; mars cmtsout Angilolll IIIIM Oansrll. Malena Incumbent. us. llmta. Dirootar geverend 3,5,, D-D-s Suzanne llcntdlli ' organist and gundly 53103 ---atom” :::::Choral Euolillili Ind l'lII0ll- h L No .,,m,..sonday lo no: g . Mo I-.,m.-Evensong I . pgjly services as ulill - All Beets Frea- meryhody Welcome. ..-m W; pAuL'S ANGLICAN CHURCH The Parish Church Esiuitilshed me I! R0!-1 Foundation. . 'llte lit-vcrcnti J.T.JllIll1i'I".A-:00”? - i n F. - m()l:t:t:ti:t and Choir Masttr. ll! f lcnukcues TOMORROW? wuuoii oi cuouao TRINITY UNITED CHURCH Chotrmaster and organist: Raymond Player. M.A.. Mus. Baa. ll. a.m.-”'l'he Sermon Dr. Dolmen Preaehed 50 Years Ago". . llnin Anthem: "Ila Thou My Vision”. 2.80 p.m.-Adult Bible study in the West Parlor. 'l o'clock-Questions and An- swaes. 4 "Shell rtzho meek lhlierit the "Is speculating in atook.gnm- ltliogi" "What is a good marriage!” ”Prove that moderate social drinking is wrong!" "Was Protestantism neces- ssry?" Anthem: "Clive Unto the Lord"- (Oadman). ' "Hymn to the TrInity"-(Tseh- alkowsky). THE BAPTIST CHURCH 'fm":ii6Ty communion-Rev. A. l: l'icrcesy.h I g 1;. c oo. Prayer and ser- l mun. Preacher: Rev. W.G. llogg. 'i.00-F.venin8 Prayer Ind 3"- iuon. Preacher: Canon 3. alone. 1;- ship Hour in Parish liztii. All are welcome. -j- t.wtt:.st3viEktAN M- THE max or 5. JAMES , Ttrlicicrend T. ll. B. Somerl. lll.A.. s.'l'.lii-. t Minister lillss ii. Iilllian Mciiansta. Mae. Bao- Orglnisi. and Director of the Choirs -,1 A (lhurcli School. ll n.m.-Divine Service' and Ser- man: "When We Must Spend Our Life Doing Little Things.” Anthem: "sweet is Thy Mercy" tllarnhyt. 5p.m.-Vespers and Meditation: "The First Epistle of Peter". Solo: "0 Troubled Heart. Be still" tiiernnrd llsmblen) - iliss Nam-y MacNevin. Tisliors Cnrdlztliy Welcome. ”"zi6N PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH .-l'rittt-ow-zigitti Grafton Streets ilet'rrt:nd G. Carlyle Webster. lllinister Organist nnil Choir Director Mr. Frank Johnston. A.T.C.I.. Murtilng worship ll.1.ni.-Serniun: "The Visitation"-Mr. J. E. R. Em-n. livtnns: 56. 492. 436. 2.30 ILIII.-The Church School. All members are urged to be present. Ijvening Worship T.00.lI.lll-SPl'llI0iI! "The Oppor- tunity to win Courage. Gain skill, Show Kindness"-The llrv. T. ii. B. Somers. M. A.. S.T.3l. "l'll1ll.IZ 531. I90. 582. Anthem: "The Lord's Prayer” dlnllnttel. inthrm "'Ileside Still Wat- ers" (lismblen). "Thy Word is a lamp unto my feet and it light unto my lilth." You are rordillly invited to worship with us. Day of Mac- CTitnm-S-oivation Army 5.4.. (ircat George Street "li0.iiE OF EVANGELISM" Cart. and Mrs. Lcs Tltcombo A Corps Officers. 0 Saturday 7-39 iI-m.--Diarket Square open air S.00p.tn.-l'rnyer and praise meet- lllL'g Sunday .00 .-i.m.-Revival prayers. . lino u m.-lloliness meeting. ;-00 um.-Directory. --30 lhm.-Sunday School. "-00 inn.-Y. P. meeting. 7-"0 run.-Salvation meeting. ...- OOSPEL HALL , gggiylltr Prince Street 0- 5- Ramsay and G. F. lleidman Ire continuing Special Evangelistic """'" "ishtly at 8 pm. excepting Saturday. a Lord's Day at 1:30 p.m. Ml are heartily invited to attend. -...m Corner Prince and Fitaroy Streets- The Reverend James D. Daviaon. B.A.. B.D.. Pastor. . Organist: Mrs. 0. Elliott Full ll. un.-Worship. Sermon series: "Whst Jesus Bolieved"- (1) "God Is My Father". Anthem: "Bread oi the World" Ordinance of The Lord's Sop- per. 12 noon-Church School. 7 p.m.-Worship. Sermon: Us Bread!" Anthem: "0 saviour of the World" (Gossi. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 219 Kent Street Marvel ii. Dunbar. B.Th.. Minister Miss Thelma Burns. Organist and Choir Director. I0 a.m.-Cliugh-S-cmol and Pam- ily Hour. Last month in Second Quarter of Maritime Contest "Give" ll a.m.- Morning Worship and Communion. g Sermon: "Waiters Are Pariah- era". Anthem: "in Remembrance oi Me". 7 p.m.-Evening Worship Service Sermon: "The Governor of the State”. or "The Head of the Home”. The second in a series oi three vital messages upon "Marriage and Home-life". Anthem: "Falrest Lord Jesus". Central Christian Church invites you to worship on the Lord's Day. Untied PEN I ECUSIAL CHURCH 37 Elm Avenue Rev. Quincy Stairs. Pastor Phone 2790-L. Services 10 a.m.-Sunday school ll a.m.-Worship and Praise 2 p.nt.-Children's Church 0.30 p.n1.-Prayer 7 p.m. Evangelistic Meeting. Everybody Welcome. j"Ihe Church That's Different" BEDEQUE UNITED W. A. - The Auxiliary oi the Bcdeque United Church met at the home oi Mrs. James Henderson on Wednes- day. Feb. 1st. Mrs. mnest Weeks presided and the meeting opened with two min- utes silence in memory oi the pass- ing oi the late sovereign. King George VI. Miss Louisa Celibeck, Secretary of Christian Steward- ship. gave a short talk. stressing the importance of extending a hearty welcome to the emigrants who are taking up residence in our midst. Mrs. W. J. Reid. delegate to Pres- byterisi. gave an interesting report of the meetings held in Charlotte- town. Twenty clght' house calls. five hospital calls were made, and thir- ty eight cards were sent. Collec- tion nmounted to s25.45 and emer- gency fttnd 80.50. A bequest from a former membe oi this society. the late Mre. Carrie Trueman. oi 3500.00 to the Woman's Missionary Society of the United Church of Canada was announced. Mrs. Hudson Lowthcr onducted the program using the theme "Uk- ralnes In Canada." Meeting then closed with prayer. IN MEMORIAM in loving memory of Mother. Mrs. Richard sorenscn, who died March lat, 1061. Peace perfect peace with ones far away in Jesus keeping we are safe. and they. inserted by Daughter and Son-in- Lstw llarsn and Henry referent. loved COOK'S for Perfect Pictures. oaaswsu. for Better Photo- srsohs MRS. JOIINSTONS LADIES WEAR BALE - Bargains for 10 days. Starting Feb. 22. DB. 1. 0. GA.l.l.AN'r's OFFICE will be closed from February 27th to March 11th. , MURRAY HARBOUR BAPTIST CHURCH.-Service Sunday. March and. at 7.30 P. M. special singing. Louis Harris ' WRITE ELEPHANT ,AliCTl0N SALE, Y. M. C. A. Monday. 3rd, 7 P. M. crnfacn or SCOTLAND - Services March and. Charlottetown 11 AM. and 7 PM. Sunday school to A. M. Rev. J. H. Bishop. WE SUGGEST you see "Robbie" our new Studebake Service Man for all your knotty problems. Phone 1111. T. G. Ives. IMMUNIZING CLINICS. con- ducted by the Department of Health and Welfare. will be held on Monday. March 3rd. at Prince street School 1.30 P. M. Rochiford Square School 2.30 P. M. Tuesday. March 4th, at Queen Square school 1.30 P. M. Notre Dame Academy: 2.30 P .M Wednesday. March 5ui' at Model School. 130 P .'M. Park- dale rm P. M. Thursday. March 00h, Spring Park School. 130 P. M.j West Kent school 2.30 P. M. In- fants and Pre-School children from 3 months to 5 years will be protected against Diphtheria, Whooping cough and Tetanus. TO ALL STUDEBAKER OWN- bills as well as owners of other makes oi cars: We have made a number of changes in our Service Garage. added tools, equipment, etc., and a new service Manager, Alex J. Robertson. to our staff of mechanics. "Robbie" has had some twenty years' experience in automobile repair work. A gradu- ate oi Studebaker south Bend Instruction School. and is fully qualified to take care oi all your problems. big or small. Visit our Show Room and look over our new 1952 Studebaker module and if you have any repair work need- ed on your present automobile or truck, now is the time to have it done. Satisfaction guaranteed. T. G. Ives. Strange But True By E. ii. MacArthur Traffic in the city of London was held up for is minutes re- cently while a. baby pigeon. which had fallen into the street, was re- stored to its nest. This humane act was accom- plished by a bobby, who procured a ladder, mounted to the second floor of a building and handed the newly-fledged bird to its agi- tated parents. A cat in Yorkshire. England. once saved the lives of three per- sons when at about 0.80 a. m., fire broke out in the kitchen oi a home occupied by a mother, her son. and her daughter. Pussy aroused the girl by stamping its feet on her face. A second more and she was in the mothers room repeating thegsame act. At that time the place was full of suffocating smoke. Quickly the mother called her son, and the three escaped from the burning building by putting wet towels round their heads. It sometimes happens that birds eat so much that they can't fly. This is cspeclally true of the spar- row, and should you ever find one in this condition you should have no difficulty in picking it up and placing it in a safe spot. until it gets over that attack of gluttony. . . . According to the Glasgow Her- ald, a London firm has penaioned off its office tabby cat, which is to receive half a crown for life. on the occasion of its retirement pus- sy was presented with s. velvet coi- lsr with its name in silver lei- as an F1 I Heathen children are able to pray almost ss soon as they learn to talk. Why? Because the mother takes her offspring to the idol templ , and teaches it to clasp its little hands before its forehead. in an attitude of prayer, long before it can utter a word. As soon as it learns to talk, it is taught to gather flowers or fru ts, and lay them on the altar b fore the idol god. "Titers are only two powers in I 0 BIBLE - li0llSE L S E. i 5 "mos votta eueronr Afr Au. -mints. A fine mum" selection of males. Po OM . i' g, . W'!9:IlOMI's.x1... ttullt -acz om-"'7 - K 313!-I ll ”' "hmrosqat "ilil rs Wort Ill. MEMORIMA In loving memory of IOHN A. MaoDONAl.D Bonlmry who passed away Marsh Ind. lldl. - Iver Remembered by Wife and Family. oossrtatrrs: visual. BIl'ltAiIi'.i0N and V ANALYSI8 -to-convert certain all the Aeterwss o. e. I-llnci-IISON '0 I sort . ll tlrsftoa I. the world - the sober and the pen. And, in the end, the former is always conquered by the lat- tsr" -- Napoleon. Pliny the Elder had someone read to him during mealtime; and he never travelled without a port- able desk and a book to keep him company. He made copious notes of everything he read. History records. that in the days of Tiberius. it was ,' us a crime to wear a ring bearing the finale of Augustus into any soiled place. whera.it.might be polluted. 0 John Newton almost starved himself to death in his seal to snortlfy the body. yet he was, the captain of a slave ship and carried on the hellish business of stealing human beings. ' .whan missionary Bralnsrd tried he was met with the retort: '(Why should you desire our people to become ohristians, seeing that your people are worse than our people. They first taught t s in- dianstogetdrunk... ewill not consent to become Christians. lest we should boas bad as they. we will livaas our fathers live and go where our - fathers are, when we die. - '-ma GUARDIAN. W Lenten Meditation From The Columns of The Times, London. THE CENTRAL GUARDIAN GIGGIYS PIAIIIACY. Kent street. Phone 3170. FLIGHTS DAILY except Sunday to New Glasgow and Halifax. Phone Maritime Central Airways 2001 or not. Ifaal)0NALn IADIO IIIVICB tso Kent street. Radio repairs. sound equipment. Disc Recording. Rogers Majestic and Stewart. Wu- ner Radios. BEFIIIGEEATOII. muggy, Mo. tors and Washer repairs. Storey Eiectric. Phone 3007. ll0LMAN'l in Charlottetown have available a shipment of the famous super-flame Oil Burner Brooder Stoves-only 834.96. or- der youra now. DB. WATSON KIRKCONNELL will deliver the Robertson Memor- ial Lectuse at Prince of Wales College. Tuesday evening. March 4th. It 8.30. Public invited. Ad- mission free. ' . Mrs. William white. Milton. has entered the" P.E. Island Hospital for treatment. Her many friends wish her speedy recovery. Friends of Lt. Col. JIR. Paton will be sorry to learn he is a pat- ient in the P.E.I. Hospital. W.C.T.U. NOTES THE COCKTAIL CURSE Many prominent persons, not usually associated with opposition to drinking. have recognized the menace oi cocktail drinking to the community. Dr. Duhig, the Roman Catholic A. 'bishop of Brisbane, has frequently urged Roman Catholics to beware of cocktails. and some time ago the President of the Catholic Daugh- ters of Australia appealed to the ll18l1'IbEI'a of her organization to oppose the cocktail drinking cus- toms. Outbursts of indignation often come from leading women against discreditable conduct at functions where cocktails were too frccly served.s The increase in drinking by women is due chiefly to the cultivation oi the alcohol habit by social parties. And the sad part is that this drinking is taking place among young women -the future mothers of our na- tion. Why the Cocktail? Why do women. eapeclallyyoung women, drink cocktails The first cocktail is taken only because oi convention. No girl at a function wants to be the odd girl out. She drinks because the other mem- bers oi the party do. She is un- der the delusion that the cocktail is a comparatively harmlessdrink, whereas it is more harmful than any other alcoholic drink served. It consists oi a solution oi vola- tile oils in a strong solution of alcohol. Vermouth is also used extensively. Professor W. E. Dixon (Cam- bridge) tells us that "the amount oi alcohol contained in a cocktail (in to 30 per cent) produces a greater effect on the central ner- vous system than three or four times its alcohol content admin- istered in beer." , The first psychological effect of the cocktail is to lessen restraint and reduce inhibitions. The first physical effect is to dull the high- or brain centre. "paralysing the critical faculties", to quote Dr. N. Paton in his text book on physi- ology. Professor E. Starling (Pro- lessor of Physiology at London University College and an anti- Prohibitlonlst) also refers to the first effect as "a gradual diminu- tion of control by the higher cen- tres." Undoubtedly this drugging and releasing oi self-restraint creates a primary rlewmi sema- tlon on the young drinker. Pro- fessor Dixon states that "within a minute or two sensations oi the most pronounced kind occur.... The pat-taker becomes cxhilaratcd. light-headed and talkstive...thc face flushed and the pupils dilat- .. eilstute builds a resistance to this new external drug. and the girl. on the next drinking occa- sion, finds that the same senaa- ho tions are only obtained by In in- creased umber of cocktails. And thus the cocktail habit and the alcohol crave is increased. The Ultimate Result The satisfying of the desire for the eoektai sensation too fre- quently finds its ultimate result in a depraved alcoholic-with an intense, relentless crave and a weak ned will-power. Un ess some vigorous action is taken. the next decade will witness crowds oi such unfortunatcs. Who will trace their downfall to the t,gr'npora.,, pleasant sensationsas- aociated with a few cocktail par- ties: for to again quote Professor Dixon, "cocktails cultivate the habit of drinking in a way and to a degree. which can be inducedpby no other type of beVerl80- - (Auatralisn Temperance Advance.) THE IIAPPIEST BIIIDES HAVE rm-zcious Ft om 0. ii. TAYLOR 0 UEWILLIRS PITITIONAIY Traditionally, the prayers of Lent sowing have been associated with the crops and the weather. It may, therefore. be a suitable occa- sion to discuss the question oi pe- tiiionary prayer-admittedly only one of many kinds of prayer-and in particular the question how far it should be used by Christians in connection with natural pheno- mena. There is an unavoidable tension between the traditional language of the Church and the Bible. and the temper of mind which all men -including churchmen-share in a scientific age. when the weath- er can be forecast. some find it harder to pray about it. for even if it can be forecast only for a few days ahead, the thought may arise that the more distant future might be .forecast with equal ac- curacy were man's knowledge of natural processes more complete. some find it more difficult now- adays to think of the weather as under the direction of a personal God. sensitive to the prayers and requests of his human creatures. The familiar question, "Is it right to pray for rain, or for fair weath- cr?" is but a symptom of a more in. reaching question, "What is the value of petitionary prayer for any subject?" it must be said at once that the very wide prom- ises of Holy scripture-for exam- ple. that in last Sunday's Gospel, "whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, He will give: it you" -must not taken as facile: guarantees of the unlimited po- PIAYIII. tency of prayer. The Lord's Prayer is the su- preme model of christian prayer, and this includes the petition "Give us this day our daily bread." . Therefore the Christian Church can never rule out any subject of human concern as inappropriate material for prayer. But in the context of the Lord's Prayer this request for daily food is seen against the background of war- ahipful adoration and spiritual ss- piration. The trouble about "prayer for raln" and similar mat- ters ia that they so often loom too large in the minds of those who offer them. God has seen fit to reveal to man more of the way in which his universe works than war revealed in vrevioul ares. Ind this natur- ally affects the kind of prayers he offers. While no trust in God can be too great, no faith too simple -for him to honour, it is natural that modern men will be chary of using prayers which call on God to modify, in answer to their re- quests, vast processes which they cannot fully understand. Rather they will "let their requests be made known unto God" in the, general language of trust and de-i pendence. They will leave to his wisdom the details of those natural pro- ceases which he has designed. to the benevolent working of which they owe their life and survival. and on which. for the human side of their existence, they must at all times depend. A Repeat Performance 0f L.T.G. Drama , pg p t The outstanding drnmailc sue-1 costs by tho Chnrioitt-town Little Theatre Guild, "Ladies In Retire- ment", will be offered in a repeat performance early in March un- der the sponsorship of the Junior Chamber of Commerce of this City. At a recent executive meeting of the L. T. G. the proposal of the Junior Cltnmher was accepted and plans made for further rehearsals. Acting on the kindly remarks of Mr. P. Lefevre. adjudicator of the Regional Festival. the cast nnd their dircciar are busy making smnli changes in characterizations and production. It was also announced at the meeting that tlielannuallt-hlidrt-n's play, now going into production. would be "Cinderella", and would he presented in the early Spring. Atlantic its; Close Heeling l.Is'BON. Feb. 29-(A.Pi --- The Atlantic Allies closed their historic meeting Monday with agreements to rearm Germany and put a mas- sive western defence buiidun in high gear. They invited Sir 0 er Franks Britain's ambassador to Washington. to be N.A.T.O.'s ad- ministrative boys. with headquart- ers in Paris. Foreign. defence and fnance min- isters of the it-country North At- lantlc Treaty Organization Coim- cil met for five days. They hailed their conference as the most suc- cessful of the nine held since N.A.- 'l".0.'s organisation in 1040. They had drawn up blueprints for a master plan for defendins the west against Communist aggression and set about to reorganize the sprawling setup under a stream- lincd non-military headquarters in Paris to work at the side of Gen- eral Eisenhower's supreme military, command. The ministers agreed to spread a. network of some 200 jet-fighter and atom-bomber bases along the 2.000-mile front facing the iron curtain to the east. General Eisen- hower is to get 40 divisions and (.000 aircraft by the end of this year and double that in two years. They gave the green light to the formation of s six-country Euro- pean d ' community which would put west German troops in o. one-tmlform army at the side of those from France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy and Luxem- urg. The ministers telephoned an in- vitation to Franks lg Washington to become N. A.'I'. . secretary- general. Franks asked for two days to consider whether he will accept. Until today. L.B. Pearson. Can- ada's external affairs minister. was mentioned as the likely choice as first N. A. TO. secretary-general. -TiTar:nv rtsn The pike, most voracious of fresh- water fish. will devour all kinds of smaller fish including the young of its own kind. Owing to the dlsru tion of mail services, the dos inc for Musical Festival Entries has been extended to MARCH the 8th. v v Literature And Life By BOOKMA N GREAT VOICES Matty years ago now I had the privilege of hearing some great men and of them I wish to write now. There is a famous institution in Edinburgh called the ”Phllosophictsl Institution." of which Carlyle was aL one time president. Five of us young Canadians had a night there not easily forgotten. The chair- man was Lord Roseberry and the speaker was Mr. Asquith. The sub- ject was the "Writing of biogra- phy" with special reference to Boswellts Samuel Johnson. Not the remotest reference was made to politics and one would never know that either had any connection with that life. Macaulay says that Boswell was "a coxcomb and a bore. weak, vain. pushing. curious. garrulous. -- that he could not reason. that he had no wit, no humour, no eloquence. and yet his writings are read be- vond the Mississippi and under the Southern Cross and likely to be read as long as the English lang- uage exists. To have hesid As- Clumi Was it treat hot to be for- gotten. Some years atzo distinguish- cd men were at Pine Hill giving lectures in a rcfreslier course. am- ong them Dr. Denney and Dr. Pat- terson and Dr. strachan and all three in different years lectured in the School for the Blind on Bos- wellls life of Johnson. probably the greatest biograohv ever written. I O I Another well remembered occas- ion was when I heard Sheriff Outh- rie. afterwards Lord Guthrie. I-Io lectured on John Knox. Not many yards away was John Knox's house. It is on High Street. Edin- burgh. some say the saddest street in Europe for what happened on Vattthrie had a most melodious voice and I can still hear the soft mos THREE- Whether growing vegetables for home use or ior commercial purposes. we believe it will pay you to Get Our ilew 1952 catalog & Price List Our Specialties include the ALWAYS TENDER BEST, IIYIIID SWEET COIN. BOUNTY KOOTDNAY PEAS. and EAltl.l' ICENEABLY CIIATIIAM TOMATO, BAKING DIANE, CIIEIIY BELLE BADISH, and GREAT LAKES LETTUCE. Write For Our Complete Catalogue - IT'S FREE! ARTHUR VESEY, York, Prince Edward Island By Very Rev. Georgie First Moderator of t a once, in a Sunday service in Convocation Hail here. a disting- uished American thinker told of a visit he had paid to a little Christ- ian hospital in China. His host apologized on the way to the apex- atlng room for what his guest might consider his slowness in operating. explaining that on his way to the coast during the Boxer uprising, he had received a sword-cut in his right arm which had weakened it permanently. The significant thing. said the speaker. was that this young missionary. injured wanton- ly byia member of this race, was back at his post serving them as soon as conditions allowed him to return. This is the love which Jesus ii- lustratcs by the parable of the Good Samaritan. a love above rc- vcnge, a love that ministers to human need in whatever form it, appears. There are two words for ”love" in the Greek New Testament. One is the love of friendship. the love that is based on liking. We love ottr friends because we find that something in them which satisfies our hearts. This is the love which calls forth a response in kind. and makes anvthlng one can do for his friend a delight. The other word is love with a purpose, a love which is independent of the character of its object and answers to his need. This love is directed by the will. and is inspired, not by what wt- see in men. but by what we have found in Christ. It is the overflow of a nature that is Christ-filled: it is a reflection of the love which Christ has poured into our hearts. As John nuts it. ”we love because he has first loved us." That is to say. we love God and we love men because God in Chritt has first loved us. 0 O I Readers of the New Testament will notice that we are taking our as the agenda that day-wafptrtici ulariy interesting and some not- ables wcre heard - Lloyd George. Joseph Chamberlain. and others. The poet Shelley wrote a poem called "A Letter to Maria Gis- borne" in which he refers to Lon- don as "that great sea whose ebb and flow on the shore vomits its wrecks - yet in its depths what treasurers." "You will see" he.says Coleridize. "a hooded eagle among blmkink owls." and-he names others whom she will see - coniempornr. ies of course. The old country has melt Seeing and hearing some of of them are events in is me umg, C. Pidgeon, D.D., LL.D. llnlied Church of Canada (Copyright) Religion and Life ? I i The New Commandment studies for the Lenten period from Christ's deeds and words in the Upper Room just before His pas- sion. May we suggest that they read chapters 13-17 of st. John's Gospel over and over again. Im- mediately after the scene of tho foot-washing dealt with last week, Judas. the traitor. left the room to carry out his bargain for the be- trayal of his Master. This discord- ,ant factor removed. Jesus turned to the Eleven with these words: "A new commandment I give to you. that you love one another; even as I have loved you, that you also love one another." This is the love of the Christian Iicilowship. the love for the inner circle of the followers of Jesus. Ht: iexpands this idea in the fifteenth chapter of John. particularly under .the illustration of the vine and the ibranches. He said: "I am the vine: ye are the branches." Now each branch is united with the othet branches only through the parent stem. Christ explained the hear- ing of this on the command to love one another by saying: "As the Father has loved me. so have I loved yott; abide. in my love." O 0 O What a tremendous comparison! The love of the Father for His only Son is the type and measure of the- son's love for us. God is love; I-lit Son is infinitely worthy of that holy love. The personal assuranct of that love given to Jesus of Hit haptism changed the whole worlc for Him and se.nt...l:Iim out on Hit divine mission. Now that love of God for His Son is Christ's own il- lustration of His love for us. A moment later He added: "Gretta: love has no man than this that 1 man lay down his life for his friends. You are my friends." The Church's love for the world is shown by the sacrifices she Continued.-on page 3 THE P. E. I. ARTE AND CIIAF1 6 presents "illliniclliris ill swam" A Talk by Ml'. Ellis Roulstot from Mt. Allison University Schooi of Fine and Applied Arts at the (TIARLOTTETOWN HOTEL, MARCH 3 -v 8:30 P.M. Admission 500. mm cadences in a phrase he used -. "I itrectin like a balm." Stevensonl had an essay oti "John Knox and. his relations to women." When! Queen Mary asked him who he: was to be interfering in the sffairsi of Scotland he replied: "Madam. rt; subject born within the same", Knox had his own troubles in his domestic affairs. One of hls wives was Marjorie Bowes and- whom he called his "left hand"', as she some- times wrote to his dictation. After her death. he then at 50 married 2 Miss Margaret Stewart who was but 17. He was then minister of St. Giles Cathedral. This sentence is from Stevenson: "He had copied out for her use a little volume of his own devotional letters to other women." Carlyle puts Knox among his heroes. He declares that what Knox did for Scotland was really "a res- urrection as from death." It was. in the guise of an old I-iebre-wt prophet.that this minister of St. Giles appeared in the lsth cent- ury. He strove to make the govern- ment of Scotland a theocracy. Much was done for education.by this sirontr man - the school and the church were put up side by side; hence the value set upon learning by the Scots folk. . . . Another notable that I heard in those ittr-off days was Sir Conan Doyle. His subject was "The Lilo Boat service." If my memory serves me right Frank T. Bullen was there also. As is well known Doyle was an advocate of spiritualism. but you would never know it that night. since the two wars people have been thinking of the dead - those who fell in battle. "Does my old friend remember me?" is often asked. We pttll the veil hut no so- swer is heard. ' Rev. Mark Guy Pearce worked as 1 missionary itt London and it was an event to hear him tell about his work. London is a world in itself and no one can read Dickens and not realize what it place it was in his day. General Booth's name will always be associated with the "down and out" peogie of that great city. . ' , I O l The Mother of Parliaments is an attraction quite alone. A friend and Present members 21st. ANNUAL couuuumt 00ll0ERT CAMPAIGN THIS WEEK ONLY HEADQUARTERS HOLMAN'S STORE Telephone 3196. a Non-Members Wishing To Join Cali Headquarters will be contacted. 5 ONLY 5 ONLY 7 ONLY ILOUSES. going 11 CARDIGANS 1 RACK DRESSES. going tot one I spent eight hours sitting in the same seat and it did not feel long, KENNEDY"S WEEK Ellil SPECIALS WINTER COATS. HOUSECOATS. going or .. 5 5.00 Evening DRESSES. going or S 5.00 SWEATERS. going oi) s 2.9: KEllllEliY's I.ilIlIES' READY TO walla going at 512.00 at S 1.00 at 5 4.95 El STREET so