)'sen- ' however-those found .5 .,--..r Am: Life New Jack Miner's By Jack Va Dunn -Achievement l l l Canadian Press. Ottawa ' Probably even Jack Miner didn't. realize what he was starting 51 1 arts ago when he coaxed the ,lirsI wild geese to land on his farm near Kingsville in western On- tario. l In later years his property be- came a famous bird sanctuary and his name a household word among lovers of nature. Next week Cana- dians will think, of the man who spent most of his life protecting wild life when they observe the eighth anniversary of National Wildlife Week. The week was established by Parliament in 1947 to begin each year on Jack Miner's birthday, April 10. The noted bird lover died in 1944. INSPIRING EXAMPLE The late prime minister Macken- zie King said of Mr. Miner: "The inspiration he has given the young :and old of many lands by his life land work will live after him." During the week school teachers will stress the need of conserva- ition to their pupils and many clergyman will preach on the great .outdoors. Federal and provincial Ifish and game departments will bring conservation to the fore. l two of Canada's nature rarities. the whooping crane and the musk- ox, will be issued by the post of- fice department. There are only 21 whoopers left on the continent and about l0.000 musk-ox. John Thomas Miner was born near Cleveland. Ohio. April . 1865. He came to Canada with his parents in l878. STARTED. SANCTUARY l An ardent hunter. he realized something had to be done to save Canada's fast-decreasing wild lite.- In 1904 he bought four wing-tipped! Canada geese and started his game. sanctuary. He banded his first duckl in August. 1909, and from then un- til 1915 he is said to have banrledl about 50.000. ; In l9l5. he started placing a. verse of Scriptura on each band as well as his name and address. His birds were spotted across the continent. Jack Miner. a brick and tile manufacturer with only a few months education behind him. rap- idly becnme famous as a speaker and writer on wild life. In 1943 King eorge VI awarded him the Order f the British Em- pire "for the greatest achievement of conservation in the British Em- pire." Two postage stamps, depicting Evaluating Prof. Marlon .I. Levy. h the New l Smnc year: ago it wait fashion- abla to estimate the population of China at 400 millions. give or take -50 million. Our only basis for even such a rough fillllff W35 I few surveys, themselves open to question. of limited areas of China. 1 Recently the Chinese Commu- tnists have announced a new pop- ulation figure, obtained by a "census" and totaling precisely 5ll2.603.4l7 an of June 30. 1953. I1 .midnight (New York Times, Nov. l2. l95-ft. Tliis figure, remarkable both for its magnitude and its minute pre- cision. seems to have been widely laccepted as scientifically accur; late. So far a: I am able to as- -certain. neither scholars nor those concerned with public polic.V I"! either side of the iron Curtain have questioned this result. It has been referred to frequently in the pages of The New York Times and elsewhere as though estab- lished beyond cavil, Conceivably this figure may be correct. But its unquestioning ac- ceptance outside the Iron Curtain is one of the few instances in which an important Cbmmunlnf self-evaluation has been like" without scrutiny. Both scholarly and political caution would suggest the poll- slbility of inflation, serious in- flation. ln the figure of 582.003.- 4l7; why. then. the unquentlonlng acceptance? Are there perhaps divergent interests inside and out- side China that iuedispose people to accept thlii enormous figure? APPEARANCE OF POWER There are several factors that would bias the Communists to- ward finding and announcing an inflated figure. The larger tho population of china. the more powerful aha la likely to appear to her own rulers. The Commu- iilstn ara alao likely to expect China to appear more .'...mldable to outsiders under theaa circum- stances-eapeclally If they can give the appearance of sound or- ganlxatlon and blah uprlt do corps throughout such a popula- Ion And the Communllt leaders of China have always hold 'thnf than can never be a " lltloll problem" -- davouf bel la the labor theory of value carrlea with it for them the faith that tho more people the more blessed a nation. The effect of the Ieadarf well-known and often reiterated preferences for large,popnlallon figures may well have had a pro- affect upon the null: ob- tained by tho eaann camara- tors. There an also bluaa in favor ofaecaptlnalhlcflnanaublila Red "China Prlncetown Unlvenlty York Times. the realm of the Communist faith- ful. Those who regard the Com- munist control of the Chinese mainland as a menace may use the figure to. support their posi- tion or to show that the Ill(”"'Cc is aven greater,t.han they pra- viously asserted. Ttiosc .... ..... like to see the United States and other nations take a more con- ciliatory stand toward Communist China may point to the figure as evidence of the utter hopeless- ness and danger of pressing our position. IMPLICATIONS OF FIGURES , The correctneiis of the figure is not a matter of indifference. An error of 200 millions, even of 100 millions or less, has significant implications. If the figure is cor- rect. does it pose greater prob- lems for the C mmunlsls or for us? When our allies controlled China we regarded the enonnous population as one of their great- eiit problems. On the other band. now that our enemies hold the area, we seem to feel that an even greater population than was previously dreamed of is one of theirgrcatest assets and a men- ace to us, This seems to be accepting llI'l- crftically both a questionable fig- ure and the dogmatic Communist infer nee about its significance. We in this in part because of an unanalyzed assumption of what the Communists can do once they control an area. Because they are ready to be ruthless in ways that we are not it in believed that there are no llmlln on what they can do. But there an limits to what they can do: Thou limits, for than as for III. are related to the nature of the people: with whom they deal as well as to their methods of dealing. We may be able to find out what those limits are. This In no time for uncritical acceptance of Commu- nist atatlatlcal or haaty VA? , 7oe&l' W5-vzeq EASTER DAY Break the box and shed the hard; Stop not now to count the cost; Hither bring pearl. opal. sard; Rack not what the poor have lost; Upon Christ throw all away: Know ye. this is Easter Day. Build His church and deck His shrine. Empty though it be on earth: Ye have kept your choicest wine- Let it flow for heavenly mirth; Pluck the harp and breathe the horn: Know ye not 'tis Easter Morn? (iatlier gladness from the skies; Take a lesson from the ground; Flowers do ope their heavenward eyes Aitd a Spring-time joy have found: Earth throws Winter's robes away, Decks herself for Easter Day. Beauty now for ashes wear. Perfumes for the garb of woe. Chaplets for dishevelled hair. Dances for and footsteps slow: Open wide your heart that they Let in joy this Easter Day. Seek God's house In happy throng; Crowded let His table be; Mingle praises. prayer and song. Singing to the Trinity. Henceforlh let your souls alway Make each morn an Easter Day. -Gerard Hopkins. Medically . Speaking l N. IIIHIOI. U-D. A IUN ILTI, Fol WHY It won't be Iona before you'll be able to uva your baby sun baths ngaln.Innxoatpartaofthacoun- try. aun bath: can In atartad some time in April and continued through September. sojourn: drawn near. word or two of advice in in ordu. especially for those of you who have become mother: during the winter months. Alda - Bone Growth Your baby needs sunshine. The short. unseen ultra-violet rays of the sun help his body clunle the phospho via: and lime in hla food Into strong, straight bones. Sun- nhine helpa increase his vigor and helps prevent rickets. You can start giving the baby nun baths any time after he is one month old, providing the weather is warm enough. Now rememk . he must always be rotectted from the cold. dust and ind. This In especially important durltu the early Spring or late Fall. The Bbat Time Except during extremely hot weather. the best time for a sun bath is usually between 10 n. m. and 2 p. in. These are the hours when the sunshine contain: the most ultra-violet rayl. However. don't rush your baby out into the hot sun right after his feeding. Walt half an hour or so. Avoiding Sunbu . You'll have to change your tol.'s sun bathing time during extremely hot and clear day: like those we usually find in July and August. Midday aunalitne frequently ba- comes hot enough to burn or over- heat your youngster. On such days. I suggest a sun bath either before 10 a. m. or after 4 p. m. . How long should you leave him in the sun? ' Well, when you first begin the sun bathing treatment for a young baby in hot. weather, keep him in the sunshine only a few in your lap or place him in his carriage. Push the hood all the way back so the sun will shine on his cheeks. Ian and handl- Remove Clothing You can remove all his clothing in warm weather if he in three months old or older. Expnsa him to direct sunlight for only one or two minutes a day at first. Then leave him in the sunshine three to five mllllll-98 longer each day until his sun- bath lat-its at least half an hour in the morning and another half an hour in the afternoon. You don't want the sun's rays to shine directly into his eyes. no point his feet away from the sun. QUESTION AND ANSWER M. S.: I have been told that .my adrenal glands are not function- ing properly. What purpose do they serve? Would the fact that they were not functioning correct- ly cause a constant ache. some- times sharp. in the chest? Answer: It in not likely that the pain in the chest is due to mal- function of the adrenal glands. These glands form several accre- tions necessary for normal well- By J. C. The Maori: of New Zenland are civilized and live side by side with Europeans on a basis of equality. Yet the power of su- perstition has led to a evival of the ancient art of the ohunga. Among the old-time Maorls the tohunga combined something of the duties of a wise man. a priest and a witch doctor. He often had greater power over the natives than the chief of the tribe. Today the Maori: are Christians and large numbers of them live in European houses in the cities. It was fully expected that the tohun- gas would pass out of existence. yet they nourish in the cities as well as In remote Maori villages. ADDITIONAL SAFEGUARI) Even some Maori religious sects have Incorporated rites for east- ing out evil spirits into their prac- tices. Many Maorla who are devout Christians also turn to the rites of the tohunga as an additional safeguard. For Instance many Maori women who have their babies in modern maternity home: ask for a visit from the tohungn before they leave. They want him to lift the tapu. or ban. which applies to a woman and child after child- birth. They have the babies bap- tized later. but believe in playing Art Of The Tohunga Graham Canadian Preaa. Auckland safe. There is also a belief that Maorls suffer from their own forms of sickness which can only be cured by Maori means. So many of them consult a tohunga before going to a European or Maori doctor for medical treat- merit. MOSTLY IIARMLESS . For the most part this belief is harmless. Some diseases which are largely psychological respond to the ministration: of the tohungn once the patient is assured that he is cured. Also most tohungas nowadays are aware of the law a g n in st unauthorized medical treatment and advise a visit to a doctor where the disease obviously requires it. But the authorities have to be on the watch for quackery and for tohungan giving Illegal treatment. Examples have been exposed of Tohunga: giving useless remedies to patients who should have been under medical caro. FAMED MUSICIAN Niccolo Paganini. born in Genoa in 17. has been called the greatest vlollnlat tn blatory. II llollll 80.. It's probably easiest to hold him g For ClIrIlf'l dlaclpteu the first Easter waa not a trb umphant zladneu but of incredul- lty and disbelief. Joy came only with avenlng. The gospels tell of sorrowful sceptics. not of credul- oua axpecfatlon. That a tomb was found empty la related as a fact. but no positive inference is drawn from if; only of the beloved dis- ciple is it recorded that "he saw and believed." The women's story of a vision of angels was dismiss- od as delirious talk. Later in tho day two disciples. stlll sadly dia- lllusloned. left Jerusalem for Em- maua. Even when the risen Christ appeared. the disciples "dlabeliev- ed for joy”-a lifelike paradox. That state passed." but not the memory of it. Haltlni between doubt and be- lie! is the experience of most re- fl9Ct1llE People. and is very prevalent in days when competing dogmatlsma confidently claim al- bring peace. give coherence and Perspective to life: but desire for belief is one I , reasonable grounds for it are another. The will-to-believe is suspect. and the honours of faith ought not to be glvgn to opinions whoch do not spring from faith. The New Testa- ment relates that one disciple re- fused lo believe the testimony of the others to the appearance of the risen Lord, and that, unlike an earlier demand of the Phari- sees, the sign he asked was grant- ed. In Thomas than was no will- to-disbelieve. which can lead astray as effectively at the will- to-believe. and more tragically. It is the doubting will. not the per- plexed mlnd, that is sinful. Loy- alty of purpose is more important than correctness of doctrine. and essential to its attainment. St. Paul's assurance that some of the original disciples. whom he knew well. saw their master alive after death can be reasonably ac- cepted without violence to intel- llgence or to honesty of mind. Yet facts aloha will not overcome doubt. The religious appeal is ever leglance. A settled faith would ed HI! 4 ll no msuin unssaan Power To Triumph TIC TIEGM IAIIOI and it in the IOVI of Christ which first "couatralneth ,u.'' it men "hear not Moaes and the prophets, "G"-ht? Wm they persuaded 1310083! one rose from the dead." It in a Ibortalghted and mistake when Christians mix ;. though faltli were a prudential ac. celltance of demonstrable pmpmi. tlons. Isolated from other affirm- ations of faith and their con- sequent experience. brief appeu-. mean of on who was dad would be but a marvel without religious significance. Whatever the tom. of the manifestation of the rlsan Christ. they occurred Intermittent. ly during a short period. and only a broader based faith could at. firm from them that ho is "alive for evermora." Yet Easter presents a challenge on an Issue of life about which it is of vital importance whether men take a decision or allow a diffi- culty in deciding to be transform. info an evasion of decision. The capacity of the universe to pro- duce. limit. and end human life on earth is manifest. The ultimate question is whether if is directed by a goodness with power to acLhieve the purposes of goodness. Tmoughout the New Testament Christ's resurrection is regarded as the act of God. In itself. that one rose from the dead could af- ford no gospel. But it is the crucified. "the portrait of the in- visible God." in whom all thi'I"s - "consist" or hold together. and are "summed up." the reflcciinu mirror nf the life divine. whnso resurrection In tho culminating fact. Accepted as disclosing what God has done. the resurrection carries the assurance that good- ness has within and behind it the power to triumph. from which springs ever-renewed hope, zeal for righteousness. an interpretat- ion ofphumau life. justifying alike the primary belief of the Christian creed in an all-sovereign Father and the conviction that because man can be delivered from tho law of sin and death. so can the addressed to faith, not to sight: NOTESpBY Many things are poisonous If taken in sufficient quantity. Even common salt. if you were to eat a half a pound of it might kill you. Nobody proposes to put fluo- ring in water in any quantity which could possibly hurt anyone. There are millions of people in Canada who have natural fluorine in their water supply. and who have been drinking it for gener- ation: without coming to any harm. -Peterborough Examiner. We note in reading Governor Hoeg's budget message that death and taxes have finally caught up with each other. The governor proposed a two percent.servlco tax on undertaking and funeral services. The quip that two things in life are certain, death and taxes. is an old one. The assumption has always been that only by departing this world would one be likely to escape taxes. Now even that faint. iiiotpe is gone. - Des Molnes Reg- : er. Gerontologlsts report that the American of today has a life span ten years longer than that of his grandparents. But. he must have the right appronch' to his later years. Different people have differ- ent approaches. Some believe in slowing down to stretch out their remaining years. Others believe in speeding up in order to crowd more into them. The time is yours. you can use it as you see fit. - o'l.. Catliarines Standard. The Runlana are the moat un- predictable of liars. because it is often impossible to trace any con- nection at all between the lies they tell and the truth these lies are intended to conseal. With the Chin- ese you at least know. says the London. England. Spectator, that such a connection exists. however tortuous and abstruse it may be. The Germans. like the Japanese. lie readily and methodically but. with only a clumsy cunning. The duclng accomplished liars. for- sake the truth with a bad cons- cience and a resultant lack of con- viction: they havo a dangerous but characteristic weakness for retain- -Galt Reporter. . English. though capable of pm- If clvillznffon he makes and moulds. THE WAY lnz. aa a sort of talisman. little scraps of truth in a fabric of false- hood. Only tha Irish lie in what may be called a lyrical way. soar- ing up from the truth like larkn info the clear. pure air of fantasy. The lash II a painful and tin- miliating punishment. and as such it has been dreadod through the ages. There is plenty of evldenca that hardened and brutal criminals, who have been in and out of prison for years. fear It much more fhal they do another term of imprison ment. For this reason it has al ways been considered an ap- . proprlata punishment for the must vicious and brutal thugs -'- tho hold-up man who beata. wounds or otherwlaa malfreata hla victims. or the sex pervert who molest: children. To forbld Judges to im- posa lashes would .emove- one of the moat. effectlva weapons in the law's arsenal. - Edmonton .lour- ml 1 A Judie ln Mllwaukea recently had to deal with the case of an 18-year-old youth who admitted senseless vandalism while "fooling around" ln three house: under construction. Tho young man was given a untence of six months in the House of Correction. but was put on probation contingent on his working for the contractor until he had paid off his acorn. Tha boy left for the Job and will be. allowed to go froa if his vic- tim reporta satisfactory labor and behavior. -Kitchener-Water loo Record. The United States in cited as I country whose population is in- creasing very rapidly -- about 2.000.000 a year. At the same fima that country In iuoduclng food- stuffs at such a rate that Iurplusex have become an cmbarrusment. We can afford to forget the dis- mal Malthusinn theory for a while. ' T threatens in years to come. some of the farm-born boy: may give up their factory jobs and turn to the plow and th reaper. -Goderlcli Signal-Star. PROFESSIONAL-CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. Bell, Matheson & Foster 150 Richmond st. Chan. 3. MoQuald, . . ' in Richmond ac. nTaiAuii .1. Elmer Blanchard, B.A. 165 Queen st. Phono 428! M. A. Farmer. Q.C., LLB. Bank of Comlncreo Bldg. OPTOMETRISTS G. F Ilufcheaon It son I. . IIUTCIIEBON. B.0. SI Grafton St. Dlal Allison M. Glllis, LLB. .l. A. Carruthera. R0. at. Dlal son tion: about the facts of social life In tho Far East or ln any of the "unda-rdevelopod arena." l Tho Ago Old Story 1... am ' namnx in Richmond at. out 4741 118 Km "” P"k'"' - N”" 3”” A Wuth LL.” Byron J. Gflllt. 0.D. "DOWNTOWN HALIFAX" "gm" 1.3:" m an,” .3. in Kent at. Dial mi 37.: 'i".".':: ''":..':".::.i.”"': M” -d M" '"- ' I s is-or. no on ngwl Amman apanucayqun rum gnuigm ' ' mm; ' , In over! loan for our Guam lusty. . 3." .g 1:... hug. mu. '53; Tllauaa 675;: madman? .'i'.ir..'"-"'.. ...':.'.-ti. H-thm vague - '-""”"”-2: aggocaai i5.:?il:'c')'tiiaTil..iT'a::.st-1' rwm nuns .7... I" 3”” "Mt CHIROPRACTOR A it: noon l --------c I WATER-stnlla moaaoo-sasos vgifilio ngfoo-aTaigLx3 t mlMI0G”uII1ttIIo'm I DI'- W- 3- 0900-9” M, o. 1:. momma. b.a., ARCWTECT iuateiunoust. nmuu 9'AKr:PM.l.Alc' I no . 'IIlI'lIl'.IUl. 1-.a.i. DlacPlioa C Tralnor Oioaa If. Dial Aflll co utn ”" ""l ""' I an 7:. mu; ,'m; . I El l CHARTERED Accoumosms :Ig:wl':h'n.a:.wl:,l'aoaklheo . cmtaatu. N . ' III-II?" .-."..::.:..-:'-...'.::-..'-.i.'."m IN! UR AN-CE ""' - ' , fauna In - In , I P- 0- '0' ml?!" WMIIN9 , . In 1873- AITIUI .t. oannatrri Anon: FVIOUI QLIIAIITITOWI QIIIIIII i I , l i mun”. U H01 p Mil: I .