ms GUARDIAN. cHARLo'rre'rowiv PAGE THREE 33' i Cecil; wine. . we regret. ma roa - Micah. human obligation is soodi air: of all .,,m, names. 3,1,0 waited mu after Joseph 0 auist went to body, and '-'ll iriui iuoiimm of d to love kindness. O. humbly with thy 004- me names of Peter and John are but there were people on Jesus at the Cr so of whom we know lit is. f Arlmathea was a mem- be, 01 the supreme Jewish Council ,ho hnd no part in the plots :1 Jesus and who refused to win the sentence of condemna- uon, but when the and came. he Pilate and asked for' the laid it reverentiy in his own tomb. Nicodemus had come to Jesus by night at the opening at His ministry, and he joined Jos- h openly in the last sad rites. There were women who had (le- lighted in serving Jesus when He "5 at the height of His popular- ity, and who stood by Him at the 6. 1951. Religion and Life I very or 0” :."..':'.is:.:-.':-'.i-..'--.r.”.- ' (Copyright) c Eliot once wrote: "When Du, the great ' reconcile . hi! 1” '1; is never our kindness that but our sevcrlty.i' waiter Foal prayed: Hive in a. house by the "' dandbe afriendtoman. the prophet. summed up in these worhds; an ed thee. 0 man. w a '5” h” 5:: what does thee but to do iustly. nut side or the Lord and to walk Cross to the end. They were in "personal peril as they stood there with the, rage of Jesus' enemies biasing around them. but what did .that matter to them? The object of their devotion and ,the One on whom their hopes were founded was suffering and dying, and their place was to be beside I-llm. Mark gives us some of their names. but apart from what they did at the Cram and what they tried to do on Easter morning little is known abdut them. Like flowers that bloom unseen and by their frag- rence sweeten the air und them. these people loved and were loyal to Christ when the powers of the world turned auinst Him. The re- ward of their fidelity the angels would love to share-they were the empty and. to hear that Christ had first to see that the tomb was risen from the dead. And the Magdalene was the first to see the Risen Lord. Jesus gave a large place to kind- ness in His teaching as well as in His life. He could never turn away from the appeal of suffering and need; to help and heal was the joy of His heart. one of the greatest of His parables, the Good Samari- tan. celebrates an act of kindness. earn you should world. Thanks to raids the will not is r W cfher your 11 Ella PAI noiqn has brought aw rilerers who had a most given up. rin,g.rclirf from the nannies of an dfss. rlseunislssin. sciim;a and neuriiis-report they'll: sii wi:Ai-liiingsggalii!-c'n1oylnglong- snnlrel elfrom baln. n - ma y mpor Tsbleis with complete cdnddence. They no sale . . . . arm your heart or any other organ. Mi lions of bottles have been used. , ' i or rheumatism is Ill or severe-don't drlayl Get s bottle of mexpensivs DOLCIN from your druulss today. One hundred tablets 821 . l)lolIAtllMb3-95- Also avails I IIIIK "- YOU DOLCIN Tablets-inaay. many hope of ever get- ciin rake save an - two hundred in bottles of gqje, Tested Medication Works Eajjb OP THE HS OF I! s In you are tortured by pains of srshrids or rheuma- know about oocciye Tablets. lfv. coasloron: relief from each miseries so grateful men and women-all our IIDLCIN DOI.C ricrivum aplssarll a I: no g)1gdMIi;l'.”PluMl; its caadzo 35' resinfn 0. a -4.-sr':Iav!?Vt.v'5.01 ' . . .- .. -.v.. -v , --,;;..-.:1.'.;.ra:. '” - - - 2 "till;-"-as-p-4v; xv--tuft 1'.li-ewblelghbors MN-... :4 "They think nothing of ii trip to some planet. out just try .-. in not them to go to the corner store l”- , g George Clark A N .ar.:..' :1 1 a '09.. (month. I. up leis Iysdnie To In I OEIITIIAI. Ellllllllkll This column is reserved for aura of local llstaroli. but advertising of vi: 2"" w ':'.....'-W a 'saa s I s - able in aslvassea. , ”, CERT for Photographs. .lIlfMY'8 TAXI-Phone 52:. furnace coal. A. Pickard as Co. IIOWABD iiaelNNls FOOT- Wlag at 115 Queen Street. MUSICAL FESTIVAL ENTBIII close March 15th. COMING - Minstrel Show in gigiy Name Hall. April 4th. 5th and t . -EASTER CARDS for everyone now on display at the Abegwelt Gift Court. . - SPBINGHILI. COAL. - A. Pick- ard dz Co., are unloading cars of Bprlnghill Screened Coal. CONNIE LECLAIII. Contractor gig! Builder. 64 Orlebar or Phone As He sent His disciples out on their first mission He said to them "Whoever gives to one of these little ones even a cup of cold water because he is a disciple, truly. ! say to you, he shall not lose his reward." In His picture of the last Judgment Jesus said that it was by their kindness or their lack of it that the nations would be judged. The services that He mentioned were: Feeding the hungry and giving drink to the thirsty. show- ing hospitality to the stranger. clothing the naked. and visiting the sick and the prisoner. and He added: "Inasmuch as you did it unto one of these my brethren. even these least. you did it unto me." Among the things that the world likes to remember of Jesus were Bis ”indncss to little child- ren, and to outcasts of ' A such words and -deeds were prompted by sheer kindness of heart. Kindness such as these unknown followers showed to Christ is the commonest of virtues. The kindness of the Canadian frontier beggars all description. The writer as a student missionary in remote cor- ners of Canada was met with a kindness and hospitality that counted it a privilege to be of ser- vice to him. Ordinary folk love to help and ask neither reward nor recognition for what they do. At the centre of our cities the modem social settlement is an in- stitution of kindness-kindness to wee ones too young for school and incidentally to their mothers. kind- rises to growing boys and girls with all their problems and temptations and possibilities. kindness to fam- ilies which rejoices in their pros- perity and helps them in their need. The services offered by these setlements are on scientific lines; the benevolence that paup- erlses has no place in their policy: but the,laws that govern their ministries are never allowed to ob- scure the warmth of heart that prompts everything they do. Often where the ordinary methods of church work fail, these institutions 4 They interpret in the terms of the twentieth century the law of Jesus' own life: "The Son of man came. not to be served, but to serve. and to give His life a ran- som for many." Bt. Francis of Assisi turned away from prospects that the world con- sidered promising to g e himself and to inspire others to rvice. To help wherever help was needed was their one rule of life. In the Mediaeval Ages it was a unique in- terpretation of Christ and present- ed Him to men in those softer lights in which the human heart rejoices. Away back on May 13. lfi9l. a religious paper in the Maritime Provinces called "The Methwsiist." published a story entitled: "The Worker's Dream." This minister. so the story goes. had been doing very successful work and was highly gratified over it. Meditatlng thus one evening. he dropped into a light sleep and thought a man entered his room carrying chemical implements. The stranger asked: "How is your real?" with s. dreamer'a strange fancy, he imagined his real to be is p cal quantity. and. taking it out of his pocket. he gave. it to him. The stranger weighed it carefully-loo pounds. Thoimlnlsier thought that was splendid. But the stranger broke it up. melted it in a crucible. and. on turning it out. he saw that it had cooled in layers. These the stranger broke apart. weighed and tested each. taking 'minute notes all the time. Then he handed a note to the minister pltyingly. and with the remark: "May God save LE Wome &My Just in time I55 WELIH COAL. .. The very best " -” sub warfare expressed it. Garslil Waring Reportingx O'l'l'AWA--When tough Clarie Gillis. one-time cock-o-the-walk in cool-mining Cape Breton. made speeds in the Commons advo- cating decentralization of industry, it got a mixed reception. Prime Minister St. Laurent: "mere can-no be very many of us in sympathy with the arguments he used.” C.C.F. leader M. J. Cold-well: "A moderate presentation by the Hon. member for Cape Breton South." J. A. Ross P.C., Souris. Man.): "There was considerable logic in his argument." .l.H. Dickey (Lib. Halifax): "rise Maritime point of view put for- ward in an unfair, impractical and distorted manner." A. .1. Brooks (P.C., Royal, N.B.): "A very able argument, as we would expect from him...s most able presentation." In case the foregoing is a trifle confus' . the explanation lies in the political affiliations of the men. After the Prime Minister had castigated C.C.F.'er Giilis. not one Maritime Liberal dared to chance the P.M.'s wrath by sup- porting Glllis' demand for federal cooperation in fostering greater in- dustrialization in the Mariiimi-s. And this despite the fact they'll all admit privately i.lhat's the Mar- itlmes' crying need. Britain Gets The Air The North Atlantic Treaty Or- ganization decision to put an Am- erican in command of the NATO fleet irked Canadian sea dogs just as it did the modern Drakes and Nelsons of the Briilms Adimiraity. Recognizing that the NATO fleet's big job in a war with Rus- sia would be combatilng Soviet submarines. our naval men were all for a Britisher in the top spot. As one veteran of World War II "The British had sub-hunting down cold last time. The Yanks didn't have a clue." But however much Navy men were miffed at the choice of U. S. Vice-Admiral William N. Foch- ieler, it didn't cut any ice with the government. .At a press conference. a reporter asked External Affairs Minister Pearson if. in view of the appoint- ment of Gen. Dwight Eisenhower as head of the NATO land forces and Adm. .Fechteler as head of the sea forces, "Do you think Britain will get the air?” "I think the British Admiralty thinks Britain's already got the air." 'Pcni-son cracked. incidental Intelligence Mrs. Cora Mutch is acknowledg- ed by M.P.'s wives to be the fore- most Parliamentary hostess. She's the spouse of Les Mulch. Liberal M.P. for Winnipeg South and Far- liamentary Assistant to the Min- ister of Vcterans' Affalrs...Dept. o-l Picturesque Patter: Social Cre- dit Lcader Solon Lorw referring to inflationary prices: i".l'hc spirit of gougeis in the air."...Mrs. Ellen Falrclough (P.C.. Hamilton West). lone woman member of the Com- mons. mentioned birbhdays in a debate on holidays. when Leonard T. Stick (Lib. Trinily-Conception, Nfld.) cried, "Don't tell us how old you are." it's no secret in this House." she shot back tarily. She's 45...It's a tough league for a wo- man. That same day Jean Fran- cois Pouiiot (Lib. Temiscouata. Que.) told her to "keep quiet while I'm speaking." Eventually she did . . . We - can - hardly - wait depart- ment: A government publicisi wrote, "rho Honorable Lionel Chcvrier, Minister of Transport. announced today that the French board of inquiry is coming to Can- ada at the government's invitation. as previously nriount.-cd...a fur- ther announcement will be made." ...The Mounties are selling the three homes they bought in subur- ban Manor Park to house senior R.C.M.P. officers. Since R.C.M.P. salaries were increased. they've decided to let officers find their own, living quarters. Thus one high officer estimates that even with his increase. he'll be worse off by about 330 a month. you." he left the room. There was a deep earnestness in the straps- er's tone and manner that annoy- ed hirn. and. opening the note, he read as follows: "Analysis of the seal of Junius. a c ndidaie for a crown of glory. We ht in mass- mo pounds. Of this on analysis there proves to be: Bigotry. lo parts; , ' ambition. 23 parts: love of praise. in parts; pride of denomination. l6 parts; Pride 01 talent. 14 parts; love of authority. 12 parts; love to man. pure. 3 parts." There can be no doubt about how the devotion of these women to Jesus would have stood such a test; love to the son of God, pure, would have be 100 parts; but what about our al? some day it too will have to stand the test. and will be revealed to Heaven and Earth as it really is. We may lack many talents that others possess in large measure. but all can be kind. None can really fouow Jesus without taking His love in its prac- tical as wall Iain its emotional forms as the law of life. VUI H" l UNVF l 33.. .5 IX ll-3 SA " V , .-. Hm Lenten Meditations DIVINE wnossms (The London Times) ..,.,,. one of the major convictions be- hind the Fourth Gospel is that the goal of faith and hope is no longer, as for earlier generations. in the future. Thanks the death and resurrection of the Lord. it has been brought forward: it has in fact become a , at reality. Thus, eternal life is something far richer than an immortality which follows upon death; it is a life begun here already and of such a quality that it can triumph over death when it comes. Thus. too, spring rush 15 on. the Lord's return is not some far- off event to be awaited, often with disappointment at its delay; it is here already in the coming of the Holy Spirit to the Christian fel- lowship. There is in this no repudiation of the Christian hope for the future. but the present 5 so full of all to which the heart aspires that the future is.thought of as bringing it to fuliument. one striking instance of this transfer of interest from the future to the present is in the highly or- iginal relnterpretation of judgment which it makes possible. God's judgment is envisaged. not as some great asslze to be held at the close of history. but as taking place here and now. And it is a. decision made by God only because it has first been made by men. Jesus. we are told, did not come into the world to judge it, but to save it. Yet in another place it is expressly affirmed that he is in the world for judgment. The solution of the enigma is that while judgment is not his in- tcntion, it is the inevitable conse- quence of his being among men. He judges them because in his pre- sence it is no longer possible for them to procrastinate, they must decide for God or against him. As they decide. so is their destiny. The illustration which the evan- gelist empioys is that of a sudden influx of light into a room. Those who are in the room at once do- clare themselves, the honest and sincere coming forward to greet it. rejoicing to stand amid its bril- liance, and ready to be seen for what they are. Those. on the other hand. who have done what they do not careito have exposed, ah;-lnx from the light and thereby brand themselves as evil. The light judges, because those on whom it shines judge themselves. Whether God. who is Love. will finally acquiesce in any man's choice of darkness rather than light, whether he will not rather seek unweariedly to persuade him to become at last the child of God he was created to be. is another question. But no trust in a divine goodness that will ultimately over- come all evil should be allowed to blur the consciousness that man's freedom lcarrles its own tribunal with it, and that to choose is to expose oneself and so to be judged. strange But True By I-'. ll. MacArthur An electric lamp which will burn steadily for three years was made by General Electric Company in Cleveland in 1949. The wonder lamp is used for radios and elec- tric apparatus to indicate whether the Juice is on or off. Mice, guinea pigs and some small birds will starve to death within 24 hours, and with no warning, if they do not have their meals punctually. . . . There is a breed of mice. sold to originate in Japan called "Waltzing Mice." They waltz after eating. when they want food, and always just after their cage is moved. The babies, too. go in fey Waltzing al- most as socn as they have learned to walk. Apart from the waltzing trick. they cut up add capers which are most amusing, and they are incessant chatterers. . . . Contrary to common belief. the stoat is n carnivore and highly precocious. Its white fur is the valuable ermine that adcms royal robes. The male stoat is one foot long. with a 4-inch tall. I O C . The Bible continues to be the world's best seller. simply because no oth book even approaches it in vital human interest, drama. hate, icve. lust; all are recorded between its covers. and. yet the greattc part of the good Book is not understood even by scholars. it is so universal in its appeal that it binds is magic spell over those who prcfess no religion. satin. himself. was most fond of quoting scripture. He knew the" power of its words and used them frequent- Warhle Fly campaign Cattle are valuable-kill the Warble Fly. Federation of Agriculture District Sec- retaries have information and Order Forms. Contact your Secretary-form a commit- tee and organize the district. Orders should be mailed to Federation of Agriculture, Box 99 si-mats LAUNDERED 10 i'llBli'IlCTl0N sits - was pm. A otlssrns 1v to mike his points. fats 'n'anslatlon): what mountain was so sacred 1; that if an animal touched it, that animal was put to death? Mt. Sinai. Exodus 19: 11-13. Many things take place behind Russia's Iron Curtain that the out- side world knows nothing about. But we do know that the world's longest continuous railroad runs from Leningrad to Vladlvostock, a distance of 5.500 miles. There are 260 station stops and it takes 12 days and nights to make the jour- ney. R.ussla's new crack train. Jos- eph Stalin. weights 82 tons and is capable of doing Bl miles per hour. Caged birds are afraid of any sudden noise. For instance, the sudden rustic. of paper or hanging of a door. is enough to make them dangerously ill. on the other hand, birds like the sound of a type- writer. a sewing-machine, or even the rattle of glasses. Often they will break forth l.n melodious music at these souncis. . . . A toad can flesh out its tongue so quick that the human eye cannot follow its movement - slight of tongue. "My breath is "name to my wife. my smell L hateful to my children. even young lads despise me, when I draw near, they run away; all my in- timates detest me. men I love turn against me. My skin is clinging to my bones. my teeth are falling out." . . . King Solomon's idea of a beautiful but dumb wo- man is given in Proverbs ll: 22 - "As a jewel of gold in a swine's snout, so is a fair woman which is without discretion." According to the Book of Genuis Eve's full name was Eve Adam. . "Male and female created he them: and blessed them and call- ed their name Adam". The Cheetah cats of India are great hunters. Hooded and cloak- ed in gorgeous draperiu. they are taken to the hunting-grounds on massive bullock waggons. eaoh cat having its own attendant. when an antelope is sighted. the chee- tah is stripped of its attire and turned lose. When it seizes its prey it holds it until its master ar- rives. The game is then killed, and a vein opened in its neck. For its clever work the cheetah is reward- ed with a dish full of fresh blood. This ends the cat's labors for the day, and it is taken back to its kennel for food and rest. Many ' 0 C 0 That Jab had pyorrhea, hallma- ls, and "B. O." may be gleaned from reading Job 19: 11-20. (Mol- 2iid-Some varieties will be scarce later in the season, while RIGHT NOW we can supply EVERY ITEM we catalogue. so wiiv liar (ORDER Nowz, if not already a Customer, send for free Garden Catalogue today! ARTHUR VESEY, York, Prince Edward Island palaces have ossnsia scans EARLY! more are two distinct advantages - one ours - the other YOURS! . 1st-We have much more time now for filling orders than when the extensive cheetah kennels - with large staffs. Squirrels are found in part of the globe except in trails and Madagascar. our native Red squirrel is fast becoming ex- tinct and the Black species and so-called Flying squirrel are ul- every Aus- dom seen nowadays. In 1034. writer rescued a Flying Squirrel fr. .n the family cat while he was living at Iorne Valley. The mem- brane; extending from the foreiio the hind leg on either side. enables the squirrel to glide irons tree to tree. No doubt many residents Charlottetown will reinember hav- ing seen this little animal display- ed ln the window of the Patriot Office. The writeralso recalls having seen Blsok squirrels hi the woods between Cornwall River. himself. and Clyde The ornate and striking head- Cress worn by some of the North American Indians has been called "war bonnetr" by historians. This is not right. They ousiht to be call- ed "peace bonnets" as no Indian warrlcr would ever dream of going to war in 5""l'l a conspicuous head- dress. In the old days a peace bon- net was made of feathers taken from a live eagle by the warrior, Joanfy styles that vary from part obova-the- waist lengths to seven- olqhrhs sryias. Your favorite Spring fabrics. styles and colors. 18.95 to 42.95 W, e I llloisssilisr Fashion Qhsrltnstm llotsl larch ms. &:f4ii'.. ...-. Vs, GLORIA "Where Smarief. Women Shop" . Ii.