WWF r ' l.EEBll.IlA.RY , ' , . .,I , v ,1 "GUARDIAN. 1'5 Htuiiic'HSEs, Tomokaow wukcl-I oi ENGLAND s, PETEl'S CATHEDRAL g AIIIIINI --:'?J;Tn'Kv crevices in A. 33'! H...” 5',-ciiuui lecherlet and 5",,,,””'5..u.y School: , s nsonsnnd Mn,” wag;-vices at regular ::-w? . 5, PAUL'S ANGLICAN CHURCH 5- -ms i-Aaisii cimscn ntebllshoil use by level Fells tion. d J. T. Ibbott. Ioetor. 2-: ::;::::: .. .......... '0,-gpnlgt and Chill! MIIICI. n g,go-Sacrament of Ilolv 003!- I """"S r r and " uM..Mo ng raft , suueut "Profit and Loes' , Anthem "God So Loved The world." z.39..3und3y SCIIOII. ,-mo-Evening Prayer and Sermon. Evangelistic IIYIIIIIN subject "The Cross and Sur- d .. . di.':l3'FeeriiowshlP "0"?" I" ll" ' Parish Hall to which all the Congregation is invited. ;....------- PRESBYTERIAN 7-'T . ms KIRK or 5. JAMES The lteverend T. if. Bueeell Somerl. ILA S.T.M-. . Minister Miss ll. Lillian ildelonaie. Mug. Bee. organist and Choir Director 10. A.M. Church School 1! AM. Divine Service and Ser- man: "Iiow a Christian Feces Ills Daily Work”. Anthem: Brother James Airb- arr. Jscob. solo: Angels Ever Bright and Fair-llaiidel - Miae Nam! MacNovin. I r.M. Vespers and Meditation on ' "Our Lord It the Marriage in Cans of Galilee" . Anthem: "0 Lord Mist Mer- ciful-Cenr Franck - Glrll -s . Choir. Vleiiore Always, Welcome. ZION riisssvrriuiu CHURCH . Prince and Grafton Street! ileverend G. Carlyle Webster. Minister - ' Mr. Frank JohnIton.'A.T.C.f.. TRINITY UNITED cnurcii - .- Ministersi . ; ' Ieverend II. I. ll. Aahford leverendal. T. lrwln Organist and Choir Director: llr. C. 1.. Gates, Ll..S.M.. l..M.T. ii an. S Unfinished Ile- lirlon-Mr. Irwin Anthem: "D Saviour of the World"-Slr,.IeiiIi Go. 'lp.m. Sermon: No. I "Why I don't go to Church-Too many hypocrites In the CliIiroh.'- Mr. -Aahford. Anthem: "Ye lloly Angela Bright"-Eric '.l'liI.Inen. We invite you to worship (led In Trinity Church and cordially welcome you to all eervces. l BAPTIST THE BAPTIST CHURCH Corner Prince and Illltsroy lb. The Reverend James D. Dsvison. l.A.. B.D.. Peetor. Ortenist and Director of Choir, Mr. Robert Crooks. A. Mus. (McGiii) ll.M.'l'. ll a.n'i.-"it's A Difficult Pet- tern." Anthem-Selected. if noon-Clturch School. Prepan. tory clese toward baptism and church membership. 7 Illllc-BI by sermon-series. "Heroes of Love". (2) Adonir- am Judson"-"The Book In The Pillow." liymn-story-"Book of Ages” Anthem-"Prayer"-Ilendel. 8.15 p.m.-li.Y.P.Il. Illustrated travelogue-"Norway, the In. comparable!" CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH I10 Kent Street Marvel D. Dunbar: B.Tii., Minister Mien Thelma Burns, Organist and Choir Director. 10.00 am. Church chool and Iain- ily llour. Standing in Inter Maritime S. 8. Competition: Lords Cove Deere Isiend (ist): Saint John (ind): Charlottetown (3rd): lielifnx (ith): Milton (lib): Special Sunday School or- chain. 11 a.m.-Morning Worship Service and Communion. The service will be in charge of the lid- ei-s. Cholr Anthem: "Fairest Lord Jesus". 1.00 p.m.-Evening Service llymn Time. An opportunity to sing the age old hymns. Song Leader. Mr. A. Turpin. Sermon: "Don't Leave Your House llninbsbited" - Matt. 11:41-is Vocal Duet: Mrs. E. and Mr. P. neck. Platte liymna: 10!. N5. 490.- Anthcni: "Heart Be Still"- . Warren. . 3.30 PM. The Sabbath School end liible Classes. 0 EVENING WOISIIIP 1.00 p.in. Theme: "Does ' Anchor Hold!" liymna: 001. 521. I81. I-iymn Anthem: Lights of Home." Anthem: "Surely lie - llorne oer Grlefe". liendei. "Draw Nlgh onto God and lie - Will Draw Nigh Unto You.” Your are cordially invited to wor- ship with he. . SALVATION ARMY . . GREAT GEORGE STIIEIT . liisior and Mrs. B. Hutchinson. SUNDAY SIS. Cl! .11 a.m.-lloilriees Moe I 1.30 p.ni.-Sunday School Bible Clem. no p.m;-Open Air Service on Grafton Si. 1.00 p.m.-Salvation Meeting All are oordially invited to WI!- slilp wiili as. United PENTECOSTAL CHURCH 81 Elm Avenee ' Ievueod Quincy Stein. HIM Phone 37004.. p A Your "Illeesed lleth Services it am. Sunday School ll a.m. Worship end Praise 2 pm. Children's Church 7 non. Evangelistic lfeetinr- lveryone isiwelcomc. lThe Cherch That's Different". ..... .8ocleiy ' ..Eeeev'ceneetIiIcn, on either not - the fouowilis ' . en te: is , Iv thin lfiggigln Done oh. 5 u. . mu.-ulnIigvl4.bb.. maxim- . , i I an maiico ' i -age Organist and Olioir Director lllbllltgefti and invites". its MORNING woasnrr of the Lordlsebsy. ' I. W 1.00 l.Ili. Theme: "The Man of Prayer and Power.” Upper Prince Street Order of Meetings for Lord's Day II AM.-Sunday School ll A.M.--Breaking of Breed 'l.I0 p.m.-Gospel Meeting. Setting forth men's total deprav- iiy end salvation through the re- demption which is in Christ Jesus. , . All welcome. no collections. IN MEELORIAM In loving memory of our dear daughter. Mildred lrenc MacDon- :l.d. who passed away Feb. Hill. 50. The , stars are shining, Upon the silent grave, Beneath it sicope ihe one we loved, The one we could not save. We are thinking of you darling. Thinkins of tho Illlt. Picturing you in memo ,, Just so we saw you last. You left behind some broken hearts. 'l'bet loved you so sincere. We never did or never will. Forgot you darling dean... .. , Always remembered by Mom, Dad. Sisters end lrotliore. IN MEMORIAMI in loving memory of PETE! G. SCOTT who peeled away Tebrlllfi Mill. llil. Iavingly Ileinesnbered by Wife and - lbmily. amen. NEWTON IOHOOL Report of examinations for the month of January:- A Grade Vlli-l. Mary Mclvor: 2. iioseinery Mulligan; 8. Gerard Mc- lvor.--- Grade Vii-i. Adelaide Mulli- gen; 2. Allison Murphy end Rob- ct Coady (equal). Geode -V-1. Peggy Molvor: I. eebeth Mulligan; 3. Geraldine le. Gyrede III-1. Winnlfnd Mur- rim 2. Betty Mclvor; 0. Earl Mclseac. 1 Grade ll-1. Freda Boyle: I. also 3. "Grede l (e)-1. Joan Greeeian. Grade I (b)-1. l-Ian-y.Greeaan and lddie Ilcivor (soul): 3. Wayne Ci-eecen: 3. iioivlh (iradui (c)-1. Alan Clove; 1. Sheila Ciow: I. Rite. Doyle. Teacher. Geordie - l -3 DIITAII--WIN I v A stouaiein in Newfound- "nm me, on clear day! Central Christian Church urges ' Lenten Meditations V Till: GIDUNII or IAITII . (Ilia London Times) The Christian religion has often had to meet the demand implied 1'1 "19 Word! "if one went unto them" from the deed. they win”. P9l1t- Jesus was frequently faced with a similar challenge. "whet lien showest thou then. that we ml! He. and, beuevo thee?" He always steadily refused to al.- Wmllir to prove the truth of mg claims by yielding to em. ammo, is would never use his ' I powers to overewe man and to force them into belief. THIS. he often did what men were not accustomed to seeing, but characteristically those deeds were "0394 by some deep human need, and never performed to satisfy a demand for the marvellous. the un- il-SIIIL or, what use would this have been in any case? mm 1. no virtue. no moral value. in be- lieving what one is compelled to believe. neither is such belief re. lit? "A 3'7. ”"”i”'.t.. l"'”....t . n was a or w he looked. ' Whawver may be said about the .mlracles of Jesus, they can never be thought of as the true ground of faith; Just as belief in God does not rest upon. and will rarely be compelled by. any arguments for his ” though these argu- ments may well help to strengthen and confirm a faith which already exists. g The universe revealed by modern science may enlarge a man's con. Btlition of God, and strengthen be- lie: in him, but it does not inevit- ably have this enact. Men some- times desire the kind of proof which. in the nature of things, can never be afforded. This desire for the strange, the unusual. expresses itself in the many curious aberrat- ions of the religious impulse of which history provides so many examples. The true ground of faith is Christ himself-what he taught. and what he was and is. The seeker must always come back to this-the Jesus portrayed in the New Tests. meat. and the Christ of religious experience. These are not two Chrlsts. but one. The Christ who has c-;mmuxilc- ated himself to and through his Church, and who has revealed himself in the lives of countless in- dividual Christians through the ages. is the same Christ as he who walked and talked with his first disciples in Palestine. The impression made upon those who came into contact with him during his earthly life-at least upon those who sincerely desired to know the truth. or possessed some degree of spiritual Insight-is abundantly clear. They could only believe that in this Jesus of Nazar- eth they saw the divine shining through 9. perfect human medium. This faith was. indeed. confirmed by the resurrection. and given re. newed potency by the Peutccostal experience. but always for them, as for the Christian to-day, Christ himself was the beginning and the end oi faith. IN MEMORIAM eossrn wu:nT,i:n GALLANT The village of North Rustico and surrounding districts were shocked if hear of the sudden death of Joseph Wilfred Gallant which occiirred on Saturday, Feb- ruary 10th. Being only forty-one years of are Mr. Gallant was well known and very well liked by all who knew him. The funeral was held on Wed- nesday morning from his resid- ence. North Rustlco to Stella Maris Church. where Requiem High Mess was celebrated by Rev. Eric Robin who also conducted service at the grave. Pallbearers were members of the Legion as he was a member. Lawrence Doucctte. John L. Doiron. Lawrence Ciel- isnt, Emile Gauthier, Leo Gallant. Stephen Peters. The Legion at- tended in a body. Besides his wife and three small children. Theresa. Mary Eileen and Kathleen he leaves to mourn his foster par. ents Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Blac- qulere. tine brother Fidcle in Charlottetown: one sister Theresa, Mrs. Herbert Riley, Maiden. Mass. The Mass and spiritual Bouquets shown the esteem in which he was held in the catn- munity. Wife Gilbert and Mary. Marguerite Gallant (2) Mr. Fidele Gallant Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Riley (2 sigh, 1 Low.) Pupils of Stella Maris Mary. Rcg and Susan Ethel eters Mr. a d Mrs. Philep Riley Uncle ohri and Aunt Josie and Family. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Perry Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Coker Mr. Oswald Gallant Mr. and Mrs. Art Gallant Sisters of the C. N. D. Aunt Sophie. Mr. John Perry (2) Amy and Frank Cronin Mr. and Mrs. Arnold sherren Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gallant Mr. and Mrs. James Gormlcy Amoa,,2...Ciaiiam stair. - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nightingale Miss Ann Gallant Joeohinel-Gallant (2) Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Doucette, Harbour Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Joseph Conant. lb. and Mrs. William Hughes In-. Mr. and Mrs. Colin Mcbernitd. Mr. s. Peel Peters. ' Students of Notre Dame, Acad- I s I fhgco of Grade II and 1:1. N.D.A. 00 ea! Girls of ii. I). A. Letters er It-pehy ' Auntpllarrsret and uncle Philip W. and Mrs. Miller 'Oi'i' and ms. scan, Pureey. Damian seams and really. Illllmiliilu. Mess Cards aim . my sac”:-unis. s a one E warrsroarsas CATALOG!!! E ; AIIIUI veers E D "'9 ''”'g D s. is E on" s 0EllTIiAl. cunmn 'I'biaeolaesnis.r::ervedrornaws eaaeey neturemaihe at nve eeetae word, etrieti) pay- ebielnsdvaloa. ' .I'lJlH!'I Tex!-Phone II. IOWAID hieclllNll FOOT- WlAn at 113 Queen street. reaxnsuz coucen-r opens next week. Tickets now at Hughes Drug Co. BIIBIGIIATOBI. Ranges. Mo- tors and Washer repairs. storey Electric. Phone 3001. war lsaarvnb. .- Shipment of new spring Purses. all colors. Kennedy's Ladies' Wear. SPECIAL Gospel meeting: can- tinuing nightly at 8 pm. in the Gospels Hall. Upper Prince Street. SPECIALS. - One table of odds and ends for Saturday. sunter's Ladies Wear. WHOLESOMI. -home-style white and whole wheat bread. lee a loaf eg, Stewart Bakeries Ltd. FLIGHTS DAILY except Sunday to New Glasgow and Jlailfax. Phone Maritime Central Airways 2061 or 504. - YORK UNITED CHURCH. - Central 11 A. ll. Pleasant Grove 2.00 P. M. York 7.30 P. M. Rev. John Douglas. MacDONALD RADIO SIBVICI I80 Kent street. Radio -cpaira Sound equipment, Disc Recurdins. ltogers Majestic and Stewart war- ner Radios. COAL DISCIIARGING. - To- day cars of Old Sydney Screened. Acadia Nut. Acadia Egg Oil Treated and Invcrncss W. D. Gillie Co.. Ltd. WEEK-END SPECIAL-Stewart Bakeries Ltd. golden cocoanui. layer cake topped with fluffy pineapple ring. A delicious treat for Sunday dessert. ENGAGEMENT -- MA'I'IIEs0N- CUFF.-Mr. William Cuff an- nounces the engagement of his daughter Mabel Gladys to Donald .MacLesn Matheson of Brostil. Lot 40. P. E. 1. Marriage to take place in Sydney in the near futture. M'II.'l'oN-ItUs'rICO PAnISll.- Rector. Rev. A. E. Plerccy, R. D. Services for Sunday. February 25th. are as follows: St. John's, Milton. 11.00 Morning Prayer and Ser- mon. st. Mar-kle, Rustlco. 2:90 Evening Prayer and sermon. Come and bring the whole family. CITY POLICE COURT-At the Stlperidlary Magistrate's Court yes- terday, a clear docket was present- ed and the Court adjourned until- today. it was the second successive day that a clear docket had been presented. LE'l'I'l::B. CARRIER. SERVICE- In compliance with Departmental instructions. the Post Office letter carrier service on residential walks will be curtailed to one delivery per day. This service will go into effect Monday. Feb. zs.-. AT QUEEN CHARLOTTE - Olitford M. Lee. Kensingtcn Road. was sworn in at ll.M.C.S. "Queen Charlotte" yesterday as a Petty officer and Class shipwright. A draft to Halifax for basic training is expected for this new member or the R.C.N. (it) early next week. men IN WETMDUTK. MASS. -Mary Ann Macintosh. daughter of the late Peter and Margaret (Stewart) Macintosh of Belle River, P. E. 1., died in Weymouth. Msss., on Feb. 7th. Surviving are two sisters, Jessie of Mllitm, Mass., Kati-rryn Beiyea of Hanson. Men. and a brother. Stewart, of Hyde Park Mess: also two nieces, Mar- garet Nichols of Resdliig, Mess., Mina Watts of Weymouiib, and a nephew, Robert Bciyea of Hyde Park, and two grand-nieces. Cyn- thrla and Kathryn Belyee of Hyde Park. A brother Ronald died in British Columbia in 1945. DEATII 0! MRS. I. ll. SMITH -The death occurred at her late home in Teunion. Mean. on Feb- ruary liiih, 1951. of Mrs. B. H. Smith. the former Hannah Fraser. doughter of the late William l'. and Mrs. Fraser of Norih River, P.E.l. She leaves to mourn three sons and one daughter; also sev- eral grand children and -greet grandchildren. and three sisters: Mrs. J. D. Jenkins, City; Mrs. C. D. Meclaeen. Clyde River. P.E.l.; and Mrs. Layton Mccebe, Alex- andra, P.l:.l. ro A'l"i'INIi MASONIC, CON- Flllllcl-ldesers. G. 6. wood. I... A. Mcilougeli and n. E. Kemp left by place this morning for Winnipeg. Manitoba, where Iiey will represent the Grand Lodge of Prince ldweni island AI. and Add. at an all Canadian Melodic conference. is. W. Bro. Wood was elected Chairmen at the confer- ence held in Toronto and his many friends will be pleeeed to know he will preside at the meet- ing in Winnipeg. The . conference vsiiidi will be held tron tlndsy. Feb. Itch to Wednesday. Feb. lath. . .1 against wage control, Gerald Waring Reporting UITAWA - When the four big labor organization wart to the Government this week with a de- mand for price control without. ware control. they weren't exactly laying all their cards on the table. 111 POM 01 feel. they were pretty sure price oniml woul come in time. and wage control till it. dc- lnlte anything they had to say on the subject. What they wen trying to do was iv? Put Ovlenized lobes in a posi- tion from which it could bargain with the Government. By taking an apparently adamant stand they now hope to be able to dicker with the Government to mitigate the never- lly of lily wage freeze. . In re iity, what organized labor is fighting is not wage control. It will accept that to get price con- trol. What it's preparing to. do bat. tie Wliih is a wage freeze which would perpetuate the disparity bg. tween wages and runaway prices. Labor Solidarity , Wage-price parity before a freeze is the objective of bushy-bx-owed Aaron Mosher. Pruldesit of the Canadian Congress of Labor, and astute Percy Bengough, head of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada. They carried the ball in the joint submission to the Cabinet not only of their own unions' pro- srems. but also the programs of the Canadian and Catholic Con- federation of Labor and the Rail- way Transportatioii Broiabex-hoods. in brief, what the four labor bodies asked was a continuation of rent control. a' general price freeze, and appointment of a public board. on which lsbor would be repre- sented. to rule on all applications for price and rent increases. A fight ior maintenance of pres- ent rent control, outmoded and shot with anomalies as it is. would be lost from the beginning. The labor lead-ers couldn't help but know that, even if Prime Minister St. Laurent hadn't bluntly told them so after he had heard their submission. But they probably felt they had to appear to be battling the Government to change its de- cision io lei. rent control lapse April 30. Farm-Labor Views Differ when that time comes. Masher, Bengough and Company, wviiosc unions might influence a million and a half voters. want a greater say in how far wage controls go vlsan labor had the last time. in 1 41 Most important, they want any "wa-ge sta.bilizatlon" to be worked out by a Government-Lo.bor-Me.n- agemerit Conference; not by a wage freeze. They argue against the lat- ier on the grounds that the wages of labor already are largely con- trolled by union contracts; that wages can increase with increasing productivity without breaking a price ceiling, and that while price control is urgent, wege, control is not. A l ' A few days earlier, the Govern- ment had heard representations from the powerful Farm organiza- tion, the Canadian Federation of Agriculture. Short, stocky Presi- dent Her-b liannam told the Ce.biri- ct that price controls ”should be made effective clear across the board on all protiis. prices and wages. No attempt should be made to control prices unless wage rates are also controlled”. Meanwhile the CC! party. which has been most ouiapokai in Par- liament in demanding price con- ti-cl, isn't committing itself on wage control. It would raiuier be excus- ed on that one, since the farmers, from whom the CCF party sprung. are for it, and organized leborr, from which the CC!” draws great Sulp- port, is against it. .:.-...:..:--.-.-m...m.... will be attended by Masons from every province in Canada. MUSIC FESTIVAL. - Our beg- inners class in Plano is open only to pupils having had one years tuition. To give pupils of two years tuition. who are not yet able to compete in their age group. a chance to take part in the festival. The syllabus committee has added two classes 90 "A" "Dance of the Mai-ionettes" by Hazel Voioari. 8 years and under Miy 1st,'1951, 97 "A" "The Merry-Go-Round" by Boris Berlin. 0 years and over Mey 1st, 1951. These selections are now available in the Charlotte- town Music Stores. Per Mrs. R. Mackinnon. ON LEAVE - Two naval of- ficers. iit present home on leave in this Province, ere- Sub. Lieut. Clifton Court of Bedford, and sub. Lieut. J. A. l-lodgscn of Kins street, chariotiewwn. sub. Lieut. court is stationed at the navel operation dockyerd. Halifax, and Sub. Lleut. Hodgson has just coni- pleieii a course for 'i'ro1rmcn' lit. the Diving School in Halifax. This course which covers work under water includes mine demolition. Both officers are L of the Strange But True. B7 II. llacarthsr Iderlun Oebeidestnn of Vor- mlilon. Alberta. has been uncon- scious in hospital since June 10. I950. Obaldeston suffered head injuries in a traffic accident. . . . Sub-aero temperatures Eastern Canada now are only half as common as they were 15 years ISO. and the average temper-t--w for March has risen nearly four dexreee since the mid-ietb cen- tury. Thero'e4 a marked lessening of our snowfall, too. At Montreal today. for instance. less than 100 inches I show falls each winter as against 130 inches in the issue . . . Here in the Garden of the Gulf. our winters are not what they used to be and our summers have tretchecl out until they are almost one month longer than in pioneer days. . . . sponges are no longer classed as see plants. They belong to the animal king- dom. are reproduced through eggs, and can drift from place to place, until. they find suitable pieces fo adhesion. . . . A hallbu weighing 190 pounds produces about 2,132,000 eggs. V000 Very large oysters have been known to produce 00,000,000 eggs, but the average oyster does not spawn more than 16,000,000. . . Iceland has neither policemen nor prisons. . . . At Sarita Maria del Tula, Mexico, may be seen the oldest tree on earth. It is s cy- press, m feet in circumferencei and between 4.000-6.000 years old. . when the dam at King- ston gave way some years ago, Duncan Marshall used the sub- merged logs for firewood and four" them in perfect condition in spite of the time they remain- ed under water - '15 years. Amorg the most important trees found on the Island are: pine, fir spruce, cedar, white .and yel- low birch, maples, beech and oak. . . . Apples will keep longer if they are placed in storage as soon as they are taken from the trees. . . Misny persons who have viewed the saguenay River will tell you that its waters are black. Is this true or false? False. This Canadian river ep- pcars black due to the shadows cast over it by treeless clifts, some of which are 1,000 feet high. Ramesed II of Egypt holds the world's record when it comes to counting one's children. lie had the missing total of zoo children: 111 sons and 50 daughters.- If the Family Allowance Act had been in force in Remeser day the King would have pulled down quite a fortune. . . . The Metropol- itan Life Insurance Company (some years. ago) estimated that it cost S5.150,to brink up a child. This included birth and expenses until its lath year. with today's high cost of living. plus medical attention. etc. the cost. of bring- ing up a child would naturally be higher than the figures quoted above. Where will it all end? . . Not all babies have blue eyes at birth, but most of 'em do; and strange to say. babies. are unable to shed tebrs until they reach the age of three months. You must not associate trying with tear shedding. If you find it hard to choose a name for your new baby. you might consider one of these three: Westllng, Patience, Fr:-.-r. These were bfie names of the children of William Brewster, who came to the new world i:. the Mayflower. Contrary to the general opinion, child labor is increasing steadily. They are found in all industries. in transportation. and in domes- tic service, but by far the greater number are employed in the tex- tile industry.l . The last names of the children who surviv- ed the Mountain Meadows Mas- sacre were never known because they were tw young to remember ihe tragic affair. The principal imports of Canada are sugar, silk. coffee and tea, rubber, jute, gems, tin, fruits. unmanufac- tured tobacco, fertilizers and veg- etable oils. In most of the Latin-American countries people are buried only for a short time, then they are disinierred and put in a common bone yard. This custom of dump- ing bones of human bodies in a bone yard only applies to those that have lein in above ground graves. . . . The custom of shaving goes back to antiquity. and we read in history that Alex- ander the Great ordered his sold- iers to shave off their beards so that their enemies might not lay hold on them. Razors were used in Europe before the lath century. PARIS. rec. 2i-(AP)-The for- eign affairs committee of the French National Assembly voted today to invite the United Nations to hold its 1961 Assembly melon in Paris or Versailles. only W0 Communist member of the group was against the proposal which now goes before the full Assembly. B.C.N. (R). IIITA SIGMA I'll! l0noitl'rI' -Miss Mary Ileeltensie was host- ese to tlieiAIplin Gunter of Beta Sigma Phi on Wednesday even- inr. lib. am. The president. Miss Allie Mccteod, conducted the business for the evening. Mrs. if. S. Rogers. educational dIi'eCI0l',-QI the Chapter gave a. most interest- ing and cnlidhteiiietg talk on the life of Handel and of his great masterpiece "The Mtssieh." roi- lowing the program delicious re- frgslimghts were served by the lunch comrnitteepurs. J. 0. Gel- lerit and Mrs. William Archlseld. aasistad.bv the hostess. 1-arcing ro sashes :.i-1;”... elephants are seldom seen moiosicei rerdene eenn unlike" the Indian elephant one in hard to handle I "llie lieal Soviet Story” Did you know the Russian Revolu- tion waa originally democratic! (Iainin wasn't even there. the Com- munists eeised power eight months later.) That Lenin's last advice to thepartywaetogotrldofstalin? in March Reader's Digut reed tbeiittla-known etoryofhowafew fanatic. ruthlem terrorbte stole the ltumian people's great eehhvement in freedom . . . eoedeeaed cm. the famous book Vcdictoffheeebecadee. in is good. an unbalanced diet is bed. one example. We talk a great deal today about balance. The medical pro- The financial experts aspire to a balanced budget. A balanced bud- get indicates financial soundnoel. an unbalanced budget that we are on the road to bankruptcy and chaos. Automobile manufactur- ers strive to have balance in their clm .. . . A balanced car is good. heavy one is dangerous and could easily prove faisl. Athletic coaches want balanced teams. good on at- tack, good on defense. (Now the people who make things are always striving to make great- er thinga and more balanced things. It is true that the budget seldom balancu and people don't stick to their balanced diets, but the really striking thing about us is that we don't seem too concerned to produce balanced men. Balanc- ed men are good men, unbalanced men are bad men, or at least de- formed mon and dangerous both to themselves and others. These unbalanced men are lopsided or one-sided either in their thinking or their morals or, more briefly, in their living. This kind of onesidedness is not the kind that is overcome by mak- ing the young teke ex ' as well as making them study. It is not the kind that is overcome by mixing work and recreation. This cncsiderlness goes far deeper than that. It is a U1 esldedness that fails to recognize that man is at least twceided or menysided. Man is an animal but he is more than an animal or at least a very special kind of animal. He is an animal who is at the same time spiritual. Man is moi-t.ai'but. he is at the some time immci-tsL He dies but he keeps on living. Man is the son of man but he is also the son of God. He is a citizen of the world but he is also a future citizen of heaven. To forget any of these si:'.:s of men's charecter or per- sonaiity or to developoue to the exclusion of the others is equal to ruining man. to deform' him. If we don't remember that man is an animal we become indiffer- ent towards the fect' that he needs food. shelter, material conifer... and health. But if we forget that he has a spiritual soul with great desires for truth and freedom and. even if he does not know it, a great desire for God, there is no no reason for not treating him as we do the beasts of the field. It is just because man is the kind of thing that he is, that he is the most. difficult thing in the world to h le. one-sided solutions to human problems are never solu- tions at all. It is easy to be an unbalanced thinker and an un- balanced liver, but it is very dif- ficult to be a balanced thinker and liver. This latter, however, is the only kind worth while. Let us take We should be men of God as well as men of the world. It is all too easy for people to say that they will leave holiness to others, that it is not for them. They will be men of the world and leave the r " business to people who get out of the World. They actually are saying that they are satisfied with being an unbalanced person- ality. They have great concern for things of this world, no concern for things of the next. There is a distinct naivowness here, a kind of bigotry. such an st:-ltudr. of mind always ends up in elilier disdain for saints or in the persecution of religion. It is equally bigoted and nar- row-minded for 9. person who pro- fuscs to be religious to have dia- dain for worldly things. Such a person is not moved at the sight or human want and suffering. If there is injustice in the world, he accepts it by saying that it will get strsghtened out in the hoceafter. Such an attitude of mind is one- sided and distinctly pernicious. The real religious man is one who fights injustice wherever he sees it and relieves want and suffering wherever he finds it. In spite of the difficulty of her- monizing a. great concern for the things of eternity with a great concern for the things of time, it is just ihe type of man who has done so. that the world needs, at the present moment. If life is to be worth living the crying need is for saints who have a great con- cern for the things of this world, saintly politicians. saintly ccono- mists, saintly social planners. such men would fight against the barbarlsm of starvation in the midst of plenty. We Christians can hang our heads in shame and take lessons from the Communists here. But such men will' fight also against the berberism of the loss Thoughts For Our Time” By His Eminence Cardinal McGiugcs iocpyrisiit) ' nearly time that we realise that the state cannot be the cure-all of our ills. Uterature . And Life By eoossus 0(&'x'.9&GOf-C IIOUTINI The other day I talked with 1 man who had Just returned from a holiday trip and he said that he was tired, and then went on to say that the life of routine is good. That does not mean that we should not take holidays. but means that we should be thankful for having something in do each day.” I-labit is closely related to routine and of course means "dress," - somethin we put on each day. Routine is closely relat- ed to the idea of the road. and the word "rut" belongs to the family. Walter Pater declared that "to form habits is failure in life." What he meant was that one of the com- monest of mental dangers was to form intellectual and moral pre- able to keep the "inner eye" open to new impressions. We become creatures of habit and of routine, and we have an ally in nature, for one follows routi . Day follows night and summer follows winter. The sea- sons pass in orderly procession. Nature follows a time table very correctly. As a rule we know what to expect from nature. God. whose servant she is, never tires of doing the same thing; it is we who or! out fir novelty. This was what struck the Author of Ecclesiastes. That which is has already been. and there is nothing new under the sun. Go down by the beach when the see breaks on the shore and remember. that this sound has been there for a million years. Routine is thus I. law of nature. Again, there is this to remem- ber -- routine helps. for we do not need to forever be asking. "What shall I do next?" Years ago I boarded with e. man whose al- most. daily question to his ninety year old mother at the dinner tebie was - "What shall I do this afternoon?" Needless to say he never amounted to much as a farmer. He had no routine. Paul bid some of his readers who were getting I . -"Let every man abide in the calling in which he was called." There ere places in the world where people expect to find us. for me are identified with them and our name is connected there- with. So it is that routine helps, for we are rid of the necessity of undue improvisation, there is so much settled for us. , We must take care we do not be- conte --koners of our routine. know a minister who had a visitor and so bound up was he with his habit .1 regular work and keeping to his time-table that he did not so with him to the train when leaving. There is what Henry Van Dyke called "profitable idleness". A happy medium is what we need in most things.- a sort of self- discipline. Lamb resented being tied to "the desk's dead wood." Energy is a sort of spring and if it is ever- taxcd it. may lose its power. Orig- inality is apt to suffer if a maxi wcsfks too hard. All work and no play makes Jack 2: dull hey" is very true. Bacon says in one of his essay: that "custom is the chief magis- trate of man's life." We read that Jesus went as his "custom" was to the synagogue at Nazareth. The habit of church-going was built into the scheme of life. when we were children most of us took for granted that since it was Sun- day, we would go to church. It was part. of our routine. The writer to the Hebrews in chapter 5:14. utters a deep psy- chological truth when he says "some have their senses exercised by reason of use". and the mar- gin translates use by our word habit. Routine must not become a rut -defined as a grave with both ends knocked out. But if properly regarded. a very useful way to or- ganize life. MOSTLY rsnsinns Albania-ls 1n" exclusively agri- cultural and stock ralsi-ng country with a population of 1,115,000. ......?....:..M...... of dfreedgim end.” pergonslb Ilgtfnty . n d t n d 3.......E. .;”...:m..f. .".t:.” :2 mi oourwrc vlsvst. uthless om ation o .tota.iit.a.r- - Iran and etheistic materialism. REFRALTIIIN "Id They wll be all II;tIhl:';Ii6 selling of the human b hr t for a mm of pun”. ANALYSIS Such 11:62. svtigi be balanced men. , Such w e men who will love God and men. To produce Gl Ff such men the state is not enough. & it needs the Church. Doth are seems to produce balanced per- olmpmgh-lgu sonsiiuel. one without the other will only produce a misshapen 33 Gianna St. tI'iIfI, a kind of monstrosity. ft is - - 1 Give Yourself a IN cnsamgrrn'rowst' AT no one llliADQUA3Tl'-33 rcssnavqss. run... 2-4 see e-10 BE A BLOOD DONOR Credit For Life same , judices in early life. We should be , 1 .