. ........-- —¢—~neu- .- ~“- lwq4nua-nm~.~-x-n$isuie anqmv .’ ‘7- w... " m-ovaenuaii-tlirui-iainoha-nunumw~w-- -~ --»~ ... . . , . , , _ THE ETOWN GUARDIAN WRIGHT’S HAS canes: some . ‘canons WRIGHTKS HAS Boy's Oxfords of WRIGHTS HAS women's Oxfords or WRIGHT‘S HAS Women's Loafers or WRIGHT'S HAS Women's Oxfords of WRIGHT'S HA5 Men's Calf Oxfords oi WRIGHT’S HAS Men's Colf Oxfords of WRIGHT’S eoosllseceooelloil 5.00 5.00 5.00 . . . . . ..~,.~..;.-..:.;. . . 6.50 .-.. 6.00 ........ teflfl\.o . 8.00 SIINNYSIIIE 8i IIIIEEN ST. eQIe-eepaljlifol eenelloloommlllfse ‘Outstanding liareer In ll S Journalism Dr. Morrison. referred to In the following article from Time mlgg- zine. is a nephew of Mr. Charles H. Chandler. City: \ u .9. y Man of the Century An outstanding career in U. B. Protestant journalism is drawing to a close. Dr. Charles Clayton Morrison. r2_ editor of the Chile- ltion Century. decided that it was time to retire and turn the magn- l-rine over to his longtime managing ,editor. Dr. Paul Hutchinson. Last week. Dr. Hutchinson prepared to take over. Dr. Morrison will stay on the staff an contributing edi- tor of the weekly magazine that- _he has made info Protestantism‘; most vigorous voice. I A slender, decorous man with old-world manners. Dr. Morrison wears gold-rimmed glasses that do not quite hide the fire in his eyes. ‘ Even in his youth, he never lacked | for words. Like his father. he be- i came s minister of the Disciples of Christ, a. denomination origin-l lily formed by Prcsbyterians who‘ wanted less sectarianism and more church unity. Once in his preaching career Dr. Morrison. in the pulpit of a church he was vis- iting, discovered a clock with a lwsrning sign: "Preach not over 30 minutes." Dr. Morrison preached right on past the deadline. in 1908, he went to the public auction of a struggling little Dis- ciple of Christ publication (circ. Murray aiiil ll’. Window iilass - - - II-IOLMAWS Can Supply Immediately From Stock Many Hard-To-Get Items-QQHLQK This List For Your Requirements --. a AUGUST‘ Z2, 1y" is, THE TIME fro“ FIX-UP YOUR HOME! $0- . . Let IIOLIIIAN'S llelp You iiet Started 0n This Important Joli, RIGIIT NUWI..." SDQHdiY-Q a few days in Halifax, NB. York AnLlIlolnlty Mr- and Mrs. Neil liiaclnnis, City, spent or» week-end in ywk the Ill-til of Mrs. itlocmnis’ moms-r, Mrs. ftobert Crockett. Mr. and Mrs. TX... Knox, (my, lpent ills: snack-en’; in York, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. George Watts. Miss Gladys Jay. Mount Stewart. is visiting in York, the guest o; Mr- anxi Mrs. Allan Swan. Mr and Mrs. Peter Proud and family WGTB visitors ta Coy/ahead 0n Sunday. tile guest of Mrs Freud's moth-er, Mrs. George Bearisto. Mr. Hts intellectual vigor. It rose to its l present circulation (40,000) .time when Protestantism was so about 600). No other prospective customers showed up. so Dr. Mor- rison got the Christian Century for $1,500 cash. As be explains it now, Editor Morrison never really gave up his pulpit: "I was simply acnuiring: n larger pulpit." From the first, the distinguishing characteristic of. the Century under Morrison was| lna mired down in social reform that it tended to forget theology-a SIIINGLES - - 4, VEE-LOCK ASPHALT SHIN- GLES-IZS lbs, weigIih-colors red, green, black, red blend ond green blend. THICK-BUTT ‘ASPHALT SHIN- GLES-ZIO lbs. weighh-colors red, green, block, blue, red blend ond green blend. ROLL ROOFING—I8 ond 36- Loige stock of Window Gloss in all wonled sizes. Order your requirements NOW. Lock Sets - - - New ihipineni of Front ond Inside Door Sets in various styles. Door Butts - - - Plated Door Bulis--Hord lo Illoilerifite Tile - - -" The props: mciterlol for your Kitchen and Bathroom-comes in white ond reen. Plastic Counter Top - Ton Linen Arborlle Plastic for lNSlILATE - Mr. Jack Casweii. has returned to his home in Yozk after spend- in: a. few days in Halifax. Mr. and Mrs Harzy Levils, York, were vr-iiors to Iracadie on Sun- IIBY aoiompanled by Mr. Elwood Beaten of U-SA M! Arid Mrs. Ralph Crockett, ltoyaitv. spent Sun-fey siicrnoon in York rho gz-cst of Mrs. Robert - Crocketi. Mrs. Harold Watts and (laughter Margaret Rose are visiting in Black River. N.B.. the 9.1m: of her daughter. Mrsif-Iazen Bradford. Miss Marina Watts, Yo'k. is vis- ltin; in the City, ti-e guicst of her iiousin Miss Edith Brown Rosebank. were visitors to Y vii Sundry. the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Archie Vr-ssey. -C WAR ON MALARIA _._._ KYRENLA. Cyprus - (c?) Anti-malarial the next two years scourge that entails on economic loss running into of dollars. -—-§___... Pl-UMB COSMIC RAYB MELBOURNE. Australia — (GP). --Scienti.sts a: University of M91- into. DQ111119. conducting reiearch cosmic rays. have erected 5 hug Mount i-lothum l’i')Dl11g i0 Mrs. Claude Oraswell and son. Robert. were visitors to York on, Saturday. Mr. Buddy Coops-r. souihpori. is visiting 1n Ycxk, tho guest oi his brother, West Cooper. 1ft. Georgi- WTifs. York. is Gefiliejump on itude. -----—~_-. 20TH Ci-TNTURY ART Glnssmalring wan-introduced lntolmke a position m“ was "m-l America at the beginning o1 this (‘El’) tury. Here, in a single produce, ll coinpleee Pmieflion against moss common polaro pesu, idling early and In: bllghu, Colorado pomp beau“, h; beetles, and leaf hoppers. Widely acclaimed by professional porno growers everywhere, this combination insecticide-fungicide coa- llm of a sifiifui blend oi Bell-Cop‘ and Mlcronized’ DDT,» ‘In’! rude-seal 'l.ooIr for the Green Cross; llio sign of Modern Protection We have In stock llrantforii Silver Leaf Binder Twine AI lowest possible prices. - Wholesale and Retail HALIFAX SEED CO. LTD. ' _ 72 Queen Sh, Charlomlown and Mrs. Gordon Proffit, work costing $1,000,- 000 will to carried out hare during, Tiii= is ouri, i " i i. ; i th! of an “dew” to fld Cyprus of a publ cations were d sp ay m: e r 5311111151. ing stubbornly to dogma or" rc- mlnwns treating headlong before the ari- gain filrther kno-ivli-dge of {he nature Bf i118 Ti-‘Ys from study at high ali- ltlme when the intellectual world. often looked on religion as a misty- minded form of escapism. In such an era, the Century dared to speak oi Christianity as a way of life, and stuck to the truths of Chris- tian gospel. inch slots long-wearing weight. ork Nails - Building Poper. Beacon in a Fog While most other Protestanh intellectual poverty either by clinc- vance of secularism. the Christim Century remained stimulating and profound; it eventually hcrame a beacon of IGVCI-hWICIWlIlBSS in a. fcg of misty thinking. l On strictly theoloni-al issues, surfaced — Heovy STARTER STRIP — Cement- Modernize HOLMAN EASY PAYMENT PLAN l-Zi Down - Balance Monthly SHEET LEAD — SHEET BOARD. Repair get-but we have them. GALVANIZED CORNER Etc. - Etc. —- Etc. zmc- Stain proof, Rebuild On The Kitchen counler tops ond tables. waterproof, practically indestructible. and in bogl. To Keep liool! To Keep Warm! Use Rock Wool Insulation, it ‘will make your Iiouse cool in Summer and worm in Winier-We can supply It in 2" and 4" buffs ond granulated OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT TOO! such standards led the Century to , oppose fundamentalism (ii/hen fundamentalism v. liberalism ivas .a burnine issue), to crusade for unity among Protestants (in 1917 it abandoned its affiiation ivith the Disciples of Christ and became frankly non-denominational), to 8i. ,ecumenlca] bilt anti-Roman Cat71-; olic, I GUARANTEED SATISFACTION SINCE I857 SUNIERSID s. CIIARLOTTETOWN Elli 551E133 IIOLMAIVS — _"Whera olii Friends Meet” But Mr. Morrison's belief that .. l‘ - ‘ $25.?“ .3: ‘°ii’.".§l5;i§i.‘°’.'f;§ u» prompted him to apply Christian Edit“ Hulcmnsm‘ mm“ h"°_ principles to ihe whole area o! It to 50 p" cent‘ i“? 1e‘, (,3 current events. The Century. at m‘? t“ keel’ our 7'1” OgNCa ED; various times. campaigned for the wnals 5N0" and. f‘ 5p‘ °w’1 ' League o; Natlons‘ y.” prohibmcm ‘ Morrlsoils editorials on theo obgly for NRA_ for the rights of labor. ‘ a" Cerlamlynlmpresslve’ but’ a t‘ sometimes it campaigned itself (‘Veiimwerml irito ositions that man readers tlioukht untenable (c.g.,ya'ttemi\t- i as well as vvsraoweriiis49r- Mfif" in; w be b0“, pfusadlng and pad- ‘lFlSOITS editorials have been tine fist in support of the Kellogg- chief factor in making the Chi s- Briand Pact, the Century nar/cly Han Century we of m few Pub‘ hoped that a oaci to "outlaw" war iicatiom iii its time. 18y m" f“ could in fact outlaw n). But the liizious- which combine his? ri- century's alarms“, firm” hacked teliectual standards. humanitarian by the principles of evangelical crusadinl "d 5 bulcany Christin“ Christianity, never degenerated Oriental“!!- into sterile intellcctualism; and l. whatever side it took, the Century ' always came up with a challenging “OWLAND AND “gym N015: C350. . d. Mr. Rosmand Cassel!’ n“ mknfled "w" anmdhfainrjily his lietullllneldeua ‘Ta; i Ru or . B Ii . i! For 39 years. Dr. Morrison's pul- ‘£235; “spent a very enjoyable pit has kept growing: Century M ‘ Casey i, mom. readership has increased steadily, “me visiting n y _ Albert Finnan of How- almost from the time he took over. er’ M“ ' The paper is now owned by the. ' ____ "editorial family" (the names llst- Macy.“ an of Rum. ed on the masthead), with D? lmxlssmtlirrlgiawas a lEecent visitor Morrison as chief stockholder. Like to ITEM,“ “my Duvgr, the guest very few butcher-paper weekiies, 0t h" aunt] M“ Hector mchM-‘L it pays is own way without pat- Iand h" 001.5,“, Mr,‘ p1", pa"; m"!- _ mer Blanchard. Behind the Centuryli editorial and M“ m "we". consistent readers have come to recognize the Morrison toucln’ a subtle bland of scholarship. sweet reasonableness and ha.d- punching prose. But Dr. Morrison attributes the rise of the Century to no one man. Editorial 00;‘??- ences. he says, are always "a gi- w“, 800d phy", h“ “m, w“); 1 inte rated collective mind" en- w" _ gygglng gin "an informal continuum [mm E’ ‘New n r7 "Y °°Yiv°""I°“-" I M. Prank Peters. miner Rich- NEW Mil" Hlmhmlmli 5 Mm“ crdflidna Peters and Aldona. Pet» ndist with a 11D. from both De- recently motored u, ca". Pauw and Garrett Biblical Insti- f;:m°wn_ lute. and a Century veteran for 2.3 years. has no intention 1f chant- ing the weekly! vigorous liberal- ism, its antl-clenominationalism. its habit of speaking its mind. Bis biggest policy chance. he say!- will be a iii-eater attempt to appeal _ to the laity. About 2s w’ we'- iif | The Duvar ball players extol their sympathy to one of their players, Mr. Ernest Pineaii. who had the misfortune oi spraining his ankle at a recent ball Bame played between Duvar and Pius- ville bail players. As Ernie ls a The Hovrlan school has reopen- ed after erdoylng a ‘six weeks vacation. The attendance is very good.“ average of so pupils. The teacher is Anita Peters of Duvar. Iilmer Richard is visitlnl his iparents. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rich- ,ard. of Hawlan. after spendinl some time employed in N. B. Mrs. Felix Doirorl and daisghter Bernice have returned home afm l spendina some time in Halifax. ' Qggffig ghetto of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Gal- Iliem with "" Mr. Bert Peters is spendinl some time with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Peters of Duvet. ami- hevins been employed in New Brunswick. Mr. Clarence Peters of Duvar I has left for Oops Wolfe when he. will be employed for the fishing season. Miss Esther Arsenault of Sum- mcrside is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Albert Martin, of Duvar. Mr. and Mrs. Hector Richard were week-end visitors to Nova Searching and often inspirins— 550m- Miss Edna Arsenault of Sum- msrside is spending a week visit5 ing friends and relatives in Du- var. _ Mrs. Angelina G-a-liant of Sask- atchewan is at present visiting relatives in Duvar. wish hlm a speedy recovery. Mr. Al-scnault has the misfortune re- cently oi injuring his foot. Mr. and Mrs. Emmanuel Gal- lant o! Berlin, Mass.. are the guests of Mrs. Gallants brother, Mr. Olive: Peters of Duvar. Friends of Joseph Peters are glad to see lllm enjoying good health again after having gone through an operation in Prince County Hospital. Mrs. William Nowell, Mrs. A. Barnard, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Barnard and daughter Joyce, all of Winchester. Moss, were recent Friends of Mr. Robert Arsenauit visitors to Duvar, the guests of / r "r wani- Inna ‘ l ~"Min Emily, what ls Aonission VAY HER; runn- or quits Mr. and Mrs. Guss Peters. Miss Dorothy IIeters. who is employed in O‘Leary, spent the week-end at her home in Duvar. FLAMING NOSES CAN BE HIDDEN 1! the job of masking a cold-in- flamed nose must be added to your regular make-up routine. here aro ways to put your best face for- ward. despite the sniffies. Wear a deeper, coloured founda- tion tint and powder. Darker make- up will keep a flaming nose a a more uniform colour. The more adherent your foundation is, t‘lo more it can be trusted to hold its rwu against frequent cncounieri with llnlldircrcilief or issue. Pow- der, oi coill-se, will have to be re- newed often. _ Wearing more cheek rouge than you ordinarily do is a hclp in oull- illg a wall, cold-ridden face over to the ilenltlly side. This is the Lme too. when you will want to rllnrch out your brightest red lipstick and to re-apply ii as often as you cncw colour off. Nothing will help mm‘! to decoy glam-es away from a tor- mented nose or teary eyes than a cleanly applied coat of bright im- secret, and will give all skin tones l stick. _ _l_‘ . . .. this I hear about e Splv tossing you ‘double for the takings and you losing!" $74!:-