fc _ -. _. ,V 4 - , - , 1 f . ~ ~ . THE DHARLDTTETDWII GUARDIAN ' __ » ' si -i. ss. v. vim-i-rssiosui-J. ii.. #umm nmueut “'S`e::::|‘::»s-llieiii?-Axel. D. A. Mseliiunou. D. ll 0- l-Jdiiofsnd sisnsging Director-J. R. Burnett A,,,u¢i|i¢, s;.|itors-li'rsnk_\\ alker and D. K. Currie 5 ' *"'“ A nee delivered. Y " A issl $5.00 per yesr nn s vs l m;:,'_-|,‘8“\,¢l¢m;l¢{;gui`:3":|¢tle|uce))uiiilied in Canada and United Btltel. Aiivlclrrislnu Bul‘nEs\§N'r.\'r|\'ns N Y K C tm ,. - S |iA= ic. evv or cn . .uvviral:-2-,.3“i.::;::r‘lr...e:°.:....i.:f’i».r..». 1:; kgfnlis cuy ivuisngnay 'iwuer iiuiiuiug ciuergo; Srndlcltl TNI" 'Buiising st. |.nc'n, oi-:ss cuiiuinnsiisuia; U°“'fli\°el Buildivl. vw l`raucisc'o: 113.5 No, filth Street, Philadelphia, L Morning Maxtor _ . ggme people don‘t know if their reputation is lost, strayed or stolen. SATURDAY, APRIL 8. 1933. l C4 J()lN'I' l\'li'SOLlf'TI()N 1 1 “Potty party politics' is indeed Canada as our acreage under bar- _ ' has trebled since the five years Hsewhere' The °rdi’“”'Y men “ld Pamnuy not 3 Singh hair on ms .ment of Agriculture. The problem is one which particularly affects IIDTES BY THE WAY “So they-‘re getting ready. With my very own eyes 1 have now seen that this is what wc have earned.” So spoke a German woman the other night in the famous Gare du Nord in Paris. Just before the train was to pull outa company of French soldiers in full marching order illi- cd the waiting room. They were bc- ing sent to the Franco-German frontier. The movement of the troops was Just a part of regular French military routine, as the company was to rclicve V another company, which would be moved ilfbat Qnlffi of £nui:s lanes W. Barton. MD. PREVENTTNG BALDNESS i A young lightweight boxer who represented one of the European countries at the Olympic champion- ships at Los Angeles last year ap- peared in the boxing ring ri few months ago completely bald; ap- ie ‘H approprmte heading for an ar.. y women feel they are .sitting on the head' une “lui-ii appeared in yesterday'-i lssuc of our contemporary. It is lherein stated that the Provincial Govemment “spoiled the effect of the reciprocity resolution" passed unanimously in the Legislature by the aincndinciiis introduced bl’ mm, Mr, sharp, These amend- ments expressed appreciation of the Federal Governments stabilization measure and of the agreements negotiated at the Imperial Econ- omic Conference last year,-agree- ments which, in conjunction with the Bennett tariff policies, had much to do iri effecting 2* chfmgc of sentinit-:it at Washington on the lubicct of reciprocal trade with Canada. - The uliolc question was thor- oughly discussed in the House when the resolution was passed, and no member of the Opposition question- rd the amendments on the ground lhnt they would "spoil" tlic effect of the rcsoiiuion. Mr. Tha Campbell specifically commended nship” fully the Imperial Conference agreements, ri i7 for his “statesma img fhom'. He sr rcfcicncc to , Mr. Sharp ln int'roduc lnflorscd th which he said was "pei-tine the resolution. The stzibli thought, might ceived with disfavour in Britain because it would exporters at an mcasurc, he Canadian vantage, bu noi- any member of thc Opp r;fici'ed this cluding reference to stabillzat the resoliitlor.. Of coiirsc, iiiisc i-‘ ri di'-ui' rcin:._.iu uliicii is Opposition to crediting the govcriimcnt in do, To ic is- every power with this type o sue is a political fcotliiill, ariytlilzigllt may f mind cvcigv publ matter is scizcd iipun as a mc ldvancing party iiitfsrests. Th lre glad to say, was not t titudc of Mr on the lmendinciif ments in to show maintainr-rl desire to li by the Fcdcrzil Government order, as they their :.iiicci'ity. that thcy ha ampcr ilic progress vcloping iuti';i-l5inpii'c trade, thcrcforc could not logically in the resolution, or to am it to prov eiitcrcd into would be and would as would n c that any agrc with the United “fair and rcaso able’ be of such a cliarucfer ot causg injury to pro- tliis country by speedy :it \\’u:,iiiiigtoii. rluccix; iii t»ci'iiiiiiaiim1 It was in the rcsolut adopted in pressed thc House, but that ou-ly the Lcglfiliiltiiw, It opinion, not only of the of the people of tlic Province and of the Maritimes gciieinlly. The only dissenting par- tisan voice so fur raised has been that of the local Lilicral organ. And whcii one coiisidcrs the paign our coiitcmporziry carrie against the ments, it is commendai on the part bers would this iunciiclcd form ion was unnnim ox- cani- cl on grcc- iiot siirpi‘i:~.iiig flint any ion of ilicsc :\grccn\eiif,s l"Impire trade ii of its own party mem- be bitterly rcscnlcd. BA HLE Y SI.'Rl’l~] Y A Barley the lrizupire siinininiircrl The (iiuirii special iiiicrciit in vlcw of llie that it is :fr Caiiadilui iiin;;<'i-s and Cuiiadixiii, grain cxi:ai~tci-.';. It cmbodics the; results of an :'m'cetig‘.tEoii Of th important in.~.ii:ri.~< for barley un- Survcy, publislicd by l‘.ia:l.1;;iiig Board “uri in rt i'r"_=cnt i;~'»uc of inn, 'iii.:~; siii'\r'j,' is of fuct, lrii`c:."c<| pririieuiririy to` -O-_ , *_ _ Q ` 0 ne A. t" to .ation be re- Great place ad- t neither Mr. Campbell ositiori us n reason for not in- ion in ui‘.‘,lC/1 i :1\".'rsc[ ans of is, we he nt- . Lca and his assocititcs reciprocity rcsolufioii s. Opposition members ' In the llouze voted for the amend- said, They d no made in de- and object to this proviso being incorporated ending id cment States n . _Professor Grant points out that abyss of war, waiting to be pushed Sold- A-nd each nation is anxious to outdo the others in preparedness uiarly in Western Canada. For cer- D ie cannot be grown in Canada..i eeders are endeavorlng to app | plant Califomian imports by de- veloping a six-rowed barley that will igrow i.n England and mature satis- factorily for this purpose. Professor Grant concludes that if Caucus wishes to hold her own in the barley export market, it would Seem thc part of wisdom to forget ab0ut growing small quantites of malting barley for export and ,pep lalize on the production of high- grade feeding barley. The new grades provide an opportunity to compete successfully with other couritres selling on fair average iluflliiy basis. In this connection it might be stated that Prince Edward Island two-rowed barley is of a. particular- ly fine quality and a, premium of from 15 to 20 cent per bushel could be obtained for it in Montreal over the price paid for Western bar- ley, if sunlicient quantities for export were obtainable. Even at this premium, however, it is more profitable to use the Island barley for feeding purposes. The Provin- cial Departmcnt of Agriculture has under consideration thc project of SOIidiIig a test carload to Montreal to ascertain its qualities for malt- ing' purposes, preliminary tests with small quantities having been reported as very satisfactory. "GOOD BUSINESS" Discussion in the Legislature on the cost of administration of Jus- tice in this -Province has shown conclusively that the Stewart Gov- emment was well advised in nego- tiating an agreement for the scrv- ices oi' the Royal Canadian Mount- ed Police. For the service of this nationally famed force, Prince Ed- ward Island pays ainiually $15,000. _This cost is considerably less than was thc cost of maintaining the Provincial Police force under thc Lea Government, and it was ad- mitted by an opposition cutie mat the change was “good business." Figures recently given by Hon, Mr. Guthrie in Parliament support this opinion. The amounts paid for R.C.M.P. services in other Prov- inces average a considerably higher cost per capita than the people of this Province are called upon to pay. Following arc the comparative figures: Alberta $225,000 Saskatchewan .......... 175,000 Manitoba . . . . . _ . ... . .. . . 125.000 Nova Scotia ............ 150,000 New Brunswick 100,000 Prince Edward Island .. 15.000 EDITOR]/i L NOTES Of interest to all school pupils tlirougliout iiic Province is the cs- Q ccntcst on Life Iiisumiice which is being sponsored by Messrs. Hynd- iuan and Company, Limited, and of wliicli details appear elsewhere in todays Guardian, The cducatioxuil dcrtalicn by i‘rofrs.';cr l-I. C. Grant value of a conf/:st of this kind can on behalf of the Manitoba Depart scarcely bo overstated. The first aces threatening civilization. Hc` Profession to improve the coalition of the human race. "ite evil is thati but surely eat‘ng its wav lute the i sential that Bilta n, with her world Wide trade routes, should have as many cruisers as the next two strongest Powers. But since the war she has laid down and coni- pletcd only fifteen cruisers while the United Stat/es has laid dorm and completed seventeen and Ja- pan twcnty-fivo. This shows that far from keeping up to any two- Power standard, Bi'itaiu's naval construction has been well below l’>8i’lfy. Perhaps the most dlsquiet- ing feature of the Return is the large niuiibcr of submarines being built by France and Italy. Each' country is now constructing twenty- five large submersibles, which will carry the submarine strength of both nav.cs above that of the Unit- ed States and Japan and make a total of four foreign Powers super- for to Britain in submarines. T'he Current History Magazine, ,publislied by the New York 'I‘i'.mes, is recognized as 'an authoritative publication of current events, But copes of the last issue of the mag- azine have been confiscated by the Cuban Covernmcnt. All newspapers: and niagaaines sold in the islam-i must be passed by an omcial board of censors before they are sent out to the news dealers. Current History had an article dealing with the political situation in Cuba, and ‘,119 Machado Govemment confiscated the numbers. The Cubans would not allow the previous montwg iggug of the magazine to go on sale either. A perusal of the rctums for 1932 of the four main line railway com- panies in Great Britain, which have ,just been pubilslicd, shows that they arc very much lu thc same po- sition rts our own. The business for the twelve months indicates s heavy depreciation. The gross rc- ceipis fcll off more than 15,000,000 pounds. More than. 300,000,000 Pounds of caplail goes without any dividend at all, and the dividend rates of it large proportion of pref- erence stock have been heavily re- duccd. Only one company, the Great Westcru, paid n dividend on its ordinary stock, and even this ,was not earned during 1932, but was paid out of previously accum- ulated reserves and the profits made cut of thc sale of investments. There is an impression in the minds of some people, says Colom- bo Tinics of Ceylon, that the Dutch are acting from some interested mo- tive in telling us that restriction is impossible. But what this motivc ls it is difficult to conceive. Tlicy can- not possibly be so foolish as to tliiiik that i'cs|.i'iciiJn in thc British owned areas is ever again going tc be tried without Dutch co-operation. Again, if' they ever entertained the idea that they coufd hold out long- cr than the Brltir.ii plantations, this has long ago been knocked on the head. The only question that rc- mains, therefore, is whether the Dutch have unwittingly exaggerated thc difficiiltics nf enforcing rg. Sll`iCii0ii in Borneo and Sumatra. cnnfcsf, inaugurated by Messrs. liyndnuin and Company Limited in 1920, was highly successful, and the prcscnt occasion is even -more opportune. Valuable cash prizes are being ofi'c'cri, ani students in every before the war. and as barley has Y . A few weeks no he appeared now assumed imlwrtancc as a ma- into the cha5m_ Tense days are again and this time his hair was jor cereal crop in the Prairie these for Europe. “They’re getting 5° 3’b"‘“d‘““" ul" 1" W" “fi mst Provinces. ready," as the German woman th°u8ht that h° was wearing 8' wig. When it was learned that he had a new growth of hair, he was the United Kingdom is over-sup- ~ besieged ,by muy bald headed plied with two-rowed melted bar-` speaking ”_a""su;eon and php people and by business promoters, iey of a quality quite superior to; swan or long experience Hon Dr |arixious to know and use the sec- “mat °”‘ b° P1'°du°°d "nd" “°’°’Herbert A. Bru:s has called at-*ret 0! me new growth or hair' mal conditions in UHMGM PGY'-1C-,tention to one of the worst men- `whm nsked what ho had used' he truthfully replied that he had used nothing' that the hair had _ _ h . h ‘ .i ~ii n' , _ ' tain purposes some six rowed bar 5;; °;`:m;;’: tsl? grams' gin lr; simply returned without any 195' iS 1’¢Qui.red md this must be ' _ ‘ thought or effort on his part. . imported. At present, this is mainly - ` Last year s. research worker was supplied bv irni>°rtsti°n= of Cali-,or mini degmeruuor. through tae EM” t° “ww hm °“ “b°“° °W°“°” f different individuals who were bald ornia Bay Brewing. Canadian;DI'°8T?5SiV0 i'>1'CD€\Sa'.cii of mental or small bald H nk i - _ and physical d f ct' . S i ' p y e eww re' lent breeders may dW@1°i> a var is ms diswse°,;a;’°1’t is” °1“‘|eeivea thousands of letters and a W. Whlilh Wm °°ml>€te with the °W y'i great many business propositions. sun-ripened. ioo per sent zemun- hem of the ` fi .. ' A ' _ ' Whv did the hair crow asain on _ ..z .i -.\tl ri ation california crop. At present it nagionl M m an I 'C 5 this boxer and upon this series of cases recorded by the research worker, when as a. matter of fact l In the melmmney Brmsh plant; 4 Before the wal; it' was held es-im the major” of . th br _ i _ y cases once e hair goes it doesn’t return? In certain illnesses, such as the flu, typhoid fever or other acute ailments there is often a rapid falling of the hair. Usually after a few weeks the hair begins to grow and soon retums to its nomial con. dition. In the series of cases above men- tioned it was it disturbance of the little pituitary gland at the base of the skull that was causing the bald- ness or partial baldness and the use of pituitary extract restored 'the hair. ' Naturally this pituitary extract is not of benefit to the .usual cases of baldness, which is due to the fact that the lltf-le layer of fat between the bony skull and the skin gets so thin that the scalp becomes more firmly attached to the skull and les movable. The skin becomes more "tight" or tense, and the hair thin- ner and thinner on the top of the head because of this shrinkage of fat. In the ordinary case of thinning hair therefore it is good treatment to keep the scalp movable by mas- sage and to use a little all or fat during the massage. Dominion Drama Festival (Toronto Globe) A modem philosopher has written il book to prove that all the mul- tlfarious activities of liuiuanity re- duce, in the final analysis, to four esentlal functions: work, play, love, and worship, It would not be diffi- cult to show that each of these four fundamental needs is satisfied, to some extent, by participation in the newly revivlficd Little Tlieatre movement which is now sweeping the OOUHAYY from I coast to coast under the linpctus so far-slghtcdly given to it by his Exccllcney the Governor-General of Canada, The presentation oi' a worthwhile drama by a Little Theatre group evidently involves good, hard work; brain-work, lumdiivork, team-work, and hcncst workinanshlp of many other kinds. Unless the group puts' its best work into the pro:iuetion,l the performance is iiiiiikriy to im~ DVCFS Vfrry favorably citiicr an nu- dicncc or an adjudicator, while earnest work of the right sort has been found to bring great rewards and satisfaction to the worker. Sl‘C°Y1dly. putting on a Little Theatre production manifestly af- f°\‘dS HIUPIC scope for the playin- stlnct in humanity, thc nccd fori fun and recreation. for rclcasc from' U10 daily erfmi of “ine Job." it is i PUBLIC FORUM This column ll open lor Ihr sl D sorta: ldenis discus on I P0 of questions ol lnlrrnt. The Charlottetown fiuudlan sion not nu-fnisrlly oldurw thr oplnions oi correspondents, G ROUCIIERS slr,-The professional groucher is thc biggest crop product of the world depression. In practically e_v- ery case he is the one who suffers the least. and has in fact no legitim- ate cause for his grouches. The per- son who is really hit by hard times is not it gi-oucher. He complains of no work, no food, family in want; but that is not groucliing. It is the natural expression against the tell- ing hardships of bitter fate, But a section of our press is load- ed with thc grouchcs of professional grouchers. They crank and grouch, not because of real want or priva- tlon, but because they cannot add the wonders of the Arabian Knights to their present abundance. Many grouch because they were removed from the political flesh pots, where me portage had made them already too fat, and where the needy broth- er, less fat and more hurigered is re- cuperating his lost strength, The fattened toady grouches be- cause he can feed no more on pub- lic smbroslas; the lean man coin- plains of the cold and exposure- and an empty stomach-his is not a. grouch but a. protest against the penalty of depression and the pains of fact. At times he is up against the choice of starvation or suicide, and too many have been forced to escape by the avenue of self des- truction. In variety the name of the habit- ual groucher is legion. And any- iiiing is suitable grouch food. Why can’t we have the sun and moon und stai'ry satclites brought to earth to adorn our imperfect habitatlons. and the roses of Sharon and lilies of the Nils to decorate our foot- paths? What are we paying taxes for, if we esn't get sn eiysiuni for a dwelling and breezes perfiuned with Arabian richness to inflate our sour- ed lungs? Why 'doesnt the Government fur- nish blow-pipes to inflate f-he grouchers dollar to make it look (like Mark Twain's frog) like a dol-. lar and thirty cents. or as big as an ox? The hungry man doesnt want this. His prayer is that he may let the dear little dollar at its real value, that he may enjoy the liberal quantum of bread, meat, molasses and butter that would bring peace and comfort to his home. Why is it that our twcfr three policemen are not omnipresent? Why isn't lie at every doorstep when the annoyed householder wants him? Isn't it disgraceful that when drunks or hcodlums are cutting cap- ers at Longworth Avenue the police are spotting the haunts of downtown burglars? And how shameful that those officers of the law _are after the dlsturbers on Elm Avenue, when they should be after the drunks on Richmond and King Streets. And stupidly those grouchers imagine that law breakers are of the blind and senseless type who would not be sure that the officers were beyond noise and eye-sight before starting their burglaries. Look at the big Civic or Govern- incnf: debt; why are they spending the money so profligately? .And then in the next sentence,-Why are the highways not paved with adamant and the hedges planted with rhod- odcudrons and privet? Whl’ 15 the public service starved? Why is the Hillsborough Bridge planked on one side only? Why are there ruts in the highways? Why docsn't the government provide work (at union wages) for every one who fails -to make good in the competitive field? 0 professional fool! 0 clironlc groucher, have you not sense enough to know that two and two make four? Will your limit of brains grasp the fact that the debts of provinces and cities is the product of your demand for those public conveniences? Can you muster to- gether the few grains of common horse sense to enable you to realize that the best government that ever existed can not buy the folderois and garnishmcnts that you are af- ter, without paying for them? Have you that flcc-sized comprehension to know that you cannot pay for them without either taxing the peo- ple, or heaping up the debt? ` thc prince of avoczitions. the mari-_ tcr~kcy of escape, thc ideal way by! which grown-ups may rc-enter once' more their lost childhood's luippy kingdom of "niakc-believe." i for a maid is a theme beloved of playwrights, and fcw stage crea- What fools these grouchcrs be, who protest against taxes. who cringe and growl and siiarl because of taxes and debt, and who Snail still more persistently when thc lav- ish hands oi' waste and prodlgality Tlilrdiy. in addition to work amif ran to embellish their surroundings mc? play. Little Theatre activity has its' Wm, the genius of everyday 1,,-,_ it F U _ _ ) t V | Get busy C y n ieis, junu o romance as wcll. Thclo\c of n. niaii provcmcnts, and velvet-coat every your jobs Provincial Government `orbs, and to this impulse may be (Montreal Gazette) The word music is s. whole d.‘a- course in itself, for it suggests a quality that hu taken to itself the express title of the muse and in- tcrpenetratcs all other arts, just as Apollo is said to have been made leader of their gleeful chorus. Whe- ther the faculty be mimetic or in- ate, whether its origin is to be found in the stress of human feel- ing or the strain be borrowed from the myiiad voices of nature, it may be accepted that music is at once the most comprehensive and gen- crous oi’ all art expressions. Music has been callcd the speech of an- gels, the poor mans Parnassus, poetry of the air, medicine of the heart, the rhythmic march of the applied the phrase of Plato that it is the expremlon of an unknown longing and an ancient need. 'I"nere is music wherever there is order, proportion and beauty. It is a mys- tery in the sense of being an inner all oth . 8 ing the constant and unquench able voice of creation and sn- echo of the invisible world. It is, as Beethoven said, the mediator be- tween the spiritual and sensual life. and blessed in ever being meviinbiy linked up wini thought and emotion, when we begin to study the cognate associations of ist delights to trs/ce the symphony harmony of the landscape, of Plc- arid in yet more intensive and discoursed of “sphere harmonies" amongst the stars. and amongst the coueorasnt relations oi music stands the term "mosaic", s stranzt yet, withal, effectual reminder that the tonal quality of music inheres- The liquid floor inwrought with pearls divine Where all his labors in mosaic shine. Surely here.. and from many sides at once, we have evidence of the way in which music is in all growing things, and the soul trem- hies with the trembling key, whilst resounds that one note of prophetic concord to which the universe at some future day is destined to ful- ly respond. When we turn to the Scriptures we are at once impressed by the frequent allusions to music and its cultivation as a. religious “T5 amongst the chosen people. Here is the story of Jubers invention “father of all such as handle ham and 01-gam; also the account of Sa.ul’s malady cured by the minstrel- sy of David. We have the Psalter, s matchless collection of lY1”1CS WS' tlfying to the integral kinship of poetry and music. There are songs by the wayside, songs of iiilsrimaee. songs of exile, songs in the night. songs of the household, the field and the temple-in short. "a pulse of air that must bc heard in which earth‘s silence livcs and throbs and sings." It is a ehoralc sucli as that Wordsworth commemorates auionssi. the 'mountainsz "A mighty ml-°>51°“ of streams. of all her voices 0110"; and just as the finale of thc Psalm Book is the summons to \iriW0!`Si\l praise, so this stream of quench- less `muslc'runs through the hills of history, and is associated with the first records of creation as also with thc last apccalypse of redemp- tion and glory, Where shall \vc find 9. more pciictrativc sciitcncc than this of thc uprlsc oi’ Ci'0i1i-10D from chaos, "Wi:cn the morning stars sang together and all the sous of God shouted for joy"? Or again. the chomle of joyful liarvcstcrs that comes up like is song from the sep, and finds its climax in the triumphant stmln,~ "And all the trees of the field shall clap their he.nds”? Or once inorc, the new song of the redeemed assembly be- fore the throne cntffrnal, heard as the voice of ,many waters, the voice of thc harpcrs of whom it is signi- ficantly said, they wore robes of white, this texture thc symbol of metre of their pathway through_ Make your bricks without straw; _ H mightier than the artist himself., i._.____ “vtirrvssnssf “UR BUSINESS -ds to a. plumber. is an expert. the musical chord the mind is al- Prompt Se"/'C5 0l'\ 3" J0bbif'lg most bewildered at the widespread branching; of this harmonic stem. . H. Scientists tell us there is the like , gamut in musical tones and pris- PHONE 393-J. ` matic hues of the light. '1’he botan- ` PAGE roun . 0 _ 'sus ciiAiu.o'i'ri~:'i‘owN GUARDIAN . ' G , ',_s __ , , _,=‘ . , 1 APRIg_§.193s A 1 The Mystery Of Music I A 3 Every man to his trade" was never truer than when applied It takes an eg-` Dert to do an expert. job of plumbing. Theirs why the man we send to do your work of colors in flowers. We talk of the April 8_sat_m_ tures, of architecture. of fabrics: , ' _ Brahmin Dran _ Sold Only in 3,5 _Z subtle fashion of the harmony oi’ FOR PERFECF TEA FLAVOR social affections and the present- » _ ment of ideas- The Greek P0095 ge Pekoe Tea Alrtilht Packages. "gh"'°°“m°°°- W°l‘t11y of attention is the fact that in the story of me Prcdical Son the feasting and mu. sie is represented as a "symphony," such being the actual word und, And finally, it may be noted that in the Pauline epistle: the very next sentence to “Let the Word of Christ dwell in you plenteously" is this: "Teaching and udmgnish. ing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs.” What could more pointedly suggest that by whatsoever is human in him and whatsoever is divine about him, man should be a. lover of mu- sic? Charles Lamb avowed he had "no ear" for music, yet could say that as he walked the aisles of the sanctuary he felt waking in him- self a new sense putting the soul of the old religion into his youthful apprehension. A fine strain of mu- sic oft will lift the soul nearer God and Heaven than the most elabor- ate discourse preached from the pulpit. Music is eloquence. This is its name. ‘ All of which considerations em- phasize thc profound mystery of the musical chord. Only our famil- iarity with this method of appeal in tardy-minds dulls the spiritual marvel and revelation of this agen- cy. Is it not a. marhcl that out of silence and invisibility, out of the sim] of other vibrations and the stir of elections, should emerge thc soothly sweet or heart-shakins £0' IN nur: season If night should come and ilrid me at my toil, When all Life's day I had, tho' faintly wrought; And shallow furrows, cleft in stony soil _ Were all my labour: shall I count it naught . If only one poor gleancr, weak of hand, Shall pick a. scanty shcaf where I have sown? "Nay, for of thee the Master doth demand Tliy work: the harvest rests with Him alone." -John McCras. __________i__ \\\\\\\\` _` | ;fDonus”/ i \ lavish upon your public works every 2131173J§..l§”Il°lL‘.S{"‘§Jf1l°`°iZ.`=fiifliii.§§“I§‘?°é';`i?§3i§f.§s.f£§.“ii§.’2§ =“~=v fm" °v‘"r °f ="°' gold 'or for mwmi Thi, tm; H rriofvuic “mr kinds or work _ny which those cranks of thc Groucli is the love of'thc.ir arf ’\vhi'l in clio' nd w‘rsl~ip It is hcl lnp- to schnol demand' But do it wn'h0uL; accom” R mlm _` ' V C] msd ‘°' B “ _‘ ' `p 5 taxation; don`t dare to do it with _ g pass on with mnii_\,,Il1 in cultuinl backgrounds, to borrowed money; mfmm yum. d0;_i amateurs-as thc very ctyinfilmzylmake us live more abundantly, to mrs and c0mp,.,,_,_., your warks; do of the word suBi!€‘Sl~i1 for I”i‘cii;-li' trash us to uic better that marvel- it an from me p,,od,,cts of the wmd_ .q1m¢iicur" is merely Latin ~,1ni1for.", lous instrument, our native lan- bags whale S,.,.,bb,,,,U,, so f,.cq,,cnuy Engl sh "i:vcr." ,gu‘gc. it is supply`i1g one mere tic dc,-acc and ,US:,.,,~5, ,hc cniumns of Dccn are the 'p ln" cud li.g.i to id togcflicr u th a c nvnon ,1 qccmn of 0._ p ci my( th- gc -- ~ 1 ' “ ' ' ' '-"'7":‘;-f;‘-571 = :» 'i`.i