7 QIINWICK scnool. gorilii Mllforlsiggilryizsscrzwen. p u"? ssnderson; 3. Unnie _.a i. Victor Mlchlren, an“ v derson. 3n; aren- —l. Martin Sander- sanderson: 3. Elmer Grade I a m; z, Denna l" M»: w). up, up! By Rev. 'r. u. a -n 11A. 80mm‘ l “Then Job a Prbrésvgl heard iufitmgf: in In e comic ’ ‘Joan 1621-2. m“ m y’ ' a heap of slag outside an ‘Ommi-il city sat a miserable cres- JIIN who had lost everything and Wh° hid everything to lose. He m“ m°v°d °m°nsst men with all Jhe assurance of physical vigour 1nd the force of worldly pm. perity. He had enloyed the repu- tation of righteousness and gen- “Wiiilfl Ho had been the head of it large and harmonious family. And n91! he has nothing left save his soul and sometimes he i; not ilo sure of that. The reader of ‘his miixnificent poem is,, how- ever. permitted to peep behind the scenes and to find the reason for this catastrophe, which is never, even after it is over, divulged tn its yictiln. Baton has challenged Gods boast that Job's integrity is invincible. Heaven has, so to . sneak. staked its reputation on the ooverv o! the crest works or m fidelity of this poor bedragglcd which the Qsnmm ha... 8,01,,“ and fellow to whose sores and humili- which it took his family more than lltions have been added the cease- 300 years to collcct. "I know 1 Wm less stream of messengers an- have the support of the British and nouncing woe. Even to the end American govemmgng u, "we md Job is not aware that his life has reclaim the-m," he any “even 1t been the battlefield between Light Goering has sent them to m, hm“, and Darkness, but at last he em- _.._ _,_: _ , . Comforb-Human and Divine best beloved. and we do not close the gap by covering it with flow- ers. The literature of bereave- ment is amongst the lest our language. Many Jioople dis- trusted. and some deri ed Ramsey MacDonald, but no one who has read the biography "Margaret Ethel MacDonald" imagines that one who so loved a nil-Slim“!!! won“... and remained hithftil r marriage could be a man without principle Abraham “stoo dead end craved a place of burial" there has been this sense of irre- parable loss when death had struck at love. What we. call "the healing hand of time"-it h s poor name for it — is lust that subtle and ‘ ‘ process by which the , . ‘ ‘ presence cf the beloved is replaced by‘ the sp ‘ comradeshi . Because of our physical situs on. it is of- ten a long and difficult transfer- encebutthoscofyouwhosrs aware of the very near presence of your dearest who have died know that it does take place and that it is one of the surest pro- miles of that life beyond into which one day we shall be “by hands familiar beckoned into our fitting place." Meanwhile our be- loved "dea " become port of our living worl _ "Thy voice is on the rolling air, in Sweden n3 i’ have been told." crges into peace. It is not a Boron Rothschild 31w mien“. at peace cf explanation — that is the thought of his country-s Imure never accorded him — but it is and the fate of his own relatives a peace vision, whereby ex- flinfortunaisly after this wny- ‘he planations are rendered unneces- French people themselves will notisary. "The peace which p “r be the ssme," 1m “k1 qwc mink,“ | understanding" reaches and 1n- Frenchmen. after four twms- 1m_ habits a higher level than intel- priscnsnsnt in qemmy Wm m. Wm iectuai comprehension, comes to is tortured soul as he exclaims “I had heard of Thee...but now mine eye seeth Thee." It is a later pen that introduces the figures of the "comforters." per cent. ' 83 w“ solutes in Junior grades, Highest average URGES EARLY sTART t Alfred igflvbfifgln" 1:‘ f“ “gun on roar-wan HOMES smderson. Elanc MacEwen. lr- IONDON _ ""_ of Dolmen 10!‘) For the sake bro ltsttra m»; Marti’; L. Benderoo , teach- m“? "Y Yehab- ilitaition of Britalnlsuhiidusiripi m. Wm of l; ts must t i and not left to ililgregd ififligdgifiy ‘This was stated in s meat shrimp or rumor rsllvs lzm-nscman VANDOUVIR. Feb. B -— (OP) - [on Ribbentmp lzas stolen his race lw. Gocrini! nas taken the best is art treasures, and now Baron liiurlce do Rothschilrl. scion of unravels richest fllrnlll/ of bankers, s s lonely refugee living in s Van- ouvsr hotel. One of the boron! most import- ," Mo..." vast. will iv» is", m, Institute of 8H“; ion Council ieties Association. m AN ARABIC Worm ’Ss.hars "‘ ‘domes; Vsplendid Cough Relief, Mixed in Your Kitchen ‘ N0 Trouble. N0 Coolsig. WW9. Then add your syrup. There Save; Big D0113‘. you have 1| ounces of really splen. n. mun‘ "BM m your on mt- did medicine for coughs due to colds. It l slim you wn all"! mi: a ooush em$‘§..'§-'£‘ii’lil’§£ llgve it WP the! can be depended upon tor And does it do tho work i You'll 32:1: "mnsvhflvg Rives you about 4 any it's your favorite cough treat_ as muc rye _ A as troubie—it's so egifirmilibliflrglii- ilrlilzntikftliggselfll:lfllbglglzbfgzfisogltiils: “gig: ‘nzsgpsslostyrtuzhungis it by gear the air passages. Eases the m, o“ mp or “awn! momieuinul‘ 1:11:58. Ind lets you rest at night. i , . is a special com ound of until dissolved. m» w‘ i’ yo“ can u“ c°m°:y°$g3o::|°:;fi PW"!!! illtredlents. in concentrated form, well known for prompt acflon ha?‘ gig‘; gfinlclggflkllfirlip. ho on throat and bronchial membranes. my dmggm‘ and no" n I ‘no: in Just try it. and if not pleased. your n ooid omlnoney will be refunded. “Pm my own 501s now!” Every business started as an idea in the mind of some individual. Every shop i-overy farm — every factory - every worthwhile elltcrprise from banks to movie theatres, came into being because some individual had faith in an idea and the courage to back it. Every Canadian has this right . . . the right to build his future in his own way- to go into business for himself if he chooses -and to reap the reward of his enter- prise. So it has always been. That is the very essence of our free way of life, the solid foundation of our greatness as s nation. THE ROYAL BANK OF a not return from Gcnnsny- -nrld m ' l.‘".‘lilila‘il.“§§3= wunutimszzaeasiis! iierson- Ratmy‘ i o m); w" i’ m“ Mme Mek- hB e881! . gm”: ‘Verne m Bu!“ Grub!’ . more even nerhlips morally- and intellectually than physically‘ I Tnhey l ‘Pmfllwi liiannina of the post- 900000 houses inwilis 0f a joint conference cf the Rovnl Nn-tirinal Houso liifiltiAterifityflftfefigtissn-bg‘: 1d the Bull-ding soc. i! the Arable word for M are lust people who mur- lir in his ears the stock argu- ments and current consolatlons popular in their day. That pros- Derity is the result of God's favour and that the loss of health. chil- dren and worldly fortune are the punishment of sin, and that the only hope is somehow to secure Once more the ear cf God -—these are the burden of their insistence. Nothing, however, will convince Job that he has deserved his fate, and, in hi3 refusal to associate his plight with infidelity to his ideals he is on very firm ground for our lord Himself declared, when they brought Him the man born blind, 11nd urged the old motion that there had been sin in him or his Parents "Neither this man nor his parents, but that the work, of ,G0d might be made manifest in ,hiln." It is a. supreme affirma- l tion, of which, of course. the cen- I tre and source is the Cross itself. At any rate. Job draws out of his 0W" 520ml the flat denial of the ih°°1°By of his day- He will have none of it._ Whatever underlies ills misery it is not what these men 51y. and what these men say does not hclp him to fear it therefore at last he turns on them -“i have heard many such thinirs: miserable comforters are ye all!" Would-Be Consolers The sufferer and the rnorallslng would-be-consolers belong t o everv generation. The necessity of finding and providing help and hope to the broken hearts of men is perhaps the supreme challenge i0 rslislon. 8nd if religion can- not meet it. it pannot be met else- where. For, while much has changed. the situation remains the same. Death strikes our nearest snd What is PRIVATE ENTERPRISE? it is the natural desire to make your own way, as far as your ability will take you; an instinct that has brought to this continent the highest standard of life enjoyed by any people on earth. It is the spirit of dc- mocracy on the march. CANADA imagines itself square. commonlysknown as liberalism in I‘ plicstion of knowledge and com- mon sense no use whatsoever to take to the I hear thee where the waters run. Thou standest in the rising sun. And in the setting thou art fair." I suppose that. when Franklin Delano Roosevelt awoke one day to find himself a sufferer from infantile paralysis, he would have been justified in believing that his career of public service-already brilliantly begun-was over. and in feeing that a situation in which he became one of the chief pil- lar of the world's hope was ut- teriy fantastic. No one who has not lain-o; Job lay-so smitten as to wonder whether life was over, work prohibited, and noth- ing remaining save to become s he pleas epondent on the kind- ness, if not the aims. other folk, con ever know whet it means to make friends with such a situation. Yet friends we must become, if life is not simply to be hideous. I speak from the experi- ence of Christendom when I say “it can be done" and all the fu- ture if the shadow goes back on the dial and the worst does not happen, is coloured by that recon- ciliation. a-inanclal Worries People often speak as if poverty were a. blessing, but. beyond a. want, it is an unmitigated curse. at many good people need most of all is a little ease and plenty. Talent has been liberated and life itself saved just by the pos- session of means. One sufferer must die in his slum, while the other may seek and enjoy the climate that will restore him. I read Lord Twcedsmuins "Life of Sir Walter Scott" last summer, and nowhere is he nobler than amid the cruh of his financial affairs. Let no man under-value the empact of such a crash. Only those know it. who like Job, have experienced it. Financial won-y ranks very high in the list of the soul's enemies. as potent now as when Job lost those flocks and herds and the affluence which had become part of and without which he no longer s ainccl himself,‘ ‘ " ' Now our modern world is even fuller than his of voices which pronounce on these situations. The pessimist is with u; as with him. Job's wife bade him “curse God and die" and we are urged to the some policy of despair by many " and others. Tschekov in "The Cherry Orchard" goes round turning out the lights one by one. and sneering at the credulities cf lfillg folk. Thomas Hardy ends is "Tess of the Durbervilles" with the words, "The President of the immortals had finished His sport with Tess." J. B. Priestley in "Angel Pavement" gives a pcture of drab and toilworn people. liv- ing in a world which apparently contain neither Church nor Chris- tian, to whom there corneg a flic- ker of worldly hobs. and when it is gone, they toil cn._ a little drab- ber and more toilworn, with no goal but despair. l not reading Omar ayarn this war. as a best seller, I am told, in the last one-largely because he wrote such lines as O come with old Khsysm, and leave the wise ‘m talk; one thing is certain, this life flie - l. One thing i; certain and the rest is lies- The flower that once has bloom- ed for ever dies! A more erroneous or less scien- tific statement it would be dif- fioult to discover. It Just is not true. for the dead flower has our- ed itself into other forrna o life. Indeed, like ourselves. the body of it seems to perish only that its soul may find better resurrection; Th psyeh“°ti'"ofil'm' th f‘ e ocg ano or o our monitors, and God forbid that! I should seem to sneer at psy- chology. It is s. real and valu- able stu . But there is s mod- ern vsrie y of it which is mis- chievous, which sug ests that men are machines with nterchsngeoble‘, parts, and which suggests facile remedies for deep distresses. All that is needed is to oil a. complex. uncouple an overheated phobia. or ibition. course govern conduct. What you believe settles what you do. When Agnes smedley, in her book on China. is grateful for never having had- auy religion, we are not surprised= that she next announces her dew sertion of her young brothers and a divorce folcwing a shal-| low marrinso. The psychologist,‘ however, is a miserable comforter.‘ until hc realises that each soul is_ an unique thing, until he treats‘ us as one who know; that t_he_ planet contains nobody ss 111.:- us. until he recognises psychology's| basic truth which ls that the in-i dividual is the heart of his experi- ences. __.,__ ,__,.____,___ The third modern comforter is the t ditionslist who is also elo- qucnt. and let us never make thci mistake of undervsluing our trad- itions. There i, a traditionalist._ however, who is forever trying to, force on us forms and formulae, which are quite useless for o generation. however well served our predecessors. in s. world which knows round and not on an earth which What is eligicn is simply the plain ap- l to the facts. It is of t 1g , u; 1 -h win tever storms may nor. fiiiolixgsegzhindh“ hgnhiiial taupe 9:3 n liens "s duller Mos l disintegrstes, G0 T"? CHARLQTTEIQQWNMGUARIPIAN l Q I in. longer true or hel fill. WWW" much they mly "0 those of on age which dwelt in a different atmosphere Ind Ne“ another lnngus ,e. I sometimes think that we need to shed a very greet deli of our roliliflll "W" and vocabulary. They no clothe reality for a vast num of suffering fol . Job's Comfort On the other hand, if. in s. dif- ferent way, we find our answer and.our comfort Just where Job found his. There is the am wonder of the world, stars cannot be counted. leviathan which cannot be hooked, and wil- dom which cannot be lumbod. As well believe that l-famot was the result of two hsndsful of print- er's pie thrown haphazard into a vat as that such a world did not spring from the mind of a Gru- tor. It may be true that Loon- ardo Do Vinci’. "Lest Supper" has some scratches and on but there is genius beneath them none the XII, and thE observer who fixes his ttention on them is a fool. It is perfectly true that man has done dreadful and do- vastating things with the world. that his hot and avarioious hands are more responsible than any; ‘thing else Kr its failure to boa tiful, fui d good. ll"! for “his to" realise the image i . as soon as one really sees the m“ ‘l’; "s12?" . ti.“ ti‘? a e m _ an a - pose of clod. Onsv eves in God tree, hiid are stopped. fir: umflfs fsctnwhich has to explained, and nobody has ever yothlottsn to e . su is further and strengthened’ as Job vvlvh . by’ the hshcrutiny ofwhipmoscetlf. e se "per es" goes . without Cod. with d. it. becomes aware of its own vitality. integrity and ere ICIOB excl: rulgce jzm air/w f... S i.” f Voéo m Zfia/z-Z-téta/ .%l7&r 2Z2... TIP TUP TAILURS INDIVIDUALLY CREATED TO YOUR MEASUREMENTS o If you are in need of new clothes and are considering their pur- chase. we suggest you place your order ls soon as possible, to facilitate the earliest delivery. 99 Grafton Street, Sunnyside the storm." It immense significance of itself as s unique creation of God, separ- ate, different and distinct from all others ever born or yet to be born. We derive comfort from the realisation that our souls are- not loan». They are the battle ground of tbs mightiest force; of the universe. above all. there is the Cross. At the heart of our reli- gion is the Crucifixion of the in- nccent and beloved of Him whom 00d was woli- leased. Whatever the meaning o your agony. your loss. your disappoint- mentitisnotthstdodisagenst you. Rather it is Xlfllll in and u and your suffering is the welding of life with Bis. You are sing- tho lord's song in many queer aces those days-places. per- you never expected to en- your ips tremble . Voices clsmour ing your surrender. took Helen Keller to the whldow of tho Rouse of Commons and described to her bind eyes "the steep frownin glories of dark IDCTIHIIII" th the snow on th ights. look at the "lonely hill" and the Cross on it and morning will despise the shallow oomfo of the super- ficial. your soul will reach to the depth. the richness. the fulness of the comfort that is God our Saviour, IANNING IIOOK W. l. . The regular meeting of Fanning Brock W. f. met at the home of Mrs mo arson with ii members and four vi tors pnsent. Roll call was enlwssod naming your first School Teacher. lick reported two rooted. A lettar of thanks was read from s soldier ovsness for s. Christmas b0 it was decided to pack another box for Ollfl in later. Four immbers khdly offend to clean school. A y. .1” {Wu-g oflillsnorous reyadlliiwby-iltifrs. lwamon Jay. Meeting closed withl ___._. _ __._' —~ e_~.__e »_»‘ 4 e. w“? P; v Allan Grads L- . Eileen 80%. Jay m4 g ymnble word contest by. Grace Ii -l. Charles Grant and Miss Thelma Jay was won by Miss Mildred MacLeod. (equal). Thelma Jay and Mrs Watson Jay.l Grade i sir. —i- Georgina Mc- A very interesting delncnstrazion Kenna. on knitting was put on by Mrs.. Grade i Jr. i-i. Ivan Kelly. Perfect attendance Beverley slac- A vote ofl lxod, Clifford Macleod, Iileel hostess Rooney, Mildred Maclieod. C. Rooney. Teacher. the National Anthem- thanks was tendered the for s. nice evening and delicious lunch on llool. Report for thTm-dn-th of Jdllli-l antlirade X-Sr. l. Beverley Mel- Grade X Jr.-l. Laurens Rooney. 2. Beatrice McKcnlla: 3. Mary Rooney _ Grade V1II—l Clifford Maclieocl,‘ 2. Marie Rooney; 3. Paillille Grant.‘ l POULTRY VMIITEI Grade VI-l. Patrick McKenha, i. Michael McKenna. Grads V-l. Annie Grant]: 2t.‘ K°mmh Maflmd‘ 3' mp No quantity too large or too small. Send in your few and chicken to the Ru Packing Company. Paying IN STOCK 1 car Fencing Wires, i car Nails and Horse Shoes. l car Nails and Bar lron 1 car Roofing and Shin- gles. ARRIVING l car Window Glass l car Galvn. and Black Sheets l car Assorted Shingles. top prices on all grades. J. D. Jenkins (Prop) THE RILYAL PACKING COMPANY Charlottetown, P.E.l. ALSO FUR$ Send in your muskretl. mink. red fox and other fun l aking shipments at all Fennell 8i Chandler llilii. it???“ '"" M‘ "’ '31 unionism-Jul i J- 9- Jmii"