JULY 3. ioso -- T -.----.- .-. ----- l V-... . one GUARDIAN. Cl-IARILOTTETOWN children are living advertise- ments of their homes. If they some late with dirty or torn sloth- mg, unclean hands. teeth and shoes; 11 they are irnpudent quarrel- wmg, dishonest or ..roie.ne, we gnowwhere the blame lies. Parents ..re the natural teachers of their children. compared with their influence, which extends through- out the 3 days of the year and go; the greater part of every day, that of the school is quite second- gry. Nothing is more personal or in- timate than home life. Its effects an accent. manners and personal- uy are obvious. Uncontclously. but inevitably. children imitate their parents. If the parents are refined. courteous. considerate, their chil- dren wlll reflect these qualities. If. on the contrary. they are coarse, rude. selfish, vicious, profane. men- dacious, dishonest, intemperate. quarrelsome, these vices will ap- pear in the children. No parent would deliberately set out. to teach his child any of the grossor vices. but they do indeli- berateiy and very effectually teach them. The irreligious parent show- mg no regard for his Creator or for the claims which that Creator has for reverence, gratitude and worship cannot expect his child to be any better than he is. If he uses coarse or profane language or calls vile names to the members of his household. how can he expect them to speak, as the Gospel puts it, ”rightly?" The child who hears violent and profane language at home will use it on the street and in his deal- ings with other children. Perhaps the day will come when he will call his father or mother what he has heard them call each other. It is hard to think of a more painful epcrience than for a parent to hear profanity from his child, es- pecially. to be called names which a guilty conscience cries out-"this is what you have taught!" The least God demands from parents is good example. It is not enough for them to provide for the body of their child. The state will see to it that they shelter. feed. clothe and give some education. But this will not satisfy God. He demands adequate care of the soul. He created man to know. love and serve Him and thus use the life which He has given. The parent must therefore tench his child the fundamental truths and duties of religion. Among those duties wor- ship occupies an important place. ledge and love. But no one can But worship presupposes know- love what or whom he does not know. Whoever knows God will desire Him and try to reach Him. live with Him and, so far as he .-1.: ' Thoughts For Our Time! Iy His Eminence Cardinal McGuigoa (copmsht) can. possess Hun. The process of possession in- volves conformity of win, om- expresses that when he tllught us to say: "Thy will he done on earth as it is in heaven." That is the fundamental law of life. All nature obeys or does the will of the Oreetor. Man alone refuses to do it and the reason he refuses is be. cause he does not know God. This is why the religious school offers far greater assistance to the Plrents in the education of their children than one in which reli- gion is not taught. The former gives God the place he deserves in forming the' ideas and shaping the character; the other merely provides ideas and ideals of mater- ial value. The religious school tries to make them successful in this world. No church made the law which binds parents to teach their chil- drcn religion. God made that law long before He gave the Ten Com- mandments. He made it when He made human nature. If through parental indifference. negligence or defiance a child should grow up without the knowledge of God which is essential to service here and salvation hereafter. it is evi- dent that the Lord will hold his parents responsible. Yet. the school cannot do all. It cannot supply the good example of Christian life. That must' come from parents who know the law of God and keep it. It must come from the home in which prayer is the rule and the endeavour to imi- tate Christ in daily practice. of their own conduct parents must be able to say to their children: "This do and you shall live." When we think of the glorious opportunity parents have to make saints of their children, of the wonderful materia' God gives them to work on and of the Divine mod- el He supplied in His incarnate Son. it is hard to explain their failure even to try to grasp that 0Pportunity and thus fulfill their vocation. They are made co-opera- tars with Gd. Conceive what that means. The faithful parent bless- es the world with good citizens. the community with good neighbors and heaven itself with saints. God gives them the material; He furnishes them with models not only in His Son, but in countless men and women in every conceiv- able circumstance; He gives the directions in His holy law and a competent instructor in His Church. he leaves nothing want- ing. The fsilures are human. Men and women misuse the material. refuse to obey the laws, neglect to copy the Model. The result is what we can see in s. godless world. a wicked generation and a tsinfui people. Mrs. Pitre To Be Tried On Intimidation Charge QUEBEC, June 30-(CP)-Trial on a witness-intimidation charge was ordered today for Mrs. Arthur Pitre, prominent figure in Quebec's airliner time-bombing case which has led to a murder conviction against one man and a charge of murder against another. The el-year-old. woman will be tried next autumn on a charge of threatening a girl witness last June 14 at a hearing for Oenereux Rzuest. Mrs. Pitre'e brother, who has been committed for trial on a murder charge. The Crown accused Mrs. Pitre of trying to suppress testimony about an incident concerning herself. Ruest and J. Albert Guay. Quebec jeweler due to be hanged next Jan. 12 for plotting the wreck of an air- liner that carried his wife and 22 others to their death. Three witnesses who appeared in Mrs. Pitre's case today said she told m-year-old Marguerite Lech- ance. "Keep your mouth shutr-I have struck before strike again." The Lachance girl had been call- ed to testify that Ruest had od- vlsed Mrs. Pitre to commit suicide after the plane crash Sept. 9 when police sought a woman who took a mystery parcel to the ill-fated airliner. Mrs Pitre today had nothing to say at licr brief hearing. Judge Roy extended until her trial the 08,000 bell fixed when she was charged. Both Ruest and Mrs. Pitre were major witnesses at G-uay's murder trlal last March. Mrs. Pitre told of the parcel delivery to the air- liner and the watch-marker told of making gt time-bomb. with an alarm-clock mechanism for Ciuay. and I can LONDON. July 2-(AP)-Prime Minister Ldaquat Ali Khan of Pak- istan srrlved today on his way home after a visit to Canada and the United States. PAIN Rheumatic Arthrltlc, Neuritie, N U.. echehe Lurnbsgo. Gout. 1-leadeche. KIDNEY AND LIVER UPSETS Gertie it t in Be in Ea. giimgumo . laddtvl e e , ouene . Peieens. ."Neehiag relieved my IWMIP” ” dieeelufert end heartburn until I took SAINAK". Mrs. IGHI9 Adana. 115 Niagara St. T01" on "I took Israel for hechche kidney and bladder trouble In FAST RELIEF FOR PEOPLE SUFFERING WHAT OTHER PEOPI3 SAY ABOUT SARNAK O RE-NEW ENERGY o ENRICH Tug . 31.001) . e RELIEVE PAIN STOMACH UPSETS Indl eetion. Heartburn. Belch- in . 3... Blost. After-Eetin Dfetren. Dizzy 8 ll. BI taste in the mout or Bid Breath. stomach Cramps. GENERAL Constipation. N e r v o uenell, gtlmplneee. lrrltahlll . Unsorted leep. General llun- wn Con- d don, Lack of Vitality. Anusnn. "I eullered with the Hill! stomach and bowels. SARNR relieved b the tlmeil hid tlhll hell the rat bottle. Mr. elm Derter. 233 not sent 1?... run Sound. ”8ARNAK brings greet relief to anyone euiierin rheumatic Pill! as I did." F. L Cori. I lone ." )1 - .'i"5”.&."'ii.if"'ia.. i. Jervilt Ontario. At All Dru! INTERNAL 6I'I'l6 Stores 31.35 MEDICINE Ave.. Brampton. BUl.LEl'lNS FROM BlRQi.AND wlturaen :.wruog oacuu. -raarrs Anthropologists divide the hu- man race roughly into three groups: the descendants of Sherri. ll-fem, and Japhcth. The task of the ornithologists is not quite so every bird can be traced to the simple. though the ancestry of Archaeopte yx. Nevertheless. there are certain definite groups into which birds fall, as distinct from each other as s Chinsman and an Englishman. This may sound too scientific for an amateur bird lover. but even a beginner should learn to identify the various members of the same family. Let us take merely a few outstanding exam- ples. Instead of trying so hard to know a Wood Thrush when you see or hear one. try to learn to re- cognizie any Thrush. Notice the bright. black eye. with a perfect THE CENTRA L GUARDIAN o v 'l"'...:.""i::'...: '..'.l."'.:.'.!:'...'."'1l a newer nature may be Inserted at five cents a word. Itrietiy pay- able advance. CIASWILL for Photographs. MILK P03 strength. for Health. .a... IANGTHIN the life of brakes by installing a Brake Saver Signal Light. At TInton's. Mas. J0llNB'i'0N'l !..adiea'Wear -Special sale, coats, suits, dresses, white, etc. SCHEDULED FLIGHTS daily to summerside and Moncton Phone Maritime central Airways Limited. N01 or 540. TICKETS ON L. P. U. CAN. re- duced in price. Present ticket- holders watch for announcement tomorrow. jut.- WHY TAKE Lliss then top price for your wool. Ship to the Prince Ediward Island Sheep Breeders' As ring around it which gives the bird the appearance of staring, the general brownish colouring with more or less distinctly spotted breast. the size, smaller than ll Robin (really a Thrush also). and the appealing. melodi us voice. Later you may know the Wood Thrush by its very distinct breast markings. the Hermit by its red- hrown tail, and the Veery by its general chestnut coloration. Their songs and calls will be learned by experience. As Sparrows belong to the large group known as seed caters their stout. conical shaped bills are de- signed for cracking this food. Brown is the main colour of the 30 or so varieties which can rough- ly be divided between those with and those without streaked breasts. Fortunately, the locality in which one is seen helps immensely: for instance the Savannah Sparrow is always found in a meadow or on a prairie. Warblers are a very difficult group to learn. There are approxi- mately 40 varieties averezins about 5 1-4 inches in length, with tiny, dark bills. Many have at least some white about them. many have some black. and a very large majority have yellow. They are very sprightly in their move- ments. with bright little voices. When you come across a new bird. watch it as long as possible. makihg careful notes as to its sur- roundings, the kind of food it seems to be looking for. the way it flies, whether its bill is long soclation. Charlottetown and be assured of this price. CHARLOTTETOWN Strawberry .Growers Association now open for business. Potato Growers Ware- hosuase, foot of Prince Street. Phone ll RACES. PARKVIEW Raceway. tsouth Rustlco Wednesday. July f12. Four classes. 31600 in purses. -Send entries to A. P. Gallant, Rustico or Sam Kennedy, Ken- nedy Men's Wear, Charlottetown. A. P. Gallant. president, Alyrc M. Gallant. Secretary. CITY POLICE COURT-At the day, a man. charged with theft under the amount of 325. pleaded guilty to the charge and was re- manded until today for sentence. A man charged with gross in- decency was remanded untll today. Three persons charged with being drunk and incapable appeared. One was remanded for seven days, while the other two were both re- leased after being in jail since June 23rd. like a Woodpecker's or very short and flat like a Swallow's, its chief colours. if it has any especially significant mark - as a crest. a white rump. or wing-bars. Then try to decide into which of the main divisions it should go. The pictures in a good bird guide should then give you your answer. Do nestlings eat much? (town. nowun lnmmg . WEAR. at 175 Queen street. sraawneenres. .- u. n. sai-I deretoh, North Wiltslaire. nnrrrr. rer' Stipendiary Magistrate's Court Fri-I -HAY SALT IN IICOI. Cash and Carry Stoke. JIFPY BRAKE Oeble liortener and adjuster easy to install. At '1'enton's. 1'Em.8'l'!'fcDtink Gold 'Nlstrlt- ious Milk. ensure STUDIO for free photo. Yellow Cab Buiidine. Charlotte- uail your films. . RECEIVING HOG! at crepeud each Tuesday until 11 A. M. where roads are passable our trucks will 70"? pick up as usual. Robert Dawson SHIP YOUR WOOL to the Prince Edward Island sheep Breeders' As- sociation. Potato Growers ware- house. Charlottetown and he as- sured of highest msrketprices. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND PBESBYTEBIAL of the Women's Missionary Society meets in Bel- fast Church on Thursday. July 6th, 1950; executive meeting at 9.30 A. M. and other sessions at 10.30. 2.30 and 7.30. To ATTEND PAINTING SCHOOL-Mr. A. L. Wright left on Saturday to join a painting school under the noted New York painter John Laurent. The school of paint- ing and sculpture is held yearly at Ogonquit. Maine, from July 3rd to September. SUPREME COURT-In the SL1- preme Court here on Friday Mr. Justice M.R. MacGuigan dismissed with costs the appeal of Robert Tinson Holman vs. the King. from a conviction of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated. Counsel for the appellant was Mr. R. R. Bell. K.C., for the Crown, Mr. J. P. Nicholson. RETURN HOME. r Messrs. Pat Murray. deputy minister of Agric- ulture for Newfoundland and John C. Crosby of st. John's returned home on a Maritime Central plane on Saturday after having sepnt several days in the Province. While here they attended sessions of the Agriculture Institute of Canada conference. I 1 NEW GLASGOW MILLS JUN- -IOR FIRST AID CLASS-Mrs. - Blair M. Andrew. a qualified Red Cross First Aid Instructor. organ- I ized and carried through to a suc- ,cessful conclusion a Junior, First lAjd Class in New Glasgow Mills I school during the last few months. The final tests were carried out on June 22nd by qualified Red Cross First Aid Instructors and the following pupils merited Junior Certificates: Doris Blair Andrew, Nellie Andrew. Marjorie C018. Pearl Nicholson. Freddie Andrews, Elizabeth ,Cole, Shirley Mofiaii, Helen Younker. p V Iiya Vifyiv d our OUR WAY BY J. R. WILLIAMS t' you MUST YES. THAT GIJYSA VEH.THA'l' 1- MEET Tl-ll5 ABOVE CARTOONIST HE AIN'T , 4 ow--Hes ALLTHI sucu AN , qr A CHARACTER PEOPLE IMPORTANT . HERE, TOP HAND mom"; Lila ' VOU AROUND . MUST MEETOU ED, 'l-ERE,BUT g z E; MEET AN' some DA JUSTA i iui.itiiuu E. i i 1' - , . iii.-ii - . J ..ii.iii.i'i':i.l.'.”"1:.” in. A . i-L." M E '. --i r - - Q? . if ' s;;s4r.I , FAKM rr 10 IMPRESS us: vou mow rr MAKES HIM I THINK HE'S ' Rest-all ALUMINUM SUN Cl-IAlR8- . high back, and with arms ...I EXTRA SPECIAL We find we have 3 Snyder 4-piece sectional Living Room Sets-just the thing for nicer summer homes. These sold regularly for s189.00-Now Clearing at . . . S8950 CROCKETT AND STOREY no. 134 Kent St. SUN SWlNGS-- V Reg. 859.50 for S4160 and Reg. s8-1.50 for 389.60 DECK CHAIRS--with or without Ganopy, Pillow, Log OUT THEY G . FOR LESS 2o95 arr . ON ALL SUMMER CON SISTING OF types. CHARLOTTETOWN e14.95 tor. s11.as A .4 Phone 834 True Success Story By F. H. MacArthur Samuei Lsngiwrne Clemens (Mark Twain) was born in 1835 in Florida. Missouri. The Clemens were poor folk and when the father died in 1847 the family found themselves in such strained circumstances that it became ne- cessary for the twelve-year-old Samuel to quit school and go to work to keep his widowed mother. But what kind of work should this youngster do? The issue was settled by Mrs. Clemens who de- cided to give Samuel an educa- tional background by having him learn printing. So the tiny mem- ber of the family was packed off to the Hanibal Journal where he worked for six years. The urge to travel now got into the youth's blood and for the next three years his itching feet carried him across the States of New York. Philadelphia. St. Louis. Cin- cinnati and Iowa. earning his way by doing various jobs that fell to his lot. The three years' trek wheited Mark's appetite for further ad- ventures, and to satisfy that urge he became a pilot on the Missis- sippi River. His. ready wit and a passion for having some of life's red plums made him a general favourite among all classes. 0 O O The end of the Civil War also brought an end to his work on the famous old river but Clemens was not yet ready to settle down. For the next five years he did con- siderable roaming about his na- tive America. prospecting for gold. writing odds and ends of stuff for the press and making a study of his fellow-men. The knowledge picked up in those five years laid the ground- work which mskes his writings so vastly absorbing and amusing. I repeat the word amusing because Mark Twain is greatest of all the American humorlsts and certainly ranks high among the .world's greatest laugh-makers. The Jumping Frog of Calaueras County came from Clemens pen in 1861 under the nom de plume of "Mark Twain". That name came from his experiences on the Mississippi and perhaps from the call of the leadsinen to the pilot, namely, "the boat has two fathoms of water under her and a safe channel." Some folks, however, cI:im that the man who kept the tslley always said. "mark twain" meaning mark two. Anyway. Clemens used the nom de plume when he handed the editors his story and the name stuck for the rest of his days. 0 O C Another of Twain's laugh books is lilnnbcence Abroad". This story is woven around the tour which he took in 1867 to the Mediter- ranean Countries and the Holy Land. In writing "Tom Sawyer", Mark Twain had only to take e leaf from the story of his own child- hood. while in ”The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn", he pictures the lives of the simple living folk who dwelt on the banks of the Mississippi. Just as they might have appeared to young Finn. who with all his shortcomings. was nevertheless a real boy. . All that Mark Twain wrote or said was interesting and many of his sayings have become famous. While -Huck Finn and Tom Saw- yer were written for boys. both stories have a strong appeal to men, and there are few readers in America or in the Old World. who have not devoured and laughed loudly at Twain's masterpieces. l Personally, I am most fond of Twain's "Joan of Arc". Unlike his other books this one is written in a more serious vein and tells the story of the great French heroine in a masterly yet soul-warming WBY. C O I Author Clemens made a lot of money by his lectures and books. He knew the value of humor and laid it on thick. It was what the public wanted and he handed it to them on a silver tray. But. strange to say. Twain was almost flat broke in 1895. He was then 00 years of age. What became of all the money he had made? Well. the author's life on the Mississippi had gotten him into bad living habits. He spent his money shouts as fast as he earned it. and some of it vanished as a result of un- wise business ventures. Bui Mark Twain was too hon- ourable e man to avoid paying his just debts. So he set forth on a world lecture tour that earned him another modest fortune. Now famous, great crowds flock- ed to bear the humorist whereves he set foot. Like Charles Dickens. he could always hold his listeners by the sheer magic of his words. ”Joan of Arc" was not written until after his world tour. Nor was this his last book, he continued to write almost to the very end -1 his life, which came in 1910. 's-1--m--- NEW HAVEN W. 1. The meeting of New Haven Wo- men's Institute met on June 7th of the home of Mrs. Duncan Gass. The meeting opened by singing Ode and repeating the Creed in- unison. Nineteen members answered roll call with an article for the Grab Bag. One member paid her fees. Proceeds from Grab Bag amount- ed to 31.85. Minutes of last meeting were read, approved, and signed by the ' president. Proceeds from pantry sale held recently amounted to 330.39. Re ports of various committee: were heard. It was decided to get prizes for school children as usual. The correspondence was read and dis- cussed. Mrs. Roland Buchanan, Sr., and Mrs. Clarence Friuell were ap- pointed to attend annual meeting at the Orphanage. with Mrs. Artie MacPhee as substitute. Bills amounting to 38.97 were paid. Mrs. Hugh Mecboneld. was elected to have three-minute tall: at the convention. The Institute Newsiwu distrib- uted among the membtrs. Collec- tion was taken and amounted to 31.18. The next meeting is to be bid at the home of Mrs. Brewer Boyle. roll call to be answered with soap or surf flakes for box to be sent to England. The meeting closed with The King. A dainty lunch wee served by the hostel. , SUNDERLAND. England. July I (Reuters)-A soda fountain cust- omer yesterday sat down here to a rubber ice cream sundae. With s comment not recorded be hand- ed it back to the waitress who was frantically searching for a dummy sundae missing from the show window. ”liluie t:otiI' EIIIIEH PIIIII , ppular all IIVI?l' THERE'S Nommc LI near winter's fuel H is. No obi ms son YOU sranr ms MORE YOU SAVE--Phone saucy --rut-: squeeze OFF A FAMILY? cocxsnsoox m WINTERJRY ITAND seal, &-A? 3 Bio Aovauracss Yes. our Budget Plan willhelp you make ends meet better. And remember. you save MONEY. Too. because you get the benefits of special Budget Prices. !llI Furnace Ins eetlon .. tow.n.l. KE IT TOTAKE I ODINEIIIEIT 2 no woman Suutsvcomil - ',',',E.l.n CUM. I3 I "WEM3 W wmv-rm .'lEl.'i'5l.i.”.ll. .'.'.l.'ili'l”l.'.l.. WY TERIS ..vca's: ms or eneorun All. 1'0 run You more vmrm me man .can save you up to 307- on lgetlon. I A. Piek'ard & 00., Ltd. Tel. 240