By His Eminence Cardinal M:Gmges . lomnnuf . II P. k . . - . ircles in which to dupe the men L”"'m,",g."..: :3: the church iallsimen so confused on the understanding of a in these and that thereasytotakein.l'undamen V : ill - mm mpio; women. It ally. however. if a man can unde .. E?” that thalstand ' . ggmti-feminist.Eer lswson understand women in all that is himself he should be able to -.i;'L'.'g.. on birth-control and her.essential. . l tionsl Q 2:. M. attitude that a woman Women are different from men in nature ordained to mother- their physical makeup. This very supposed to be sttcmptsidifference points out half the. have, normally, a different work to , ldo. There are certain social privil- truth of the matt . how-leges granted to them out of defer- is something else. It is verylence to motherhood. not here the to say that Christianity hssldifference ends. They are not let that they iigtiyea women with a sense of off any moral obligations binding 'dun1t,y end personal liberty. Christ! on men. ' did W, different sets of masts, one for men. the other forisuch things. they speaking . Christ paid omen the ex- zrgriixinary and rare compliment of granting them as equal human beings, I-le treated them as He u-"ted men. This-may sound very mtg today but at the time of Christ , R was very revolutionary. The Church has always maln- ialned this attitude of Her Found- er. It is true that this equality is emphasised by the Church princip- .i1y in the spiritual order. There gm some temporal aspects of equality that. perhaps. need great- er clarification but it is question- able whether the initiative in things of this nature should be taken by the Church. Recently. due principally to cor- mn psychologists, there have risen great discussions of women as peo- ple of mystery as unpredictable persond, as a section of the human race that is not subject to or bound by the laws which govern men. The . movement has been well described as "the chivalrous illlusion." This illusion seems to emphasise the spiritual difference of women and to allow them a different eth- ical code. This. Christ never did. The Church here is definitely pre- feminlst. This myth of difference is well exemplified in the code of ”the L .. gentleman." women almost as if they were de- lenceless 'ldren. Its shortcomings have been well described m follows: "the trouble with the code of the southern gentleman is that no lady is ever a gentleman." Now the Church has the appar- snt effrontery to think and even insist that every lady shoulld he-I It regards I not preach two Gospels or glvei Alt.hough men die younger and Command- 0 suffer more from heat and cold and am. generally . much stronger than women. Unfortunately men use this strength sometimes to molest and tyranise woman. 'i'hey become -brutes and csds. Men are inex- cusable on this score. Yet there are teas and "hen-parties" at which husbands' faults and shortcomipu receive public airing. Men are ex- pected to be chivalrous and uncom- plsining about these. Yet t.he.wom- on are inexcusable here for the law of defamation and revelation of faults binds them no less strictly than it binds men. Women may be weak but the Church never considers them so weak that such things as blackmail by tears can be allowed them. if a woman cries she can easily escape a well-merited rebuke. Men are not supposed to cry and hence get the rebukes they deserve. They can't avoid scoldings by a copious flow of tears. Women should not resort to such trickery either. However weak women are the Church never consid them too weak to live up to the Commandments and to bear the ' i of transgressing them. The thing that men don't seem to realize about the babying oi women is that it is an implied in- sult. Women deserve to be treated as adults. There are Girls Rules in golf and hockey but there are no Girls Rules in. the game of life. Hence the Church in insisting on this does not lack derstanding about women. She shows by her at- titude that she works unceasingly for their emancipation. She refuses to consider them as children. Women have a different temporal have as gentlemen behave. On the destiny than men. But when it level of morals she has no code dii- ;comes to eternal destiny they are lerent from that of men. There they: not a class set apart. There are no are equal, Women would have Just cause for complaint if the Church did not grant them this natural equality. we very frequently hear men say that they will never be able to un- derstand women. It may well be thstthismythof Inylteyisa woman-made wile used bywomen special. sins allowed them. no spe- cial penances from which they are relieved because of their sex. Such an attitude on the part the Church is the surest guarani of the dignity and equality of women and keeps them from retaining throughout their lives the unlovely mann of spoiled children. Find Sub - Zero Weather Cuts Down On Penalties FORONTO. March 3-(OP) - Forty-below-sero teenperstureeere the usual thing when the Arm- strong, Ont.. ngles play hockey on their outdoor rink. Coach Jim Dempsey, who brought, the team to Toronto from their village ill) miles north of Port Arthur, said such temperatures 1 affect the game, even if the mectatora stand- ing in the snow around the rink don't seem to notice it. . For one thing, he said. penalties are rarities-the Eagles aren't too eager to sit long in the -freeing weather. i-iockey league officials would be puzzled if they tried to classify the team. Several of the boys are in the 10-year-old bracket while one or two others are twice that use. some of the players are Ind- isn boys and they never worry about birth certificates, anyway. "in a town of 300 you can't bar food talent sknply because the players don't fall into a uniform In group. The main thing is to round out a team. In Armstrong there are some people who don't vlnv hockey.” Four other clubs compete in the iessuez Nakina. Hem ayne. I-one Lee and Sioux Lookou . The Sioux Lookout club are considered -u' I because they have S rink with a roof over it. Wi "0 hishwaye, the nearest haul in the logs for the Eagles is 110 AT your The President and members men's Liberal, Club will be At Home to 'all the friends Of the Liberal Party in the Confederation Chamber of ""9 Liilislature Building on Welds! eftemoon March 8th, jlnunediately after the overyipri the Home. ,or the, Charlottetown wo-' i miles-by rail. Money for the trip to Toronto- to see a National Hockey usgue game-abetween the Maple Leafs and Boston Bruins-was collected by the Eagles through bingos and raffles. ' v” Sabotage Efforts , Are Reported , osnaws. Ont.. March 5-(CP) -The Oshawa Times-Gasette. ins newspags story today, reported recent attempts to sabotage in- dustrial production in-Oshawa. Heads of lndustrleawere reluct- ant to discuss the matter but it was admitted there had been de- liberate actions tending to slow up production. the story said. It added that at General Mot- ors there had been toppages in the assembly line because bolts or other pieces of metal had been placed on conveyor belts. And there had been an epidemic of broken doors caused by trucks crashing into them. In one plant a warning notice was posted to the effect that de- liberate actions to hinder pro- m duciion would mean dismussal for those responsible. Details could not be obtained of " t in many plants. the pap- Ot said. The "story quoted a well-inform- source as saying that there is a growing wave of minor sabotage -lnddsnte in industry throughout the Province. The source linked this with a deliver- ate communist campaign to slow tthev e K is . ' . . V, , -rue LGUARDIAN. cHAm.o'rrcTowN' -..ASt'resg'e Ilut True I: l'.il. IfaeArthnr liiset Robert !llinols' farm boywhotippedthescsle at no pounds when he was 20 years old. ftobettvhad to quit school when only ten because his 315 pounds made it awkward for the boy to get around. . . . ltuione Wishing to make clothes for the big boy will please note these measurements. Chest, lm inches: knees. 33 inches. nor his ovrslls you'll need I yards of goca and for his shirts five. Getting through doors is a see question for Robert and when he cetires for the night his two nor- mal eised brcthers have to lift each leg into bed. Its heavy going. When liuropeans first reached Florida and Virginie, they found the Indians elaborately tattooed. Though sometimes' prevalent, among the tribes of New nigland, the North American Indians pre- ferred painting as a means of personal adornment and for cere- Inonisl purposes. The false notion has always existed among white people that Indians donned war paint in or- der to terrify their foes. War paint was used as a camouflage. For exsmple, a warrior who was paint- ed with various colors could con- ceal himself in the shadows of trees and plants more easily. , A painted tcrso was less conspicuous than a naked body. Indians are keen observers of Mother Nature. When they used camouflage to protect them from their enemies and to enable them to approach their foes unseen, they were fol- lowing the example set by Nature when she gave different animals different stripes. O O 0 "Keeping up with the Jones" is by no means a recently developed weakneu. Ancient man endured self torture and tattolng, etc., to avoid appearing unusual by their absence. The taboos of primitive races were, and still are, the results of superstitions. We read about them and remark "Hcw silly." But civi- lized persons are by no means free from them. The savage who ref as to wear a certain colcr be- cause it is taboo may be comps ed to the civilized man who would just as soon Jump into an ice-cold stream as to appear at some swanky event in - overalls. . . In the Republic of Haiti even to- day. farmers going to market will make a wide detour rather than step across two sticks that happen to be crosswise in their path. How many men and women of decent education carry lucky coins or a rabbit's paw on their persons? I once worked for a pro- minent man of Belmont. Msss.. who would never walk under a ladder. never put on his right shoe first. never go out of a house by a different door than the one he'd entered through. And all the mirrors in his home were securely fastened to something Just in case he might break one while handling it. one may pooh-pooh our super- stitions, may at times even laugh at them. yet, strange but true, there is not, one person in s hun- dred who does not have his or her pet ones. And when it comes to tabocs. we have just as many as the wildest savage who ever lived. So- ciety foik have a habit of calling their taboos fancy names such as "e . customs. wu entions." and such like for the simple truth that they can find no reason for their existence. It will perhaps take centuries of years of education to free . man- kind of his peculiar taboos. In the meantime. we shall continue to eat our oysters only during the months that have "R." in them. 0 O C The principality of Monaco and Vatican City are the two smallest countries on earth. Monaco has a population of 21.000, Vatican City was. Besides being the smallest country in,the world, Vatican City has the shortest railr-oad:only six- tenths of a mile long. The com- plete run tsk'es butun seconds. Think of it! . The tropical American sloth wiu ham for weeks from the branches of s tree-without moving so much as half an inch. It feeds on leaves while in an upside down position and is a silent, lone wolf, and the laziest living animal. The female never give birth to more than one offspring in her lifetime. . , . The stslest loaf of bread - 5000 years old --may be seen in the museum in Cairo. uypt. It was ily found buried with one of the anA Khan vh. "mi "my much eient Ismtian Queens. . . . quaint custom in the island of Oy- rus in the Mediterranean Sea is the public washing of the bedding and the filling of the new mat- treu of newly married couples. friends of the young couple throw money into the mattress as it is being filled. This money may be take? out of its hiding place and mime alunnulu . L, ' Tbkceiamalsruiervadfernewa efieealIatarest.bItIdvestldrrgof aaswsy astaramaybes Inserted at live oIlItaawoi'l.II'letI) pay- abieiaadvaaea. 0001'! for Photographs. JIMMY? TAXI-rP'honI 535. nowsan asserrnus irooru wlsa st in Queen Street. swsrdsr. resrrvsr. nurmes eiope March lsth. IABTIB CAIDE for everyone now on display If the Abegweii Gift Court. - scuenvnsn . I1-lilIl'l'S dell: to Sununsrsids and Phone Maritime aenu-31 Airways Limited. 2001 or. see. AYIIIIIIE IIS inter- ested in discussing an importation of bulls from Scotland are asked to meet at Prov. Dept. of Agricul- ture on .'i'uesday, March 6th. at 130. If stormy. .I(al'ch Ith. RECEIVES SAD Nl.'Wl- -- Mrs. B.W.IlaePage, West St. received the sad news on Sunday of the sud- den assing of her brother, James W. Christie in his list year at his horrrre in Forest Hills, Long Island. N. . Peggals Mr. and Mrs. Emerson MacDon- ald, Vlotorla, were in the city on Tuesday. Mr. Vvillard Rogerson. Victoria. paid a flying visit to the city on Tuesday last. Miss Mary Davena Bernard who has been seriously ill with "flu". is now convelescing nicely at her home in Charlottetown. Mr. and Mrs. I. 0.: Bell of Cape Travers. who have been spending the winter in Montreal with their son ,I.orne and family, plan on arriving home this week. York and Vicinity Mrs. Max Taylor, was a visitor to the city on Tuesday. Miss Bernice Lewis, City, spent Sunday in York the guest of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lewis. Messrs. Harold Watts and Harry Lewis were visitors to Cavendish last week. -. Mrs. Arthury Johnson and infant son returned home from P. E. I. Hospital on Sunday. Many friends of Mr. George Watts. York. are sorry to hear that he is a patient of the P. E. Island Hospital with the 'flu.' Mr. and Mrs. Dolph Murray, York. were visitors to Pleasant Grove on Sunday, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Oaswell. Miss Christine Proud, teacher at Pleasant Grove spent the week- end at her home in York. the guest of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Peter Proud. ST. CHARLES SCHOOL Report for the month of Jan- nary: Grade X-l. Germaine Gallant; 2. Shirley Dolron; 3. Betty Gor- mam. Grade IX-Patricia Peters. lacr- nsrd Gallant. Grade Vill-1. Renllda Galla-ni, Phyllis Gallant (equal); 2. Ther- esa Doucette. Grade Vll-l. Ls-ura German; 2. Mary Mullal-ly: 3. Shicley Gallant. Grade VI-1. Loretta Mccormac: 2. Louis Peters; 3. Norma Gallant. Primary Department Grade V-l. Shirley Gallant. Grade IV-l. Freda Peters: 2. Susie Gormsn. Theresa Peters: 3. Winnie Peters. Grade ill-l. Hilary Gallant: 2. Gloria Peters: 3. Albert Clements. Grade ll-1. Dolores Peters; 2. Cyrus Jenkins: 3. Priscilla Dou- cette. Grade I (A)L1. Helen Gallant. Grade I (B)-i. Cleo Peters; 2. Dale Cahill; 3. Terry Peters. Grade I (C)--l. Lennie cetie; 2. Jole Dolron. IN MElORIA in loving armory of our darling little dalgllte-r Shirley Ann lilac- Dou- lth, IMO. Age one year and nine months. . God knows how we miss her. Never awlll her memory fade. loving thoughts will always wan- ll. To the not where she is laid. 1 Sally Missed by not Parents. Mr. and Mrs. llarold Maexinnon. Cause cave. r . IN-4 MIMORIAM Mcncton i PAGE THRE -.--r Lenten Meditations FATIIEBIIOOD OF GOD (The London Times) one fundamental of Christianity exemplifies the fact. also evident in art, invention. and scientific theory, that great advance is often conditioned by successful simplific- ation. In primitive religions numerous sods, everything concerning them and man's approach to them, are intricate subjects of obscure and expert knowledge. That the ulti- mate power is one. a nu. ,” reached along different lines by Greek and Hebrew. was a great simplification. The prophet Micah's famous declaration (vi, 6-8) was another tuming-point. settling before man once for all the right road. Christ's revelation was an even more cp- och-making simplification. . It is not enough that man shcu live up to his ideal of righteous- ness if the ideal be defective. Nor can a wholly right personal attit- ude of the soul towards God be attained until man has reached the highest conception of God. and one in which reason, imagination. and emotion combine. In both respects Christ's teach- ing is a profound simplification. To love one's neighbour as oneself is at once simplified and deepened when a right spirit within man to- wards all other men brings them all within the definition of neigh- bour. To "love the Lord thy God" was no new commandment; but Christ saw that this was possible only if God is realized as one whom men cannot only love but who in- spires love. It has been emphasized that in naming God as Father, Jesus was not 0I'iliinE1- Quite half a dozen instances of the use of the word can be found in earlier Jewish thought. As well point out that Zeus in Homer is called Father. and that in the Latin Jupiter it is part of the derivation of the name. It cannot be or less than set pur- pose that Christ uses it, not as one of a string of titles but vo- ly; and that so much of his teach- ing illustrates its implications. In so far as God is better than the best of men. so far will his tttitude transcend that of the best human parent. The life and character of God have been of greater import. it may be theoretically possible for man to conceive, but it is not pos- sible imaginatlvey to realize the nature of God as soaring far above the best embodied righteousness he has known. r When Christ had lived and died. men ssessed a pattern, within SALE Sensational Food Saving . A 8 While Juicy GRAPEFRIJIT. 69: doz.: nuns wsnnusnsr IIIIC Breakfast BACON: Young Tender LIVER. 'lib.ofsocli 99c DELICIOUS FOR ANY MEAL Have You Tried COTTAGE PORK 8: BEANS. 2 lga. 20 oz. tins . . . 25: An Island Product That Is Very Good Apple & Raspberry, Apple & Strawberry JAM. 4 lb. tins. only A WONDERFUL SAVING 73: Good Quality TOILET TISSUE. 11 rolls . . . . . . . . . . 51.00 Magic Baking Powder, lb. .. ............. .. 29c , Icing gar, p gs. . 31c Vanilla, 8 oz. jug ...... .. 19c Baker's Cocoa, lb. tin 47c Tea, our special, lb. 75c Sunkist Oranges. 3 doz. S1 White Bread, Sliced or unsliced, loaf 14c golneless Salt Codfish, 1 Island Oatmeal, 5 lbs. 55c Mackerel, 5 15-02. tins S1 Pilchards, 5 tins Salmon, 4 tins .... .. Green Peas, 6 tins ........ 31 Wax Beans, 6 tins 31 93 lb. bug ss.sv A (4 Entry Blanks) 24 lb. bug . . . . 51.59 5.533 ll .?..?”S r.'.:.;""" iii ” Em” 3'8"” . Tomato ulce, 8 tins 51 7 '5' 559 - - - - - - - 573 (1 Entry Blank) Rolled Oats, 5 lbs. 53c Ger Your Guess In SUNLIGHT SOAP. llc cake: 9 for . . 95c Today. , 20 Beautiful Prizes PHONE 747 CASH & . CARRY STORES 187 GREAT GEORBE 81'- THE BIG STORE WITH BIG STOCK for P. E. I. Winners Only. "How Long Will The wr: DELIVER c. o. D. 8-my clock Run," human nature. on which to frame their image of the dixlne. If God be concretely portrayed in" Christ. then God takes a share, and a share proportionate to his great- ness. in the concerns. strivings, and sufferings of men. For one who realizes the natur of God in Christ it is a Copernic- an revolution. At first sight it seems to turn everything upside down; but the longer men reflect upon it the profoundcr its simplis- ity. truth, and im, ' appear. !T. EA MONOTON EAToN's. Spring and Summer catalogue has now been distributed I Over 500 pages of items for every member of the family and for the home. A good variety d , practical, good quality seseonable items including up-to-the-minute fashions in a wide assortment of styles and colours. . It's just like having a big store right at your door. because ordering by catalogues, either direct to Moncio or through EATON ORDER OFFICES, is so easy when youshave such sgrsnd selection of items from which to choose. Dollar for dollar too on a value basis you know that "It pays to Shop at EATONlS," where the time honoured guarantee of "Goods Satisfactory or Money Refunded” is your unqualified shopping protection. ' If you did not receive a copy of this new Spring and Summer Catalogue, enquire at your nearest EATON Order Office, or write direct to Moncton, using coupon at right- . T.9N.C2;.. A OANIDI ' I BRAOKLEY SCHOOL Wallace Jackson; 2. John llatch. ' Grads V-l. Ernest Bryentonp The following is the repat of 2. Clair Bryenton. nrackley School for the months as-ade IV - 1. Virginia Maoxsyp of January and mbruary. 2. Doiulas Newell. . ' Cifsde x Senior-cl. Shirley Grade 111-l. Bernice xenon: Prowse; 2. Greta Pr-oude; I. Stan- 2. Maria Bryenton: 8. Dorothy 19? Jackson. Proude. s 5- , Grade X-Junior-Thelma New- Grade 11-l. Audrey Strickland; i j". son. 2. Luella clerk; 3. Bobby 3ryan- Grade 'Vl11-1. Gail Prowse. ton. . ' Gfldc V11-L Allan Blstch; 2. Grade 1-1. Sheila Rwar; 1 Marie Strickland; 3. Gladys 311- Blair Bryenton; 8. C301 Mgeinlc onion. fan, . Grade V1-1. Ernest Roper; 3. Leona cl. Cameron-Thacher. mail through EATON v Q I The T. EATON Co. Ilaritimes Ltd. Moncton, N. B. Gentlemen. Please send me a copy of your new Spring and Summer Catalogue. l