.‘- _ i. m ‘S'"’:'1~r-v~ E EIGHT THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN SEPTEMBER z. 19..- _ . -, .. . l SHOWING AT \ PARAMOUNT 3 Dozon o! ‘Em lnla Slanlng CABS" - IIPE - DIIBPII - IAICASTII-IISSIlI-[Ylll PIESTDII - IAIE - llllll - A l And Scum Moro ' Involving IAIY IAWI ‘l. 7-‘? l PRIIDE EDWARD 4 TDDAY - WED. m YOUR EYES may long-and-danco romance of All“ in Hollywoodlandl lAll - STAIIYCA- IMAM-LAID" m: - GAllFlllI - IllllI-SDDU - llhlllill mliilAll- lAliY- IASIIYA- DAIEY Willi Dip in Jvun ' Illly I0 Wail: hlrk lmln - William lkmcuil loll Imlllln ' (nil lvlleny 2:30 — 7 —9 dazzling lEllIlX howl lollay ~ Spin Jenn Inlml by Dlnlol llm llmhd l1 imp lhnhll l l l l l poirnierriflll/ Hill’? i a till, nun; lolu nun ALSO MUSICAL — NEWS Popular p Shows 2.30 - 7 _ 8.45. \ll.oo<§scoi=,co’o;coaépc@/wog§oo; '\Ji‘~9 ‘hi9’: ‘i ~19 i/ififiyiO fiat l‘ "Wfi/lrr/er” Picture §lln lllllllllll - lleglsllllllllll _. o4? ?€>(>I'> Science [wins s. uzlsuns A tcontlnued from Page 2) If lhcy spend their “mole vaca- ilon visizin; Her relatives-it's a Cinch 5hr: dreamed up the trip and pushed it throng-h. If they decide t0 rough it, which means going of! to the wilds where he can fish and hunt and she can! fish and hunt-and also POLK meals, wash dlshns and flsht mosquitoes-- it‘; a prctly snfe guess it lavas his idea. 1r they go to a fashionable re- sort tlllilt neccssitales her buying a i-omplore new wardrobe) and come hut-k with stories of the im- portant perplo they met. yc-u can, be quite sure the little woman in‘ that family ntzide the decision. l. And. of course. if he spcnds his two weeks‘ vacnfilzn on a hunt-j in’; tr with hrs pals. mngnnni- mCusly inning he: take the kids to her mother's for u visit while= he is away, he's really running: things. But if She comes back talking about clrl schc-ol friends of hers they looked up, the amusing tea- Z [é 223 Queen St. f ~ —- - 4 rooms they 8.0 1n. l e shopping she (lid. then she boasxl the trip. So maybe we shouldn't do so much talking nbcut our vacations, alter nil. Nil friends lo'know “his b755, in the fbrnlly. CHIEFS VISIT UK. LONDON c-hicfs from the East A. An pro- tectorate of Unnnda now are visit- ing Britain. A plounccl. flYO-lvflck tour has bren arranged by tho British C/1lli1(“.l at the request of tho C.‘lf‘.nlnl Office. a El uurru smear near l * MARKET t 55 j Henry Petcrs. Prop. illEATS. FISH and VEGETABLES § Phone 2296-2297 J pauouisog 8u|uado o8a||o9 scum u) aau. NDTICE Fourth Year ond Third Yeor Classes will enroll ol 2 Monday, September 8th. Second Yeor Classes, Teoche r Training Class-est Graduating Class in Commerce or 3 p.m. Mondu tember 8th. All First Yeor Classes or 2 p.m., Tuesday, Ssplzmber. Supplementary Examinations in Third and Fourth Y jscts will be held or 2 p.m., Tuesday. sflliembfi’ The Model School will m» ber 2nd. Qt 9 a.m., Tuesday, S: \. . w» in INCH PIECE ot= - PEANUT BRITTLE, , n. OFA PEANUT. '0. OF A PEANUT; Pnucn or era/xv LlNT, In. met-t PIECE OF PUTFY. SOAP oz l-cr M =- DONYT BE FUNNY.’ i MEANT PUT DOWN THINGE LIKE ESL NLFFE‘, lZlVETS AND 5O ON" THEY'RE ALWAYS CLAlMINJ WE'VE LOST A VE VALUAE-LE PlE OFF THE Bil imam) 6E1’ GRAY uuIc-s we -.'.'.1l"it ruri DEITRAI. GUARDIAN _._. This column a round In new. ol local Interact. hli dunking ol A nowny noun may In loaned n flve cents n wool olrlotly pay- nblo in adunoc. CONFEDEIATION LIFE l! SURANCE. Al‘ YOUR SERVICE Arului Coal Compuy. Phonl M98. HOWARD AlolNNIS’ Pitteu Footwear at 175 Queen Street. T0 NEW GLASGOW l-n 25 min- utes V18. Maritime Central Airways twice daily, Phone 2061 or 540. MARITIME CENTRAL Airway: rhreo times daily to Moncton. Air and rail connections to Montreal and Boston. Phone 2061 or 540. t T0 HALIFAX in 55 minute. via Maritime Central Airways Phone 2061 or 540. TO NEW GLASGOW in 26 ml?! utes via Maritime Central Airways twice daily, Phone 2061 or 540. RETURNING HOMIJ— Mr. and Mrs. John A. MocLean or Brook- llne, Mass, accompanied by their sis Mrs. John R. OKnfo ot Br hton. Nfass, ielt for their homes on Friday morning afler spending their annual three weeks holidays as the guests o! Mrs. Herbert B. MacWllilams and fam- ily of Dunblane, Lot 8. RETURNING T0 OTTAWA — Mrs J. L. Keefe nnd her three children. Paul. Marilyn and Wilfred left Saturday momlng on return to her home in Ottawa after spending several week; vacation with her Daronts. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Canon-tier. New \Vlll.8t‘l-lX‘€.s-.‘lE also visited friends in Kinkora and Charlottetown. THE BAPTIST CHURCH- The morning service of worship was conducted by the Rev. James D. Davlson, B.D.. who has returned from the European Baptist Con- ierence at Copenhagen. The preacher at this service was the Rev. Kenneth Eaton, BD.’ son or a former minister of this church bringing 8n inspiring message on those things that eternally en- dure. Miss Norene Auid was the soloist. The Rev. Ross C. Eaton, _____ , "nuances" 115F515?“ T0 . nuuror. THEATRE, SUMJVIERSIDE \ Alfred Hitchcock the grimy. Help Kidneys I! Back Aslig Ill I (I lawn“, llhlfvroununa m“ , Mug woilen Aukiu. Rheum; n". m; Ian‘; run-down gdolntouum or ‘o. d. trouble‘! 1t so’. hm i» n” “d -“' very first dolo o! (Evita: "m." non: Th0 to work halplng tho Kidney: null: lcid: and mute: which m! board's“: our trouble. Trial 05hr: o prove what k:":.:rg;zrrat."rirrzruaars'rsm NU ‘ —————————r"'—— B.D., minister of the First Baptist Church‘ of Truro brought the in- teresting message of the service of evening worship. Mr. Wendell Phil- iipS was the soloist at this service. can}; or scoruusn Puwrr "A View of Heaven" was the subject of the sermon preached by Rev. Horace F‘. MacEIwon in the Church of Scotland, August 31v The fourth chapter of the Revelation furnished the scene, where the apostle Joltn was summoned by a voice which said “Ocme p hither. and I will show thee i-hi gs which must be hereafter." The throne o! Christ is tho central aspect. where "he that sat was to look upon like a jasper and a sardine stone: and there was a rainbow round about the throne. ln sght like unto an emerald". The twenty-four elders round abcut the throne represent the total body of the redeemed. the old testament and new testa- ment saints, who are clothed in white robes, typical of the imput- ed rlghtcousnrss of Christ to Lie believer, and Mm wear golden crowns. typical of the rewards givcn by Him in faithful testimony to His name. The seven lamps o! tire burning before the throne are typical of the Spirit o! God in His complete fulncss. Mr. l\lacE~:von also explained the four living creatures as the Cher- ublm, the angels who have to do with the vindication o! God's holi- ncss and righteousness. They or- rospond remarkably to the ll lng creatures oi’ EzekieVs vision, whose faces were those of lhe licn. calf. man and eagle. They too correspond remarkably to the portraits of Christ given in the four QospeIsJ where Matthew represrnts Him as the “conquering lion c-f the tribe of’ Judah; Mark as the patient servant. which the ox typifies; Luke as the representative Man—- the Son of Man; and Jcthn as the director whose name has become on international trademark for ex- cellence in psychological thrillers, made “Rebecca? the United Alrtisls roivase now at. the Capitol Theatre, as his first assignment under u contract to David o, solmlcp rnhe picture. Academy Award and Not- ional Critics‘ Poll, co-stlrs Joan Fontnlne and Laurence Olivier. _Sir.cr- completion of "Rebcccn" Hitchcock turned out some other top melodramatic spine-chillers for Soiznlok, among them "Sus- vision." which won for Miss Fon- lfiiIlG an Academy Award, and the current "Spcllboun "Rebocca? however. has been ranked by critics ccncroliv as one of Hollywood's . most notable "all time" releases. It was wit). “The steps," "The Lady Vnnishes." gnd "ya- malcn Inn" that Hitchcock built up who reputation for mastery of what some svritcrs have called the “cerc- brai thriller." There ‘may b: min»- dnr and mayhem in a l-Il-lcheock 39 SWPY. but the elements that help" to win audience enthusiasm include a never-flogging suspense. almost ( ‘faultless character motivation am‘ 1th’: spocini kind ol’ x-rnylng emotions of tear. mystery m Imorse that the director impa his stories. heavenly One, as the eagle is the. heavenly bird-the Son of God. The living creatures rest not day and night singing His praises. “Holy. holy. holy. Lrrd God Al- mighty. which was, and is. and is to come". Likewise the eklers cost their crowns bolore Him saying. "Thou art woithy, 0 Lord. to ro- ceive glory and honour and power. for thou host vrentvd all things" and for thy pleasure they arr- and were created". tRoveiatlon 4:11). Only those who have washed their robes in His precious blood, who have been "born again" have o right to enter that place. The sin- nrr trusting in his own moral iigzhtcolzsncss nml good works ncvcr can. We may well qumstion ourselves whore we stand as to etemnl salvation. 11nd. if not saved. coll upon H's name for this great. and glorious mffvil __.~____._. ‘III Ill-K PULPII: Prelchlng sundoy morning, the mlnilter. the Rev. T. H. Bussell Homer: aid: There is further nerd. perhaps the deepest, i! our con- solation 1| to be true. Not. all our sorrow comes from wrong choice. An arm lost by a neighbour's neg- ligence does not grow again. our mild dismay at. the ebbing of our years does not bring back our youth, and many a man has suf- fered loss in war who was not primarily to blame-with many a child and many a home. But much o! the world's burden does come from wrong choice. and each one of us shares the blame. Thus much sorrow is entangled with sln. "The sting ofdeath is sin". Perhaps if there were no moral failure there would be no sorrow. Perhaps our pains, if we were pure. would he only a richer dissonance in the music. The old fable said that when l nightingale sang she rest- ed her breast on a thorn. But. this beauty we do not know’ for we are not olnless. There ls wrong. We are wrong. The tyranny of our time is only the peak of the con- tinent of wrong; its base is toe everyday self-seeking or indif- ference of hosts of people like you and me. "God our Father hath given us good hope through grace" says our text. The deepest meaning in tho New Testament of that word grace ls the love of God in action. the just for the unjust, the loving for the unlovelyz-that love of which Jesus is ,the living ,S1gn. What better Sign? He is in our own language-the language of a life lived out amid the sorrows and sins of earth in a most Divine pur- ity? What better Sign than 'l\.e Sign of the Cross-God gatherinn our sins into His suffering mercy? Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbortlon A Good Thing Carried Tco h: ‘A great deal has been written about the dangers of blddlnfi l° strongly without a fit in partner's sult. Needless to 55-)’. 8M1! W5"!- lngs carry merit, bill U10 tIC-llblfi ls that this idea. like EVETY "m" tdea in bridge. has been greatly overdone. A Mayne. Jr.. in a trenchant article in a. current bridle lmagazlne, lnvelghs against thoic players who “lean over backwards." and uses the followinz deal. amOF-S _ others, to illustrate his point. south dealer. Dot?» olden vulnerable. QliQl1Q2 Q I 1 ‘I l0 The blddink. by North-South nlavers who were ntlpnfsed tn be tar better than average. was this: fle- mu Noni kw Pun l Q Pu: Pal Pun Polo Ssh 1O 3V It needs little and sis to discover Thirty or forty years npo a little book was published entitled: "The ltian or No Sorrows." It portrayed; that kind of Christ. The world had no shadows. There was no re- morse. for there was no sin,—0r no consciousness o! sin. There was no l-zindllness. for there was no lack or need. There was no sympathy, for there was no suffering. The planet soon became a brittle hedv- en filled with metallic people. They began to long for shadows. us min-l ers on the desert long for rain. They began to realize- their need: they were not people: they had no choice, and no struggle. Then the real Christ came again, and the vast shadow of His cross fell along the \v0rld 1n healing. A fable? Yes, but it. speaks to our deepest selves. There. at the point of our selfishness. is our tragic; necessity. Grace, for our sins is‘ still the central comfort. l that the three-hes t contract was anything but ideal! South made his nine tricks. but this was no great solace ln View of the laydown vulnerable game that could hsvg been made at spades or notrump — or eve at diamonds. The flaw in the bidding was, o! course. Scuthks totally inadequate reblcl of three hearts. A; Mr. Moyse took pains to point out. this reb‘d xvns the reflection q! South's ob- surd phllosivphy that he could nct make a_strong raise cf his psi-t- ner's sult because there was no zissurance that North had a five- rnrd or longer suit. and because South himself did not have four- curd support. In other wtrds, Sou‘h made a distorted. dcsnerate rffort to find out whether Ncrth could rebid his spades, instead of giving a strong direct raise and thereby leaving ft to North to take care of himself- There were two irremidiable oe- A0108! 1. Unit o! 3. A sign o! the zodiac 4. Girl's name 5. Foggy 8. Skin disorder 7. Also 8. Rope secured to yardarm (nauL) 9. Melody 11. Talks (slang) 15. Canton v (Switz) 18. Fluff from cloth pictures (Russ. Ch.) 12. Pungant vegetable 13. Pry into another’: 16. Music note 17. Long, nar- row room (or plctural 20. Devourad 21. River (Russ-‘lfiu-k.) 22. A son o! Adam 28. Booth 36 (Asia) DOWN .A.IUIHIIIOID CROSSWORD 2. Bay window 10. Old time: 88. Invalid’! food 39. Body 0t water 40. 0n an oquol mIrmQWn-Anrhnllqvflllfl an nae nv ULJOOI onoauxo QNVJ can oxnbvfizzcno-conrocoxv. 5$53éWPIj§§T.-s- ITAGIBUTICIO_IAQ . ,_,. GRAND oremnox of New Legion Hall Mt. Stewart Wednesday, Sept. 3rd Amusements, Refreshments, Boll Game DANCING FROM 9 TO l Modern and old time music l ENRDLI. YDIIR PUPILS‘ ll JUNIOR nrn cnoss Junior Red Cross encourages healthful living and Service to others . . . Ir is on old to teachers as it demonstrates the democratic way of living. l1’ con be used to broaden the social activities of your school. Monthly newsletters 0nd magazines are mailed to all teachers. Supplies should be ordered from JUNIOR RED CROSS OPFICE, 62 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P. E. I. When vI/ritlng, please mention THE SCHDOL. BINGO Holy Redeemer Hall IO-NIGHT 8.30 ‘The nrllcs Ire the sum- u (‘hue prevailing at oma Bingo: In the oily. Freezoul For Chu-luhh Pomona fectg to South's three-heart rebld.‘ First. the heart sult ltsell was not strong enough: second. and mrre important. this jump rabid of the 1 original sult is not even n force! If South had "religious" scruplos against a huge spade raise. he might l at least have jumped to three n0- Lrumpl u COOL FRUIT SHARES | ln warm weather the human body requires more liquids. Drinks can be made lusty by using lrult Jul"! mlxerl with milk to make milk shakes. CROSSWORD 8. Little child l1. Indefinite 4. To spot article 5, Ehygggd m. Porcolato DAIALY A 1. Olly subotancel B. Heroic 9. A writer of table: l0. Not general l2. Squtndcrl 14. Main part o! a church 1B. Before 16. Earth 18. Ahead l0. A memento 21, Silkworm 22. Therefore 24. Ancient 25. Boarlnl H. Highest cud 28. Rc-ocho 80. Oflerl 88. Public notice 81. Choose 88. Par-ad!» l0. Winged insect. I1. Right ( obbr.) l2. Lifetime 3a. River (Pa) l5. Jumblod WP! Q0. Root of the til-W l7. Sign of tho l0. City (Okla) I2 Grand M: Vontunl 16. Mother-oi. pearl 47. River (Run) 48. Speck! l 71:11 ACAUBBIWZI’ w: 40x4!!! " IIIIHAO II IlllTUA-KWIXIXUHS‘! mm do“... ‘ our: B0Anoino_uousr. EGAD. MARTHA.’ REMluoED Me OF \/ . oevoreo PART OF M\/ Tue CALM A F BTATEL‘! PlNES 0F THE FOREST ~msr WHAT r new row. ' THAT FNE- VACATIOPA TO FASHIONNG‘ 4A Major Hoovll a MASOEG coto- ‘ 1H WEATING 1N Hts: CELLAR d6 ‘THAT CHuNK . E btkfiflt. m... t.