aljtlgyqAprll ll 1942, Mrs. Willi-in ' Bil-Mist Church for service today Algmli 1s. 1942 THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN PAGE THREE l PRINCE EDWARD -.- svsavsoov asap, "THE HIT svsavo sl-louio sear" ' Walter Winchell laid - u +- Jnu Lnlih ee'Miu Grltlll AlvlaYerlUe . Tennessee sweetheart. * "v "*'l’é§‘.‘..'."$a.'.l“’“ > "a WALTER BRENNAN ' IOAN LESLIE ' slmwl aims * Due to length of program evening performances start at 6:45 and 9:10 P. M.—Matinee 3:15 l i 'l|'e'e' SHOWS 8.15-7.00 l.“ ' ...Meev "Di-earliy‘ Smith. just a boy scout at heart! He's made up his mind t: help his friends... llll Ill-l - unusual Iiuulnluuli NEWS —CARTOON-FICTION ,. 5T. DUNSTAWS BASILICA 1n preparation for the forthcom- ing jubilee aniiive sary of the con- secratlon of Pope Pius XII on May l3, a section of a letter giving s bio raphical sketch of the P;n- tifilc life was read by Rev. Richard Ellsworth. 0.1)., in st. Dunstaifs Bllblllcil yesterday morning. The relllzlinder of the pastoral ‘etter, wllich was commenced in all Roman Catlloiic Churches in the province yesteday, will be read in sections will Slihdllv preoeeding the anni- versary, Reference to the forthcoming ob- servance was made by Dr. Ells- op of Charlottetown, was in the Silnctilay. seated letter in this connection, Dr. Els- worth preached a shrt sermon on “The impediments to Marriage". The se".mon is preached on this day each year in keeping with one of the Councils of the Church. Father Ellsworth explained. It was made a COlYPlBIld at the Plenary Counril of Q"ebec. ' In the evening there were vespers and benediction by Father Dougan. worth at Solemn High Muss in the gfiisiiica ‘yesterday mcrning, Nlrhe "OW REDEEMER ee:ran was Rev. George ac- Members o; the Ho“, Name Donald. ssi t a b R . Ina. . -' - Dough“ a: dgaion gm gevv. La,‘ Society nl the Church o. the Most Holy Redeemer attended a special se vice in tile chuzch last eirenilig. New members were taken into the society and follzwlng the service. thenI-loly Name men met in the Ha . His Excellency, Most Rev. J.A. 0'Sullivan, Bishop cf Charlottetown was celebrant of Solemn Benedic- tion. He was assisted by Rev. Rich- ard Baines. C.SS.R.. as deacon and Rev, Thomas Greene. 0.551.. as sub-deacon. The sermon for the occasion was preached by the rec- tor, Rev. A. MacDomfd, 6.38.11. Prayers were said by Rev. George Ayers as sub-deaco nHsExcellency Most, Rev, J.A. O'Sullivan, Bish- BIRTHS ____________i_ lllclNNlS-In the City Hcspial on Avril l0. i042, to Mr. and Mrs Pow Mclinnts, n daughter,‘ STULL-At the Charlottetown l-Ios- llital on April 12, i942, to Mr. and Mrs. Ray Btull, City, a son. R-iilliiiaiu - at the P. a. Island Hospital April 11th w Mr. and Mrs. Judson Rackham. Fredericton, a McKenna. 0.33.3. soil. (stillborn) The 10:20 mass in the _mornin was celebrated by Father Baines. DEATHS Rev, Father MacDonald read a section cf the pastoral letter in connection with the forthcoming 25th anniversar of the consecration of Pope Plus II on May l3. The . pmwss in her 79th year. Filii- remainder oi this letter will be lead tral notice hter. The late Mrs in sections each sunday until May Prowse is resting at the Macbeim 1°- Funeral Home until further ni-lcc T-————-——— ravioli-in Charlottetown. April DeFhne Comment on‘ Prisoner Exchange l2. i942. Nelson Taylor of Annan- dale in his 75th year. 'l"he remains ‘All be forwarded from the Cut- ALEXANDRA‘ m”; Apr" 1g _ ° fie Funeral Home to Anilafldiil! (A P) - British o culls declined comment toni ht as to whether they might try aga n to exchange wound- ed war prisoners with the Germans as they now are doing with the Italians. Previous etie r s to exchange British and German war wounded the Bilglish Channel bogged use the Germans. who an excess oi British prisoners, demanded that the difference be made up b adding other Germans hes‘ in Brilain. e exchange with the Italians is at the ratio of about five wounded Italians for each Briton. British authorities delivered 919 Italians. PROWSE-At 178 Fitzroy St. Sat- 3 o'clock. Interment Annandale Cemetery, N. D. MacLean UNDERIAKER EMBALMER Charlottetown snll North Wiltehire Plume ll! steep air-Iii» in ‘the hem . COOPER. won AN ACADEMY Awslw ma nls sou: as "assumin- yo“. A HOWARD HAWKS-PRQPTN Wm Please Be Early! rr MUST as odour Avrenil" Id Sullivan “Will add eeuieihlug tie uievle lilsteryl" Demon Runyon “Cue el the greeleet ever!" N. v. pcuy m." “Guaranteed te give you double your mn- ey'e vierilii" MY. m: ill- BllSllllESll STAND FOR SALE TEA ROOM —And- l Confectionery Store ll, Good Location a Thriving Business >4 h Apply: "X Y" GUARDIAN w" CONFIDENCE l IN (Continued from page 1) of the Germans. Germans Past Peak The German army. he declared, has passed the climax of its strength and its power is on the wane. If anyone wishes to ask how Kalinin knows, the answer must be that he is the president of the onl country in the World that can ma e the drivers of the German war machine go into reverse. The longer you remain in Rus- sia and the more you talk to the Russians, the more you realize what an enormous undertaking the destruction oi the Red army and the capturing of this vast country would be. The capture oi Moscow or Inn- ; 1 f t ._. i ingrad or Rostov or_ Kuibyshev or state was bound to come, should, nniltiisfiilfinliliiliklfig$1.3Till: any other or the i»: cities wwid indeed. have come la mean neither destruction nor cap- itulation. Even with such an un- ifiought-of catastrophe actually happening, Russia would still be strong enough to fight on and on. You liear it officially and unofficially: "Germany simply is not strong enough to defeat. the Soviet Union.” And that‘: the belief that permeates the whole population. Despite the great sacrifices for the war effort, you never ex- perience gloom or even doubt here and a foreigner nowadays is able to walk and talk freely with the man in the street. It is a land oi good, strong optimism and spring-even in face of the promised German offensive —has intensified rather. than les- sened it. Tell Story In Detail The Government has carefllly told the people the story of their war. Newsreel cameramen who get so close to the fighting they often put down their cameras and take up their guns have done u msg- nificent job of illustrating what dividends the sacrifices, have paid this whiter. Newspapers cover the battlefront carefully. The people understand when their papers do not publish specific information and refer tn some places only as “X" and adopt simple terlns for fronts that are really great areas. Sometimes 0P9!‘- ations are only hinted. Throughout the whole offensive campaign. the government has never failed to inform the PC0019. with news of new Russian vic- tories. that the German army is still strong and still a big factor. The government has never toler- sted the suggestion that winter might have played as big a part in the German retreat as the Red army. Now they say the German army will be liquidated in 1942. And so. s ring ls here-and with it came ths fresllened confidence as recognizable as all the Russian mud and the winter thaw. WARN All! WARDENS LONDON - (C?) - Air wardens absent frcvn thefr ts while on duty may be jafled n future warn- ed a Burton magistrate fining two A.R.P. men who had "just gone for s drink" [l0 (845.00) eadi. _ he followed the teaching are gradually becoming the equals CENTRAL GIIABIIIAII this eelunil le relervel for new: el bod interest. In advertising el e sewn eeture may ee hum-J u | r e Iell. Illldl! lwnlile b BEAR W. G HOGG Confederation Life Manager for B, island lscuse T 0F WHAT YOU EARN I8 YOURS T0 KEEP" Over Radio Station CICY ‘Lil MONDAY, APRIL 13th. OONFBD A we‘ u: TION use mlsgqn; CONTRACT AWARDED _ on the Igpflf. w 59ml. N55338:: COOKS for PIIOWIIIDlI-l. 11-593 dim i! bl’ I storm lust ear, Ls" ’“—" QXDw to commence in a out six M“ 07mm“ "535 " 51 weeks urns, Th, ‘mym-w; m, the ron Leader R. E. Dodds of the prefect which will cost in the vicin- R°Yei (Fmfldiw All "Y" mm‘ n“ sssn snl-qed u, ouarters, Ottawa, arrived in the ‘m; so“ o; chaflonb province on a short visit Saturday. m 1mm gm," m4 l-le is here on official business end b, Qmplom on m, is registered at The Charlottetown Willi!‘ iob. -——- . —~ Puffer" "h" As ANKLE B]; KEN __ _ 0i‘ . . per, . .. onnery c llrl Murphy, irnyesflld m“ “Mg? this city, now serving with the f. Austin Murphy. suffered s broken C.A.M.C. h94 recently been proinoi left ankle in a acume Wm, a 0mm ed to the rank of Lieutenant Coionc pulion in m, gm cafe on ma,“ He has been serving since the out ztsreqt l“; Plum, The boy‘ we” break of war. sren ' ' - -———- ciclent find?“ . lifted‘. if... swarm w» raw- - a ai- lev against a bench and the force 811m received by Mr. A. Bert Devi 0f lire blow fractured the ankle I-1 _ e son conveyed the sad news of thy WM rushed to the City Hospital h, death of his mother, Mrs. James n In ambulance. Davison at the home of her daugh- clm about s40 p. mlwmnt wok "Y. Mrs. C. N’. Butcher of Calgar; ____ Alberta. on Sunday, April 12th CONDITION IDTROVED — ?‘-— condition of 8-year-old Roy Fall, , ENUMERATWN COMMENUW — lured at Frank Clarke's warehouse ‘he plebmm’ “mlmemmu Wm Friday, w“ mpm-tgd to be good m, commence their rounds of the city nigng, H, n, injured about the and county this morning to list chest mun may,” between a bu“ those entitled to a vote to decide trugk snd m, ward-mu” ML whether the federal government will Iieth Stewart was the driver of the ' "lead"! ‘mm "-5 Pwml" Wm‘ vehicle and the accident was caus- “m” m u“ ‘wrumni °l m" f" ed when it rbucs back after the miiiiiiiawrviw- The "Wk of I brakes were released. The boy's in- hum‘ “W” "m"! l! °*P°°“d juries were not considered serious t” b‘ finish“ b!’ n“ “d °3 u" 511111110 was removed to his home, Week- Afinigawailve; Zlnlgflfi‘! ‘lglg; s sssn _ _areqlia vo. eea ml. M w ‘M M“ ° lling divisions in the city and 1i the country in Queen's County. Wll. or vicinity will ‘Ilie in- FLIZBISCITE ADDRESS —- With the manpower plebiscite only two PBISOIIHIS Weeks away. Plans are being formu- --- la to acquaint the electors of AB. Raymond smith, R.C.N.V. Queen's County with its import. The 3., arrived hcme Saturday night two Federal members, Hon. Dr. Cy- on s. 14-day furlough. T"! M d Ml’. J. Iiester --—-—-i_ ST. JAMES CHURCH xpected and J. 0. Hyndman. the two Con- Basing his evening sermon on servative candidates, tomorrow I Them, Chapter 1, verses 9-10, night. It ls believed plans villi be “And how ye turned from idols to laid for the delivering of addresses serve the living and true God, and on the plebiscite. Hon. Dr. MacMil- to wait for His Son from Heaven" the Minister, the Rewd. T. H. Bus- lan is expected in the city this eve- nins- sell Somers, M.A., S.T.M., took the three words “turn," “serve" and LEARN 0F BROTI-IERJS DEATH Wait" as applying particularly, _Mrs. Robe-rt Wares. Wheatley though not exclusively, each to a River, received word from her definite period of life. In youth we brother John Barrett in Forbes, make our supreme decisions. In North Dakota, that their brother, middle life vie render our most l-Ienry Barrett had passed away af- noteworthy service. in old age we ter a. few days illness at the age iive most eagerly on our expecta- of 75 yum He was born st wnsah tions. In conclusion, Mr. Somers ley River, the youngest child of the said: "I dale riot presume to ex- te Benjamin and (Catherine Maic- hort those whose years are so much Millan) Barrett, As a young man more than mine, so I will borrow Profession, the words of the saintly oetogenar- later taking up farming ri North ian, Alexander Whyte-"Up, all you Dakota. He leaves to mourn the Old P901716. Ind "like Yoilfseve-S following brothers and sisters. Mrs. ready! Up and abolish death! Up. Robert Wares. Wheatley River. John out of ybur bondage all your days 1,, Forbes‘ N13“ will. whom lie re- for fear of death. ‘Up and practice V‘ sided: Ewen in Manitoba, Mrs. dyingin the Ilorctuntil you take the Elizabeth Hooper and Mrs. D. A. prize! Up, till you also shall stand Munsey, Woburn Mass. The late on tiptoe with expectation and full Archibald Barrett oi’ Wheatley Riv- assurance of faith! Yes. Hill-till er was a brother. The funeral took you too shall salute his sudden place from il'e home oi’ his brother coming and explain "Even so. come and burial was at Forbes, N.D. quickly. Lord Jesus!" Spiritual Values And War Issues Theme Of Sermon Bpirltal values in connectl with that of Canadians in Canada, and the preserft world conflict were while each can retain its form of emphasized in the fol'owlng sermon government. the common citizen- preached in St. James Church yes- ip of v/hiit Rauschnlng calls "The tel-day morning by the Minister, Atlantic Empire“ of the future Rev, ‘Iii-l. Bussell Somers: seems written in the books of pro- "But tile liberal man deviseth liber- phecy. cl things, and by liberal thingsshali The other associated Peoples are he stamp" Isaiah 3213, not, however, so related. ‘Illose The struggle in which we are who, whatever has happened have engaged is quite different from any given new hope to the cause of which has hitherto marked human Freedom, carry n3 pack into the history. National frontiers do not ancient world. They have been fcrm its lines of demarkatlon. enslaved. but they have never been Language and history do not limit oonvulsed. A hundred years a its affiliations. The gradual devel- and more when they were strug - opment of ts has made in! for the light to be a people strange and probaby peimanent cnce 841E111, Byron thalght them alliances. That between the British worth his life and felt the inspira- Comnonwealth and the United tion of their tradition. "The mountains 100k on Marath- on And Marathon looks on the sea; And musing there an hour alone, I dreamed that Greece might still m i’ ago, and onl needed some rea common erl to surmount t ose antipath- es on both sides which, like most famil quarrels sprang from too be free. _ Rreatya. simlla ty of character. If Fir. standing on the Persians tile Colonists had not been reared Fave- in the sturdy insurrection; of the I could not deem myself a slave". British Civil War and G'ori1us In the very thought oi Greece Revolution, and if George Wash- there is sometl-iin ageless, exqui- ington had not been an Email-sh site, and ‘mperis able. Not only gentleman as unmistakeable as have our noblest western thinkers John Hampden there would pro- been fed unon rer sunlit orchards. bablv have been no War of Inde- but, as tllzough Europe there pendence. and if the obstlnacv of crashed the great engines of en- George III had not been off-set slavement, it was fitting that they by the sympathetic commonsense should have been challenged by of so ahllny of his subjects, it is men brillght up under the shadow unlikely that the sword of Britain of Athens and Thermal-wine. and wou'd have broken so finally o: by the descendants of a people so soon. Elven today the proportion who, not for the first time, can be cf Americans of British descent in trusted to endure disaster-bravely. the United States is greater than to pluck alory from defeat, and, R. A. F. Presents Garrison Theatre No. 3 “ IN TOWN TO-NIGHT ” in aid of llo. 60, Charlottetown Squadron, Air Cadets of Canada TUESDAY andiWEDllESllliY APRIL 14th and 15m, 1942 PRINCE 0F WALES COLLEGE llALL 1:30 P. M. Reserved Seats 75c General Admission so; Blly your tickets at. I THE ROBERT SIMPSON EASTERN LTD. HENDERSON & CLIDMORE LePAGE SHOE STORE mimilchy- It is not so long since even our friends in the States regarded "this K1 a?» "fn o Yflljlf. Dr. James Moflstt, es the noble man planning noble Iwernment can determine lair-it. lIII/lllowzl14111111111111‘ ll t a ~.' ' ' ' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJ Iffiffirflfififlfllfifflfllfl 711.1151 their des- quote China, to me, and my reply would be that, despite appearances, Japan's repudiation of its past is far more drastic. It has retained an old form as the clothing of u new spirit. Chine. has retain- ed tlle old spirit as the soul of a new form. American history was British history lip to l776—if you doubt that, go to Washington, as I have done, and see the Magna Carts. under “protective custody" in the Congressional Library, along with the Declaration 0f Independ- ence and the Constitution of the fiiiallfto prevail over troyers . Chine. iltnbei at the beBlh- H ,°xl“l.CW9VQl', thgen first check to bar ian aggression came not gmm in” people of Socrates but from these of Confucius. It is good that we are now to aid China. though chins would have fought withcut our aid, and would have turned every Japanese victory into a triumphant absoriiitloii- Chine knows her Euro only too well. _ . Mlssim“ to which Shormghted to view in Virginihyliian 15% estliltg; gem“ cigggedsfiicgflffi; P':,.‘f{‘°t’l,' from the 18th century swatch Am- ave c ' slams. lmllmucn d Prue!“ m’ lmpene‘ den revolutions ma. “be ex us ble “able mmpa“ o! ' M0918 so old but they are seldorll constcrucative’ and 3° M” that they can never The bud becomes the rose imper- b° ‘mslaved’ w generous and m ceptibly and remains on the same alert that their leaders-amorlsst Shem to do w The m,” m o! m" the most remarkable alive-f fo low neople “es m h ‘Mt “n: son Cele 91"!“ Wm‘ ‘l "-"“p“°“l' “e mm“ brnted in words which yChurchill “maul ‘mi '° “mum” m“ used at the age of 28 to end his Wm“ J“ n h” murdered 100000" peroration in Aberdeen~ oootumt If’ 3001,0090‘) Wm Sml "A land of settled government m“ m“ u“ A land of just and fair renown an , hadigmwgzgleghrojrliafgibfi igltilaggortggli‘: Whegtewnfreedom slowly broadens P" - r '95 m’ m em From "re ent " phenomenon has been more Per- In an gird thomhfiecoefailgw the 515mm? mlsundersmm m“ Russia‘ world is to be ordered after this M’ m” begmnlng’ opinion was War we must remember that in divided betwee“ um“ wh° regard" political and social as in natural ‘id it" "-5 m9 ‘verthnw °t en" and intellectual connections devel- hghtellmenl and culturegunder the opment is the divine order‘. when our‘ ‘M “m” whm‘ n“ Francis the League of Nations is revived- Meyneu- 5PM“ ‘if ‘his “e9 wmd "robablv under the name "Common which has come out of Russia to CWZeHShHyLR m”, not be u . b1°w “way the darkness of the mere assembly of incompatibles but W714i" 30m- °r cmuse» we.” ‘Wong as n fellowship of those who have Russia cut h“ roots’ fmmdered found the solid way between the m“) allarchy- the" P5559". mt” past and the future and are resolv- Fascism. The real Russia lS still ed to tread 1t as comrade‘ fubrrifrggd 3?}? awaits tliise tlixllaerat; ' ng an .— e same n e o Thosen whge shared wllgh spiritual Values e a m"! "e I" 5"" l" " i illiiik we are a ntitle to Eiviiiile "W" “W flmimfl’ with sav that. the “liberal$°m;n." hi! this "mice- have bee“ Justified by sense, the noble and constructive eveml thouih the Decaune "WW" thinker is a very firm believer in spiritual vailles. The la-te Lord Tweedsmuir, al- lnent only prove: that tradition has not been killed, but merely ways profoundly concerned for the future. tells us in "Memory Hold overlaid. Yiu will still find that. contrary to legend, Simday in Paris compares quite falvourably me D00,» m“ at the beglnmng of his political career he had some uncertainty as to party allegiance. with Sunday in London, where. but finally decided that the greatest d-uJng the last war. the cinemas got permission to open under the emphasis needed in his generation was on conserving our heritage. guise of distraction and charity, and ‘I see its‘ the pressmlletteirs ad- voca rig s Zar perm on n my o 515w , _ heme city. T-‘PQHiO- 0111i’ two gull of filllgySfltilgl? nriiglhggslntllgemgllg- ‘mill! need b9 551d "will "WP tenance of the same formula. of 0X19 la that the T685011 2W9" 15 even the preservation of member- not the real one, and the other 15 ship in the some society. It lies in that experience in England proved lid-silty to the same Rvincinle‘ "What that the“ thiliifs are "ever wm- did Mr. Gladstone "say in 1868?" P07517- 011" 50119. it 1S (10119 1°?‘ matters nothing alongside the fact ever. The more one reads of the may 1n 1340 on m, Chinese w“. collapse of Frame. h-Waver- the Mr. Gladstone stood on exactly the "w" °n° ‘"3395 ma‘ Flflwh same spiritual snot as in 1894. when he took advantage oi lJlySlCBl in- firmlty to retire, in order to cover Canada, the DeGaulie Dflfiiv and the submerged peasantry, zepresent a sharp difference of opinion with his colleagues ~ the nation's true morality and llis- Now this deep fidelity is always tory. roofed in the unseen world, in con- victions which can often be neith- er shaken nor explained, in assur- ances ils old as his-who murmured to himself "not by might nor by power, but by my spirit." saith the Lord." That is why the Church is the source and sustenance of all civi- lization-as we understand the word. With all its defects and divergen- Cermany and Italy In Germany and Italy the situa- tion is different. What has hap- pened, ior instance to the Ger- many of Bach. Goethe. alld the Prince Consort, to the Saxon and the Bavarian, t: the Hessian and the Wurtembezger? The wave oi Pflilfialflnlam has flowed over and Submerged ihfm and it may be cies, it alone stands for human that their resurrection and reili- fellowship and divine guidance. Men iorcement is one of the surest M1398 must watch the stars quite as lnuch oi a European settlement, Wlien at as the ramparts, remembering that, the Lord Mayors Banquet in i918 whenever Moses let down his hands, Mr- U°Yd 59°! 9 "m; FWD days Jle Ainalekites prevailed. and that, belfore the Arm tice. Crcwns are if we are to avoid our own repeti- ia ling in Eilro e" like leaves in tion of our errors-for which we the litlimn wnd, many shared are now being forced to pay so his impression that that was a dearly-we must. be s peoplg of 800d thing. We now know that it prayer not of hysteria. If victory was a great disaster. Kings have sends men to the liquor stores l-ath- been proved fer less dan ercus er than to the churches, where is . that vision without which a people Passion woifld not let men see t, perishes? The visible things of lllis (tBhe Kaisers offer to abdicute as world were not made oiit of things ‘erman DYIPCIRI‘ and remain Klilg which do appear. and they will not o Prussia was one of the most be remade out of the same incon- orornising suggestions ever made, sequential material. If the "liberal 1t would have undone 187i and the man", the noble man, is sure cf one _.’lork of Bismark, ended the de- thing more than any other it is astuting hegemony of Prussia and that Job was everlastingfy right Prevented the disease of the Third when he declared that God "hang- Re It may be that the world eth the earth upon nothing." l5 Roi"! i0 revise its thglflgs about Christian Standards In the third place these spiritual values are judged by Christian stan- dards. No one who knows Buddha and Confucius. socrntes and Virgil, will deny that tilel-e are features cf their teaching vlrich conform to Christian requirements but the mis- taken impression given by the study of comparative religlori under some teachers. and s very popular mis- conception resulting, is that one l-l- United busin- noble ilntl Blasts"? lm u. “filmy n l. ll . snce e Royal Visit of 1939 I think they are less sure. It is almost true to say that EPYOPQ was both safer and better g-ivemed when her kings counted for wmethins. and that my text- Wm“ my Old professor in New renders things and nobly eXeCutlng 1.15 ligioii is just as good as another. “inception! -—¢lves no Qllcourage- That cannot be too promptly or lilcnt to the idea that a form of Dcremptorily denied. im Whit then are ilte morals of all this? 1 think the first is tnsi, me 9”” h°ld4 u" if)’ to the future. The Chinese have a proveb to the effect that only he who won- ships his ancestors can hope m- ilie part of the lecherous riucnls posterity. It is profoundly true, No was a good thing. I am far from nation which has had s sharp and auxin-sling that any cf those srcai sudden break with its past can be names l have menlioned are as- quite sure of its future. You may sociated with superstition, but it is Macaulay has a great passage at the beginning of his history lll whim he ellloiilzcs the advantages of slip- ersiition ill times of violence. rmrl says ital. when. for instance, no woman was safe from outrage. a craven fear of a nlinllrry Chilplll nii Trinity United Church MONDAYF- '1:30--B0ard of Stewards. 8:00—Combined meeting of the Silver Cross and Willing Circle oi’ the Kings Daugh- ters, East Parlor. as wildly false to deny the limits- tions of their Christian ideas ss f0 deny their very existence. The gold is embedded in dross. Whatever contributions iilay be made to it from other faiths-arid I tilizi: fl are too indifferent to that-ours ie the one and only candidate for the position of a world-religion, and it ts more necessary than ever that that candidature be pushed with uncompromising zeal. It is a poor tribute to the Church of Christ in Canada that missionary giving; have fallen off by 50 per cent in me last fifteen years. Whatever the causes, there is the fact, and bil- lions of dollars and thouszurls of ii\'es are now required to cure whet a fraction o-f both would have been ample to prevent. There is no iurb- stitute or rival for the Christian religion and no excuse for apathy in Christian propaganda. Finally this moans for each of m some searching of ixenrt. The Greek word for "l'f‘pflllilll"l(‘€" in the New Testament menus literally "a. change of mind." Perhaps we should eey a "change of heart." Many of us have never really thought these things through in relation to the present. vcorld crisis-if we have, in- deed, tliouulit (lccply about illem at" all. It is time we did s0. Not only does our Christian allegiance requim it. but our common sense compels it. We must decide on history as our hope, on spiritual values u history's significance, and on Jesus Christ. as the centre and focus of everything. He. stands at the door and knocks. not plenclinzly hilt per- enlptorlly. We open to Him or stul- gay ourselves. We repent or we per- TH-E BAPTIST (‘HVRCH Dr. 112W. Palimson, President of Acadia University was the slleilkél‘ at morning and evening services yesterday. His momlil; subject was the Vine and the Branches, based on the lifter-nth chapter of the gospel of Saint John Last Sunday we commelnnrlitcd the Resurrection. The Rcslirl-oriim Wis not an end. it was a new helillning, following which the (liscifples, consecrated unto certain tasks. exercising cer- tain functions were to represent their Lord nn earth, Lnsi. in the poverty of ores lrilllrllzlize it _is difficult to define the (Jllurvh. saint. Paul uscs the phrase "llllilrlcd i0- gether as living smiles“. more tilan building life. Jesus says “I am the vine, ye are the branches". A vital, living organism, what are its marks? Ville, ro't, stem, branches possessing one llfr wherein 1i‘ one ortion (ices not. illllctioll, cieath gegins. All nris depend upon each other, none ive by or; fnr self alone, there is corporate us wall us individ- ual quality. An trunnion exists fOr two purposes, to receive nourish- ment and to l'(‘l‘l"(‘(li‘.lf‘l". s0 we re- ceive of his spirit in reproduce his life, in all nlll- rr-lllliruls, lllflhldilfl] and corporate. 1i the church coli- tacts men nml docs not iiiilllellce them t'wa'd Chris! hns it i\ right to iive? The living power of ari organism is such that lakes ill aflen material and ITLIRPQ sflmfiillill: cise nut of it, so slmll illf‘ (Ihul-vll as living iii Christ, find its fulvtion, to reproduce the spirit of Jesus in the hearts of men. The morning anthem was Goa-s’ Christ Our PnssOvcr is sacrificed for Us. Miss Burns inking the s lo. Dr Patterson's growl ruvilifig message ans "'l‘i‘.0 Li l- f-Itnrnlll". The cvcllillc illlillPlll upas illl‘ iridi- tionul Welsh. Gently Loin. O Gehtlv Load Us. John Inch .\lu.= Bac. Organist and Clloirnl:isiel' was in charge of the day's lliuslc. BRITISH F STER TRAVEL IDNDON - 1GP» -- Declining to authorlzw additional trains for Easter travel l\i‘il-.<'<:' cl Trails- port- LOH [fllllll rs advised “Don't travel for l€fl~llf€ ni- Elston-have your rcsl. ut lime it where rou are" T00 Late to Clnsify WANTED—. O.\‘(‘l-I A ruin. Refercilccs. Apply 4L2 Allibl-nw st. 4-13-31. WANTED l‘ T TIME l\l.-\ll'). l Gllnlllill Office. 4-l3-li mu all. tllllinon Vsmvs n; furrow will. Apply Grddic Mar- “ Blulsllrlw. 4-13-21. EOE SALE RY l'l'lll.l(‘ AITTION Tuesday lz nrlcck norm, on Nlarkci Square. 193i) Dollars Coupe. W. l-l. Briton. Auctioneer. 4-13-21. ~}¢'. iQfinl-q.l_hvs-s ,,-..,..r_ .