Manon 17, 1952 Lenten Meditation ,.-........ .- .......... From The Columns of The Times. Insiders. THE EMPTY HOUQ when the empty house of Man- wul is left empty. ev" mirits ctxne Ind take possession. That law. dramatically stated in the sayings that form the Gospel for the Third Sung” in Lent, has been verified in wumnporary experience. Wars to end war have proved to be vain dreams. To fight those wars was a moral obligation in a sinful and disorganized world; but they brought inevitable disappointment. The attempt to expel the demon 3: aggression without a creative faith to take its place and guard the house threatens to bring in 'seven other mirits more wicked than itself," so that the last state is worse than the first. only the finger of God can cast out devils. our Imid himself heal- ed patient, not diseases; and he denied them-or, cos they "said, have out the demons-by awak- i-ning faith in the goodness of God. ills principle, now generally ac- ;.-nawledged in the methods of our- alive psychology, was summarized in Seeley's well-lenown phrase. ”ihe expulsive power of a new at- icction." , A man cannot by sheer force of will overcome evil compuisions and desires; he must be helped to identify the self with the positive desire for a new good, and organ- ize his life round that centre. Tlicre is but one prescription acainsi sin--to be growing in the knmvledge and love of God. Dis- cipline and lmmstion are but means to that end. is of more than individual applica- tion. and explains much that is happening on the world stage. Every civilization hitherto has tested on a religious foundation and the worship of the gods has been at the centre of it. The mod- em world is attempting for the slut tune to maintain a culture on the basis of a non-religious philosophy of life. The fundamental prwlem for the free world is not so much the material strength of Oommunl-n as its own cultural and moral weakness. Mr. Dowlas I-Iyde, in hie recent book, "I Believed." quotes a party member, already beginning to be disillusioned, who said that she dared not' face resig- nation because "I'm terrified of the vacuum which would be left in my life if I went." ”It is precisely." he goes on. "this vacuum which gives Oom- mvunlsm its chance. Communism, I believe, has its origin precisely in that spiritual vacuum.whlch exists all over what once was Christen- dom . . . (It) has been able to take what is essentially a religious instinct and use it for evil ends. If so, the only effective answer of the west to the challenge that threatens it is positive. strategic resistance has been imposed upon it. and here and now that may be a duty; but of itself it offers no constructive solution. The positive nnswer is cultural and religious. The true resistance is to exhibit and to authenticate in action a better way through the witness The law of the spiritual vacuum of a Christian society. . TI-IE GUARDIAN. CHARIDTTETOWN PAGE THREE K mrnit lillillilllilll Thlseolumaisreservsdfoeswws of local interest, but advertising elalsowsynstprsmaybeinserted atllveeentsawerl. strictly pay- ableiaalvanea. JIMMTI TAXI - Phone 535. arrsanoorc TEA. Ladies Aux- iliary Y. M. C. A, Tuesday. March Illth. 3.30 to 0. MRS. JOHNS'I'ON'S LADIES' WEAR. Specials - Coats, Dresses. Suits. HOWARD M.aelNNIS FOOT- WEAR at 175 Queen Street. CIAIWELL for Better Photo- graphs. x HEAR Majorxlioy MacGillivray, Charlottetown Red Cross Cam- paign Chairman over C. 1'. C. Y. to- night at 6.30 P. M. IF YOU ENJOY GOOD MUSIC and like to laugh-come to the Irish Concert in the Baptist Church Hall. tomorrow (Tuesday) evening. Tickets 50 cents. CHARTER FLIGHTS to any point in Canada or the United states for passengers or cargo Phone Maritime Central Airways Limited. 2061 or 540. MEETING OF RESIDENTS of Spring Park in Hall, March 19th. at B P. M. under auspices of Com- munity Ciub. Professor Prank Mac- Millan. Guest Speaker. Lunch and social hour. LEFT FOR. OTTAWA - Mr. F. M. Nash. district manager, Egg and Poultry Division, Dominion Department of Agriculture. left by plane for Ottawa Saturday morning where he will confer with departmental heads of the head office. He is expected back 8 -LOVELY we HAVE MOVED com: AND sup Us AT OUR. NEW LOCATION I81 - GREAT GEORGE ST. - I81 ENGLISH some cimva ours is saucnas oeuar 39c paces The Ahegweit Gift court SPECIAL DESIGNS - 8 Do you know me 3.796 Blood Trans- fusion: were provided for Patients In Local Hospitals and Armed Services Overseas in 1951. .1.4-..-.--.-- --.- - :- - was-an-4 a.-.9: -in - s TEAM NO. I CPL. M. HAGAN (Clpt) GILBERT A. GAUDET DONALD MaeMILLAN EARLE CLARK TEAM NO. -'I -RICHARD MATHESON (CIIIL) CLEVE ORASWELL EARL WONNACOIT ALLISON OWEN SIDNEY JEFFREY. . - TEAM N0. 1! LOUIS CAMPBELL (Capt) HENRY L. PETERS J. PRESTON CURLIY A. II. MOULD H. A. POWER TEAM NO. 10 T L'I'.-CMZDR. J. J. TRAINOR (Cspt.)Ma.l. LAWSON JENK SE J. T. PLACE REG. RARWI SYLT. S. FARRELL MAJOR E. A. MoCAIEY . TEAM NO. 18 BLAIR MIeDONALD (Capt) R. J. RUPERT R. E. HYNDMAN THOMAS MGAVINN GERRY STOKOE WILBUR WILLIS BLAIR SWAN jg me up csoss cannot essay on wmiour voua SUPPORT the latter part of this week. C O U N T Y MAGISTIIATI-2'5 COURT - A resident of Char- lottetown charged with operating a truck that weighed in excess of the prescribed weight limit on a public highway pleaded guilty, and had his case adjourned for one week by the Queen's County Magistrate, Mr. Gilbert A. Gaudet Saturday. A resident of Bonshaw convicted of the same misdemeanor also entered a plea of guilty and hadk his case adjourned for one wee . SEEKING REPLACEMENT PLANE - Mr. Elton Woodside, "The Flying Farmer", who is as- sociated with Mr. Paul Sharpe, of Paul's Flying Service, is presently S P E G I A L One 5 x 'l Enlargement "REE with every Roll of Film at Meyers Studios 12! Richmond Street Quebec Really To lifi Restrictions. QUEBEC, March 15 Premier Duplessis said today Que- bec is ready to lift its meat rut- rictions is better methods of pro- ecting its livestock from ioot-and- mouth disease sre'!ound. The Premier said this in answer to questions as to when the gov- ernment plans to relax its meat and livestock import restrictions. The Premier said the restrictions -were "necessary" to protect the ProvInce's livestock and public health in general. "The G... nment will be happy to co-operate in the enforcement of other methods of protection. if such exist and as long as they offer the same guarantees as the current embargo." the Premier said T in Halifax where he is negotiating for a replacement plane to use in the service now being given to the public. He is expected to return this week and will resume oper- atlons in answering the many calls made on the flying service this winter. In the meantime Mr. Sharpe has been piloting the plane on the "mercy" flights. ALL MALE CHOIR. - An in- novation in church services was initiated at St. James Presbyter- ian Church yesterday, when at the Vesper service the music was led by an all male choir of men and boys under the direction of Miss Lillian MacKenzie, Mus. Bac. There was a large and ap- preciative congregation and the ministcr, Rev. T. H. B. Somers, M.A., S.T.M., gave a fine expos- ition of the 2nd Epistle of St. Peter and the Epistle of St. Judc. SONG SERVICE - The Trinity Young People's Union held their regular Sunday song service last evening in the social hall follow- ing the church service. The sing- ing was led by Leith Stetson and Donnie Wood. with Mary Mor- rison at the piano. Unfortunate- ly the guest for the evening, Les Alexander, was not able to be present, but the group was en- tertained very capably by Miss Betty Beers who sang. "Jesus Took My Burden" and ”Saved By Grace", and by Mr. Raymond Player who sang t'Think On Me" and "Found Me I-'alls- The Night', with Mrs. Keith Rogers playing the piano. The meeting closed by singing "Jacob's Ladder". the offering and the benediction led by Mr. Irwin. Personals The many friends of Mrs. F. C. Dollar, Brookfield, regret to hear of her continued illness in the Prince Edward Island Hospital. Mr. Emmett Francis. son of the well known sportsman, ”Shonna" Francis. has been taken on strength of the 21st Armored Brigade R. C. A. C., as lieutenant ordnance of- ficer. Lieut. Francis was former- ly in the C. 0. T. C. at St. Dun- stan's University. -(CP)- Erin's Sons Prepare For Big celebration (By Canadian Pram) Out come the green ties and shamrocks again as the sons of the Ould sod prepare to celdarate at Patrick's Day on Monday. one of the biggest celebrations in Canada, that of Montreal Irish- men. will be heki Sunday after- noon when the United Irish soc- ieties hold their annual parade. Impressive floats will be dotted among the long 'line of marchers from parish groups, militlry units and many Irish organintions of the city and surrounding munici- palities. smaller celebrations will be held in cities and towns acrou Canada Monday when Canadian Irish and Sons of Erin the world over com- memorate the deoth of the saint who brought Christianity to Ire- land. - Among special events this year is a British Broadcasting Corporat- ion prograsn direct from the an- cient st. Patrick's Mem i-l church at Saul in Coiuity Down. The church stands on the spot where st. Patrick preached his first sermon after landing in Ire- land In A. D. 432. After being a prisoner of s mar- audlng chieftain in A.ntrim for six years he went to the continent, where he established his religious reputation and was commissl d by the Pope to work in Ireland. Great Missions , I-Ie preached and taught, organ- ized parlshes and built churches. he founded probably 866 churches and baptized 10.000 persons. Among his converts was his captor o! earl- ier years. He banished the snakes and" he, made the shamrock the lmmortall emblem of Ireland. using the tiny plant as a representation of the Holy Trinity. St. Patrick's day was decided on only after a lengthy Irish argu- ment which according to legend ended in a truly Irish compromise. It is said that one faction in Ire- land claimed the Saint died on March 8. while an opposing party held that March 9 was correct. A Solomon-like Irish priest. Father Mulcahey, is said to have settled the argument by the addition of eight and nine and March 1'! has stood to this clay. I COMPLETE VISUAL REFRAf.'l'lflN and ANALYSIS 6. F. I-IUTCI-IESON 8: SON Optometrists I3 Grafton St Yj-Z Addressing the Royal ,0anadisn Institute some time ago, the Pres- ident of the University of Toronto expressed anxiety about the effect upon cltlsens of India of the im- pact on their eountryof the Illlir erisilsm of the West. When he passed this remark. President smith had Just returned from a tour of the universities of India where he had personally experienced a little of the conflict between the forces of the West and East. He was far from sharing the unthinking West- erner's all too boastful confidence that the whole world has only to come to know the West in order to embrace spontaneously its way of life. There has come about in the west. I am afraid. an almost com- plete separation between the theory of living and its practice. In theory it is Christian and rational, in practice it is predominantly mater- iallstic. At some time in the past we effected this divorce between reason and practice. and now we have finalized the divorce by quiet- ly laying reason aside. Thus Pres- ident Smith could rightly lament "the shoddy sentiment and the distorted values that are unthink- ingly embraced by the majority of nur fellow citizens." If the soul of our new, unreas- oning, twentieth-century society could be adequately examined, how would it appear? I suppose we can only speculate on this. but the view suggested by a recent book by Professor McLuhan of St. Mich- aei's College is not unconvincing. O O I In a fairly general survey of the fields of popular art. dress, adver- tising. entertainment. journalism, marriacn and burial customs. he has left the impression that we are fundamentally shallower than we care to admit. Our reading. for example. if circulation statistics are a real Indication. is largely "pre-digest:-d pap. -spooned out with confidential nudges." Like "A crowd of ient.husiast'c kids lining the curbs." we gaze upon the pic- tures and innocently absorb the chatter as "Time marches on." We We read Books of the .Month. not of our own selection. or flashy re- nrinis of sadistic sex novels and think that by doing as our neigh- bors do we are demonstrating that we. too. are cultured and sophis- ticated. And so for the other aspects of life. It is the passing I " ticns of passion or the dictates of can- ricious sentiment that determine what we shall accept next from the fashloners of our sordid cult- III'C. v An interesting but equally con- vincing. variation of this View of society appeared recently in Leo Chcrne's analysis of television pro- grams for the New York Timu Magazine. Mr. Cheme. executive secretary of the Research Institute Thoughts For Our Time By Ilk Eminence Cardinal Mcfiuigaa . (Copyright) of America. was asking whether the "debate" programs of "Town Meeting were not in reality a dan- ger to the nation. They are pro- d, grams intended primarily as en- tertainment but based usually on very serious issues. They purport to present in some twenty minute both sides of some important con- ! O 0 As Mr. Cherne says: "Deciding the issue of the Marshall plan in thirty minutes is difficult indeed. Saving Asia from Communism be- tween the commercials is an irri- posslbllity. Finding the means to head off inflation in thirty min- utes is an economist's daydream.” The disturbing factor. however. is that such programs distort the real issue. In the interest of enter- tainment value. they presenf the two sides of the case as though they are clearly defined and sharp- ly distinguished. But no genuine debate can be accurately recorded in black and white. There are all kinds of extenuating circumstances and modifying considerations to be taken into account. It is here that human reason comes effectively "Aye. Aye Sir" Correci Phrase OTTAWA, Mar. 15-(OP)-"Aye aye air" is the traditional reply of a rating to an officer in the Royal Canadian Navy, and any other phrase is frowned on. That's what the navy said to- y. A naval spokesmsn said though no general order stipulating the use of the phrase has been laid down, a ”reminder'' was recently posted at I-IM.C.S. Stadacona, the naval station at Halifax, remind- ing ratings that "aye, aye sir" is the correct nautical phrase. The spokesman didn't know if the ratings in Halifax! had been diverging from the traditional practice to cause the notice to be posted there. But, he added, it is a fact that "aye. aye" is traditional in the navy-adding "Sir" when replying to an officer-and anythingielse such as ”OK sir" just isn't pro- per. second builder takes up where the first builder, reason, had to give up. But our sophisticated age does not dare to believe. It looks on faith as childish, too unlrtterably silly. It has long since given up into play. It is at this stage that the habit of faith. How can it now the audience might become truly be expected to carry on with its human by exercising its mogt hu. thinking? And thus are men left of their animal man faculty. But in the interest We Playthings of purchased time and entertain- senses and passions. Is it any won- ment value, this has to be sacri- def that Western man 15 H0 IOHKEF ficed. Is it any wonder that people attractive. no longer comprehen- sometlmes find us difficult to un- 311319. to Deollle on the other side the world? derstand? Indeed, do we really un- Of derstand ourselves? , What does this imply? Surf.-l,v that, as a people. we are not really free. Our tastes. nur sentiments. our ideals, our notion of what is good for us. are all dictated by the materialistic principles of our so- callcd modern culture. Again. it implies that we are immature. that we are units incapable of taking the full view of any issue confront- ing us. Maturity and freedom do not come by mechanical mgns They are concomitants of reason. When we really start to think. when we become human beings. then do we achieve natural matur- ity and basic freedom. O C 0 Yet most of us are afraid to tlilnk. And why? Because on those only ion rare occasions when we have tried to do so, it seems to have cot us nowhere. our thought was likp the unfinished wall of a beautiful building. The builder had begun the wall but had been up- able to complete it. with the re- sult that the last row of stones re- mains Iuitlnr! out, like the teeth of some gigantic gear, awaiting the hand of a second builder. our thought was much like this and we were disturbed. We did not seem to realize that all thought, all thinking Is bound to be incom- plete. It is like the unfinished) wall calling into the void for something to complete it. What completes it. of course, is divine faith. Faith the Soothe them with MlNARD'S tiunasur D luh on (red uick relief. lat-dryi . N IAIIl':l(06lsDcIICAL ad". "I R '53 35G Finest Work Done by Experts. Free Inspection. Prompt. Service. G . H.TAYLOR J EWELLERS Charlottetown RED CROSS CAMPAIGN OPENS rooav, MARCH I7, I952 , HAVE YOUR CONTRIBUTION READY WHEN THE CANVASSER CALLS- HE IS A VOLUNTEER ON AN ERRAND OF MERCY - DON'T ASK HIM TO "CALL LATER"-HE'S BUSY TOO! . CI-IARLOTTETOWN CHAIRMAN - Meier Roy D. MecGiIIivrey DIVISION I - DIVISIONAL COMMANDER - LT. DONALD A. MeeLEOD TEAM NO. 2 GORDON HUTCHESON (Capt) MAC MscKENZIE GEORGE BURNETT HOWARD HOBBS ROBERT BRADLEY EDWARD MSCPHAIL DIVISION 2 TEAM NO. S C. E. MIAGINN (Cnpt.) CLARENCE WALKER BILL AGNEW ERNEST CLAWSON” MERRITT RORSYTHE CHARLES WILKINS TEAM NO. If LT. COL. DAN BELL (Cant) LT. COL. L. T. LOWTHER GORDON BENNETT J. W. F. M.Is:CALLI.'M J. G.. PATTERSON C. F. HINE RALPH L MACLEAN - DIVISIONAL COMM TEADI NO. I FRED NORTON (Capt) CHARLIE DOWNE HAROLD DOBSON RALPH CARR GEORGE ANDERSON LEA STETSON LT. COL. KEITH JOHNSTON W.S.VEALE TEAM NO. 4 L1'. W. B. PETERS (Capt) IV EMMETT MMDONALD CLARK INNIS JAMES CARRAGHER JOE CALLAGHAN WENDELL BIULLINS TEAM NO. 5 AN TRAINOB (CIpt.) ALLISON MMLEOD ANDER - DR. R. H. TEAM NO. 10 GORDON KERR (CIl!t.) MICHAEL CAMPBELL ALBERT LANNAN ARTHUR PERRY II. C. MARTIN MYRON BELL (Capt) ANDREW LIKELY JIM CURRIE ALLAN PORSYTHE BRIAN CUDMORE SIDNEY GREEN JR. BARRETT TEAM N0. ll DIVISION 3 G DIVISIONAL COMMANDER - J. RUSSELL ST. IJOHN TEAM NO. 14 TILT. D. L. O'ROURKE (Capt) ALLAN MURPHY J. ALFRED Mcl(EARNEY JAMES J. COADY J. BERNARD FLEMING DIVISION - DIVISIONAL COMMAN DER -- LT. COL. A. RAM NO. 20 R. E. ROGERS THOMAS MIDADAM MAURICE BLOCK ANDREW MIIEACHERN DIVISION 5 - DIVISIONAL COMMANDER - LT. JO TEAM NO. I0 JIM MORRIS (Capt. DR. P. A. CIIELMA DON CROCIRTT BILL CROCKE'I'l' TEAMNO. ) N TEAM NO. III J. J. Y. BOUDRAIS (Capt) STERLING BEATON MAURICE WEEKS W. VERNON PEARDON J. IVAN NICHOLSON TEAM NO. 21 INS, M.C. (C)WILl"RED SMITH (Capt) MAJOR FRED NASH PHIL PALMER II. R. LARGE CAPT. L. G. MMNEVIN GENE RICHARD TEAM N0. ll BENEDICT M. CALLAGHAN (CJPRED C. DeCOS'l'E (Capt) MICHAEL ROBISON IJOYOLA MURNAGHAN N. RAYMOND HUGHES E. JACK LEIGHTIZER JR. TED MMARTHUR W. ROGERS FRANK G. O'NEILL WILLIAM CAMPBELI. VVILFRED L. MIcLEOD EUGENE COADY TEAM NO. If SOMERLED TRAINOR (Clpt.) LT.-COL. W. H. SOPER, M.D. CAPT. R. J. MAHAR ELMER BLANOHARD IIIAJOR D. J. MICCORMACK R. DR. LEO MoISAAC TEAM NO. IVILLIAM TANTON (CIpt.) BOB SNAZELLE (Capt.) JACK CLARK LLOYD FORD FRANK COX (Capt) TEAM NO. 11 TEAM NO. BILL THOMPSON (Capt) DR. L. I. DUFFY ALLAN ANDREW OWEN LOCKYER Do you know that your Red Cross con- tribution helped provide treatment for 408 handicapped children in 19517 TEAM NO. I! KEITH ACORN (Capt) STUART MMKAY GORDON STEWART HILL BEER LLOYD GRANT. PERCY SIMMONS TEAM NO. 18 LEO P. CALLAGHAN (CIp(.) STEWART PIERCE N. LARABEE E. DOUGLAS HENRY MURNAGHAN J. REGINALD MMEDONALI) J. WII.BERT CROKEN ream N0. .11: HUGH SIMPSON JR. ,l;lN RICHARDS. R.C.N. TEAM NO. 10 TEAM NO. 24 El) GARNHUM (CInl.) MAJOR E. K. KENNEDY BILL MICHAEL GERALD MADDIGAN JOHN ROGERS TEAM NO. 80 (ll-JCII. DOWLING (('Ipt.) H. L. SEAR BILL WARREN D. A. MIQCANNELI. HOWARD McINNIS M. IV. WEEKS JOHNNY SQUARERRIGGS J. E. WRAN JACK FRASER- RAE STULL JOHN SIINNER HARRY MURPHY A. II. PEAK!) ALEX MelSAAO RAE KEENAN GEORGE BEER JIM MUBLRY A. R. GILLIS ERNIE IADRD PAUL KAYS LIDYD IIIAD BILL BROWN GEOH FITZGERALD DIVISION 6 - DIVISIONAL COM MANDIR - FRID PO ll TE 0 TEAM N0 89 AM N . IS CHARLIE ItIoAR'l'lIUR (Clot) JOHN PHILLIPS LOUIS MIIEDONALD HAROLD RUELI. LOUIS DOYLE nwst: span (cape) learns pvuom STAN LANCASTER WALTER WILSON GORDON ROPER (CIMJ DESIIOND RURGR KEITH ' ROBINSON ED PINEAU TEAM NO. 84 CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAYS - DIVISIONAL COMMANDER - C. J. MoeLlAlil nan no. as race: NO. as rah: No. as rs C.N.Mll.LlSH(CIPi-) IRIOORI J. IVAN HUGHES AM NO. II It. ausraant ( ) w. (1. MURRAY (Capt) &" cute nooosow wuss a c. an AND YOUR . DOLLARS -ll AS OINIROUS AS YOU CAN I AIM; -A. ..-.. . EM . .. .-,. 112. 39:1: 21:: M T3iJ.ZCjQiTI.L'Z; KC